Commodities Market Impact Weather
Warmer Temperatures, Some Active Weather This Week
MINNEAPOLIS (DTN) -- Recent drought-reducing rainfall across the southern U.S., frost chances ending in the Midwest, a wetter pattern ahead, colder temperatures in northern Europe, and dryness in Australia are the weather factors driving the markets Monday.
COLD AIR MOVING OUT OF MIDWEST
A system moved through the southern Midwest with showers on Friday. And a few more showers dotted the region over the weekend. Cold air continues to sit in the region, which brought more frosts on Monday and may have a few more yet on Tuesday around the Great Lakes. That may be the end of the frost risk for the year, though we may see a few patchy areas on Thursday as well. A system will move through on Tuesday and Wednesday with scattered showers and the region will be more active later this week into next week. Soil moisture is largely favorable for fieldwork in much of the region, allowing for good planting progress. The occasional rain in the forecast could cause some minor delays in some spots, particularly across the north.
SPOTTY SHOWER COVERAGE FOR CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS MAY INCREASE
A disturbance that went through the Central and Southern Plains this weekend produced some areas of heavy thunderstorms across the south, easing some of the drought there. Some showers also went through the drier west, adding to some rain and snow from last week. The small boost in moisture is nice, but does not erase the large deficits over the last several months. The region will be drier the next few days, but systems moving through the Northern Plains will bring chances for showers and thunderstorms starting on Thursday that could have some at least widely scattered coverage going into next week. Above-normal temperatures will be in place for much of the next few weeks, which adds stress to dry wheat areas, and may continue to reduce soil moisture for those areas that continually miss out on the rainfall.
WARMER WITH SHOWERS FOR NORTHERN PLAINS
Isolated showers moved through the Northern Plains this weekend, with some colder temperatures in the east still producing frosts into Monday. That may be the final day for frost risks with some warmer temperatures moving in for the rest of the week. Multiple systems moving through the region or north in Canada will bring through periods of scattered showers. Coverage does not look very extensive, but the opportunities are numerous, probably through the end of the month. That should give enough room to do plenty of field work and get some rain at times as well, overall, a favorable outlook.
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WARMER AND SHOWERY FOR CANADIAN PRAIRIES
Western areas of the Canadian Prairies saw temperatures rising over the weekend, but eastern areas remained colder with frosts and freezes. That warmth will spread eastward with fewer chances for frosts this week. An active weather pattern will get some showers to move through the region, improving soil moisture in some areas, while bogging down a few unlucky areas as well. The active pattern continues next week, but temperatures are forecast to be cooler as well and may bring about more potential for frosts. Planting progress has already been slow in all three provinces due to cold temperatures and late-season snowfalls. Progress should be more rapid this week, though if showers are too frequent, it could cause some issues as well.
DRIER IN THE DELTA THIS WEEK
A front and another system continued to produce some heavy rain in the Delta over the weekend, particularly in the south, easing drought some more. Soil moisture is much improved from a couple of weeks ago, but rainfall deficits are still large across much of the region. Much of this week is forecast to be dry, but the pattern may become more active starting this weekend. More of the fronts and systems are forecast to impact areas to the north and west, but may bring the region in on some of them through the end of May as well. If the rains come, then conditions will continue to improve. If they don't, we could see a return to drought conditions.
FRONT BROUGHT HEAVY RAIN TO SOUTHERN BRAZIL THIS WEEKEND
A front brought areas of heavy rain to Mato Grosso do Sul and Parana on the southern end of Brazil's safrinha corn growing areas this weekend. However, hot and dry conditions north of the front continue to stress filling corn. Extremely cold air built in behind the front, leading to some frosty temperatures in a small area across the south. That may or may not have an impact on corn. Wheat planting should increase throughout the month across the south and will depend on fronts moving up from Argentina. Another is forecast to bring some rain to the south this weekend and may get a few showers into central areas as well. Any rainfall will be beneficial.
COLD TEMPERATURES SINKING INTO NORTHERN EUROPE
A system moved into western Europe over the weekend and will spread showers eastward early this week. More showers are expected to develop mid-to-late week as an upper-level system stalls out over the continent. That will get some needed precipitation into the drier northeast, but may produce some patchy frost across the north throughout the week as well. Many winter wheat areas would be vulnerable should frosts occur.
PERIODS OF SHOWERS CONTINUE IN THE BLACK SEA REGION
Scattered showers moved into the western Black Sea region over the weekend, favorable for increasing soil moisture for wheat and corn. That system continues through the east early this week. An upper-level low-pressure system settling over Europe will bring through waves of showers throughout the week and weekend, possibly into next week as well. Most areas will welcome the rainfall as soil moisture has been improving this spring. But the showers may slow down corn planting.
BUILDING EL NINO UNFAVORABLE FOR AUSTRALIA
Rainfall deficits are still large and conditions are still dry for much of the Australia's wheat belt. Drier weather continues through much of this week, with chances for showers in eastern areas this weekend. The developing El Nino in the Pacific has a correlation with fewer storm systems, creating poor weather conditions for winter wheat and canola.
LIMITED SHOWERS FOR CENTRAL AND NORTHERN CHINA
A few showers went through the North China Plain and the northeast over the weekend, but these regions in China have been quieter this spring, a pattern that continues this week. That may be favorable for corn and soybean planting, but not for development of either or winter wheat. Canola areas in the south-central are in better shape from more consistent precipitation this spring.
John Baranick can be reached at john.baranick@dtn.com
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