Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

El Niño worries Asian rice market

Bad weather threatens crop production, global supply

- BEN SHARPLES AND ANURADHA RAGHU Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Eko Listiyorin­i of Bloomberg News.

El Niño has started to cause some concerns in Asia, and it’s a strained rice market that’s facing the first test from the weather phenomenon.

The market has already been upended by export restrictio­ns from top shipper India and drier weather threatens to cause more chaos. Any loss of production risks tightening global supply, and could prompt a renewed rally in prices which have cooled recently from the highest in almost 15 years.

Across Asia, nations are warning about the impact. Major importer Indonesia has flagged a marginal hit to output, while Vietnam has told farmers to plant their next crop earlier than usual to avoid water shortages. The Philippine­s is also giving aid to growers to cope with the weather as rice inflation soars.

The weather worries rippling across the rice market are the first signs of real concerns about the potential hit from the cyclical phenomenon. This can parch crops, strain power grids, affect fishing and cut off access to mines due to flooding across regions from Asia and Africa to South America.

“Many crops, especially those highly dependent on water supply, will be badly affected by El Niño,” said Muhamad Shakirin Mispan, an associate professor at Universiti Malaya’s Institute of Biological Sciences. Lower output from key producers will “significan­tly impact global rice supply, affecting not only Southeast Asia but also reverberat­ing across the world,” he added.

The rice market has seen weeks of turmoil after India ramped up restrictio­ns on its shipments in late July. The move has worried government­s from Asia to Africa, led to a flurry of supply deals and diplomacy, prompted warnings about hoarding and fueled inflation in the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

El Niño usually brings hotter and drier weather across parts of Asia and can lead to drought and wildfires. Indonesia plans to import more of the grain this year and next, and says its 2023 output may drop by 1.2 million tons. Unhusked rice production was expected at 54.5 million tons, slightly lower than 2022.

Vietnam, the third-biggest rice exporter, asked growers in a section of the Mekong Delta that accounts for 26% of the region’s winter-spring crop to start planting from early this month, rather than November.

The directive was given to avoid water shortages at the end of the harvest, in part due to El Niño.

El Niño is a naturally occurring phenomenon, but it’s coinciding with more extreme and hotter weather due to the impact of increasing greenhouse gas emissions on the climate. The global average temperatur­e in September broke the heat record after the warmest Northern Hemisphere summer ever.

Persistent dry conditions may lead to more forest fires in Southeast Asia in the coming weeks, according to Carl Bek-Nielsen, chief executive director of Malaysian oil palm planter United Plantation­s Bhd. “In situations like this, it’s simply inevitable,” he said earlier this month.

Australia expects El Niño to persist until at least the end of February, and ranchers are expected to prepare for the drier conditions by ramping up cow sales for slaughter.

That’s weighed on the Eastern Young Cattle Indicator, a benchmark price, which recently tumbled to the lowest level in nine years.

Some crops do benefit from El Niño, such as almonds and avocados in California that get higher rains, but many food staples from rice, cocoa, sugar, wheat and palm oil tend to face more challengin­g growing conditions.

 ?? (Bloomberg/Soichiro Koriyama) ?? A farmer checks harvested rice grain on a truck in a paddy field in Uonuma, Niigata Prefecture, Japan, in September.
(Bloomberg/Soichiro Koriyama) A farmer checks harvested rice grain on a truck in a paddy field in Uonuma, Niigata Prefecture, Japan, in September.

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