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Capacity available at Australian grain ports in 2024-25

  • : Agriculture
  • 24/08/14

Australia's largest bulk grain handlers have millions in tonnes of unallocated loading capacity at their port terminals in the October 2024-September 2025 marketing year.

Bulk handlers GrainCorp, Viterra and CBH record at least 3.7mn t of available capacity across 17 port terminals on Australia's east and west coast in 2024-25. Shipping capacity has been stretched in past years, because of record bumper harvests. This led to the expansion of mobile shiploaders to ease bottlenecks at export terminals.

Viterra — which covers the southern states of South Australia and Victoria — indicates available capacity of almost 2.5mn t in 2024-25, of which 540,000t is at its Port Adelaide outer harbour. Available capacity is lower at GrainCorp and CBH, at 400,000t and 870,000t respectively. Additional capacity is available at GrainCorp's Fisherman Islands, Carrington and Port Kembla and Geelong terminals in New South Wales, although exact quantities are not provided.

Spare capacity at CBH terminals in Western Australia (WA) represents just 4pc of the 19.5mn t in total port shipping capacity for 2024-25 and 2pc of total capacity at the Kwinana facility. The Kwinana port has a maximum outloading capacity of 5000 t/hr and ships more than half of WA's total grain production on average each year, according to company data.

Australia is forecast to export 23mn t of wheat and 5.6mn t of barley in the 2024-25 marketing year, according to the US Department of Agriculture. But wheat exports will have to pick up from current levels to meet this target. Australia exported an average of 1.79mn t/month of wheat in the current marketing year to June, according to the Australia Bureau of Statistics. It will have to export at least 1.92mn t/month in 2024-25 to meet the USDA target.

Further difficulty may arise if shipments to China, Australia's primary wheat export destination, slow in 2024-25. Current demand from China has been notably absent compared with the same time last year, according to market participants.

Australia grain port available capacity in 2024-25 000t
Grain HandlerPortCapacity
GrainCorpMackay1.95
Gladstone2.05
Fisherman IslandsAvailable
CarringtonAvailable
Port KemblaAvailable
GeelongAvailable
PortlandNone
ViterraPt Adelaide (Outer Harbor)5.40
Pt Adelaide (Inner Harbour)3.09
Pt Giles3.00
Pt Lincoln3.89
Wallaroo3.89
Thevenard5.40
CBHGeraldton2.70
Kwinana1.55
Albany1.05
Esperance3.40
Total37.37
Capacity of GrainCorp as at 13 August, Viterra as at 12 August and CBH as at 25 July. Viterra capacity subject to restrictions.

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Australia sees large chickpea exports in Oct-Dec


24/09/05
24/09/05

Australia sees large chickpea exports in Oct-Dec

Sydney, 5 September (Argus) — A bumper chickpea crop is filling up capacity at Australia's Queensland and New South Wales grain terminals at the start of the 2024-25 shipping year. GrainCorp shipping stem shows 19 slots loading approximately 270,000t of chickpeas in October-December from its Mackay and Gladstone export terminals. Only 230,000t of wheat is shown for loading in the same period from southern ports at Geelong and Portland. GrainCorp said in June it would only accept vessel nominations of chickpea shipments for elevation capacity at Mackay and Gladstone for October–December in anticipation of higher demand. The export programme in northern New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland is geared towards chickpeas for the start of the marketing year, some market participants said. Growers are not in a hurry to sell existing wheat because of the low current domestic prices — some near costs of production — and the high prices for chickpeas. Chickpeas prices were around A$1,050 compared with APW at approximately A$340 for delivery to Brisbane. But the large chickpea volumes could strain the local logistics and northern east coast export terminals, given the record crop and tight export window. This is especially so with India's suspension on tariffs on Desi chickpeas set to expire on 31 March 2025. The Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences forecasts chickpea production to reach 650,000t in NSW and 640,000t in Queensland in the 2024-25 (July–June) fiscal year. The NSW wheat crop is forecast to reach 11mn t and Queensland wheat crop is estimated at 2.1mn t in 2024-25. Competition for freight in northern NSW and Queensland, which is mainly by road, will drive resources to where they are most valuable, a market participant said. With margins on chickpeas exceeding wheat, that could limit capacity for wheat during harvest. In the near record harvest of 2021-22, Queensland exported 360,000t of grain in containers and 2.9mn t of grain in bulk, according to the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission. Chickpeas accounted for 270,000t of the bulk shipments. By Edward Dunlop Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US Coast guard restricts lower Mississippi drafts


24/09/03
24/09/03

US Coast guard restricts lower Mississippi drafts

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US corn growers could sink deeper into red on downturn


24/09/03
24/09/03

US corn growers could sink deeper into red on downturn

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Rain forces Kazakh wheat crop downgrade


24/09/03
24/09/03

Rain forces Kazakh wheat crop downgrade

London, 3 September (Argus) — Much of Kazakhstan's 2024-25 wheat crop could turn out below human-consumption quality because of excessive rain during spring wheat development in August, according to market participants. That said, output could still be above average, with Argus forecasting the country's production above the previous five-year average for 2024-25 (September-August). Cold and wet weather has delayed crop growth by around 10 days, market participants said, and weighed on quality. Some producers, particularly those growing durum wheat, report sprouting, especially in crops sown before mid-May. Sprouting has not been seen in soft wheat, with falling numbers and protein content also reported in line with producers' expectations, market participants said. But the rain has increased the prevalence of yield-risking diseases, such as rust and septoria tritici, and lowered test weights to 71-72 kg/hectolitre (kg/hl), well below the standard minimum of 76-77 kg/hl for human consumption milling wheat. Producers still expect above-average yields, with harvest now well under way. But the continuing rain and muddy fields have hampered operations, according to market participants, exacerbating delayed crop development. If snow arrives before November, this could also challenge the harvest, which is usually complete in mid-October, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). Farmers grow spring wheat in northern Kazakhstan, where rainfall was 150-400pc above norms in August and 120-200pc above norms in July-August, according to USDA. The rain had left topsoil and subsoil moisture levels well above average as of 31 August, USDA data show. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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