Rising prices could lead farmers to grow more mustard

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: March 3, 2022

Statistics Canada has pegged the country’s 2021-22 mustard production at 50,000 tonnes, nearly half of what was harvested the previous year because of severe drought on the Prairies. | Getty Images

Countries that buy Canadian mustard are now looking elsewhere, such as the United States, to increase their own supply

Ongoing supply issues are driving up mustard seed prices.

Yellow mustard in Western Canada has a high-delivered bid of $1.61 per pound, 10 cents higher than last month and $1.18 higher than last year, according to Prairie Ag Hotwire data.

Over the past month, the high-delivered bid for brown mustard went up 34 cents to $1.85 per lb. ($1.46 higher than last year) and oriental mustard was up nine cents to $1.10 per lb. (77 cents more than a year ago).

Canada’s mustard production for 2021-22 was estimated at 50,000 tonnes by Statistics Canada, nearly half the production from the previous year, due to severe drought in the Prairies.

Read Also

Port of Churchill. Given by the Port for our use.

Saskatchewan, Manitoba sign Arctic Gateway deal

Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Arctic Gateway Group have signed an MOU to strengthen trade through the Port of Churchill.

As a result, carry-out stocks are forecast to decline 88 percent to 5,000 tonnes, according to the latest estimates from Agriculture Canada.

Last December, Canada’s total mustard stock was only at 47,000 tonnes, according to Statistics Canada.

Walter Dyck, general manager of Olds Products’ seed division in Lethbridge, said despite lower supply, demand for mustard is constant.

“Mustard has very high inelastic demand. Although demand doesn’t change from one year to the next regardless of price, the customers need mustard. There is no substitute for mustard,” he said.

Dyck added that Canada, typically one of the world’s largest exporters of mustard seed, has enough mustard to satiate demand. However, countries that buy Canadian mustard are now looking elsewhere, such as the United States, to increase their own supply.

“Those countries that import the mustard, they’re taking efforts to secure their requirements, and I think that will include buying from other mustard exporters,” he said.

Despite the tightening supply of mustard, Rick Mitzel, executive director of the Saskatchewan Mustard Development Commission (SaskMustard) believes the industry will be in good shape this marketing year due to rising prices. Most Canadian mustard seed is grown in Saskatchewan.

“(The industry) is strong. We have a good group of loyal growers and that helps us,” he said. “I think this coming year we’ll see a few more acres go into mustard than there probably has been over the past two or three years. I think mustard will be quite profitable this coming year.”

Mitzel also gave a “conservative estimate” of 350,000 mustard seed acres in Saskatchewan this year and added that while yellow mustard is still predominant, demand for brown mustard is on the rise.

“Our brown mustard goes to Europe and our oriental mustard goes over to Asia, generally speaking. It seems like the world demand for mustard has increased over the last five years. So, we are trying to capture that demand with our Canadian product,” he said.

Dyck agreed that rising prices can prompt Canadian farmers to seed more mustard acres, but the crop faces competition from other commodities, many of which are also showing strong prices.

He also warned buyers might stay away from a scarce product like Canadian mustard.

“I do see an increase in mustard acres in Canada, but not in a very large irrational way,” Dyck said. “(An increase) will be a lot more measured.”

Canadian farmers seeded 309,000 acres of mustard in 2021-22, with an early forecast from Agriculture Canada calling for a seeded area of almost 370,000 acres for 2022-23.

About the author

Adam Peleshaty

Adam Peleshaty

Reporter

Adam Peleshaty is a longtime resident of Stonewall, Man., living next door to his grandparents’ farm. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in statistics from the University of Winnipeg. Before joining Glacier FarmMedia, Adam was an award-winning community newspaper reporter in Manitoba's Interlake. He is a Winnipeg Blue Bombers season ticket holder and worked as a timekeeper in hockey, curling, basketball and football.

Markets at a glance

explore

Stories from our other publications