An
estimated 53% of French grain maize was in good or excellent
condition by Aug. 8, down from a revised 62% for the previous
week, FranceAgriMer said in a cereal crop report on Friday.
That was the lowest maize score for the time of year in
FranceAgriMer data going back to 2011.
This year's rating has shed around 30 percentage points in the
past month, spoiling what had been a good start to the growing
season.
Maize is among the crops most exposed to France's worst drought
on record, which has been exacerbated by successive heatwaves
that have also fanned wildfires.
A year ago, 91% of maize was rated good or excellent by the same
week, FranceAgriMer said.
Maize crops may have suffered more damage this week as torrid
weather continued, with temperatures expected to reach near 40
degrees Celsius (104°F) in the southwest on Friday.
"This week has been one too many, it's going to cost us dearly,"
said Dominique Defay, a farmer who grows maize in the Sarthe and
Mayenne regions in northwestern France.
"I can't tell what yields are going to be like, there will some
crops that are alright and others that are disastrous."
French farmers are watching to see whether storms forecast from
this weekend bring rain and cooler temperatures to avert further
maize losses.
Other parts of Europe have also endured severe drought and
extreme heat this summer, leading forecasters to slash their
expectations for this year's EU maize crop, crucial to feeding
the bloc's livestock herd.
That has raised concern of supply tension as shipments from
Ukraine, the EU's biggest maize supplier, remain disrupted by
war despite the resumption of maritime trade under a diplomatic
agreement.
The hot, dry summer is expected to lead to an early start to
French maize harvesting in the coming month, after quicker than
usual harvests for other cereals.
Farmers ended spring barley harvesting last week, after already
finishing harvesting soft wheat, winter barley and durum wheat,
FranceAgriMer said.
(Reporting by Gus Trompiz and Forrest Crellin; editing by Jason
Neely and David Evans)
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