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Canola and China

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    #13
    Canada takes tougher line with China over canola export dispute - Canada hardened its line with China on Wednesday in a dispute over Canadian canola exports, saying bilateral relations could not improve until Beijing took action to settle the matter. Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland made the remarks in an interview just days before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is due to visit Beijing on a trip designed to deepen economic and political ties. China says that starting on Sept. 1, it will toughen its inspection standard for canola over concerns about the crop disease black-leg, threatening C$2 billion ($1.6 billion) in Canadian exports of the oilseed. Freeland, stressing she felt Ottawa had addressed Beijing's concerns, said she was "pushing very hard on this" and would be raising the matter with Chi-nese Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng by phone later on Wednesday. "It's important ... the Chinese understand this is not some side issue. This is a priority issue for Canada," she said, noting that when the Liberal government came to power last year, Trudeau instructed her to expand trade with China. "We cannot take the next step in our relation-ship with China until the canola issue is resolved. ... We expect some action from China. Our canola is absolutely safe," she added. Canada is the world's biggest exporter of canola, used mainly to produce vegetable oil.
    Exporters, including Richardson International, Viterra Inc and Cargill Ltd, stand to lose sales to Canada's biggest canola export market. Freeland said she did not know whether the dispute could be settled by the Sept. 1 deadline. A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Ottawa said it could not immediately comment on the canola discussions The matter threatens to overshadow the visit of Trudeau, who is promising to improve Canada's relationship with China after a rocky 10-year period under the former Conservative government. China has raised concerns for years about blackleg spreading from Canadian canola into Chinese crops of ****seed, another name for the oilseed. Trad-ers suggest China's real reason for a higher standard is that its domestic ****seed oil stocks are high. The issue is a personal one for Freeland, whose father is a Canadian canola farmer. "I have asked my dad today to send me a jar of canola he has just combined, which I'm going to take with me to China and I'm going to give it to Minister Gao," she said.

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      #14
      There is more to this issue. Reality is that China is broke and can't afford canola. Dockage is just a side show. China need super clean canola to blend with their stockpile of decaying crap which was bought during the speculative fever years. (2010 to 2015 RIP). As for the >1% dockage growers, show me the tickets. Mine has never been that low but that includes small seed as well. I can see cleavers in the neighbors crop at 100 kmh so that ain't 1% canola either.

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        #15
        The real fight is over dockage and who get paid and who does not want to pay
        So ya when times get tight , ie China , they tighten the rules the grain co's loose a cash cow and the farmers get screwed - simple

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          #16
          All grain co's have been doing this for years , charge dockage , charge cleaning then add the tolerable amount of dockage back in for shipping - it's been a huge money maker for them . I know very many who have worked at elevators and are still doing so - they openly admit it - they are just getting caught with their pants down and it will cost who - farmers .
          No one in the civilized world can deny this.

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            #17
            You guys are right, it is a complete joke that companies have been getting away with this.....

            But honestly this is not a Chinese buyer issue
            ...this is political bulshit.

            The Chinese are bidding 90 to 100 over US /mt for canola off the west coast.... that in itself proves the demand there for canola.

            So now grain are gonna make MORE than they did before at the 2.5 dockage limit.

            Sounds like p and h, Cargill, and viterra all jumped on the bandwagon to sell canola to china...Richardsons are sitting tight.

            Once again we are the low man on the totem pole.
            Honestly would rather have it this way than not shipping anything to them at all.

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              #18
              Exactly happy

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