PREMIUM
Cropping

Winter crop outlook

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The national winter crop is forecast to be up, but Victorian output, down. Photo by Rodney Braithwaite

While Australia is due to harvest a larger winter crop this season, Victoria is facing a 35 per cent reduction in tonnage.

Rabobank says Australia is looking towards harvesting a “marginally larger” winter crop this season, despite significant weather challenges experienced in a number of key grain-growing regions throughout the year.

The agribusiness banking specialist says in its Australian winter crop forecast, the nation is on track to produce an estimated total winter crop of 47.1 million tonnes, up one per cent (0.5 million tonnes) on the previous season, but down a significant 13 per cent on the five-year average.

A combination of lack of timely rainfall along with late frosts in some regions has taken the edge off this year’s production prospects, the bank says, with overall grain and oilseed production forecast to be down 43 per cent on the previous year in South Australia and 35 per cent in Victoria, two of the hardest-hit states.

New South Wales production is forecast to increase 30 per cent year-on-year and Western Australia, the nation’s largest grain-exporting state, is tracking towards a harvest 19 per cent larger than last, despite a worryingly late start to its growing season.

Report author, RaboResearch analyst Vitor Pistoia said the projected “small uptick” in total crop production in 2024/25 was “poised to come mainly from wheat” and, to a smaller extent, pulses and oats.

“While the wheat harvest is expected to be an improvement on last year, canola and barley production look set to be down year-on-year due to the combination of low rainfall and late frost which struck many crops at a critical period,” he said.

Weather woes

Mr Pistoia said this winter cropping season had been a “mixed bag”, characterised by patchy rainfall, a warm winter and late frosts.

A good start to the season and beneficial rainfall through the growing period in Queensland, northern New South Wales and some areas of Western Australia had largely been “counterbalanced” by a lack of rainfall that had impacted Victorian and South Australian crops, he said.