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Australia set for record wheat crop as harvest wraps up

Grain traders down under expect a massive 42 million-tonne wheat crop

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Published: January 17, 2023

a wheat field in Australia

Australia wheat production is expected to be a record 42 million tonnes as results from the final phase of harvest show higher yields in the world’s second-largest exporter of the grain, traders and an analyst said.

Higher Australian wheat output comes at a time of stiff competition from the Black Sea region, where all-time high output in Russia is keeping the global market well supplied. The benchmark Chicago wheat futures were on track for a weekly decline of more than five per cent, for the week ending Jan. 6, the biggest in six months.

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“We are getting monster yields,” said Phin Ziebell, agribusiness economist at National Australia Bank. “Western Australia has performed very well.”

Western Australia, the country’s biggest wheat exporting state, is estimated to produce 16 million tonnes of wheat as compared with earlier expectations of 13 million tonnes, said one Sydney-based trader. The country is poised to ship record volumes in the months ahead.

“Ports are almost fully booked for wheat shipments for March and April. Buyers are now looking at May shipments,” the trader said.

In December, the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics estimated wheat, the country’s major grain crop, at 36.6 million tonnes in the 12 months to June 30, 2023.

However, higher rainfall that drove the stronger yields has likely resulting in a large portion of the Australian crop developing into average or below-average milling wheat instead of higher protein grades for human consumption.

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