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Danish farmers’ drought losses deepen, more bankruptcies seen

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) – Losses for already hard-pressed Danish farmers are likely to be bigger than previously expected, an industry lobby group said on Wednesday, warning this could trigger more bankruptcies.
FILE PHOTO: A farmer watches as grain is harvested in Hurup, Jutland in this August 16, 2011 photo.
REUTERS/Henning Bagger/Scanpix/File Photo Denmark, like many other countries in Europe, has been hit by one of the hottest summers on record, which has damaged crops and hit farmers’ income.
The drought, combined with low pork prices, is expected to trigger losses in the Danish agricultural sector not seen since the 2008 financial crisis.
The losses could reach almost 8 billion Danish crowns ($1.23 billion) this year, according to research institute SEGES, part of the Danish Agriculture & Food Council lobby group.
On its own, the impact of the drought is seen at around 6 billion crowns, it added.
“There is no doubt the drought has impacted so many farmers, that there will be more bankruptcies,” SEGES economist Klaus Kaiser told Reuters, declining to give an estimate.
Denmark’s harvest of wheat, barley and rye could fall by about 40 percent from previous years, the lobby group has previously forecast.
To view a map on European drought, click tmsnrt.rs/2M4kIvA The industry had already been struggling with a Russian ban on food imports introduced in 2014.
Twenty Danish agricultural businesses declared bankruptcy in June, more than twice the number in the same period last year.

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