Rising La Nina to deepen US Plains drought, NOAA says

By Karl Plume

CHICAGO (Reuters) – A developing La Nina is expected to bring warmer- and drier-than-normal weather to the central and southern U.S. Plains this winter, likely worsening a drought in the country’s top winter wheat-producing area, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said on Thursday.

U.S. farmers are currently planting winter wheat that they aim to harvest early next summer amid an expanding drought that has raised concerns about harvest prospects and elevated prices recently to 3-1/2-month peaks.

Dryness in the Plains and other key wheat areas around the world, including top-exporter Russia, is expected to thin global supplies of the staple crop to the lowest in nine years, according to the latest U.S. Department of Agriculture forecast. The United States is the world’s fifth largest wheat exporter.

“We anticipate widespread moderate to extreme drought will persist across much of the Great Plains and portions of the central Rocky Mountains,” Jon Gottschalck, operational prediction branch chief at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center, said as the agency released its winter weather outlook.

Drought expanded this week to encompass 52% of U.S. winter wheat areas, up from 44% two weeks ago, according to National Drought Mitigation Center data.

While the Plains are likely to remain dry, a wetter pattern in the Great Lakes and Ohio River Valley regions should help boost Mississippi River water levels later this winter, NOAA said.

Such a rise could aid barge shipping in the biggest U.S. grains export corridor after historically low water disrupted crop movement for a third straight harvest season this year.

“That will be very helpful for the Mississippi River as a whole because a large fraction of that (water) comes from the Ohio River and the central Mississippi River Valley,” Gottschalck said.

The Mississippi River at Memphis, Tennessee, is forecast to recede by the end of this month to within less than three feet of an all-time low set a year ago, according to NOAA data.

This post is originally published on INVESTING.

  • Related Posts

    Oil steady as investors watch Trump 2.0 policies

    By Arathy Somasekhar (Reuters) – Oil prices were little changed in early trading on Wednesday as markets weighed U.S. President Donald Trump’s declaration of a national energy emergency on his…

    Asia FX extends fall on Trump tariff fears; ringgit jumps on BNM rate hold bets

    Investing.com – Most Asian currencies extended losses on Wednesday as investors remained cautious ahead of potential new U.S. tariffs under Donald Trump’s administration, while the Malaysian ringgit jumped on expectations…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Revolut Automates Investment: Launches Robo-Advisor in Singapore

    • January 22, 2025
    Revolut Automates Investment: Launches Robo-Advisor in Singapore

    Interactive Brokers’ Q4 2024 Revenue Increased by 22%: Spent $9M on Ads

    • January 22, 2025
    Interactive Brokers’ Q4 2024 Revenue Increased by 22%: Spent $9M on Ads

    Oil steady as investors watch Trump 2.0 policies

    • January 22, 2025
    Oil steady as investors watch Trump 2.0 policies

    Asia FX extends fall on Trump tariff fears; ringgit jumps on BNM rate hold bets

    • January 22, 2025
    Asia FX extends fall on Trump tariff fears; ringgit jumps on BNM rate hold bets

    Oil prices steady as markets weigh Trump production outlook, tighter supplies

    • January 22, 2025
    Oil prices steady as markets weigh Trump production outlook, tighter supplies

    Oil prices steady as investors debate Trump 2.0 policies

    • January 22, 2025
    Oil prices steady as investors debate Trump 2.0 policies