Wheat production in Bosnia and Herzegovina was reduced, flour and food prices will rise

Published Aug 2, 2023

Tridge summary

Bosnia and Herzegovina has experienced extreme weather conditions, including heavy rains, floods, and droughts, which has led to significantly reduced wheat, corn, and other crop production. The harvest for wheat in the Republic of Srpska has been below the multi-year average, with yields ranging from 3.5 to 5 tons per hectare. Additionally, Russia's withdrawal from the Black Sea grain export agreement is expected to impact grain and food prices in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Bosnia and Herzegovina's "Independent" reported on July 28. Bosnia and Herzegovina has been hit by heavy rains, floods and droughts this year, and the production of wheat, corn and other crops has been greatly reduced. The assistant minister of the Ministry of Agriculture of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bursaqi said that although the Republic of Srpska has about 47,000 95% of the hectares of wheat planted have been harvested, but yields are below the multi-year average. Wheat yields in the Semberia area are about 3.5 tons per hectare. Only in some plots where all agricultural technical measures have been taken, Yields just exceeded 5 tons per hectare. The average yield of wheat in ...
Source: Foodmate

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