Archived News
06-07-2001
Biodiesel use would boost Argentine oilseed output
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, July 4 (Reuters) - Argentina should increaseproduction of biodiesel, fuel derived in part from vegetable oils, inorder to boost oilseed output and cut costs for farmers, industry leaderssaid on Wednesday.
06-07-2001
Indonesian turmoil stalls feed consumption growth
JAKARTA, July 5 (Reuters) - Indonesia's lingering economic and politicalcrisis has dimmed hopes of a strong rebound in the country's commercialfeed consumption to pre-crisis levels, a senior industry official said.
06-07-2001
Malaysia palm oil breaks RM 900, eyes on China
KUALA LUMPUR, July 5 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures broke above900 ringgit, a level last seen on March 30, in anticipation of morepurchases from India and talk about an increased Chinese import quotas,traders said on Thursday.
06-07-2001
Thailand to host international biotech conference
BANGKOK, July 3 (AFP) - Thailand will next week host an internationalconference to debate the safety of genetically engineered food and crops,which is to be opened by Britain's Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott.
04-07-2001
ARGENTINA SOY RISES ON DEMAND FROM ABROAD
ARGENTINA SOY RISES ON DEMAND FROM ABROAD
04-07-2001
Guthrie plans to refinance bridging loan
Guthrie plans to refinance bridging loan
04-07-2001
NORTH AFRICAN IMPORTS OF SOY, PALM OIL RISING
NORTH AFRICAN IMPORTS OF SOY, PALM OIL RISING
04-07-2001
SPAIN HALTS MOVEMENT OF POSSIBLY HARMFUL FOOD OIL
SPAIN HALTS MOVEMENT OF POSSIBLY HARMFUL FOOD OIL
04-07-2001
WORLD SUMFLOWER COMPLEX EXPORTS TO FAIL - OIL WORL
WORLD SUMFLOWER COMPLEX EXPORTS TO FAIL - OIL WORLD
03-07-2001
Canada canola plantings seen lowest in five years
Canada canola plantings seen lowest in five yearsWINNIPEG, Manitoba, June 29 (Reuters) - Canada's farmers will plant thesmallest canola acreage since 1996, a widely watched government surveyreported on Friday, but the planted area was still higher than industryexpectations."It's a little higher than the trade was anticipating, but I think it's agood number," a Winnipeg-based grain company analyst said. "It's verypositive because it gives us something to work with.""It's kind of like newfound money," a floor trader at the WinnipegCommodity Exchange said. "All of a sudden things aren't as tight as theyonce were and now you can kind of trade a little more freely."The Statistics Canada report said canola plantings this year would drop to9.93 million acres, down 18 percent from the 12.09 million acres seededlast year but above industry estimates of 8.9 million to 9.45 millionacres. The survey figures were also higher than an earlier Statscanplanting estimate of 9.27 million acres released in April."Unprofitable margins for canola crushers, near-record stocks of canolathis spring and high input costs for fertilizer and chemicals were themain deterrents," Canada's statistics agency said in its preliminaryestimates of principal field crops areas.Canola is the Canadian variant of rapeseed. Canada produces 20 percent ofthe global supply and is the world's largest exporter of the oilseed.According to the Canadian Grain Commission, Canada has exported 4.37million tonnes of canola so far in the current 2000/01 crop year, a jumpfrom the 3.57 million tonnes exported during the same period the yearbefore.Canada's major canola buyers are Japan, China and Mexico.Last year Canada's 12.09 million canola acres produced 7.1 million tonnesof the oilseed. Using the latest acreage estimates, some analysts said anaverage yield this year could produce about 5.4 million tonnes."Longer-term, it's still a very friendly number. We barely have enough togo around," an industry analyst said.Analysts said that given extremely dry conditions in Alberta and parts ofSaskatchewan earlier in the spring and excess rain in Manitoba, attentionwould now shift to crop weather and yield, something that Statscan alsoacknowledged, stating that some farmers were "ambivalent" about whetherthey would have a crop to harvest.One of the major surprises in the Statscan report was a decrease in barleyacres."The barley area drop is surprising and mystifying," said Bruce Burnett,director of weather and crop surveillance at the Canadian Wheat Board.The Statscan survey said 12.4 million acres of barley would be seeded inCanada, down from 12.55 million last year. Grain traders had expectedbarley plantings of 12.5 million to 13 million acres.Much of Canada's grain industry had forecast that canola acres would betransferred into barley because it is a more drought-resistant andlower-cost crop."Obviously for the later planted stuff that went in, they decided to givecanola a whirl," Burnett said.The Statscan survey revealed that hundreds of thousands of acres had goneinstead to specialty crops such as peas, oats and chickpeas.Dry pea acreage climbed to a record 3.6 million acres, 16 percent higherthan the 3.1 million acres seeded last year, an increase Statscanattributed to lower fertilizer costs and the growing use of peas in animalrations and for export.Canada's all-wheat seedings came in at 28.497 million acres, aboveindustry expectations of 26.55 million to 27.5 million acres and higherthan last year's 27.583 million acres.In April, Statistics Canada forecast 27.28 million acres.The largest increase was in spring wheat, the statistics agency said,jumping to 21.96 million acres from 20.06 million acres in 2000."I look at the wheat numbers in Canada as being kind of ugly," a Winnipeggrain broker said."In the last report, it all said a lot of those canola acres would go intosummer fallow," an analyst said. "Well, it turns out they didn't. Theywent into wheat."The report forecast that durum wheat would decline to 5.54 million acresfrom 6.53 million last year and within trade expectations that had rangedfrom 5.3 million to 7.05 million acres. Statscan's April planting estimatefor durum was 5.31 million acres.Additional acres were seen for flax, Canada's other oilseed crop. Friday'sreport forecast 1.635 million flax acres, up from 1.47 million acres in2000.Statistics Canada will release its crop production estimates on August 28.
03-07-2001
Don't Cut Fertiliser Usage, Says Hap Seng's Madsen
Don't Cut Fertiliser Usage, Says Hap Seng's Madsen
03-07-2001
Korean firms sell StarLink corn for edible oil
Korean firms sell StarLink corn for edible oilSEOUL (Asia Pulse) June 28 - Four food processors processed corn importscontaining the genetically-modified corn StarLink to starch and cornsprout and sold them for edible use to food and cooking oil makers, theKorea Food and Drug Administration (KFDA) said today.StarLink kernels from the United States are banned for human consumptionand are for livestock feed and industrial goods only.The four companies are Shin Dong Bang, Samyang Genex Corp., Doosan CornProducts Korea Inc. and Daesang Co.They processed a combined 141,372 tons of American corn, including the USbio-engineered corn, through edible corn treatment facilities to starchand sprout.The administration has found that 34.4 tons of the industrial starch weresold for edible use to baking powder manufacturers and 4,061 tons ofsprout, enough to make 1.4 million liters of cooking oil, went to fourcooking oil makers.After examining corn starch and cooking oil goods on the market, a KFDAspokesman said the allergy-causing element of StarLink was not found inthese finished products.Even if people digest oil made of StarLink contained corn, it wouldn'tharm them because harmful components of the genetically-modified food arecleared through refinement processes, he added.The administration notified local governments where the four foodprocessors are headquartered to take necessary administrative stepsagainst them for violating the relevant laws, including imposing fines orsuspending operations.