Dec. 25, 2024
Both Stratégie Grains and Coceral predict an 11% larger soft wheat (exc. Durum) crop for the EU-27 in 2025. Private forecaster Stratégie Grains forecasts the EU-27 2025 crop at 126.6 Mt vs 114.2 Mt this year. Industry association Coceral is only 0.1 Mt lower for both its estimate of the 2024 crop (114.1 Mt) and its projection for 2025 (126.5 Mt).
The increased crop figures follow expanded areas due to improved weather conditions compared to the very wet conditions in autumn 2023. Data from the French government earlier this week reported a 8.7% rise in soft wheat area for the EU’s top wheat producer. Meanwhile, this morning data from the German government shows a 12.3% recovery in winter wheat area. Germany is closer than France, neither of these countries’ areas return to their 2019 – 2023 averages.
Despite this, at 126.5Mt, Coceral’s prediction for 2025 EU-27 crop would only just fall short of the 2019 – 2023 average of 126.9 Mt. This could keep pressure on prices.
This season, despite a smaller crop, nearby Paris milling wheat futures prices fell below year-earlier levels each month from July to November. They are only edging above in December so far. This follows slow EU exports amid competition from Black Sea origins and sluggish global demand. This pressure in European markets contributed to year-on-year falls in UK prices. So as we look ahead, Black Sea 2025 crop sizes will be important to the EU export level and prices, with implications for UK prices.
Differing views on barley
Stratégie Grains expects only a minimal rise (+0.3Mt) in EU-27 barley output in 2025 to 50.6 Mt. Area drops are expected to almost offset a recovery in yields. However, Coceral predicts a larger (+1.5 Mt) rise to take the crop to 51.9 Mt, with both the area and yield up from 2024. Winter barley areas are down again in both Germany and France, suggesting increased focus on spring barley areas.
The EU-27 recorded only a small recovery in barley output in 2024 from the 12-year low in 2023. However, like wheat, sluggish EU exports and global demand for barley have weighed on prices. Unless we see recovery in demand or smaller crops elsewhere in 2025/26, a larger EU barley crop could weigh on EU prices, with likely knock-on impacts for UK values.
Both forecasters also point to larger maize crops in 2025.
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