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Daily Network News

  • Young women from across Ontario kept food production going during the war under the farmerette program. Photo: We Lend a Hand.

    Women who fed a nation

    13 hours ago
  • Photo: JHVEPhoto/Getty Images Plus

    U.S. grains: Soybeans rise on China demand hopes; corn and wheat rebound

    13 hours ago
  • U.S. livestock: Hogs rebound, cattle hit upward limits

    13 hours ago
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Daily news


A charity distributes meals to Palestinians in Gaza City, Gaza on July 28, 2025. The UN report focused on chronic, long-term issues and did not fully reflect impacts of acute crises brought on by specific events, such as war in Gaza.
Photo by Omar Ashtawy via Reuters Connect
News

Foodgrains Bank sounds alarm on slow progress in addressing global hunger

Number of people facing hunger fell in 2024, but war and food costs continue to drive insecurity

By Geralyn Wichers July 30, 2025
The number of hungry people in the world declined in 2024 for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a recent UN report, but progess has been too slow says the Canadian Foodgrains Bank.

Bison rest from the summer heat in a paddock in the southern Interlake of Manitoba.
 Photo: Alexis Stockford
Weather

Prairie forecast: Sunny and warm with a chance of rain

Forecast issued July 30, covering July 30 to August 6, 2025

By Daniel Bezte, Reuters July 30, 2025
This forecast period is looking much more stable and predictable as a large area of high pressure dominates the Prairie region.


Changes to Manitoba’s spring wheat: crop report
Canola, Cereals, Markets, Pulses, Spring Wheat, Winter Wheat

Changes to Manitoba’s spring wheat: crop report

Canola varies widely

By Glen Hallick July 30, 2025
Crops in Manitoba continued to hold up quite well, but the provincial agriculture department reported some variation in the spring wheat over the week ended July 29.

Photo: bfk92/Getty Images Plus
Markets, News, Reuters

Bangladesh to buy 220,000 tons of U.S. wheat to cool tariff tension

By Reuters, Ruma Paul July 30, 2025
Bangladesh's government has approved the purchase of about 220,000 metric tons of wheat from the United States as part of efforts to cool trade tensions and reduce steep import tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump's administration, a Dhaka official said on Wednesday.


Photo: Marco Velasco/Getty Images Plus
News, Reuters

Locusts spread in Ukraine’s south as war disrupts control measures

By Reuters July 30, 2025
A massive locust invasion is threatening sunflower and other crops in Ukraine's southern regions, largely caused by the war against Russia's invasion that makes it impossible to use traditional pest control methods, officials and producers say.

Photo: Marc Dufresne/Getty Images Plus
News, Reuters

Bank of Canada holds rates steady and says global trade war risk has eased

By David Ljunggren, Promit Mukherjee, Reuters July 30, 2025
The Bank of Canada held its key policy rate at 2.75 per cent for the third time in a row on Wednesday, as expected, and said the risk of a severe and escalating global trade war had diminished.


(iStock photo)
Lentils, Markets, Pulses

Pulse Weekly: Most lentil prices lower as focus changes to new crop

By Glen Hallick July 29, 2025
Lentil prices on the Canadian Prairies eased back during the week ended July 28, said Levon Sargsyan, broker with Johnston’s Grain. Sargsyan noted that’s due to the recent rains that brought relief to some of the dry areas of the region.

Photo: Geralyn Wichers
Livestock, Markets

U.S. livestock: Cattle climb on low inventory, anticipated tariffs

By Geralyn Wichers July 29, 2025
Chicago cattle futures continued to climb, Tuesday, on anticipated tariffs on Brazilian beef and low herd numbers.


Photo: JHVEPhoto/Getty Images Plus
Markets, Reuters

U.S. grains: Corn, soy futures extend slide on milder weather forecasts

By Julie Ingwersen, Reuters July 29, 2025
Chicago corn and soybean futures fell on Tuesday for a third straight session as forecasts for cooler Midwest temperatures this week and continued periodic rains reinforced expectations for ample U.S. harvests, analysts said.

A seeder sows wheat at a farm in Bencubbin, Australia, May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Hollie Adams  To match Special Report CLIMATE-FOOD/WHEAT
Crops, Reuters

Less rain, more wheat: How Australian farmers defied climate doom

Australia’s research system, focus on closing yield gap help drive success

By Peter Hobson, Reuters July 29, 2025
Australia's gains in wheat farm productivity have exceeded those in the United States, Canada and Europe and continue to rise while those of other developed markets slow or reverse.


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