The harvest is underway across Alberta, with major crop yield estimates rising from two weeks ago.
Friday’s weekly crop report showed the overall harvest at 2% complete as of Tuesday, in line with the province’s five- and 10-year averages of 3%. The South Region leads activity with 6% of crops off, followed by the Peace Region at 2%. The Central, North West, and North East regions remain in the very early stages, with less than 1% combined.
Progress is most notable for pulses and fall cereals, though harvest of major crops is expected to accelerate in the coming weeks. Broadleaf crops are at 94% podding, 4 percentage points ahead of the five-year average, while spring cereals have advanced to the dough development stage. Fall-seeded crops are beginning to ripen. Warm temperatures and timely rainfall in parts of the province have helped maintain strong development, the report said.
The report pegged the provincewide yield potential of major crops (spring wheat, oats, barley, canola, and dry peas) at about 15% above the five-year average as of Tuesday, up from 14% above two weeks earlier.
At 49.4 bu/acre, the average expected Alberta spring wheat yield is little changed from 49 bu last year, while the average barley yield, at 66 bu/acre, is seen higher than last year’s 60.6 bu average. This year’s average expected dry pea yield of 42.7 bu/acre is also seen above 35.4 bu a year ago. On the other hand, the average oat yield of 69.5 bu/acre is projected down from 73.3 bu in 2024, and the average canola yield of 38.9 bu/acre is expected slightly below the previous year’s 39.1 bu.
The Central Region continues to report the highest expected dryland yields relative to its five-year average, with projections 37% above. The South Region follows at 29% above average, and the North West Region at 10% above the five-year average. However, the Peace and North East regions continue to report projected yields below their respective five-year averages for the second week, at 8% and 1% below average.
Rainfall over the past week has boosted soil moisture and eased crop stress in parts of the province, with gains in the South and Central Regions offsetting deficits elsewhere and keeping provincial surface soil moisture ratings steady at 61% good to excellent, though some areas may still see yield impacts from low moisture.
The full report can be found here:
https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/2e0c96ee-50bf-4891-8f16-224233f372ce/resource/1fb74334-e643-43ff-91cd-5730168e8c7c/download/agi-tedab-alberta-crop-report-2025-08-12.pdf