Top soy producer Brazil to boost plantings for 15th year: Datagro

Brazil’s soybean area poised to jump four per cent

By 
Ana Mano
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: August 9, 2021

,

Top soy producer Brazil to boost plantings for 15th year: Datagro

Reuters – Buoyed by strong demand, Brazilian farmers are poised to expand their soybean area for the 15th consecutive year, a survey by agribusiness consultancy Datagro released July 30 showed.

The area planted with soybeans in the world’s largest producer and exporter is expected to increase by four per cent to 40.57 million hectares in the 2021-22 cycle, Datagro said.

Brazil will produce an estimated 144.06 million tonnes of soybeans in next season, which farmers will begin to plant around September, Datagro forecast. If confirmed, next year’s production, which is harvested starting around late January, would be five per cent higher than the 136.96 million tonnes of the estimated output in 2021, Datagro said.

Read Also

Flooding in early 2022 sent big parts of southeastern Manitoba under water and turned communities in the region into islands.

Rural Manitoba resources slim on disaster planning

Brandon University’s Rural Development Institute has found that many rural and small municipalities in Manitoba don’t have staff or resources to make formal climate plans against natural disaster.

Brazil’s first corn plantings will be expanded by an estimated four per cent to 4.56 million hectares in the new season, as demand for the cereal, a key ingredient to make livestock feed, remains strong, projections show.

Based on regular weather patterns, Brazil’s first corn crop in the 2021-22 cycle will reach an estimated 28.83 million tonnes, 16 per cent higher than the 24.91 million tonnes produced in the previous cycle, the consultancy said.

Brazil’s second corn area is also likely to rise by a projected five per cent to 16.37 million hectares in the coming cycle.

In the absence of weather problems, Datagro said Brazilian farmers could increase second corn production to 90.84 million tonnes in 2022, 45 per cent above the projected volume for the current season, when drought and an ill-timed frost damaged a lot of the crop.

explore

Stories from our other publications