Drought threat intensifies for US Great Plains wheat crop

Drought threat intensifies for US Great Plains wheat crop

A drought encompassing the Great Plains states of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas have greatly reduced the coming yield of US wheat.

More of the US' wheat is grown in Kansas than in any other state. (Reuters pic)
More of the US’ wheat is grown in Kansas than in any other state. (Reuters pic)
CHICAGO:
Yield prospects are dimming wheat in the breadbasket of the southern US Great Plains, where the crop is emerging from dormancy and requiring moisture at a time when much of the region is gripped by drought, crop experts said.

In Kansas, the largest wheat-producing US state, Governor Jeff Colyer on Tuesday declared a drought emergency in 28 counties and issued drought warnings and watches for the rest of the state. The emergency declarations allow affected counties to access water from certain fishing lakes.

Nearly one-fifth of Kansas is under extreme to exceptional drought, the two most intense categories, conditions not seen in the state since 2014, according to US Drought Monitor data.

Wheat futures traded on the Chicago Board of Trade ramped to seven-month highs above $5 (RM19.50) a bushel this month on fears an intensifying Plains drought would threaten crops at a time when planted acres are already at a 109-year low.

“Across Kansas, I would predict we are going to have a below-average wheat crop, even if we have rain from here on out, just because the potential has already been limited,” said Doug Keesling, who farms more than 400 hectares of wheat in Chase, Kansas.

Plains producers grow hard red winter wheat, a high-protein variety that is used for bread. Tight supplies of high-protein grain prompted flour millers to pay historically high premiums for top-quality wheat over the past year.

Still, global wheat supplies remain plentiful following a record-large world harvest in 2017, a factor that has at times impeded US exports.

HRW wheat is seeded in the Plains in autumn and harvested in June and July. Precipitation has been minimal in portions of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas since October, preventing some plants from establishing strong roots.

“You have so little soil moisture available to a crop that in some places didn’t even germinate, (or) it’s so poorly established that the root structure is in danger of just dying,” said David Streit, an agricultural meteorologist with the Commodity Weather Group.

“I fear there is going to be a notable loss of plant population if we don’t see a rain event,” Streit said, adding he expected no significant storms in most of the region for the next couple of weeks.

The US Department of Agriculture on Monday rated 53% of the Kansas wheat crop in poor to very poor condition, up from 50% the previous week. Just 12% of the wheat was rated good to excellent, down from 13% one week earlier.

In neighbouring Oklahoma, 72% of wheat was rated poor to very poor, a slight improvement from the prior week, the USDA said.

A lag in crop maturity means wheat plants are running out of time to develop properly.

“The issue is, we are behind. And the further south you are, the more serious it is because you have less time to make up the difference,” said Mark Hodges of Plains Grains, a wheat industry group based in Oklahoma.

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