India’s wheat and rapeseed ravaged by rain just before harvesting

Published 2024년 3월 5일

Tridge summary

India's winter-sown crops, including wheat, rapeseed, and chickpeas, have been damaged by untimely rainfall and hailstorms, causing delays in harvesting and potentially limiting wheat production growth. This could hinder the government's stock-building efforts and may necessitate wheat imports. The adverse weather conditions could also increase harvesting costs and result in lower rapeseed production, possibly forcing India to continue costly overseas purchases of edible oils.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Untimely rainfall and hailstorms have battered winter-sown crops, including wheat, rapeseed, and chickpeas in India’s main producing areas, delaying harvesting, industry and government officials told. Adverse weather could limit growth in wheat production and complicate the government’s efforts to build stocks. This year’s wheat harvest is critical for India, the world’s biggest producer of the grain after China. Hot and unseasonably warm weather cut India’s wheat output in 2022 and 2023, leading to a sharp drawdown in state reserves. A third straight poor harvest will leave no choice for India but to import some wheat. The government has so far resisted calls for wheat imports – a seemingly unpopular step ahead of a general election early this year. “The entire wheat crop has been flattened due to heavy rainfall and hailstorm. It was nearly mature, and we could have harvested it in two to three weeks,” said Mukesh Kumar, a farmer from Uttar Pradesh, the country’s largest producer ...

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