FUGGLE (FR) Pellets T90 (5KG)
Aggiungi al carrello
HALLERTAU SMARAGD BIOLOGICO (DE) Pellets T90 (5KG)
Aggiungi al carrello
NUGGET (BE) Pellets T90 (5KG)
Aggiungi al carrello
MALLING BIOLOGICO (AT) Pellets T90 (5KG)
Aggiungi al carrello
NELSON SAUVIN BIOLOGICO (NZ) Pellets T90 (5KG)
Aggiungi al carrello
Kegcaps 74 mm, Rosso 102 Flatfitting A-type (700/box)
Aggiungi al carrello
Kegcaps 64 mm, Rosso 56 Sankey S-type (EU) (1000/box)
Aggiungi al carrello
Tappi 26mm TFS-PVC Free, Champagne Opaque col. 2713 (10000/box)
Aggiungi al carrello
Kegcaps 69 mm, Black 91 Grundey G-type (850/box)
Aggiungi al carrello
Tappi 26mm TFS-PVC Free, Green Transparent col. 2722 (10000/box)
Aggiungi al carrello
UK: Spring barley area forecast to drop by 15% in 2026
The final UK area forecasts for 2026 from AHDBs Early Bird Survey (EBS) show only small changes from the provisional figures for wheat, barley, oats and oilseed rape.
The small changes mainly reflect those between provisional and final UK area figures for 2025. There are also small adjustments to allow for any weighting differences (crop mix or regions) between the survey area and the final official data, reverting back to the methodology used in 2023.
The final forecasts include rises for wheat and oilseed rape, but falls for barley, oats and pulses. A large rise in the area of uncropped arable land is also predicted.
The largest change in terms of the planned hectarage for harvest 2026 is for spring barley (from 717 thousand ha in 2025 to 612 thousand in 2026), with falls for all countries of the UK and all of the English regions. This reflects the tough market environment currently for barley, with lower prices, especially for malting barley, and sharp declines in demand from the brewing, malting and distilling sector.
In Scotland, the spring barley area is forecast to decline 10% to 227 Kha, the lowest level since 2007. Within England, the East Midlands expects the largest decline in hectare terms, followed by the East of England.
While there are variations across the UK, the total winter barley area is expected to decline slightly as well (down 1% to 360 thousand ha in 2026).
The forecast changes for winter and spring barley would put the total UK barley area for harvest 2026 at 972 thousand ha, down 10% year-on-year and the lowest level since 2011. Even if yields returned to average levels in 2016, a fall in area of this size would limit UK barley production in 2026.
EU-27 prospects may also add to a reduced global barley output picture in 2026/27. Coceral forecasts a broadly stable barley area for harvest 2026, though production could shrink if yields return to more typical levels after the good results in 2025.
However, any potential for price impacts would also depend on domestic and global demand levels, plus the quality of the 2026 crops and price changes for other crops.