- Production Down: Australia’s 2026/27 wheat harvest is forecast at 29 million tonnes, a 19% year-on-year decline.
- Exports Tighten: Wheat exports are projected to fall to 23.5 million tonnes from 26 million tonnes, reducing global seaborne supply.
- Costs Rising: Diesel and nitrogen fertilizer prices have roughly doubled, pressuring farm margins and planted area.
- Weather Risk: El Niño-related rainfall uncertainty adds downside risk to yield and production forecasts.
- Black Sea Impact: Lower Australian exports are neutral to marginally bullish for Black Sea wheat as buyers may shift origin.
Australian Wheat Production Outlook
The USDA Foreign Agricultural Service projects Australia’s wheat production at 29 million tonnes for the 2026/27 marketing year, representing a substantial 19% decline from the prior season. This pullback comes after relatively strong output in 2025/26, with current expectations pointing to yields normalizing toward long-term averages.
While the season opened under broadly favorable conditions, the outlook is clouded by uncertainty around seasonal rainfall patterns and potential El Niño impacts. Any deterioration in moisture conditions during key crop development stages could push realized production below current forecasts.
Input Costs and Farmer Economics
Australian growers are facing a sharp escalation in production costs ahead of sowing. Diesel and nitrogen fertilizer prices have approximately doubled, eroding margins and incentivizing more cautious planting decisions. Elevated input costs, combined with weather risk, are expected to trim planted area and reinforce the move back toward average yield assumptions.
Exports and Trade Flows
Export availability is set to tighten in line with the smaller crop. Australian wheat shipments are projected at 23.5 million tonnes in 2026/27, down from an estimated 26 million tonnes in the prior marketing year. The 2.5 million tonne reduction will modestly reduce global exportable supply, particularly into Asia and the Middle East where Australia is a key origin.
| Season / Metric | Wheat Production (million tonnes) | Wheat Exports (million tonnes) | Year-on-Year Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025/26 (est.) | ~35.8* | 26.0 | Baseline |
| 2026/27 (forecast) | 29.0 | 23.5 | Production: -19% | Exports: -2.5 |
*Implied from 19% year-on-year decline to 29 million tonnes.
Implications for Black Sea Wheat
The anticipated tightening in Australian export supply is neutral to marginally bullish for Black Sea wheat. A 2.5 million tonne reduction in Australian shipments may prompt buyers in Asia and the Middle East to increasingly source from Black Sea origins, especially if Australian production risks intensify during the growing season.
However, the impact is likely to be gradual, given the 2026/27 timeline and the ability of global trade flows to adjust over time. Traders should closely monitor Australian rainfall patterns and the evolution of El Niño as key variables that could further constrain or stabilize supply and, in turn, influence Black Sea export prospects and pricing.
Source: Market Data


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