China’s wheat deficit

Published August 19, 2013

CHINA’S growing wheat imports could soon make it the world’s top importer, although such a change is not expected to push global wheat prices higher, industry experts said.

Frost in spring and wet weather in May and June will cut China’s wheat output by 2.6 million metric tonnes to 118 million tonnes in wheat-producing provinces such as Henan, Anhui, Jiangsu and Shaanxi this year, said a report released by the foreign agricultural service of the US Department of Agriculture.

China has long maintained its food security by producing 95 per cent of its grain consumption. However, the nation’s growing demand for wheat imports is causing some concern that China is likely to replace Egypt to become the world’s largest wheat importing nation.

But Ding Shengjun, a senior researcher at the Academy of the State Administration of Grain, said China’s rising wheat imports aim to refurbish its inventories, which are aging and need to be replaced with better quality wheat.

China Grain Reserves Corp, which manages China’s central government reserves, began to renew its stock and use the previous wheat stores for feed in May.

The country’s wheat imports nearly tripled to 3.68 million tonnes in 2012 compared with the previous year, according to the General Administration of Customs.

A senior economist at the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations Abdolreza Abbassian said people should be aware of the difference between China and Egypt.

“While Egypt imports almost 50 per cent of its domestic consumption requirements, wheat imports by China, even if they were to increase to 8.5 million tonnes, that would still represent not more than seven per cent of its total domestic requirement,” said Abbassian.

The Food and Agriculture Organisation forecast that China’s wheat imports for the 2013-14 crop year will hit five million tonnes. The forecast was based on June and July trade figures, which will be two million tonnes above the 2012-13 levels.

China imported 1.36 million tonnes of wheat in the first half of this year.

Australia’s Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry said it exported 426,000 tonnes of wheat to China in the first five months.

The China National Grain and Oils Information Centre said the country has placed a wheat order for 1.5 million tonnes from Australia in the past weeks.

“The reduction of China’s wheat output has offered export opportunities for major wheat producers throughout the world,” said Wen Tiejun, dean of the school of agricultural economics and rural development at Renmin University of China in Beijing.

He added that a recent drop in wheat prices in the global market is also good news for China as an importer.

Wheat imported from Australia, the United States and France costs much less than wheat produced in China.

According to the US Department of Agriculture, the average US wheat price was $303 per tonne on July 30, compared with $407 per tonne at China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange

The rising price of corn has also prompted a number of Chinese livestock farms to purchase foreign wheat.

The China National Grain and Oils Information Centre forecast that China will import 6.5 million tonnes of wheat from the international market in the 2013-14 crop year, a nine-year high.

“Adequately raising wheat imports is fairly useful to help China ease the pressure on wheat-related food prices,” said a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences in Beijing Ding Lixin.

— By arrangement with China Daily/ANN

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