HomeNewsBusinessEconomyHigher temperatures delay wheat planting in India

Higher temperatures delay wheat planting in India

Lower wheat acreage, down around 26 percent so far this season, in the world's No. 2 wheat producer could buoy global benchmark prices of the grain that have shed 5 percent this month amid crop-friendly rains across the United States.

November 24, 2015 / 15:48 IST
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India's wheat planting has been delayed by at least a week due to high temperatures, threatening its output of the grain yet again after hailstorms during harvest earlier this year dragged down annual production levels for the first time since 2007.

Lower wheat acreage, down around 26 percent so far this season, in the world's No. 2 wheat producer could buoy global benchmark prices of the grain that have shed 5 percent this month amid crop-friendly rains across the United States.

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In India, poor wheat yields would exacerbate the pain for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government that is struggling to address discontent in the countryside, where dozens of farmers committed suicide earlier this year as erratic weather hit their only source of income.

"Obviously it's too early to talk about the size of the (Indian) crop but late sowing is definitely not a sign of robust production," Indu Sharma, chief of state-run Directorate of Wheat Research, told Reuters from the northern city of Karnal.