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French ups soft wheat location estimate, sees increase in sugar beet

France's farm ministry on Tuesday estimated the total soft wheat location in France at 4.39 million hectares, down 7.7% from 2023 and still at its second lowest in 30 years in spite of a small boost in its forecast for winter season wheat sowings.

Torrential rain during autumn disrupted sowing in France, the European Union's biggest grain producer, raising concern that farmers would be unable to complete planting strategies and that drilled crops would lose yield potential.

The estimate for French soft wheat sowings was the 2nd least expensive given that 1994, after 2020, the ministry stated in a crop report.

The ministry somewhat increased its forecast of the winter season soft wheat area to 4.37 million hectares from 4.36 million seen in February and raised the estimate for the winter barley area to 1.28 million hectares from 1.27 million previously, now down 6.1% year-on-year.

In contrast, spring barley sowings were seen rising 10.7% on in 2015, the ministry stated. However, they would still remain 17% below par.

For rapeseed, France's main oilseed crop, the 2024 location was reduced to 1.33 million hectares from 1.34 million anticipated in February, now 1.3% listed below in 2015's level.

Wheat and rapeseed are almost exclusively winter crops in France whereas barley production includes a big amount of spring-sown crop.

For durum wheat, used to make pasta, the planted area was pegged at 230,000 hectares, up from 210,000 hectares anticipated in February but still almost 10% below the five-year average.

Experts had actually expected that durum could gain back some location as it can be planted approximately completion of winter, though sowing was expected to stay around its lowest this century as the sector deals with a longer-term decrease.

For sugar beet, the ministry in a preliminary estimate pegged this year's location at 399,000 hectares, up 4.9% from 380,000 hectares in 2023 when sowings had been up to their lowest in 14 years. Apart from last year, this year's sugar beet sowings would still be the lowest because 2015.

Producers have actually pegged the relatively little increase in sowings regardless of high sugar prices due to issues of insect attacks, as seen in previous years, and an effort to protect high costs which would be pushed by an increase in sugar beet supplies.

(source: Reuters)