The average mean fibre diameter for the season to the end of October was 20.1 microns, down by 0.5 microns.
The Australian Wool Production Forecasting Committee has updated its forecast for the 2018/19 season to 305 mkg greasy.
This is a 10.8% decline on the Committee’s shorn wool production estimate of 341 mkg greasy for the 2017/18 season.
The fall reflects an expected reduction in both the number of sheep shorn and the average annual wool cut per head as a result of the continuing difficult seasonal across many of the major wool producing regions of the country.
Committee Chairman, Russell Pattinson said that “the Committee brought forward their usual December meeting into November to provide the industry with an updated forecast for the remainder of the current season.
The second forecast made in August at 322 mkg was contingent on how the season progressed over the Spring period.
Tough seasonal conditions have continued in many regions and as the wool textile industry is monitoring the situation closely, it was important to provide updated information to the market”.
Mr Pattinson said “The season continues to be very difficult through most of NSW and Queensland, northern Victoria and east Gippsland, northern South Australia and parts of southern Western Australia”. In these regions, both the number of sheep shorn and the annual average cut per head are expected to decline considerably. Shorn wool production in NSW is expected to decline by 20% to 100 mkg and by 14% in Queensland to 7.1 mkg compared to the 2017/18 season.
Rain in October and early November has slightly improved the outlook for wool production in parts of the country.
For other wool producing areas, the situation has been more positive with the southeast of South Australia, western Victoria, Tasmania and parts of Western Australia having better seasons that other parts of the country. Shorn wool production is expected to fall by amounts varying between 0.3% in Tasmania and 8.0% in South Australia.
The Committee noted that for the 2018/19 season to the end of October, the AWTA test data showed a large increase in the weight of wool tested in all micron ranges up to 18.5 microns as well as a large decline in the weight of 20 to 23 micron wool and 28.6 microns and broader wool.
Volumes have generally fallen for other micron ranges.
The average mean fibre diameter for the season to the end of October was 20.1 microns, down by 0.5 microns. The average staple length across Australia has fallen by 3.2 mm to 85.8 mm, with all States recording shorter staple length for the season to date compared with the same period in 2017/18.
-AWI
