World has just ten weeks' worth of wheat left after Ukraine war

Authored by telegraph.co.uk and submitted by Arpith2019
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The world has just 10 weeks' worth of wheat stockpiled after Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine disrupted supplies from the "breadbasket of Europe".

The UN has been warned that global wheat inventories have fallen to their lowest level since 2008 as food supplies are rocked by a “one-in-a-generation occurrence”.

Official government estimates put world wheat inventories at 33pc of annual consumption, but stocks may have slumped to as low as 20pc, according to agricultural data firm Gro Intelligence. It estimates that there are only 10 weeks of global wheat supply left in stockpiles.

Russia and Ukraine account for around a quarter of the world’s wheat exports and the West fears Mr Putin is trying to weaponise food supplies. Russia is on track for a strong wheat harvest this year, cementing Mr Putin’s control over the staple grain as bad weather spoils production in Europe and the US.

Gro Intelligence chief executive Sara Menker warned global food supplies are being hit by a number of “extraordinary” challenges, including fertiliser shortages, climate disruptions and record low inventories of cooking oils and grains.

She told the UN’s Security Council: “Without substantial immediate and aggressive coordinated global actions, we stand the risk of an extraordinary amount of both human suffering and economic damage.

“This isn’t cyclical, this is seismic. It’s a once-in-a-generation occurrence that can dramatically reshape the geopolitical era.”

The war has disrupted agricultural production in the region and sent global food prices soaring to a record high, stoking fears of unrest in developing countries. The crisis in wheat has been worsened by India, the world’s second largest producer, banning exports of the cereal and higher costs for farmers from fertiliser, feed and fuel.

Western officials also fear the Russian president is deliberately trying to damage global food supplies by destroying equipment and stealing grain in Ukraine.

Mtkerjack on May 21st, 2022 at 07:33 UTC »

Just FYI in 10 weeks the entirety of the US, or darn near it will be harvesting our grain.

Obviously the South will start well before that. I'm in Montana and a farmer, we're probably right at 10 weeks out personally.

I'm not saying things are great of course, I'm just saying that number doesn't mean much without context of how much let's say was stored at the same time last year world wide.

MacSanchez on May 21st, 2022 at 04:56 UTC »

I will trade you one sheep and one brick. Final offer before I drop this monopoly card and piss off the whole table

NeedsSomeSnare on May 21st, 2022 at 04:40 UTC »

The article is behind a paywall.

By contrast, how many weeks were there before the war?