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Australia cuts wool output forecast to at least 21-year low as dry weather bites

Published 11/12/2018, 12:01 am
Updated 11/12/2018, 12:10 am
Australia cuts wool output forecast to at least 21-year low as dry weather bites

* 2018/19 production now seen at 385,000 tonnes - ABARES

* New estimate 5 pct below previous

* Lowest output since 1997, when official records began

* Farmers forced to cull sheep after pastures wilted in drought

By Colin Packham

SYDNEY, Dec 11 (Reuters) - Australia on Tuesday trimmed its forecast for wool production by nearly 5 percent as dry weather across the world's largest producer of the fibre squeezes production to at least a 21-year low - the worst on record.

Wool production during the 2018/19 season will total 385,000 tonnes, the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) said, down from an estimate in September of 404,000 tonnes.

That forecast would mean the smallest amount of wool produced since before 1997 - Australia does not keep official records on wool production before this date.

With Australia's east coast, home to the majority of the country's livestock industry, seeing less than 40 percent of the rains it would normally receive in the last six months, farmers have been forced to cull sheep after pastures wilted.

While the drought has left many Australian farmers struggling to survive, the hit to production will also pressure the global garment manufacturing industry.

Australia provides about 90 percent of the world's exported fine wool used in clothing manufacturing. Lower production will force millers to either pass on the cost or require retailers to cut down on the use of the fibre.

Millers will already struggle to obtain Australian wool: ABARES said wool exports will fall 9 percent during the 2018/19 season from the previous season.

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But while the dry weather will see wool production fall, ABARES said Australia's red meat output will rise, flooding an already amply supplied global market.

Beef production from Australia, the world's third-largest exporter of the meat, will hit a three-year high, ABARES said, climbing to 2.32 million tonnes during the 2018/19 season. That's up from a previous forecast of 2.3 million tonnes.

Meanwhile, ABARES trimmed its sugar forecast. ABARES said production will total 4.7 million tonnes, down from its previous forecast of 5 million tonnes.

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