by copious.abundance » Wed 01 Oct 2008, 22:45:34
Wheat galore.
-->
LINK <--
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]
USDA sees wheat crop at just under 2.5 billion bushelsWednesday, October 1, 2008, 4:06 PM
by John Perkins
The United States Department of Agriculture reports the 2008 U.S. wheat crop at a total of 2,499,524,000 bushels. That's compared to the 2007 total of 2.067 billion bushels. Prior to the report, estimates ranged from 2.421 billion to 2.475 billion bushels, with an average guess of 2.459 billion. The average yield is seen at 44.9 bushels per acre, compared to the 2007 average of 40.5 bpa. 2008's planted and harvested area was reported at 63.047 million and 55.685 million acres, respectively, compared to 2007's planted total of 60.433 million and the harvested area of 51.011 million acres.
The winter wheat crop was reported at 1.868 billion bushels, compared to 2007's 1.516 billion. Analysts had been expecting the crop to be around 1.872 billion bushels, in a range of 1.845 billion to 1.883 billion. The average yield of 47.2 bushels per acre was up 5 from 2007. Planted area for 2008 came out at 46.181 million acres, with harvested area at 39.614 million, compared to 2007's totals of 44.987 million and 35.952 million, respectively.
Out of the total winter wheat crop, hard red winter is pegged at 1.035 billion bushels, under the average estimate and down 20 million from 2007. Soft red winter is placed at 613.578 million bushels, up sharply from last year and above the high end of pre-report expectations. White winter production came out at 219.090 million bushels, just under the average guess, but more than 20 million above last year's total.
Non-durum spring wheat was reported at 546.744 million bushels, compared to 2007's 479 million. Durum came out at 84.877 million bushels, compared to 71.686 million a year ago.
Decent monsoon season in India means good crops.
-->
LINK <--
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]
India Gets Near-Normal Rain, Boosting Crop ProspectsBy Subramaniam Sharma
Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- India received near-normal monsoon rains this season, improving prospects for record harvests of crops including rice, cotton and soybean.
Rains in the June-September season were 98 percent of the long-period average, Ajit Tyagi, director general at the India Meteorological Department, told reporters in New Delhi today.
A normal monsoon helps India's 234 million farmers gather bigger crops, paring the need to import wheat, sugar and edible oils. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government is counting on higher farm output to cool inflation that's doubled this year.
``The beauty of this year's rainfall was that it was well distributed,'' Tyagi said.
Rainfall will be 100 percent of the long-period average, the bureau said in June. The forecast allows for an error margin of 4 percentage points.
India, the world's second-biggest rice producer, may harvest a record of 83.25 million metric tons of monsoon-grown crop after normal rains spurred plantings, Federal Farm Secretary T. Nanda Kumar said Sept. 25. That's 0.5 million tons more than a year ago.
Monsoon crops including rice, oilseeds and cotton are sown in June and harvested this month.
Update on Russia.
As of September 30, Russia harvested grain and legumes within 41.3 mln ha (89% of planned territory) and, the crop totaled 104.1 mln tonnes of grain, a 22.3 mln tonnes increase compared to the same date in 2007. An average yield totaled 25.2 c/ha, up 4.1 c/ha compared to the previous year. Russian farmers have to harvest 5 mln ha (11% of planned areas), including 3.5 mln ha of spiked grains, 1.4 mln ha of maize and 130.000 ha of rice, according to the Ministry of Agriculture of Russia.
Further, Russian farmers harvested wheat throughout 23.2 mln ha (87% of planned areas) with a yield of 26.5 c/ha, up 4.2 c/ha. The crop totaled 61.5 mln tonnes, up 11.8 mln tonnes compared to the previous year. 8.7 mln ha of barley were harvested (89% of planned territory) with a crop yield of 23 mln tonnes, up 6.9 mln tonnes compared to the previous year. An average yield totaled 26.6 c/ha, an increase of 6.5 c/ha compared to 2007.