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Canada Seen Importing Wheat From Black Sea Region

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    Canada Seen Importing Wheat From Black Sea Region

    Canada Seen Importing 500,000 Tons Of Wheat From Black Sea Region

    WINNIPEG, MB, Sep 06, 2002 (Resource News International via COMTEX) -- Drought devastated wheat production in Western Canada is expected to result in the increased importation of feed quality wheat from the Black Sea region during the 2002/03 crop year which began Aug. 1.

    Canada has been importing feed wheat from overseas outlets for quite some time, but not to the magnitude anticipated this year, a export source commented. "While it's hard to put an exact number on it, there are ideas that imports of feed wheat to Canada could hit 500,000 metric tons in 2002/03," he said.

    Most of the feed wheat is expected to be brought in from the Black Sea region, where both Russia and the Ukraine are said to have exportable surpluses.

    The feed wheat shipments are expected to remain mainly in Eastern Canada although there have been some hints that some could make its way into the eastern regions of Western Canada, the exporter said.

    Statistics from the market analysis branch of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada are predicting that all wheat imports into Canada during 2002/03 will hit 110,000 tons. In 2001/02 Canadian imports were 97,000 tons and in 2000/01 60,000. No breakdown was available on how much of the wheat imported graded as feed.

    The exporter noted the feed wheat generally is off-loaded at grain export terminals located in Eastern Canada (Quebec) and then shipped by Lakers to its final destinations.

    A floor trader at the Winnipeg Commodity Exchange agreed that Canada will need to import more feed wheat then it has in previous years because of the production deficit situation. He too was working with a 500,000 ton estimate.

    "The cost of moving feed wheat from Western Canada to Eastern Canadian destinations can be an expensive proposition," he indicated. "Add in the supply shortage and the cost becomes even more prohibitive. As a result, eastern Canadian outlets can import feed wheat from offshore at a cheaper rate."

    Charlie Pearson, a grains and oilseed analyst with Alberta Agriculture said there is no doubt that there is import business on the books. However, exactly how much feed wheat will be imported, is another thing.

    He indicated the world supply/demand balance sheet on the wheat front is changing fairly significantly every day. "Right now, North America is an attractive place for countries that have wheat to sell."

    However, Pearson also said that with the global situation as it is, there may be a lot of other customers who may want this feed wheat more than Canada or even the US does.

    "If that occurs, this commodity could become fairly expensive very quickly and will likely change the decision making of Russian and Ukrainian feed wheat suppliers, who will then sell to the highest bidder, including outlets in the Middle East and even North Africa," he noted.

    The export source noted the Russian feed wheat is of higher quality than the Ukraine, and some of the imports to Canada could possibly make their way to the mills.

    http://news.tradingcharts.com/futures/8/3/30575638.html

    #2
    Its been raining for 2-3 weeks solid now in Manitoba and Saskatwhewan where there was a crop. Our CWRS grades do not allow for sprouts above 0.1%, so I now suspect ALL wheat to be feed. Who is going to eat all this domestic and imported feed?

    Will flour millers have to use some of the better feed wheat, or will there be enough higher quality available from old stock and the U.S.?

    Comment


      #3
      My latest market report says Ukraine has sold 4million tonnes of a 5.5 million tonne exportable crop. Russia may have alittle more but supply is tightening up.
      This is where the price is being fixed in todays market The BLack Sea.
      IF we refuse to allow it to be traded in our countries when there is a shortage it will depress prices forever.

      Comment


        #4
        Ianben;

        How did your quality turn out on your grains?

        Was your production reasonable?

        Have you started seeding fall crops?

        We seeded 500ac of winter wheat... the first winter wheat we have ever planted...

        Won't these big wheat prices increase plantings of winter wheat in the EU this fall???

        Comment


          #5
          Hi Tom
          We finished harvest 2nd sept. Early cut barley made malting then came the rain.
          Rest of barley canola and especially peas sprouted in the field locally oats which we do not grow where also affected. The peas we did get in the bin look terrible and losses in the field horendous
          Wheat did not suffer as bad as we expected perhaps because it was not quite ripe when it rained. Further south they were not so lucky, the jury is still out on how much will make milling
          Think we have about 1000tonnes from 275acres so very pleased with quantity.

          Next years canola is all planted and showing in the rows. Started sowing wheat yesterday but 2ins rain has stopped play.
          20th sept is ideal date to sow so still early yet.
          Grain prices here are still at very low levels. Harvest prices being at 30yr low pulled down by Black sea availability.
          Talk is of more setaside, we must have 10% to obtain subsidy but can have up to 50%. Barley is the crop which would lose acres.
          Farmers like to grow a crop, dont they, your summer fallow acres alway seem less than forecast and I bet our plantings will be very similar weather permiting.

          Good luck with the winter wheat.
          I suppose you need a little help from the weather for it to survive the winter.
          We always spray ours with manganese sulphate at about 1kg/ha when we spray for aphids in late Oct.
          Even in our climate it can make a difference to surviving the winter or not.
          Dont know about-40C though!

          Regards Ian

          Comment


            #6
            Ianben;

            Thanks for the update!

            We are spraying the 270ac of Canola (that is left out of 2500)with Reglone (diquat) desiccant to kill the second growth that has come up through the swaths, after hail and 2inches of rain in the last 10 days.

            The Roundup gene is really a curse this year, must use MCPA on cerials to kill it... and it really does grow like a weed in wheat crops that are less than a foot high with a yield of 10-20bu/ac.

            So many fields are yellow blooming but they are actually wheat fields underneath.

            Barley fields look like the end of July, as second growth has turned them back green again... how does a person make planting seed out of it? What a challenge.

            We are afraid of swathing wheat, but started on the Hard Red spring because it is now coming second growth, and has leaves the size of corn comming underneath... No Roundup on planting seed here, it is against the law...

            Glad to hear the volume is not too bad... I am afraid my canola is going to turn out like yours... One field 52% hailed, the other was 19%... and it all got pounded into the dirt...


            WHAT a year...

            All the best!

            Comment

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