The question of CWB monopoly marketing was front and center in my mind today as I visited with Alberta Premier Ralph Klein.
I received a call from a durum farmer with high quality durum who was beside himself with frustration.
This farmer had not contracted on the A series durum contract, which has been a risk management tool for many years.
We wait until the later contracts so the opportunity to deliver into next year’s pool becomes an option.
This option is one of the few legislative benefits available to help a grain producer manage risk through the CWB pooling accounts.
This option had been available from the beginning of the CWB. For durum, switching pool years, is still the only optional risk management tool available, as the basis and fixed pricing options are not available.
It should not be unreasonable for a farmer to hold off until the B,C,or D contracts as the farmer himself pays all the carrying and storage risk associated with waiting until later in the crop year to deliver this special product.
It however is beyond the power of the CWB’s authority to refuse delivery of grain offered to them, when a ready market is waiting for this grain.
The CWB refused #1 and #2 Durum deliveries on the B Series Durum contracts.
I phoned the CWB and they agreed there is a rumor that they won’t take any C series, and that a serious look would have to be taken whether or not they would accept any D Series high quality durum.
This high quality durum is worth over $7.00/bu, and the CWB refuses to sell it.
WHY?
The CWB says it is “Holding UP” the durum market by withholding our supplies from the market.
What are the effects of this action?
1.The farmers that are required to hold back the durum are not being paid storage, carrying costs, or for risk of spoilage loss. This farmer further has no assurance that when the CWB does decide to market their durum, that a profitable price will be available.
2.When the CWB withholds this high quality durum off the market, we as western “designated area” farmers tell the world that Canada is an unreliable supplier, and are willing to blackmail consumers to force the durum price higher.
3. Other farmers around the world see high prices for durum, much higher than they should be, in relation to the other grains today. This creates a signal that tells everyone else on the planet that can, to grow durum in the next production cycle. Higher production of durum outside Canada is assured for next fall.
4. Now the higher world production of durum lowers the price paid next fall by the CWB.
The high quality durum grower is now dead, because of CWB speculation.
Obviously the durum was not the “designated area” farmers own, but had been expropriated by the CWB NEP (National Expropriation Policy), when the CWB refused to market this durum.
Other exporters contract and fill the void the CWB leaves when it refuses to market all the “designated area” durum offered for sale.
We are again labeled as unreliable suppliers!
Other nation’s farmers reap the benefit of CWB foolishness, and Western Canadian farmers go directly to jail and do not collect $200.00.
Speculation with food products is a foolish idea. If an individual farmer holds back production to cover costs, I do not place this in the category of speculation.
However when prices are already profitable, and the CWB withholds food products from the market against any farmer’s wish, this is not acceptable, and is the worst kind of speculation.
I heard only multi-nationals were guilty of this! I guess not.
The CWB did this speculation in feed barley, and all types of wheat in the spring of 1996. Again in the fall of 1998 the CWB speculated that market prices were going to rise, and were wrong. In the fall of 2000 the CWB speculated on lower grade wheat, and certainly it appears that they lost again.
Will the CWB reject the series C durum contracts?
Has the CWB already triggered too much durum to be grown world wide in the next production cycle?
No one said the CWB had to sell all of this high quality durum tomorrow, you know over the next 8 months would be just fine, wouldn’t it?
Will the CWB market the durum offered them and fulfill their obligations to maximize returns to western Canadian durum growers, by selling the entire special product that will be offered to them through the C and D series contracts?
Shouldn’t it be the individual farmer’s choice whether or not they want to withhold from the market or sell their grain?
What good does a single desk monopoly do, when it is often guilty of “holding up” and robbing Western Canadian wheat and barley farmers of well-deserved, profitable livelihoods?
I received a call from a durum farmer with high quality durum who was beside himself with frustration.
This farmer had not contracted on the A series durum contract, which has been a risk management tool for many years.
We wait until the later contracts so the opportunity to deliver into next year’s pool becomes an option.
This option is one of the few legislative benefits available to help a grain producer manage risk through the CWB pooling accounts.
This option had been available from the beginning of the CWB. For durum, switching pool years, is still the only optional risk management tool available, as the basis and fixed pricing options are not available.
It should not be unreasonable for a farmer to hold off until the B,C,or D contracts as the farmer himself pays all the carrying and storage risk associated with waiting until later in the crop year to deliver this special product.
It however is beyond the power of the CWB’s authority to refuse delivery of grain offered to them, when a ready market is waiting for this grain.
The CWB refused #1 and #2 Durum deliveries on the B Series Durum contracts.
I phoned the CWB and they agreed there is a rumor that they won’t take any C series, and that a serious look would have to be taken whether or not they would accept any D Series high quality durum.
This high quality durum is worth over $7.00/bu, and the CWB refuses to sell it.
WHY?
The CWB says it is “Holding UP” the durum market by withholding our supplies from the market.
What are the effects of this action?
1.The farmers that are required to hold back the durum are not being paid storage, carrying costs, or for risk of spoilage loss. This farmer further has no assurance that when the CWB does decide to market their durum, that a profitable price will be available.
2.When the CWB withholds this high quality durum off the market, we as western “designated area” farmers tell the world that Canada is an unreliable supplier, and are willing to blackmail consumers to force the durum price higher.
3. Other farmers around the world see high prices for durum, much higher than they should be, in relation to the other grains today. This creates a signal that tells everyone else on the planet that can, to grow durum in the next production cycle. Higher production of durum outside Canada is assured for next fall.
4. Now the higher world production of durum lowers the price paid next fall by the CWB.
The high quality durum grower is now dead, because of CWB speculation.
Obviously the durum was not the “designated area” farmers own, but had been expropriated by the CWB NEP (National Expropriation Policy), when the CWB refused to market this durum.
Other exporters contract and fill the void the CWB leaves when it refuses to market all the “designated area” durum offered for sale.
We are again labeled as unreliable suppliers!
Other nation’s farmers reap the benefit of CWB foolishness, and Western Canadian farmers go directly to jail and do not collect $200.00.
Speculation with food products is a foolish idea. If an individual farmer holds back production to cover costs, I do not place this in the category of speculation.
However when prices are already profitable, and the CWB withholds food products from the market against any farmer’s wish, this is not acceptable, and is the worst kind of speculation.
I heard only multi-nationals were guilty of this! I guess not.
The CWB did this speculation in feed barley, and all types of wheat in the spring of 1996. Again in the fall of 1998 the CWB speculated that market prices were going to rise, and were wrong. In the fall of 2000 the CWB speculated on lower grade wheat, and certainly it appears that they lost again.
Will the CWB reject the series C durum contracts?
Has the CWB already triggered too much durum to be grown world wide in the next production cycle?
No one said the CWB had to sell all of this high quality durum tomorrow, you know over the next 8 months would be just fine, wouldn’t it?
Will the CWB market the durum offered them and fulfill their obligations to maximize returns to western Canadian durum growers, by selling the entire special product that will be offered to them through the C and D series contracts?
Shouldn’t it be the individual farmer’s choice whether or not they want to withhold from the market or sell their grain?
What good does a single desk monopoly do, when it is often guilty of “holding up” and robbing Western Canadian wheat and barley farmers of well-deserved, profitable livelihoods?
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