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Satellites suggest soy crop will be lowest since 2018

- BY JONATHAN GILBERT

With many crop traders focusing on Argentina’s drought, one forecaster has tapped satellite imagery to make the bold prediction that the nation’s upcoming soybean harvest may plunge to a five-year low.

Mickael Attia, a crop analyst with Earthdaily Analytics, sees the soy harvest in the second quarter shrinking to 36.9 million metric tons. That’s well below the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange’s estimate of 48 million tons, and would be at a level not seen by the bourse since 2018. Argentina is the biggest exporter of soy meal and soy oil.

“It’s a little bit aggressive, especially if there’s a change in the weather pattern in February, but right now it makes sense given the frightenin­gly low moisture levels,” Attia said in an interview.

His Vancouver-based firm is part of a mushroomin­g satellite-analytics industry that is increasing­ly being drawn into crop forecastin­g, usually in conjunctio­n with on-the-field accounts since images and algorithms alone can’t tell the whole story. Argentine crops are in a tough spot after La Niña caused drought to farmlands, ravaged wheat and forced growers to delay soy and corn planting.

With fieldwork still getting finished and the possibilit­y of rain in a few weeks, other prognostic­ators have yet to revise preseason estimates. The US Department of Agricultur­e estimated the soy harvest at 49.5 million tons, though it is set to update its outlook Thursday. The Rosario Board of Trade, whose forecasts tend to lead other institutio­ns, is scheduled to publish its monthly report imminently. Rosario and the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange use farmer surveys.

While many soy plants are in bad shape, La Niña is fading. That should in theory make way for rainfall at the end of January and early February — during yield-defining growth stages — that could save the crop.

Earthdaily Analytics also predicts an Argentine maize crop of 45.4 million tons, compared to a 50 million estimate from the Buenos Aires exchange and the USDA’S 55 million forecast. Argentina is the world’s third-biggest corn exporter.

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