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U.S. rains unlikely to help smallest Oklahoma wheat crop since 2014

Published 05/05/2022, 04:49 PM
Updated 05/05/2022, 04:51 PM
© Reuters.

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Rains this week in the U.S. Plains arrived too late to help much of the winter wheat in Oklahoma, the No. 2 U.S. producer of the grain, where farmers will soon begin harvesting the smallest crop in eight years, a state wheat official said Thursday.

"Unfortunately I do think it is a little too late in most instances for us," Mike Schulte, executive director of the Oklahoma Wheat Commission, said of this week's precipitation.

A crop shortfall in Oklahoma adds to a dire global wheat supply picture, after Russia's invasion of Ukraine shut down ports and knocked the No. 5 exporter off the market.

The commission this week projected Oklahoma's winter wheat crop at 57.05 million bushels, about half the size of last year's crop and the smallest since 2014. The commission forecast an average winter wheat yield of 23.5 bushels per acre, also the state's lowest since 2014.

About 69% of the U.S. crop was in an area experiencing drought as of May 3, the USDA has said, including most major wheat areas of Oklahoma and top producer Kansas.

Drought shriveled Oklahoma's wheat during March and April, the crop's key growth period, leaving sparse-looking plants with few tillers, or stems, especially in southwest Oklahoma and the Panhandle, Schulte said. A few areas are in decent shape in south- and north-central Oklahoma, he said.

Heavy rains this week could actually threaten the state's wheat by either knocking over mature plants and making them difficult to harvest, or raising the risk of diseases for plants that are still developing.

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The crop shortfall is frustrating for growers given that K.C. hard red winter wheat futures are trading above $11 a bushel this spring for the first time since 2008.

"With high commodity prices, I think there's a misconception that our wheat producers are going to be doing extremely well this year. The fact of the matter is, if they don't have a crop to take to market, they don't get to benefit," Schulte said.

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