Rising global wheat prices make pasta and bread expensive

Published 2021년 9월 9일

Tridge summary

The article highlights the global issue of decreasing wheat supplies, caused by adverse weather conditions in major producing countries like Russia, the US, and Canada, leading to a significant reduction in wheat production. This situation is further worsened by export restrictions imposed by countries such as Russia and Belarus, resulting in a surge in wheat prices. The price increase is affecting the cost of end products in importing countries like Egypt, France, Italy, and Turkey. The USDA anticipates a significant drop in durum wheat supplies, with both Canadian and US exports expected to reach their lowest levels since MY1964-65. However, the EU and Mexico are looking to capitalize on this opportunity by increasing their durum wheat production. The article also notes that while wheat prices may experience a short-term plateau, uncertainties in production due to drought and lack of clear information will continue to influence the market direction.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

With concerns over tightening wheat supply across major producers, end products such as bread and pasta in importing nations are becoming costlier. Apart from a likely decline in supply, export regulations imposed by countries like Russia and Belarus are also seen supporting wheat prices. Global wheat supplies are seen shrinking across key exporters Russia, the US and Canada due to weather vagaries like drought or floods. Led by reductions in these major countries, the US Department of Agriculture has lowered world wheat supply estimates for MY2020-21 by 16.8 million mt to 1.066 billion mt. For Russia, the top producer, wheat output was reduced 12.5 million mt to 72.5 million mt on a likely smaller winter wheat harvest due to frost during February-March, said USDA. Russian wheat is typically used for baked goods. Canada’s wheat production was lowered by 7.5 million mt to a 10-year low of 24 million mt on drought across the Prairie provinces during July. The country is the biggest ...

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