Good weather outlook for winter wheat

Spotlight on wheat market
May 29, 2018
Spotlight on the domestic maize market
May 30, 2018

Good weather outlook for winter wheat

Good weather outlook for winter wheat

  • In terms of weather outlook, the South African Weather Service seems to be singing from the same hymn book as the International Research Institute for Climate Change Society. Yesterday the local weather agency indicated a possibility of above-normal rainfall in winter crop growing areas between June and September 2018.
  • The expected higher rainfall is precisely what is needed in the Western Cape province in order to sufficiently improve soil moisture and benefit the new season crop. The dam levels could also improve. In the week of 21 May 2018, the dams averaged 17 percent, down by 2 percentage points from the same period last year.
  • Be that as it may, the near term forecasts paint a mixed picture. The areas around the West Coast, Swartland, Helderberg, Overberg and the Garden Route regions of the Western Cape province could receive light showers within the next eight days which should benefit the newly planted crop. Meanwhile, the forecast for the week of 05 June 2018 shows clear skies over most regions of the province.
  • The Western Cape province is of importance because of its share contribution to South Africa’s wheat production. The province accounts for 64 percent of South Africa’s intended 500 500 hectares for winter wheat in the 2018/19 production season. We will get clarity about this season’s harvest when the National Crop Estimates Committee releases its first production estimate for winter crops at the end of August 2018.
  • Aside from the production dynamics, the wheat import tariff rate of R437.24 per tonne that triggered on 10 April 2018 was finally published in a government gazette on 25 May 2018, making it an official rate. This is a 45 percent increase from the previous rate. The delays and uncertainty of wheat tariff adjustments partly resulted in a decline in imports in the past couple of weeks, but this could soon change as all triggered tariffs have now been gazetted.

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