Daily-refreshed yield-risk view for the Eastern DEFRA region.
Updated at ~07:25 UTC after each daily run.
Region brief
The Eastern region (Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex) is England's largest arable area by hectarage, with deep silt and chalk soils, low rainfall, and the highest concentration of CropIntel's tracked-account farmers. Conditions here disproportionately move the national wheat balance.
Recent farmer sentiment (Eastern)
MILDLY NEGATIVE (-0.11)
Across Eastern-attributed posts in the last 7 days
(30 posts aggregated),
the rolling sentiment is mildly negative (-0.11).
Direction only on the public page; per-day scores and individual
post rationales on the sentiment pulse.
Active early-warning signal
Increased mentions of weed in the last week, full breakdown on today's call.
What drives Eastern wheat year-to-year
Climate. Lowest rainfall in the UK arable belt, typically 550-650mm/yr. Drought risk in flowering and grain fill stages is structurally higher than the West.
Soils. Predominantly silt-loam and chalk, free-draining, fast to warm. Drilling windows tend to open early; grain fill can be cut short by late-spring drought.
Disease pressure. Lower septoria pressure than Western regions on average (drier leaves), but higher BYDV and yellow rust risk in mild autumns.
Market significance. ICE London Feed Wheat futures are deliverable from East Anglian ports. Eastern yield directly influences UK basis vs MATIF.
How CropIntel models Eastern
Each DEFRA region in the UK is modelled independently with its own
weather, soil, satellite and sentiment series. The
compound stress score aggregates
weather deviation across the wheat growth cycle for Eastern
specifically, against the 1999-present regional baseline. The
ensemble model emits a directional
yield call only when its complementary components agree on direction,
the regional consensus filter. The 62.3% walk-forward hit rate is the
pooled rate across all 11 regions; per-region rates are on the
Track Record page.
Where this fits
Eastern is among the highest-utility regions for grain merchants and
crop insurers, because the volume of UK wheat that originates from this
region is structurally large. Acquisition enquiries:
alastair@hurricane.works.