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Australia raises wheat production forecast by 60,000 tons

Australia raised its national 2024/25 wheat harvest estimate by 60,000 metric heaps to 31.9 million lots on Tuesday, with excellent yields in the east and west forecast to make up for losses in the south to deliver aboveaverage production.

A bigger wheat harvest from Australia, which is among the world's biggest exporters, will increase global supply at a time when prices are near four-year lows.

The Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES), part of the farming ministry, likewise stated the nation would produce about 500,000 tons less barley and 100,000 tons more canola than it thought three months ago.

Higher production in New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia is expected to mostly offset reduced production and crop losses in large parts of south-eastern Australia caused by persistent dryness and prevalent serious frosts, ABARES stated in its quarterly report.

Frosts and dry weather condition triggered private-sector analysts to slash their wheat production price quotes, however arises from the harvest, which is in full swing, have actually gone beyond expectations.

ABARES approximates that the 2024/25 wheat crop will be 23%. bigger than the previous season's and 20% above the 10-year. average to 2023/24.

Australia should produce 11.7 million tons of barley in. 2024/25, 8% more than in 2023/24 and 3% above the 10-year. average, and 5.6 million tons of canola, 8% less than last. season however 23% above the 10-year average, ABARES stated.

In early September, ABARES projection production in 2024/25 of. 31.8 million tons of wheat, 12.2 million tons of barley and 5.5. million tons of canola.

ABARES said, however, that the latest weather forecasts from. Australia's Bureau of Meteorology predict above-median rainfall. throughout the majority of cropping locations in December.

If realised, rainfall throughout eastern cropping areas will. likely disrupt the harvest of remaining winter crops and may. cause grain quality downgrades, it stated.

(source: Reuters)