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Bayer Monsanto Merger Serious Concern For Canola Farmers: Associations Joint Statemen

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    Bayer Monsanto Merger Serious Concern For Canola Farmers: Associations Joint Statemen

    Bayer Monsanto Merger Serious Concern for Canola Farmers

    Joint News Statement - Canadian Canola Growers Association, Alberta Canola Growers Commission, SaskCanola, Manitoba Canola Growers Association, Ontario Canola Growers Association


    The proposed merger between Bayer and Monsanto has the potential to significantly reduce competition and stifle innovation for canola farmers.

    Winnipeg, Manitoba – September 19, 2016 The recent announcement of a merger agreement between Bayer and Monsanto is a cause of serious concern to Canada’s canola farmers. The merger would combine two leading players in Canada’s agriculture industry, significantly reducing competition and consolidating market share in the canola seed, trait and crop protection business.

    Canola is an extremely important crop to the long-term economic and environmental sustainability of 43,000 Canadian grain farms. Canola farmers are especially concerned about the effect of the merger on the offerings that will be available to them in the future. A reduction in competition could potentially increase crop input prices, curtail product choice and diminish the incentive for future innovation in canola seed and chemistry.

    The Competition Act and its enforcement agency, the Competition Bureau, have established review procedures for determining the impact that proposed corporate mergers will have on competition in a sector of the economy. The regulator has the power to impose actions, conditions or require divestitures in a merger agreement to ensure competition is not substantially lessened.

    Associations representing canola farmers at provincial and national levels, call for a timely and rigorous review by the regulator of the merger’s impact on competition in the canola sector in general, and more specifically at the farm gate. The associations will work with the regulator to ensure canola farmers’ concerns are voiced and that the impact of the merger on canola farmers is fully understood.

    #2
    About time those folks woke up. There is only one reason to engage in merger activity of this nature and that is to fatten margins by lessening competition.

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      #3
      The sad thing is..l it might be worse when the executives get together for that monthly golf game or "fishing trip"

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        #4
        Only a matter of time graincos will start to merge to.

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          #5
          This is bad for farmers. It is a good time for the merger because canola and soybeans have a good chance for farmers to make a profit. Canadian farmers are growing more acres of canola than ever. If they are not happy they can plant the alternative..........soybeans. Splash a little wheat or lentils in between once every 7 or 8 years and retire a multi millionaire!

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            #6
            Damn, must be Harper's fault, oh he is not around anymore, who do we blaim now? But seriously without a doubt this will cost farmers more. Just like the potash corp Agrium merger will cost farmers more. Canola seed is already overpriced imagine what it will be now. Bayer will decide if you will be able to make a profit, it is very sad. Sure glad I still have some cows.

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              #7
              they are already jumping the seed cost 10$/acre , in lock step without joining.
              what does that say?
              competition does not exist now.

              time to wake up people, powerful agribusiness, seed , chemical ,companies
              write the laws that prevent real competition from occurring.

              your the only one fighting it out in the free market.

              not them though.

              how can Treflan or avedex cost close to 20$/acre., seed and chem jump in lock step.
              how come so hard to get basagran, or other choices etc.

              you pay freight to the coast on fert. manufactured here

              market manipulation enabled by the very govt.s you guys elected.
              china would sell you all of it at 1/4 the price or less. if they could get access.

              and with the new seed rules , everything you grow will eventually come from the cartel .

              you guys are big on free market economy,, that's great . how about we see some
              for a change.

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                #8
                Yep, where were these "representatives" when the anti-competition board made its decision? Now they are speaking up?

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                  #9
                  This buy out is far from complete...the competition bureau will take six months minimum to make any decisions. I still highly doubt they will be allowed to keep both systems.

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                    #10
                    Goodtime....reread sawfly1's post. Doesn't matter now either.....Mother Nature plays the last card but the other assholes at the table jointly stack the deck in their favor. There we sit thinking we're in the "game", we are but for only one purpose.....to have most of our chips taken from us. One day you will realize you don't have to play anymore...cash in your chips and take the crooks hands out of your pockets and tell them all to **** off! So you either stay in the game and hope they leave you enough chips to go make some more and in the meantime hope Mother Nature, with her big trump card, doesn't take you out of the game.

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                      #11
                      Why not go demonstrate in your 70,000 $ pickup trucks?

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                        #12
                        ....can I take the Escalade? The $70K truck is hard on fuel.

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                          #13
                          Ouch.

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                            #14
                            What is the cdn canola councils opinion on this?

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                              #15
                              They will be bought off with a Bayer sponsored winter meeting in the tropics some where - just a wild guess

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