Morocco will offer subsidies to import up to 2.5-million metric tons of soft wheat between January 1 and April 30 2024, state grains agency ONICL said, as the North African country pursues an import programme to offset drought-affected local production.
The January to April import scheme was approved by Morocco’s finance and agriculture ministries, with subsidy details to be published separately, ONICL said in a note on its website.
After drought reduced its domestic wheat crop for a second year, Morocco launched an import programme for the 2023/24 season covering up to 2.5-million tons for July to September, followed by a second round for October to December allowing up to 2-million tons.
Traders had expected the import campaign to continue after shipments so far this season lagged volumes available under the subsidy schemes, and with low rainfall again creating uncertainty about Morocco’s next harvest.
The longer import window could be welcome for the EU, for which Morocco has become the main export outlet.