Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

An end to El Niño and likely return of La Niña

Major weather forecaster­s, including the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Climate and Society ( IRI) and the Australian Bureau of Meteorolog­y, recently confirmed this view.

- Dailymaver­ick.co.za/ www.

We are currently in a neutral state, where neither El Niño nor La Niña is active. Hope beyond El Niño: winter crop prospects

While an end to an El Niño is always a welcome developmen­t, it comes at a time when the 2023/24 summer crop season is at its tail end. Therefore, this update on weather conditions will not have a material impact on harvest prospects.

If anything, ending an El Niño cycle would mean a normal transition into a winter season.

Such normal weather conditions would favour the drying up of mature crops in the summer crop- growing regions, as well as improved harvesting conditions. It would also mean normal to favourable weather conditions for the winter crop- growing regions.

So far, farmers have witnessed the damage of unfavourab­le weather conditions during the 2023/24 season and are cautious about the 2024/25 winter crop season.

For example, the farmers’ intentions- to- plant data released by the Crop Estimates Committee this past week signalled a 3 percent year- on-year decline in South Africa’s 2024/25 winter crop plantings to 798,800 hectares. This figure comprises possible plantings for wheat, barley, canola, oats and sweet lupines.

The decline in the area is primarily in wheat, which is down 3 percent year on year to 520,200 hectares. The barley plantings could also fall 5 percent year on year to 102,000 hectares, and the oats plantings could be at 20,500 hectares (down 26 percent year on year) and sweet lupines at 15,000 hectares (down 6 percent year on year). Canola is the only winter crop whose area plantings could lift 8 percent year on year to 141,100 hectares.

Admittedly, it is still early and farmers will adjust their planting decisions in the coming weeks as they progress with the seasonal activity.

The need for cautious optimism

Beyond the near-term winter crop season, the weather outlook for the 2024/25 summer season is also positive. The IRI forecasts the return of a La Niña weather phenomenon from May 2024 throughout the year.

This means the excessivel­y hot and drier weather conditions of the 2023/24 summer season that resulted in crop failures may have been temporary.

In the coming months, we could soon transition into a favourable rainy season for South Africa’s agricultur­e. However, it is too early to be confident about the outlook.

Still, the rise in the probabilit­y of La Niña occurrence to over 50 percent from August 2024 throughout the year is a source of optimism.

The 2024/25 summer crop season will start in October, and if the current La Niña forecasts hold, South Africa should receive early rains during that period to support the season.

Admittedly, farmers across South Africa are focused on the current 2023/24 summer crop season. The yield prospects are bleak for various regions.

The financial impact of the poor 2023/24 summer crop season on farmers will be more evident over the coming weeks and months as the market receives crop deliveries.

Therefore, while the weather outlook for the 2024/25 season looks promising, this may be something that farmers will pay attention to after the harvest season of the current crop. By then, we will also better understand whether La Niña will extend into 2025 and for how long.

The current forecasts only apply until December 2024. The early months of 2025 are vital for summer crops.

For example, the 2023/24 summer crop season started well, with favourable rainfall. It was only in February that the problem of dryness and heat waves intensifie­d through to March. This twomonth event changed the agricultur­al fortunes of the country for the worse.

Still, after a challengin­g 2023/24 summer season, the and the Australian Bureau of Meteorolog­y signal the end of El Niño. Notably, the return of La Niña is an even more welcome developmen­t for agricultur­e.

While we primarily reflected on crops in this note, the positive weather outlook is for all agricultur­al activity in the entire southern Africa region. We will keep monitoring these developmen­ts over the coming months.

 ?? ?? After a scorching summer that led to significan­t crop failure, the El Niño cycle seems to have ended
After a scorching summer that led to significan­t crop failure, the El Niño cycle seems to have ended

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe