Drought in Turkey may reduce grain harvest

According to the Turkish Meteorological Service, the country’s rainfall from October 2024 to January 2025 was 39.6% lower than the same period the previous year and 28.4% lower than the 1991–2020 average. The moisture deficit over the past four months could lead to a decrease in the country’s grain harvest for the second year in a row.
Crops in the southeastern regions bordering Syria and Iraq, which are the main winter crop growing areas, are the most affected by the drought. In Central Anatolia, the largest wheat-producing region, which provides about 31% of the country’s total harvest, average rainfall from October to January was 49% lower than in the same period in MY 2023/24.
According to USDA, in the MY 2024/25, Turkey harvested 19 million tons of wheat from an area of 7.25 million hectares with an average yield of 2.62 tons/hectare, while in the MY 2023/24, 21 million tons of wheat were harvested from an area of 7.2 million hectares with an average yield of 2.92 tons/hectare.
Despite the reduction in production in MY 2024/25, grain stocks in the country remain higher than usual. Domestic wheat consumption is expected to increase compared to MY 2023/24 from 19.7 to 20 million tons, primarily due to an increase in grain use in feed by 1 million tons to 1.3 million tons.
Further development of the grain sector in the Black Sea and Danube region will be discussed at the 23 International Conference BLACK SEA GRAIN.KYIV on April 24 in Kyiv.
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