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Grain Companies take $13 million Valentine’s gift from farmers

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    Grain Companies take $13 million Valentine’s gift from farmers

    Grain Companies take $13 million Valentine’s gift from farmers
    (Pelly, Sk., February 18, 2015) “Farmers are justifiably angry over the on-going grain robbery by the private grain trade” said Kyle Korneychuk, spokesperson for the Canadian Wheat Board Alliance (CWBA), an independent prairie-wide farm group.
    “Using newly revealed figures we know that farmers had $13.7 million dollars taken from them by the grain handling companies in excess profits in one week alone. This is a continuation of the multi-billion dollar rip-off of farmers by the private trade since the killing of the farmer-controlled single-desk Canadian Wheat Board.”
    “The grain companies can call it basis, the economists can call it excess profits or excess basis, but it is real money that the grain companies have which should have gone to farmers” Korneychuk added.
    Korneychuk went on to explain the low prices offered by grain companies to farmers were compared to recent west coast port wheat prices reported by Agriculture Canada to Feb. 6/15 and then combined with Canadian Grain Commission shipping data from week 27 of the crop year (Feb. 2 to 8/15) to show the size of the rip-off. Korneychuk said that week’s west coast port price for #1 HRSW (Hard Red Spring Wheat) was reported as being in the range of $337.96/mt ($9.21/bu) while the local price available from one of the giant grain handling companies in eastern Saskatchewan was in the $205.52/mt ($5.60 /bu) range. This is a $133/mt ($3.64/bu) difference.
    The Canadian Grain Commission reports that for the week ending February 8, 2015, 227,000 mt of wheat was exported from Vancouver and the St. Lawrence. “Simple arithmetic shows us that for that week alone the grain companies have taken $13,781,170.00 in excess profits away from farmers. It is a wonderful Valentine’s gift to the private trade from Ottawa which farmers pay for” said Korneychuk.
    Korneychuk then went on to explain the math which shows how much the grain handling companies are taking now that Ottawa has allowed them to own the grain from the elevator pit and insert themselves between farmers and their former end-use customers:
    Wheat Per metric tonne Per bushel
    Port Price (FOB Vancouver) $337.96 $ 9.21
    Average Rail cost $40.00 $ 1.09
    Maximum Regulated Tariffs: (Cdn Grain Commission)
    Primary elevation $15.50 $ .42
    Terminal elevation $ 10.40 $ .28
    Terminal cleaning $ 5.83 $ .16
    Sub total: $71.73 $ 1.95
    Net to grain companies: $266.23 $7.25
    To farmers: $205.52 $5.60
    Excess profits to grain companies: $60.71 $1.65
    Korneychuk noted that this extra $60/mt ($1.65/bu) is over and above the regulated profits and return on investment allowed grain handlers under Canadian Grain Commission rules – rules which allowed those companies to expand and prosper during the 77 years of the existence of the single-desk Wheat Board.
    “We know that last year at this time the grain companies were enjoying record world prices for Canadian wheat which have held more or less steady” said Korneychuk. “We also know The Canadian Transportation Agency rate cap audit showed that the railways moved about 20% more grain than the previous year. So unless the grain is being dumped into the harbour, the grain companies are selling an unprecedented volume of grain and taking record profits from grain producers.”
    “A year later, in the face of farmer outrage and the unsuccessful efforts of the Agriculture Minister and others to divert blame to the railways, the grain companies are still taking excess profits and farmers are still getting nowhere near the 90% or more of the world price we once received with the single-desk Canadian Wheat Board” concluded Korneychuk.
    – 30 –
    For further information: contact@cwbafacts.ca

    #2
    my bank account is confirming those figures.
    sad to have your hard work , sacrifice and savings stolen.
    so the more efficient we get ,the more they can steal.

    if we were dumb enough to put ourselves in this position.
    i guess we deserve it.

    Comment


      #3
      Ah-hem??? Without a system of checks and balances in place would you expect them to act any differently?

      Just once I'd like to see them come on here and explain or defend their side of the story. I would especially like to hear how producers should be responsible for demmurage.

      Comment


        #4
        I think the government is paying someone 750 grand to explain it on behalf of graincos.

        Comment


          #5
          I wonder once again , why are no other farm groups talking about this ??? WCWGA , APAS, etc. ,what are your thoughts on this ?? As someone said on here , we have given so much away with nothing in return . Crow rate , Farmer owned elevators , rural rail lines , ,etc. etc. Make no mistake , we are giving away another very valuable tool right at this moment with UPOV91 , and our "supposed farm interest groups" are anything but , and are breaking trail for more of this horseshit . Saying it will give us more production , yea , that sure is what grain co's need , and the very last thing we need. Wake up everyone !

          Comment


            #6
            The open market was delivered.

            The only competition I see is for limited rail capacity.

            And the fact the basis is soooo wide should be an indication there are no sales and producers continue to "push" grain rather than terminals "pull" grain into the system. So in essence its our fault, at least thats what some would like us to believe. Therefore producers are competing for limited sales orders.

            Oh, there's competition alright, amonst ourselves.

            Comment


              #7
              Come on guys flex those muscles, exercise your power. Dig in your heels. Take on Goliath. Stand nose to nose, eye to eye, it's your treasury against theirs. Come on stand up for **** sakes, or bend over and take it like a man.

              Comment


                #8
                checks and balances
                Conservative policy forbids those.
                that would be interfering in the "free market "
                Mr. Harper clearly stated that he would not interfere and preferred a market solution.

                what we have now is the market solution.
                whom ever can bleed the farmers
                wealth first wins.

                the grain co.s were handed an unintended gift by the rail roads.

                the RRs have misplayed their hand.
                (they failed to see there was another extortionist moving in on their racket)

                taking grain revenues and building other business. figuring they could just get another grain frt. raise when things were not moving .

                turns out .RRs would have been better off to actually provide service.

                now to get more revenue RRs would actually have to move grain. (grain. cos beat em at their own game)


                the grain co.s are clear winners.
                even beating the seed co.s
                we still kinda do not have to use all their seed yet..
                but we have to sell our crop.

                those peon farmers are eventually replaceable .with Mexican
                and how is the market going to buy them out for nothing unless they are broke
                .

                Comment


                  #9
                  And this is why you need to spend all the checkoff money paying for higher yields research. effective use of fungicides. huge fertilizer bills. Use more, grow more, spend more.

                  Its important because spending checkoff money anywhere else.... well that would be just silly.

                  However, it is a fair question to be discussed. Did the CWB keep basis and fairness in check? Or has this always been happening and with a lack of transparency everyone glazed over it?
                  What would the basis be today if the CWB still had its death grip over farmers sales?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Revolution time
                    Boston tea party

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I'll make it clear we need more transparency to deal with the market environment that exists now but still,

                      The west coast price mentioned in the first post is NOT the price actual sales are being made at. It is an indicator price. The AAFC report makes that clear.

                      The 227,000 tonnes loaded for export in week 27 didn't just come from one country elevator. It came from all over the prairies and was purchased at different times and different prices.

                      More transparency is needed NOW.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        The only way to make markets efficient is arbitrage.

                        That entails any number of this. Including selling and delivering to US elevators. I have sold to Lansing and Schoular and my grain is picked up.

                        Doing what Klause has done with containers would be another way.

                        Producer cars need to be pushed to the max.

                        Every avenue needs to be explored. And yes if we had kept ownership of wit, pwt, gst, etc. it would have helped.

                        It is tough to get anything too off the grid going when the railroads tell you to go *@#% yourself.

                        Comment

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