Mustard supply evaporates following drought in Canada

게시됨 2022년 1월 14일

Tridge 요약

2021 was a challenging year for Canadian mustard growers, with yields at about 40% of normal and a total production of 50,000 tonnes, due to insufficient rainfall and high temperatures. This resulted in a significant decrease in mustard seed availability in North America, leading to increased prices and potential incentives for increased production in 2022. Canadian farmers are expected to seed 400,000 acres of mustard in 2022, up from 308,000 in 2021, drawn by the crop's profitability and the introduction of high-yielding hybrids. The increased mustard production could help Canada regain a larger share of the global mustard seed market, which has seen growth but dominance by Russia in recent years.
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원본 콘텐츠

Simply put, 2021 was not a good year for mustard growers. The average yield was about 40 percent of normal and Canadian farmers only produced 50,000 tonnes of mustard seed — a fraction of the typical output. "It's the smallest crop for decades… in Western Canada," said Chuck Penner, owner of LeftField Commodity Research, who spoke at the annual meeting of SaskMustard, held Jan. 13. The shortfall of rain and extremely hot temperatures — with 27 days above 30 C last summer in southwestern Saskatchewan — took a severe toll on mustard yields. Saskatchewan Agriculture estimated the provincial yield at 431 pounds per acre. In the southwest, where most mustard is grown, the average yield was 383 lb. per acre. That's a fraction of the 10-year average for the province, of 1,024 lb. per acre. Consequently, total output was way below average. Between 2014 and 2019, Canada produced 120,000 to 220,000 tonnes of mustard seed. With poor production in Saskatchewan and an equally bad crop in North ...

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