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The most relevant industry news curated specifically for Idaho’s wheat growers.

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Latest News

Wheat Production in Argentina Continues to Decline

Due to widespread dry conditions, Argentina’s wheat production forecast for the 2023-24 marketing year has been revised lower in the most recent Global Agricultural Information Network report from the US Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS). The FAS dropped its projections for Argentine wheat output by 2 million tonnes from the previous forecast to 14.5 million tonnes. If realized, the total would still be 2 million tonnes higher than the country’s 2022-23 drought-stricken crop. Argentina, typically the largest wheat producer and exporter in South America, is in the midst of a three-year stretch of dry conditions.

U.S. Winter Wheat Health Starts 2024 Season at Four-Year High

It has been a few years since the United States has had a truly good winter wheat harvest, though the 2024 crop could be on its way despite lingering drought in top states. In its first assessment of the growing season, the U.S. Department of Agriculture rated 47% of the domestic wheat crop as good or excellent (GE) as of Sunday, the date’s best since 2019 and above the recent five-year average of 44%. That is substantially better than last year’s initial rating of 28% GE, which was by far the worst start for winter wheat since conditions began in 1986. Come April, the 2023 crop still carried some of the worst-ever ratings, seemingly guaranteeing a terrible harvest was looming.

U.S. Farm Leaders, Visiting China, Talk Up Agricultural Trade

Dozens of U.S. agriculture industry representatives gathered in Beijing on Thursday to meet Chinese counterparts amid growing U.S. efforts to bolster farm trade even as political ties between their two countries remain strained. A delegation from 11 groups including the U.S. Soybean Export Council, U.S. Grains Council and U.S. Wheat Associates is visiting a week after Chinese grain buyers signed non-binding agreements in Iowa to buy billions of dollars worth of produce, mostly soybeans, the first such signing since 2017.

Russia-China Grain Deal Raises Concerns

Competition may be heating up big time in one of Canada’s top markets for grain, oilseeds and pulses. Russian grain exporting company Food Export Trade LLC (FET) signed what is reported to be a US$26 billion contract to supply China with 70 million tonnes of grain, pulses and oilseeds over the next 12 years...Grain in the FET megadeal would be routed through Grain Terminal Zabaikalsk, a grain railway terminal at Russia’s border with China’s Inner Mongolia, according to the website.

Farm Bill Action Expected with New Speaker in Place

With new House Speaker Mike Johnson on the job, work on the new farm bill is expected to ramp up. In October, Johnson, R-La., stated in a letter to colleagues that he wanted the House to pass a farm bill in December and await Senate action, with negotiations to begin "as soon as possible." Chandler Goule, CEO of the National Association of Wheat Growers, said the House and Senate agriculture committees continued to work on the bill during the leadership shuffle. Goule estimated that the new bill could go to President Joe Biden in the first quarter of 2024.

ISDA Announces Idaho Farm and Ranch Conference

The Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) announced today the Idaho Farm and Ranch Conference January 4-5, 2024 in Boise. The Idaho Farm and Ranch Conference is a free event for producers, agribusinesses, organizations, and community leaders to exchange knowledge and expertise that position Idaho agriculture for success. The conference will address key issues affecting Idaho producers including managing finances, succession and stress on the farm.

New Secret Plan Proposed in Snake River Dam Lawsuit

The U.S. government and plaintiffs in a lawsuit against management of the four lower Snake River dams say they have developed a “package of actions and commitments” that they hope to present in court by Dec. 15. Agricultural stakeholders say they have no idea what’s in the package, including whether it calls for breaching the dams. A coalition of environmental and fishing groups in 2020 sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and Bonneville Power Administration over their dam operations plan.

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