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Cotton, wheat expand as dairy declines

Canola farmers have recorded a 43 per cent increase in production to the year to June.

Canola farmers have recorded a 43 per cent increase in production to the year to June. Photo: AAP

Farming land has decreased and more dairy farmers have left the industry, while cotton, canola and wheat production has hiked.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics’ latest agricultural snapshot found the amount of agricultural land as of June 2022 declined by five per cent from the previous year to 369 million hectares.

The key commodity results showed wheat production was up 14 per cent on the previous year to 36 million tonnes, while canola producers recorded a 43 per cent increase to seven million tonnes.

Cotton recorded the biggest jump, with the area sown almost doubling with a 99 per cent increase during 2021 and 2022 to 549,000 hectares.

Strong cotton prices and forecasts of favourable weather resulted in increased planting and a record 1.3 million tonnes harvested.

But there was a continuing decline for dairy with the national dairy herd shrinking 10 per cent to 2.1 million head as producers either scaled back sales or moved into beef cattle.

Australia’s beef cattle and sheep herds recorded minor increases.

The number of sheep and lambs grew by three per cent to 70 million while the beef cattle herd grew by one per cent to 22 million.

The ongoing La Niña weather cycle resulted in a mixed season for broadacre crop producers in the eastern states.

Sugar cane was down eight per cent to 28.7 million tonnes, while there were significant increases in rice and sorghum production.

Sorghum production was up 62 per cent to 2.6 million tonnes, with rice up 63 per cent to 691,000 tonnes.

Barley and oats production were both down on the previous year.

The ABS said the quality of responses to the agricultural survey which informs the results was lower than required to produce a full set of regional agricultural statistics.

The bureau won’t conduct large agricultural surveys in the future and will instead rely on existing data from government, industry and commercial sources.

– AAP

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