Canola ending stocks for the 2021-22 crop year may be estimated at their lowest level in nine years, but they are still well above previous expectations.
In the wake of the 2021 Prairie drought that slashed production by nearly one-third, a Statistics Canada grain stocks report on Wednesday pegged total nationwide canola stockpiles as of July 31 (ending stocks for the 2021-22 crop year) at 874,600 tonnes, down almost 51% from a year earlier and the lowest since July 31, 2013.
However, today’s stocks estimate is still up from Agriculture Canada’s August supply-demand estimate of 800,000 tonnes – which was double the government’s projection as recently as July. Although last year’s drought did severely dent canola output, the 2021 production estimate has ticked higher from previous estimates in recent weeks, also pushing ending stocks higher. In last month’s crop production report, StatsCan revised the 2021 canola crop up to 13.75 million tonnes from 12.59 million.
Regardless, the higher 2021-22 ending stocks estimate, combined with a much larger Prairie canola crop in 2022, means total supplies for the 2022-23 crop year will be much more comfortable than a year ago, potentially at more than 20.3 million tonnes.