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    CWB Press Release

    Farmers lose barley value without single desk
    Winnipeg – After extensive analysis, the CWB board of directors has concluded that no other marketing option comes close to achieving the value the single desk brings to barley farmers.

    “A plan to transition the CWB completely out of barley may be the only realistic option if the single desk is dismantled,” board chair Ken Ritter said. “Recognizing this, the board has agreed that we must work to secure the single desk for farmers.”

    The analysis shows that without a radical transformation of the CWB into a grain company with a complete range of physical assets and a large capital infusion, the CWB could not market barley. Even if this transformation could be accomplished, the CWB’s ability to add extra value for farmers would be small compared to the value of the single desk, independently verified at $59-million a year for barley.

    Last week, the CWB’s directors continued their extensive discussions and analysis of the conditions necessary for the government’s stated vision of “a strong and viable” CWB in an open barley market.

    “The board tested all options against the following proposition: Does the CWB provide farmers with a materially higher net benefit relative to competing entities?” Ritter said. “None of the scenarios we examined could pass that test.

    “It is simply not realistic for a farmer-run CWB to continue to market barley without either a single desk or very significant assets.”

    Ritter noted that ownership of both port and country grain facilities could help ensure the CWB’s competitiveness with customers and farmers. However, any commercial arrangement would have to be sustainable for the long term, he added.

    “If we are unsuccessful in our efforts to secure the single desk for farmers, we would present a strong business case to government for asset ownership and adequate time to transition the business,” Ritter said. “However, we recognize that this would not compensate farmers for the removal of the single desk.”

    The federal government is expected to release results of its producer plebiscite on barley marketing as early as this week.

    “We are calling on the Government of Canada to carefully consider the consequences of the future of barley marketing in Western Canada,” Ritter said. “We look forward to discussions with Minister Strahl that result in common-sense business solutions.”

    Controlled by western Canadian farmers, the CWB is the largest wheat and barley marketer in the world. One of Canada’s biggest exporters, the Winnipeg-based organization sells grain to over 70 countries and returns all sales revenue, less marketing costs, to farmers.

    For more information, please contact:

    Maureen Fitzhenry,
    CWB media relations manager
    Tel: (204) 983-3101

    Always interesting. I guess now the CWB is talking money versus single desk.

    #2
    This just in, Chicken Little says sky is still falling, has paid for 'independant' study to verify.

    Solution send money, lots and lots of money, sky will still fall but taxpayers money will help.

    Comment


      #3
      <blockquote>“If we are unsuccessful in our efforts to secure the single desk for farmers, we would present <b>a strong business case to government</b> for asset ownership and adequate time to transition the business,” Ritter said. </blockquote>

      How's about making a strong business case to farmers? I guess that would be to radical. If you have to make the case to government it is not a strong business one, it goes by a different name, <b>welfare case.</b>

      Comment


        #4
        I'm reminded of the value the CWB provides while I still store my malt, with a contract without a delivery date or a real price and have to pay for delivery while seeing feed barley picked up in the yard at $3.35 of which I can make a real contract with a real price and a real delivery date.

        Keep telling me there is value in the CWB, yup, uh huh, alrighty then.

        Comment


          #5
          Sounds like a class action to me

          Parsley

          Comment


            #6
            Storing mustard is fun too.

            Comment


              #7
              As suggested in another thread...you should be processing your product (in this case mustard), and start selling it door to door.

              Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha

              Comment


                #8
                Cotton
                On your mustard storage did you

                a) fail to read the fine print and not realize they had until July to pick it up

                b) read the fine print and think
                .16 cents was not a bad price hoping they would have it by now (that's the one I picked on our farm. MY bad)

                c) Just grow it on spec and are storing it waiting to get the 22Cents or higher for new crop

                d) you supply the answer
                ***note none of these are the same analogy as WD9's on barley***

                Comment

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