Turkey’s durum exports expected to fall

Published 2025년 12월 1일

Tridge summary

A major competitor in the durum market is fading away, according to reports. Turkey stunned the market in 2023-24 when it came out of nowhere and exported 1.6 million tonnes of the cereal crop. Exports fell to 700,000 tonnes the following year, but that was still well above its typical export program of about 150,000

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tonnes. It appears that the 2025-26 program will be closer to normal, at around 200,000 tonnes, according to the Saskatchewan Wheat Development Commission’s recent Wheat Market Outlook and Prices report. Annachiara Saguatti, analyst with Arete, an Italian agri-food intelligence company, said that aligns with their estimate of 200,000 to 300,000 tonnes. “The pullback looks real,” she said in an email. Why it Matters: Canada harvested a huge crop and needs all the help it can get. The two-year stretch of unusually large exports was driven by a combination of better domestic availability, tight global supplies and a favourable export policy environment. However, conditions have flip-flopped. The Turkish Grain Board (TMO) bought durum aggressively at high prices of about US$351 per tonne earlier this year to help offset rising input costs and inflation, said Saguatti. That led to strong domestic sales, leaving less product for export. With intense domestic inflation Turkey’s export ...

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