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Romanian government strategies drought insurance plan for farmers

The Romanian federal government strategies to approve an insurance system for agricultural land as part of a series of measures to help farmers whose crops have been wrecked by drought, Agriculture Minister Florin Barbu stated on Wednesday.

Romania is among the European Union's largest grain sellers and an active exporter, with Egypt a primary buyer, however prolonged heatwaves this summer season have actually damaged millions of lots of crops.

First, we have actually talked with banks and the monetary regulator and we have actually concurred a formula for ... a system to set up a drought insurance system for 7 million hectares of farmland, representing spring and fall crops, Barbu stated.

This mechanism makes sure settlement of up to 3,000 lei ($ 671.14) per hectare, which will cause unblocking loaning for Romanian farmers.

He did not define when the scheme would be approved or imposed.

Other measures he said the government would approve in the coming days include increasing state guarantees for farm loans, offering state settlement worth up to 1,000 lei ($ 223.71) per harmed hectare before fall crops are planted and freezing loan repayments until Dec. 2025 for farmers with harmed crops.

In July, Barbu stated almost 2 million hectares of maize and sunseed crops had actually up until now been impacted, a figure some analysts said was an underestimate.

I do not resonate with the minister's price quotes, the damage is more substantial, Cezar Gheorghe of Romanian grain market consultancy AGRIColumn informed Reuters.

He likewise said measures such as freezing farmers' loan payments will impact input sellers and suppliers.

Gheorghe approximated Romania's maize output will drop to 6.7 million metric tons this year, dramatically lower than Argus and AgroBrane estimates of 7.5 million and 7.7 million, respectively.

He estimated sunflower seed crops would fall listed below 2 million metric heaps in 2024, while the wheat crop stood at 9.6 million metric loads.

Romania's water management company said just under 630 towns and villages had water constraints in place. The Danube's level at its entry point in Romania was below the normal variety at around 2,800 cubic metres of water per 2nd, far below the August average of 4,300, triggering interruption in river traffic.

(source: Reuters)