It's another bumper year for Australian agriculture with near-record production, despite devastating floods in eastern states taking its toll on some crops.
The quarterly outlook for December from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences also found the value of exports is expected to reach a record for 2022 to 2023.
"The gross value of agricultural production is forecast to be a near-record $85 billion in 2022-23, just shy of the record set the previous year," ABARES Jared Greenville said.
"Another bumper year combined with high commodity prices means Australia's agricultural exports are forecast to break records at over $72 billion in 2022 to 2023."
"Meanwhile, the winter crop is forecast to be the second largest on record at over 62 million tonnes."
That comes despite a decrease in winter planting by 10 per cent in NSW and nine per cent in Queensland because of the big wet.
Crops in Western Australia and South Australia benefited the most from spring conditions, with total production in both states forecast to reach record levels.
Total production in Queensland is forecast to reach the second highest on record, despite parts of the Darling Downs missing out on plantings due to floods.
While the bureau also concluded that summer crop planting in 2022 to 2023 may fall by 9 per cent because of excessively wet conditions and flooding across major production regions in New South Wales.
The report found New South Wales bore the brunt of the damage from the spring rains and floods.
"Record spring rainfall followed above average rain in August, which has led to losses," Dr Greenville said.
"The total production for New South Wales has been revised down by 2 million tonnes since our last crop report in September."
In Victoria, high yields in the Mallee and the Wimmera will offset crop losses in central and northern border regions.
While flooding and waterlogging have caused widespread damage on the east coast, stored irrigation water is at the highest level in a decade.
The bureau found the volume of water held in storage across the Murray-Darling Basin reached close to 96 per cent of capacity, the highest level since 2011 to 2012 and close to 10 per cent higher than at the same time last year.
Livestock production was expected to hold steady, contributing $34 billon to the national total, Dr Greenville said.
The outlook concluded inflation is squeezing demand and producer incomes across the agricultural sector.
"Considerable uncertainty remains over winter crop harvest progress and grain quality in New South Wales and Victoria given ongoing high rainfall, which could lead to downgrades in production value," Dr Greenville said.
He said harvests in Victoria and New South Wales were likely to run well into summer.