(Bloomberg) Grain farmers in northern China have escaped the worst impact of the summer’s typhoons on production, with harvests of crops like corn set to rise in the coming year.Most Read from BloombergWall Street Comes to Grips With How Wrong It’s Been in 2023MGM Resorts Hackers Broke In After Tricking IT Service DeskUS, Chinese Officials Meet in Malta in Bid to Keep Channels OpenThe World Is Struggling to Make Enough DieselHouse Republicans Prepare to Turn US Government Shutdown Into Immigr
BEIJING: Floods have damaged corn and rice crops in China’s key northern grain-producing belt, traders and analysts said, with more rain in the forecast as another typhoon approaches, threatening to add to global food inflation pressures.
The Fiji Times » China floods hit rice, corn crops; trigger food inflation worries fijitimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fijitimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SINGAPORE/BEIJING - Floods have damaged corn and rice crops in China's key northern grain-producing belt, traders and analysts said, with more rain in the forecast as another typhoon approaches, threatening to add to global food inflation pressures. The hit to China's cereal crops - the full extent of which is not yet clear - comes as consumers worldwide face tightening.
Northern China, still grappling with swollen rivers and floodwaters caused by Typhoon Doksuri two weeks ago, could see further crop damage with tropical storm Khanun