Canada crop tour sees smaller canola crop after reduced plantings, dry spring

Published: August 1, 2019

,

A canola field blooms in Manitoba’s Interlake on July 11, 2019.  (Greg Berg photo)

Winnipeg | Reuters – Canadian farmers are likely to reap a smaller canola crop in 2019-20 due to reduced plantings and dry conditions, consultancy FarmLink Marketing Solutions said on Thursday after a crop tour of the prairie provinces.

The Grain World tour on Tuesday and Wednesday, organized by FarmLink, visited fields in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba to observe conditions and calculate yield estimates.

Dry conditions parched soils across much of the Canadian Prairies for three years, raising fears about this year’s crops surviving, until rains fell in June and July.

Read Also

In 2024, 55 per cent of Canadian fruit and vegetable preserving and specialty food were imported according to Farm Credit Canada’s 2025 food and beverage report. That category includes frozen and canned vegetables and fruit, pickling and drying. Photo: Juanmonino/Getty Images Plus

Canadian trade tribunal to examine imports of frozen, canned vegetables

Canadian officials will look into whether global imports of frozen and canned vegetables are threatening Canadian growers and processors.

“To kill the crop, you need persistent drought. The early season drought may have cut the top end off yield, but crops can recover,” according toFarmLink’s presentation in Regina, Saskatchewan.

FarmLink estimated an average Canadian canola yield of 39.9 bushels per acre in 2019-20, up slightly from 39.8 bushels a year earlier. The crop may produce 19 million tonnes, down from 20.3 million a year ago, after farmers planted less.

Crops looked above average in Saskatchewan, Canada’s main crop-producing province, and more variable in Manitoba and Alberta, FarmLink said. Canola crops, many of which were planted late, are at risk of damage from an early season frost, the company said.

ICE Canada November canola futures dropped 0.6 percent.

The crop tour estimated an average Canadian wheat yield, excluding durum, of 52.1 bushels per acre, the same as last year.

explore

Stories from our other publications