I have been running various scenarios through and trying to think strategically. I think there may be some unintended consequences of this thing, depending a bit on how the legislation goes. Some of these are good, bad or indifferent depending on your interpretation (example: pt #10). I am not saying they are all bad things, just things that may occur.
1. feeding capacity may shift to SK
- depending on the regulatory framework of this thing, it could give SK feeders a large competitive advantage as they would have a lower cost structure and are actually closer to some of the US plants.
- the feedgrain advances are a technology that can be easily transferred into SK
2. Processing capacity may decline in AB
- we are overbuilt and the new regs may require a further cost on processors who are already at a disadvantage due to SRM rules.
- if the plants are not required to kill only age verified cattle, they can simply bid the price of the subsidy out of alberta calves (maybe all calves) and this may give SK a further advantage
3. The cow calf sector may downsize (after the payout) or may shift geographically to areas with a lower cost structure (less regulatory burden)
4. COOL is a big monkey wrench. depending on requirements, etc. it may mean more cattle are finished here, or fewer and it may furhter restrict the size of the Canadian cow herd. AB may have removed a potentially large premium from the marketplace for cattle that can readily meet COOL requirements.
5. A lot of the kill may shift stateside. Tyson at brooks has already been singled out in an annual report as one of the key money losers for the bigger operation. Regulatory burden would provide a good excuse to close shop.
6. The AB government may need to throw more cash at this thing to develop packing capacity (did I say that?). Through this whole process that has been one thing they have been unwilling to do. As Rancher's beef how well the AB gov treated them (certainly able to meet EU market demands).
7. Small herds may exit sooner. If you are doing this for "fun" then some of that fun has to have been sucked out of it. With high comodity prices for grains/oilseeds, we may see an increased move away from cow/calf and into grain or landlord type arrangements.
8. We may negotiate a trade deal with a group such as the EU. We may still not have any processors willing and or able to meet EU processing standards. The government may kick in more $ to subsidize this market.
9. The US may launch a countervail on this program (see history).
10. ABP and CCA may fold up their tents due to changes in the funding rules.
11. Several breed associations may have a difficult time if the AB Gov preempts the animal pedigree act and provides services traditionally offered by national associations.
12. The AB gov becomes the broker for services to industry such as genetic evaluation/parentage testing, rather than private industry.
13. There are probably others...
1. feeding capacity may shift to SK
- depending on the regulatory framework of this thing, it could give SK feeders a large competitive advantage as they would have a lower cost structure and are actually closer to some of the US plants.
- the feedgrain advances are a technology that can be easily transferred into SK
2. Processing capacity may decline in AB
- we are overbuilt and the new regs may require a further cost on processors who are already at a disadvantage due to SRM rules.
- if the plants are not required to kill only age verified cattle, they can simply bid the price of the subsidy out of alberta calves (maybe all calves) and this may give SK a further advantage
3. The cow calf sector may downsize (after the payout) or may shift geographically to areas with a lower cost structure (less regulatory burden)
4. COOL is a big monkey wrench. depending on requirements, etc. it may mean more cattle are finished here, or fewer and it may furhter restrict the size of the Canadian cow herd. AB may have removed a potentially large premium from the marketplace for cattle that can readily meet COOL requirements.
5. A lot of the kill may shift stateside. Tyson at brooks has already been singled out in an annual report as one of the key money losers for the bigger operation. Regulatory burden would provide a good excuse to close shop.
6. The AB government may need to throw more cash at this thing to develop packing capacity (did I say that?). Through this whole process that has been one thing they have been unwilling to do. As Rancher's beef how well the AB gov treated them (certainly able to meet EU market demands).
7. Small herds may exit sooner. If you are doing this for "fun" then some of that fun has to have been sucked out of it. With high comodity prices for grains/oilseeds, we may see an increased move away from cow/calf and into grain or landlord type arrangements.
8. We may negotiate a trade deal with a group such as the EU. We may still not have any processors willing and or able to meet EU processing standards. The government may kick in more $ to subsidize this market.
9. The US may launch a countervail on this program (see history).
10. ABP and CCA may fold up their tents due to changes in the funding rules.
11. Several breed associations may have a difficult time if the AB Gov preempts the animal pedigree act and provides services traditionally offered by national associations.
12. The AB gov becomes the broker for services to industry such as genetic evaluation/parentage testing, rather than private industry.
13. There are probably others...
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