Australia: The cattle country blessed with rain this year and those who hurt the most

Published 2024년 12월 18일

Tridge summary

Beef producer sentiment has improved due to favorable short-term weather forecasts and continued improvement in soil moisture maps in key cattle regions. The lack of the predicted widespread El Nino weather pattern and varying rainfall amounts across cattle regions have significantly impacted producer fortunes in 2024. The Bureau of Meteorology's improved three-month outlook for many cattle regions has led to a decrease in destocking talks. In New South Wales (NSW), the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) anticipates a 14% increase in the gross value of production across all primary production sectors for the current financial year. This is supported by stronger production in key sectors such as red meat and crops. The Department also expects that improved conditions for the coming season will lead to further growth in GVP.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Many of the issues that plagued beef producer sentiment this time last year have faded, not the least of which is the seasonal outlook. A short-term weather forecast for relatively good conditions and soil moisture maps showing continued improvement across many key cattle regions should encourage producers to invest where there is feed to take advantage of. While the widespread El Nino weather pattern that many were factoring in at the end of last year didn't eventuate, the extremity of what various cattle regions received in terms of rain marked beef producer fortunes in 2024. The cumulative rainfall for key cattle regions put together by agriculture commodity experts at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia shows some areas received well above the ten-year average for their part of the world. Specialist weaner country in north eastern NSW received triple the rain it had the previous year while Dalby in Queensland got well over half. Charters Towers in Queensland, however, ...
Source: Farmweekly

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