Unrelenting rainfall may have slashed U.S. planting of durum wheat to the lowest level in more than 50 years, fueling a surge in the price of pasta and noodles as mills scramble for supply of the grain. Farmers who normally are finished planting by now had completed just 44 percent as of June 19 in North Dakota, which produces more than two-thirds of U.S. durum, government data show.. Planting may drop 47 percent this year to 1.365 million acres, the lowest since 1959, Olson said. In the past month, parts of North Dakota and Montana, the second-biggest grower, had triple the normal rainfall, National Weather Service data show. North Dakota durum prices are up 52 percent in the past month, and U.S. pasta in May was the most expensive on record. Grain elevators in North Dakota are paying farmers about $14.40 a bushel for durum on average, up from $9.50 a month ago, North Dakota State’s Olson said. The price may top the record of $23 reached in February 2008 if additional weather problems hurt crops this growing season, he said.
New crop durum PRO for 1CWAD 13.0 at $10.23 in Saskatchewan. The fixed price contract (FPC) was at $10.18 yesterday. New crop durum for September delivery in North Dakota was CAD$14.95 - a difference of $4.77. It is only $143.10 an acre difference on a 30 bushel durum crop.
New crop durum PRO for 1CWAD 13.0 at $10.23 in Saskatchewan. The fixed price contract (FPC) was at $10.18 yesterday. New crop durum for September delivery in North Dakota was CAD$14.95 - a difference of $4.77. It is only $143.10 an acre difference on a 30 bushel durum crop.
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