Kansas Wheat Forecast Slashed: 31% Production Drop Looms
TOPEKA, Kansas — Conflicting early forecasts for Kansas' 2026 wheat harvest have converged on trouble, with an economist's model projecting a sharp 31% drop in hard red winter wheat production to 240 million bushels. The grim outlook, driven by yields of just 39.4 bushels per acre — 4.8 bushels below the 44.2-bushel trendline — stems from record heat, extreme moisture deficits and declining crop ratings. USDA data as of April 19 rated only 24% of Kansas wheat good-to-excellent, down from 32% the prior week and 62% in late November 2025.
An initial March 30 estimate painted a rosier picture, forecasting 279 million bushels from 43.7 bushels per acre across 6.381 million harvested acres, a potential 20% production increase. But drier conditions prevailed, with T-Storm Weather's 14-year data showing less than one-quarter normal rainfall over the past 60 days in hard red winter wheat belts. A lingering weak La Nina has kept the Plains parched, delaying relief despite an El Nino forecast later this year; experts warn May dryness followed by wet June harvests could deliver a "double whammy."
Kansas, the top U.S. wheat producer, typically kicks off harvest in early- to mid-June, wrapping by mid-July. Fields in regions like the southwest echo woes elsewhere: In neighboring Oklahoma, yield potentials have cratered to 15-20 bushels per acre from a 30-bushel norm. Farmers from Dodge City to Salina view these models as guides, not guarantees, but the lower acreage and stressed crop signal economic strain for rural communities reliant on wheat sales.
As state agriculture officials monitor weekly updates, the pivot from record-yield hype to deficit reality underscores weather's grip on Kansas' $1.5 billion wheat sector. Producers are urged to scout fields amid forecasts of scant May rain.
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