Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Heat scorches wheat supplies, adding to food shortage woes

- Bloomberg

NEW DELHI: A blistering heat wave has scorched wheat fields in India, reducing yields in the second-biggest grower and damping expectatio­ns for exports that the world is relying on to alleviate a global shortage.

Temperatur­es soared in March to the highest ever for the month on record going back to 1901, shriveling India’s wheat crop during a crucial growth period. That’s spurring estimates that yields have slumped 10% to 50% this season, according to almost two dozen farmers and local government officials surveyed by Bloomberg.

This could be a serious blow to global wheat supplies after Russia’s war in Ukraine upended trade flows out of the critical Black Sea breadbaske­t region, prompting warnings of food shortages. Importing nations are looking to India for supplies, with the first shipment being prepared for top buyer Egypt. Lower production would jeopardize India’s ability to make up for the shortfall.

The food and commerce minister predicted that India will export 15 million tons of wheat in FY23, a record high and double what it shipped last year. The scorching heat has thrown that into doubt. It’s also raising concerns for the domestic market, with millions depending on farming as their main livelihood. Weaker production will lead to a drop in farmers’ income, squeezing margins just as costs of fertilizer and fuel have soared.

Ajay Vir Jakhar, chairman of Bharat Krishak Samaj, an associatio­n of farmers, expects yields to drop by an average of 15% across India due to the heat. Another wheat grower, Manish Tokas, said output at his 21-acre farm in Haryana shrank by a third. He plans to hold on to his crop for a few months in anticipati­on that prices will rise, helping to offset lower production.

Wheat is very sensitive to heat. High temperatur­es in March shortened the important grain filling period, reducing the weight of the crop, according to K.K. Singh, head of the agromet division at India Meteorolog­ical Department. Farmers should sow wheat early as the intensity and frequency of hot weather will increase in the coming years, he said.

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