Posted on August, 12, 2024 at 09:57 am
European wheat production estimates have fallen this week, as yields continue to be poorer than expected in top producers France, and Germany, according to a market report from AHDB senior analyst Helen Plant.
This follows persistent rain through key periods for crop development and harvest. Lower estimates this week from private forecasters, the USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) and the French and German governments show the challenging picture.
Across the EU-27, soft wheat production (wheat exc. Durum) is now pegged at just 116.50 Mt by Stratégie Grains. This is 5.8 Mt lower than the company’s previous projection and would be the smallest crop since 2018 (114.8 Mt, EU Commission). The company also highlighted quality concerns.
The French government cut its estimate of the country’s soft wheat crop by 3.3 Mt to 26.3 Mt. This is down 25% from 2023 and is the smallest crop since 1987. Argus Media is even more pessimistic, putting the crop at 25.2 Mt. Better weather over the past week has helped the French wheat harvest, reaching 88% complete by 5 August, but progress is still eight days behind average (FranceAgriMer).
Rain has also delayed Germany’s harvest, with anecdotal reports of lower yields and protein contents but also notable regional variation. The German Statistics Office put its first estimate of the 2024 wheat crop at 19.7 Mt, down from 21.5 Mt in 2023 and the lowest since 2003.
At 50.6 Mt, Stratégie Grains’ latest estimate for the EU-27 barley crop is still above 2023’s very small crop. But it is now below the five-year average. Both the FAS and Stratégie Grain put maize production at around 60 Mt and below last year’s crop. This is despite a larger area, and is due to the heatwaves in Eastern Europe.
The smaller EU crop numbers are offering some support to prices, wheat in particular. The outcomes of numerous international tenders could influence price direction going forward. Further clarity on quality will be important for milling (and malting) premiums.
However, a positive US maize outlook is limiting gains in feed grain prices and could yet bring more pressure. US national weather service confirmed yesterday that average temperatures across the ‘Corn Belt’ (weighted by productivity) were below the long-term average. This is typically associated with US yields being close to, or above, their long-term trend; the USDA currently predicts the 2024 yield just below the long-term trend. The market is expecting the USDA to increase its yield forecast in Monday night’s World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates.
Source: Poultry Site