The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Cereals market outlook in focus at online event

ARABLE: Wheat crop predicted to be smallest since millennium

- NANCY NICOLSON FARMING EDITOR nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Challengin­g cereals markets, the loss of convention­al chemistry and the policy pressures springing from the climate and biodiversi­ty crisis will all be tacked by scientists and economists at today’s online Arable Scotland event.

Overshadow­ing all other issues, the AHDB will unveil its latest cereals market outlook which forecasts the UK will be a net importer of wheat but an exporter of barley this year.

The levy body’s director for cereals and oilseeds, Dr Martin Grantley-Smith, told a pre-event briefing that the export of barley was likely to take place early in the season as exporters race to beat any tariff impacts that could be introduced from January 1.

AHDB forecasts the UK’s wheat crop will be the smallest since the millennium, while the barley crop will be close to the annual average of around eight million tonnes.

Dr Grantley-Smith added: “But there is also potentiall­y a high turnover (of barley) from last harvest, which will lead to high domestic supplies looking for a home. We also have to face the fact that there’s a global surplus of maize.

“It’s going to be cheap, and potentiall­y with zero import tariff into the UK, and this cheap, accessible maize could be very attractive to UK feed compounder­s.”

Prof Fiona Burnett of SRUC said the season’s weather extremes, together with challenges to convention­al chemistry, the loss of pesticides and market pressures, amounted to “a lot” for arable growers to digest. Her session will focus on integrated pest management and emerging chemistry.

The event timetable includes a 10am session on alternativ­e crops and sustainabl­e future production systems; and a 1pm discussion on new entrants and routes into arable production, and alternativ­e crops.

A question-and-answer session on the challenges of net-zero at 5pm is followed at 6.30pm by economists and food experts discussing alternativ­e markets and new product opportunit­ies.

A session on plant health, contrastin­g New Zealand and UK experience­s on new products, pesticides and sustainabl­e practices, starts at 8pm.

Visit arablescot­land.org.uk to register and to see the full programme.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck. ?? AHDB forecasts the UK will be a net importer of wheat but an exporter of barley this year.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck. AHDB forecasts the UK will be a net importer of wheat but an exporter of barley this year.

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