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		U.S. wheat crop hit by dry winter then soggy spring, adding to global 
		tightness
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		 [May 31, 2022]  
		By Karl Plume 
 (Reuters) - North Dakota farmer Dwight 
		Grotberg wanted to plant more wheat this spring to capitalize on soaring 
		prices since Russia's invasion of Ukraine cut grain exports and left the 
		world short of millions of tonnes of wheat supply.
 
 Heavy rain has prevented Grotberg from planting as much wheat crop as he 
		wanted and is hampering farmers across the state, the top U.S. grower of 
		spring wheat.
 
 Instead of boosting supply, North Dakota expected to plant wheat over 
		the smallest share of its farmland on record, according to government 
		data.
 
 The United States is the world's fourth-largest wheat exporter and 
		problems are hitting output at a time when the world can ill afford to 
		lose any more supplies of the staple grain amid a global food crisis.
 
 Benchmark Chicago Board of Trade wheat prices surged 50% to more than 
		$13.60 a bushel after Russia's invasion in February halted shipments of 
		nearly a third of the world's wheat exports, and little has gone right 
		for wheat since then.
 
 Worsening harvest prospects in China and parts of Europe, followed by an 
		export ban by major producer India, have tightened stocks and 
		exacerbated global food supply concerns.
 
 The United Nations has warned the impact of the war on grains, oils, 
		fuel and fertilizer could throw millions of people into famine and take 
		years to resolve.
 
 
		
		 
		Washington has been calling on U.S. farmers to seed more winter wheat 
		this autumn, and the government said it would allow planting on some 
		environmentally sensitive land beginning this fall. But the drought and 
		costly farm inputs could limit production gains, say grain analysts.
 
 There are two wheat crops in the United States: spring wheat planted 
		now, and winter wheat planted in autumn that will be harvested soon. 
		Both are in trouble.
 
 The problems with the spring wheat planting faced by farmers like 
		Grotberg come after drought hit the winter wheat crop in Kansas, the top 
		growing state.
 
 The U.S. winter wheat harvest potential there has fallen by more than 
		25% due to severe drought. Kansas farmers may abandon thousands of acres 
		of wheat in fields this year, instead of paying to harvest the 
		drought-scorched grain.
 
 Back in North Dakota, it is too much water that is the problem. An 
		historic April blizzard left the state's expansive, pothole-dotted 
		fields under more than 3 feet (1 m) of snow in some areas, triggering 
		floods as the deluge melted.
 
 Grotberg has only been able to plant about 500 acres (200 hectares) with 
		wheat so far - just a quarter of the land he had aimed to sow - because 
		of the wet conditions.
 
 Seeds sown in soggy soils can struggle to emerge or come up unevenly, 
		while heavy farm machinery can tear up overly muddy fields, compact 
		soils or get lodged in the muck.
 
 Now, Grotberg's planting window is closing fast.
 
 Wheat planted too late in the spring is likely to yield less grain or be 
		at risk of frost before the crop fully ripens.
 
 "We're stuck ... Normally we're wrapping up wheat planting by this 
		time," Grotberg said.
 
 SLOWEST SPRING PLANTING SINCE 1996
 
 Soggy spring weather has all but ensured that the northern U.S. Plains 
		breadbasket will not produce a bumper crop this year.
 
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			Mark Nelson, a scout on the Wheat Quality Council's Kansas wheat 
			tour, checks a drought-hit winter wheat field near Hill City, 
			Kansas, U.S., May 17, 2022. Picture taken May 17, 2022. 
			REUTERS/Julie Ingwersen 
            
			
			
			 
            U.S. farmers have only seeded 49% of their intended 
			spring wheat acres as of May 22, matching 2014 for the slowest pace 
			since 1996, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.
 In North Dakota, which produces about half of U.S. spring wheat, 
			growers have planted just 27% of their crop, the second slowest pace 
			in four decades.
 
            "Some farmers have not turned a wheel yet," said 
			North Dakota Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring. "If North 
			Dakota is not able to get a substantial amount in, it's just going 
			to wreak more havoc on the global market."
 ABANDONING SHRIVELED WINTER WHEAT
 
 In the southern U.S. Plains, winter wheat farmers have received very 
			little rain and are concerned about the size of their harvest - or 
			if the shriveled plants will simply need to be plowed under.
 
 A private group touring wheat fields in Kansas in mid-May forecast 
			its harvest would shrink by 28% this year and more fields than 
			normal may go unharvested due to drought damage.
 
 About 6% of the state's planted acres would be abandoned, according 
			to the latest USDA estimates. But given the drought damage, Kansas 
			State University wheat agronomist Romulo Lollato thinks the 
			abandonment rate would be higher.
 
 "I would not be surprised if 8%, 9%, 10%" of planted acres are 
			abandoned this year, Lollato said.
 
 In neighboring Colorado, abandonment could top 30%, Colorado Wheat 
			Executive Director Brad Erker told tour participants.
 
 "Wheat yields are affected by weather in May, and we've had a really 
			dry May," said Kansas farmer Vance Ehmke. "The trend is not our 
			friend."
 
 DISAPPEARING WHEAT ACRES
 
 U.S. wheat output has been on longer-term decline as farmers favored 
			corn and soybean production, which are more lucrative due to demand 
			from biofuels producers. Seed science also has boosted their yields 
			by 30% or more since 2000, outpacing just 6% for wheat.
 
 Biofuels demand is likely to continue to erode wheat acres as two 
			new soy processing plants are set to open in eastern North Dakota, 
			including one by Archer-Daniels-Midland Company that will supply 
			Marathon Petroleum Corporation with soyoil for renewable diesel 
			fuel.
 
 
            
			 
			As the planting window in the northern Plains narrows, North Dakota 
			farmers are weighing options that include shifting to soybeans, 
			which can be sown later in the spring than wheat, or filing 
			prevented planting insurance claims.
 
 "It gets pretty tempting to file those claims," Grotberg said. "Once 
			you get into June, you might be lucky to get half a crop. And with 
			costs as high as they are, that's hard to stomach."
 
 (Reporting by Karl Plume in Chicago. Additional reporting by Julie 
			Ingwersen in Manhattan, Kansas. Editing by P.J. Huffstutter and 
			Marguerita Choy)
 
            
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