• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Triffid crisis over, world didn't come to an end

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Triffid crisis over, world didn't come to an end

    From this weeks agriweek

    <b>Shoot that foot
    Chinese oilseed crushers recognize an opportunity, fast</b>

    The uber-regulators of the European Union remain content to keep the ban imposed a year ago on Canadian flax
    seed imports which may contain infinitesimal traces of the variety Triffid. As a result imports are down sharply. European linseed mills have either shut down or switched other seed. But a shortage of linseed oil which quickly developed when the ban was imposed is now gone. <b>China is taking all the seed that formerly went to Europe, crushing it and exporting the oil to the EU.</b> Triffid cannot be detected in the oil. In April, for the first time, China became the
    leading importer of Canadian flax, taking 169,000 tonnes in the crop year so far, compared to 166,000 to the EU.

    Exports to the EU are half of the 323,000 tonnes sold up to the same date a year ago. China took only 3,000 tonnes of flax in all of 2008-09. <b>If this trend continues Europe will cease to be a significant market and China will replace it.</b>

    This may well be the template by which other market disruptions from trumped-up food safety and GMO issues will
    be dealt with by regular market forces.
    For a time it appeared that Canadian flax could be trans-shipped to the EU through the U.S., which does not face the Triffid ban, but this trade has not developed. Flax exports to the U.S. are similar to those of a year earlier.

    <b>For the Canadian flax industry the crisis created by the Triffid ban is effectively over</b>, at least on the level of finding buyers for what is grown. The export market for flax has always been very thin, in recent times entirely concentrated in Europe.

    To make the Chinese connection work, there has been an erosion in flax prices to western growers, but not as large as might appear. Last week cash flax prices in Saskatchewan were about $320 a tonne or about 87% of the cash canola price of $365. Averaged over the last two years, flax has mostly sold at about 88% of the canola price. The flax market slid from over $400 a tonne in the late summer of 2009 to under $300 in eight weeks when the Triffid affair broke.

    #2
    Free markets trump regulators. Again.

    Comment


      #3
      so can you now, plant, grow and sell flax, without testing it for Triffid?

      Comment


        #4
        I doubt it.

        Comment


          #5
          Sad part of the story is that IF Canada would have a flax crushing industry this would not have been an issue in the first place.

          Who do think is making the most in the value added train?

          Canadian farmers,Chinese crushers, or the EU ?

          Instead of putting money into crushing, the flax council and governments are out developing another variety of gm flax.

          Comment


            #6
            Sad part number 2 - flax acres are going to be way down with the normal flax area under water/flooded out, not seeded. Flax may be the revenue leader in 2011?

            Comment


              #7
              All flax stubble was the driest fields to seed, another plus in a soggy spring.

              Comment


                #8
                Kind a sick commentary on the general attitudes on the this
                board. Free market is work because we are screwing the farmers
                out of about $4/bushel and got a lot more middleman skimming
                money out of our pockets.
                Any read the story about how Viterra is screwing farmers down
                under. I think it is New Zealand where they are import grain
                at a cost of about $100 more than they pay local farmers.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Fransisco,

                  How much flax are you stuck with?

                  This 'crisis' has cost our farm thousands... and we sold just under 600bu of seed this spring...

                  7000 left.

                  You really don't think this cost farmers, grain co's... EU cushers... $$$millions out of pocket?

                  THINK AGAIN.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Tom, what are the tarrifs on flax oil as opposed to seed from Canada to EU? Does China have any? I'm assuming not hence the reason they are crushing.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      WD9,

                      I understand the meal value is very important... why we do not crush it in Canada is the meal market. We must export our canola meal... and the flax meal has the gm event in it. It takes time to develop new markets that accept the GM event.

                      Flax yeilds 20-30% less than canola... so at 80-90% of canola it is not competitive to grow.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I'm sure hog farmers were grateful that the free market found a home for their porkers. The fact they went for nine dollars a head didn't matter.

                        There will always be journalists who believe that the only important thing is having an outlet for goods.

                        Comment

                        • Reply to this Thread
                        • Return to Topic List
                        Working...