Ukraine plans same 2024 sowing area as 2023, has concerns on wheat
quality -minister
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[February 09, 2024]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) - Ukraine expects its 2024 spring sowing area to be the
same as last year, though it could see a slight decrease in the worst
case scenario, Agriculture Minister Mykola Solsky told Reuters on
Friday.
Ukraine is a major global grain and oilseeds producer but its harvests
have decreased since Russia invaded and occupied significant swathes of
territory. The war, now in its 24th month and with no end in sight, has
driven up global grain prices and disrupted supplies, especially to
poorer countries.
"I don't expect any drastic changes in terms of sowing area. If the
sowing area is smaller, it will be a very insignificant decrease,"
Solsky said in an interview, providing the first official outlook for
the 2024 sowing season.
Ukrainian farmers sowed a total of 12.75 million hectares of spring
crops for the 2023 harvest, including 5.7 million hectares of various
grains.
The acreage included 4 million hectares of corn, 5.3 million hectares of
sunflower and 1.78 million hectares of soy beans.
Solsky said farmers had sown a smaller area of winter wheat last autumn
due to poor weather and this could force them to increase the area sown
to spring wheat. Ukraine sowed 280,000 hectares of spring wheat last
year.
Ukraine sowed 4.2 million hectares of winter wheat for the 2024 harvest
versus around 4.4 million hectares a year earlier.
"There will definitely be no increase in the overall sowing area. I
admit its reduction, and the question immediately arises what to sow
then? We have three options only - sunflower, soy and corn," the
minister said.
He said farmers would try to increase the area sown to soy, but a lack
of high quality soy seeds could prove a serious obstacle. He also noted
that relatively low sunflower seed prices and a mandatory crop rotation
would prevent a future increase in the area sown to sunflowers.
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A worker loads a truck with grain at a terminal during barley
harvesting in Odesa region, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues,
Ukraine June 23, 2022. REUTERS/Igor Tkachenko/File Photo
Ukraine harvested around 28.7 million metric tons of corn in the
2023 harvest, threshing almost 91% of the sown area. Some corn still
remains unharvested in the fields.
QUALITY CONCERNS
Solsky said farmers' shortage of funds caused by the war and
difficulties with exports had forced them to save money and use
lower quality wheat seed.
He said winter wheat had survived the winter so far without serious
damage but the quality of the future harvest was unclear.
"There is one problem - it seems to me that our seeds are getting
worse and worse," Solsky said.
"It seems to me that farmers are saving money on winter wheat
seeds... and (this is) one of the reasons for the worse quality of
wheat."
Ukrainian farmers' incomes have declined significantly due to
difficulties in exporting the 2022 and 2023 harvests resulting from
limited shipping capacity from seaports and the expensive logistics
of using land corridors.
It is crucial for Ukraine to preserve its farming industry. Before
Russia's full-scale invasion, Ukraine was the world's fourth-largest
grain supplier and in value terms the commodity accounted for half
of all Ukrainian exports.
Ukraine harvested almost 110 million metric tons of grains and
oilseeds before the war, but in 2023 the combined harvest had fallen
to just over 81 million tons because much of the territory was
occupied or mined.
(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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