Early Bird Survey, data we can trust

The Early Bird Survey (EBS), released last Friday, showed wheat, winter barley & oilseed rape areas could increase for harvest 2022. Meanwhile, the area of other major crops, such as spring barley and oats, reduced.

This survey is part-plantings and part-intentions, so some crops are not sown yet. The EBS covered 630Kha this year, representing 13% of the total area of the crops surveyed.

With successive years of EBS publications this data & analysis has stood the test of time. For the most part it is not too dissimilar to the final Defra figures, which are released 13 months after the EBS’ provisional publication.

Early Bird Survey vs Defra final​

In this analysis I have taken the provisional wheat area results and compared them against the Defra final areas going back to 2016. I have also included the re-run of the survey we did in February 2020. The survey ran twice that season as the very wet Autumn hampered winter cropping and impacted the results.

gmd graph 23 11 2021.PNG


As we can see in the graph, the provisional EBS wheat area estimates are similar to the final Defra results. Excluding 2020, there has only been a maximum difference of 48Kha from provisional EBS to final Defra results.

Between 2016 – 2021, with the seven surveys conducted there has only been a 4.4% difference from the final Defra result. The main driver of this difference is the first EBS undertaken in Autumn 2019. That survey estimated the wheat area at 1.63Mha, a 17.6% difference from the 1.39Mha in Defra’s final result.

However, the re-run estimated the area at 1.50Mha, 8.4% different from the final figure. The data collection for this was only up until 14 February 2020. Therefore, it seems like not all spring wheat intentions were planted for harvest. There’s more detail which can be found in this report.

If we exclude the first EBS in 2019 and use the six surveys between 2016 – 2021, the difference from Defra’s figures reduces to 2.2%.

Yield is key to production​

With the area cover in this survey, we can have a high degree of confidence that our wheat area will sit in this region. Using the EBS area of 1.81Mha, it means that based on a 5-year-average yield our production could be 14.4Mt.

If we apply 5-year-low and 5-year-high yields to the area, we can expect a crop between 12.6 – 16.2Mt. This shows that production is largely dependent on parameters out of our control, i.e. the weather.

Conclusion​

To conclude, the EBS is a timely piece of information that gives a first insight into what wheat crop the UK could produce for the 2022/23 marketing year.

The EBS variation from Defra is higher in extreme weather years. But so far this year hasn’t posed any extreme weather.

There are two main factors that could change these intentions from now until 2022 harvest:

  • The rising cost of fertiliser could shift intentions in spring to less nitrogen intensive crops, if rotation allows. But a lot of wheat is winter sown, so we probably won’t see much of a change in wheat cropping. But be sure to check out our latest tool: Nitrogen fertiliser adjustment calculator for cereals and oilseeds.
  • The final point is the weather could still impact spring cropping intentions, but this will not have much impact on winter barley, wheat and OSR.
The AHDB Planting & Variety Survey will provide further clarification into the harvest area. This survey is scheduled to be released in July 2022, just before harvest.

Early Bird Survey, data we can trust


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Red Tractor drops launch of green farming scheme amid anger from farmers

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As reported in Independent


quote: “Red Tractor has confirmed it is dropping plans to launch its green farming assurance standard in April“

read the TFF thread here: https://thefarmingforum.co.uk/index.php?threads/gfc-was-to-go-ahead-now-not-going-ahead.405234/
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