South Africa's wheat crop looks promising from a distance

Loading player...
On August 10, we drove across the Swartland region of the Western Cape from the Karoo side of the Northern Cape. As we entered the Western Cape, I couldn't miss the excellent sight of the wheat fields from a distance.

And yes, I appreciate that the Western Cape has received excessive rain recently; the picture certainly is not all rosy. Some fields have puddles of water, which may undermine the crop's growth potential. Our members in the area tell me that the southern regions of Swartland may be too wet, and the northern regions should do well.

South Africa's Crop Estimates Committee will release the area planted estimate and first production forecast for this season's crop on August 28. We will know more about the production prospects then.

What we know at the moment is that South Africa's preliminary area plantings for wheat are at 502k hectares, down by 7% from the 2023/24 season. This is the lowest area planting in seven years. The sharpest declines in area plantings are in the Free State and Limpopo.

The Western and Northern Cape provinces show a minor decline in area plantings. Other provinces, which are relatively small producers, such as the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga, also show a mild decrease in area plantings.

The major decline in winter wheat plantings in the Free State and Limpopo is unsurprising. The northern regions of South Africa experienced a harsh mid-summer drought, which led to significant crop losses. The farmers in some of these regions are under financial strain and, thus, understandably reluctant to increase the winter wheat plantings.

Moreover, the wheat prices have moderated this year, down by roughly 5% year-on-year. Therefore, in an environment with reduced soil moisture because of the mid-summer drought, lower wheat prices, and some financial pressures, farmers are likely focused on utilising more area plantings for the 2024/25 summer crop plantings that start in October 2024.

If weather conditions, particularly in the Western Cape, remain favourable for the rest of the season and we achieve a five-year average yield of 3,78 tonnes per hectare in the area of 502k hectares, then we could have a winter wheat harvest of 1.89-million tonnes. This would also be down 7% year-on-year and well below the five-year average winter wheat harvest of 2.02-million tonnes.

Podcast production by Richard Humphries, and Sam Mkokeli

My writing on agricultural economic matters is available on my blog: https://wandilesihlobo.com/
13 Aug English South Africa Investing · Food

Other recent episodes

SA sees robust agricultural exports

I am starting to believe that South Africa’s 2024 agricultural exports may reach a new record high and surpass the 2023 record level of US$13, 2 billion. The better prices and output in various fruits, red meat, wool, and wine will be the major driver of the improvement in exports…
13 Dec 13 min

There is rising optimism in South Africa’s farming sector

We continue to observe the rising optimism in South Africa’s farming and agribusiness sectors. For example, the Agbiz/IDC Agribusiness Confidence Index (ACI), a sentiment indicator in the sector, increased by 10 points from Q3 to 58 in Q4. This is the second consecutive improvement, placing the ACI at its highest…
9 Dec 15 min

South Africa eases a path for possible maize imports from the US

South Africa’s decision to ease possible maize imports from the U.S. is not necessarily bad. It is a “safety option” in recognition that our white maize supplies are tight. We also face strong demand from broader Southern Africa, whose maize production is down massively because of the drought earlier this…
1 Dec 16 min

The easing agricultural trade friction in SACU is crucial

The Southern African region has experienced agricultural trade friction in the past few years. Namibia and Botswana placed a ban on the imports of South African vegetables and citrus. Simply put, the rationale of both Namibia and Botswana was that the import ban ensures that their domestic producers are not…
24 Nov 12 min

SA's agricultural employment improves

While the 2023-24 mid-summer drought has been the central theme of the downbeat performance of South Africa's agriculture this year, we see a welcome positive change in the jobs data. Statistics South Africa data show that primary agriculture employment improved by 4% from the previous quarter to 935k jobs in…
19 Nov 12 min