Production drop of principal prairie field crops: Statistics Canada
LETHBRIDGE, AB. — As harvest is well underway, the latest data from Statistics Canada indicates what many in the farming community were already expecting – reduced crop production.
While farmers are projected to harvest more corn for grain, there will be reduced harvesting of wheat, canola, soybeans, barley and oats. Recent yield models using satellite imagery, confirms how badly lower production has been, driven by ongoing drought conditions in Western Canada, as well as higher-than-average temperatures throughout the growing season.
An assessment of Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) curves, which are a measure of plant health, indicated that in almost all parts of the Prairies, crops reached peak health well ahead of normal. In some instances, peak NDVI occurred up to four weeks earlier, before decreasing rapidly as a lack of moisture and high temperatures took a toll on plant health.
The Crop Condition Assessment Program (CCAP) indicates This is the first time since 1987, when Statistics Canada began monitoring crop conditions using coarse resolution satellite images, that NDVI curves have peaked so early in the growing season.