Trade4go Summary
The European Union's (EU) corn harvest is projected to be 59 million tons, marking an 8% decrease from the five-year average, with Hungary, Romania, and Serbia's corn-growing regions particularly impacted by drought. The total wheat harvest is also expected to decline, with the EU's harvest adjusted to 124 million tons, 8% below the five-year average. France experienced the most significant wheat losses, while Ukraine's wheat yields decreased by 7% but harvested area increased, resulting in a total wheat production of 22 million tons. Sunflower oil production in Ukraine has been reduced from 5.2 million tons to 4.8 million tons, and the EU has increased its sunflower oil imports from 2.4 to 2.8 million tons.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.
Original content
The European Union (EU) corn harvest is estimated to be 59 million tons this year, the expected amount "melted" by 1.5 million tons during August, and it already looks 8 percent worse than the five-year average. At the EU level, the yield average is 6.86 tons compared to last year's 7.47 t/ha. (The five-year average is 7.2 t/ha.). The USDA report also includes a map of Europe's August NDVI image. According to this, the corn-growing regions of Hungary, Romania and Serbia were most affected by the drought. This means that the processors' plan to supplement the domestic harvest from Serbia will be far from cheap. In Romania, about one million tons of corn was destroyed in one month, the total crop is now estimated at 7.8 million tons. In good years, the country produces twice as much, 14–17 million tons, even surpassing the French output. This year, however, the Gauls will harvest 14 million tons, exceeding last year's result by 9-10 percent. In Hungary, the expected quantity was ...