Most pulse and special crops are expected to be acreage losers in 2026 due to weak prices.
Initial new-crop supply-demand estimates released by Statistics Canada Wednesday suggest pulse and special crop seeded area will decline by a combined 12% this year, with notable reductions for both dry peas and lentils.
Dry peas are expected to see one of the sharpest pullbacks among Canadian crops. Seeded area is forecast to fall to 2.96 million acres, down 15% from last year, reflecting poor profitability compared with cereals and oilseeds as well as continued import tariffs imposed by India.
With acreage falling and yields assumed to return to trend levels, dry pea production is forecast to drop 28% to 2.85 million tonnes. Despite the smaller crop, exports are forecast to increase from 2025-26 levels, supported by stronger shipments to destinations outside India. Ending stocks are seen at 755,000 tonnes, well down from the 2025-26 forecast of 1.265 million.