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Production Estimates and Crop Assessment Division
Foreign Agricultural Service

 

 

February 11, 2004

Malaysia: Excessive Rainfall in Fourth Quarter for Malaysian Palm Oil

Average monthly rainfall in Malaysia in the fourth quarter of 2003 was 381 millimeters.  This was excessive, and is expected to have a negative effect on Malaysian palm oil production in the third quarter of 2004.  Rainfall levels above 300 millimeters per month reduce pollination levels, which in turn reduce output 6 to 9 months later.  Rainfall was heaviest in the states of Pahang and Terengganu, in the central and eastern peninsula.  Pahang averaged 591 millimeters per month; Terengganu averaged 519 millimeters per month in the fourth quarter.  In Eastern Malaysia, Sarawak had excessive rains, averaging 448 millimeters; Sabah had modestly excessive rains, averaging 344 millimeters.  Joho, in the southern part of peninsular Malaysia--the state with perhaps the highest concentration of palm oil trees--escaped the deluge, averaging only 203 millimeters.

Image showing rainfall in Malaysia, monthly weighted averages.

Looking back over the last 10 quarters shows 5 above-normal and 5 below-normal periods.  Above-normal is favorable unless there is enough rain to interfere with pollination or persistent cloudiness that reduces light levels.  As a result, output levels should be fairly close to trend through the remainder of the Oct.-Sept. 2003/04 marketing year.  The effects of the excessive rainfall in Oct.-Dec. 2003 could bring the third quarter 2004 output level below trend. 

Not enough data is available yet to project output for marketing year 2004/05, but rainfall levels that have occurred in the yield-determining time periods portend trend production levels in the first three quarters of 2004/05.

Using the Malaysia rainfall data, yield for 2003/04 (Oct.-Sept.) is estimated by the Malaysia Rainfall Regression Model (MRRM) at 3.74 tons per hectare, which is slightly above average.  This projection would imply a production level of 12.5 million tons (using a projected harvested area of 3.35 million hectares).  The USDA estimates 2003/04 production at 13.4 million tons, higher than the output indicated by the MRRM and the long-term yield trend only.  The higher estimate is based on increased fetilizer applications and the use of improved, higher yielding selections of oil palm.

Image showing Malaysian palm oil yield, by quarters.

Image showing Malaysian palm oil area and production, over time.

Note: The MRRM linear regression model uses rainfall lagged 3 quarters, 1 year cumulative rainfall lagged 6 quarters, and time as independent variables regressed against yield.  Because of the characteristics of linear regression, the model continues to increase projected yields even as rainfall becomes excessive; thus, the model tends to overstate yield when average monthly rainfall lagged 3 quarters is above 300 mm, and understate yield when rainfall is optimal.  A variety of information sources are used in determining official USDA estimates for Malaysian palm oil.


For more information, contact Paul Provance
with the Production Estimates and Crop Assessment Division, at (202) 720-0881

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