Paris | Reuters — This year’s European Union soft wheat crop is expected to have reached a record high, commodities research company Expana said on Thursday after raising its estimate on the back of bigger than forecast harvests in central and northern EU countries.
In its latest monthly report, Expana pegged EU soft wheat production for the 2025/26 season at 136.1 million metric tons, 3.3 million tons above its August projection.
Why it matters: Hefty global wheat crops are putting downward pressure on prices.
Read Also

U.S. livestock: Cattle make gains, hogs mixed
Most Chicago cattle futures rose on Wednesday after Tuesday’s hard fall. Hogs settled on either side of unchanged. Most-active October…
That was up 19.8 per cent from 2024/25 and beats the previous record of 135.6 million tons in 2015.
Global grain harvest forecasts for 2025/26 have risen sharply in recent weeks, particularly for soft wheat in Australia and Russia and corn in the United States, which should intensify competition in animal feed and export markets, Expana said.
“Given the expectation of a record global soft wheat harvest, European exporters will face an uphill struggle to offload this season’s exportable surplus,” it said.
EU soft wheat exports have been rather sluggish since the start of the 2025/26 season, owing to strong competition from Russian wheat and the lack of Chinese imports, it noted.
Expana also increased its barley crop outlook to its highest since 2008 at 56.2 million tons. That was 1.4 million tons higher than last month’s estimate and would also lead to hefty barley stocks at the end of the season.
Grain quality for this year’s wheat and barley has generally met market requirements, though protein levels were relatively low in several countries.
In contrast to winter crops, Expana cut its maize harvest forecast for a third consecutive month to 55.7 million tons, from 55.9 million tons in August and down 5.4 per cent from 2024/25.
Since planting, growing conditions have been especially unfavourable in southeast Europe and France, it said.
— Reporting by Sybille de La Hamaide