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An Even Bigger Negative Number for 2024-25 Canola Balance Sheet

After taking the 2024-25 canola supply-demand sheet into the red in May, Agriculture Canada has gone even further in June in order to boost exports. 

In its latest monthly supply-demand estimates released late Friday, Ag Canada dropped its canola feed, waste and dockage number to a -959,000 tonnes, from –609,000 last month. That adjustment, along with a 150,000-tonne reduction in the old-crop ending stocks estimate to 1.15 million, allowed the government to raise its export forecast by 500,000 tonnes to 9 million, 35% higher than last year and 11% above the five-year average.  

The negative dockage figure is a temporary fix, giving Statistics Canada an opportunity to revise its 2024 canola production up from the current 17.845 million tonnes, thus boosting the total supply. Ag Canada could also raise its import forecast from 150,000 tonnes to further augment the supply side.  

Market watchers and analysts have long suspected Statistics Canada underestimated the size of the 2024 canola crop, given the red-hot pace of exports and domestic use.  

“At the time of writing, canola exports reported by the Canadian Grain Commission are outpacing last year by 60% with steady producer deliveries, indicating there is still inventory being moved off-farm,” Ag Canada said in its Friday report. 

At the current estimated level of 1.15 million tonnes, 2024-25 canola ending stocks would be down 58% from the previous year’s 2.748 million and a 12-year low. 

With this month’s smaller old-crop carryover, Ag Canada also trimmed its 2025-26 canola ending stocks estimate, dropping it 150,000 tonnes to 1.85 million.  

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Border View Farms is a mid-sized family farm that sits on the Ohio-Michigan border. My name is Nathan. I make and edit all of the videos posted here. I farm with my dad, Mark and uncle, Phil. Our part-time employee, Brock, also helps with the filming. 1980 was our first year in Waldron where our main farm is now. Since then we have grown the operation from just a couple hundred acres to over 3,000. Watch my 500th video for a history of our farm I filmed with my dad.

I started making these videos in the fall of 2019 as a way to help show what I do on a daily basis as a farmer. Agriculture is different from any other industry and I believe the more people that are showing their small piece of agriculture, helps to build our story. We face unique challenges and stressful situations but have some of the most rewarding payoffs in the end. I get to spend everyday doing what I love, raising my kids on the farm, and trying to push our farm to be better every year. I hope that I can address questions or concerns that you might have about farms and agriculture.