Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts

Friday, 8 February 2013

Agriculture ministry alarmed at quality of fish imported from Vietnam

Ukraine is alarmed at the quality of fish imported from Vietnam and cases of the non-observation of quality and safety requirements, First Deputy Agricultural Policy and Food Minister of Ukraine Ivan Bisiuk has said.

According to a press release of the Agricultural Policy and Food Ministry, Bisiuk informed Vietnamese Ambassador to Ukraine Ho Dac Minh Nguyet of this at a meeting in Kyiv on Thursday.

Ukraine said fish supplied from Vietnam is in great demand on the market. However, last year the State Veterinary and Biosecurity Service of Ukraine found 12 cases of the non-observation of quality and safety requirements in Vietnamese fish and seafood. Ukraine banned imports of products made by two Vietnamese companies.

The report says that at the initiative of Agricultural Policy and Food Minister of Ukraine Mykola Prysiazhniuk a working group has been created. The group will visit Vietnam in March to study the problematic issuers and resolve them.

Bisiuk also said that Ukraine is interested in expanding its trade with Vietnam. In particular, this concerns supplies of Ukrainian grain crops, sugar, sunflower oil, meat and dairy products to the Vietnamese market.

According to the ministry's information, in 2012 goods turnover with agricultural products between Ukraine and Vietnam came to $98.9 million, which is $30.3 million up on 2011.
Original Article Here

Monday, 14 January 2013

Ukraine Increases Agricultural Exports

UKRAINE - In 2012, Ukrainian agricultural export increased by nearly 40 per cent, reaching US$17 billion, according to the Ukrainian Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food, Mykola Prysyazhnyuk.

Additionally, he noted that Ukrainian agricultural industry produces twice as much as is consumed by the domestic market. Comparably, the UK produces only 60 per cent of the food consumed in the country.

Ukrainian agricultural export in January - October 2012 included meat, fish, dairy, poultry, vegetables, vegetable oils, sugar, wine, nuts, apples, as well as 6.7 million tons of wheat worth nearly USD 1.8 billion, according to ukrstat.gov.ua. Major buyers of Ukrainian agricultural products in 2012 were the EU and CIS countries.

In late December 2012, the Financial Times noted Ukraine's potential in wheat, barley, corn, and sunflower seeds export. Notably, in 2011, Ukraine joined the world's top three grain exporters. A year prior - in 2010 - it landed fourth on the list of the leading grain exporters, following the USA, the EU, and Canada. Moreover, Ukraine currently ranks number one in global barley exports.

Additionally, the Eastern European country became the third largest corn supplier in the world in 2011, surpassing Brazil and being the second runner-up to the USA and Argentina. In 2012, China - the world's largest corn consumer - imported Ukrainian corn for the first time.

Suffice it to say that in 2011, Ukraine became the world's largest sunflower exporter, according to Erste Bank. The top consumer of Ukrainian sunflower oil is India - the country acquires around one quarter of the annual Ukrainian sunflower oil export, according to Ukragroconsult.

Given Ukraine's rich grain production in 2011, the country initiated the creation of the world's grain reserve under the auspices of the United Nations to ensure more efficient price regulation on the world grain market. Ukraine aimed to form a grain reserve of 10 to 12 million tons and use it for grain interventions.

ThePigSite News Desk

Friday, 11 January 2013

Ukraine Increases Agricultural Export

UKRAINE - In 2012, Ukrainian agricultural export increased by nearly 40 per cent, reaching USD 17 billion, according to the Ukrainian Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food Mykola Prysyazhnyuk.

Additionally, he noted that Ukrainian agricultural industry produces twice as much as is consumed by the domestic market. Comparably, the UK produces only 60 per cent of the food consumed in the country. 

Ukrainian agricultural export in January - October 2012 included meat, fish, dairy, poultry, vegetables, vegetable oils, sugar, wine, nuts, apples, as well as 6.7 million tons of wheat worth nearly USD 1.8 billion, according to ukrstat.gov.ua. Major buyers of Ukrainian agricultural products in 2012 were the EU and CIS countries. 

In late December 2012, the Financial Times noted Ukraine's potential in wheat, barley, corn, and sunflower seeds export. Notably, in 2011, Ukraine joined the world's top three grain exporters. A year prior - in 2010 - it landed fourth on the list of the leading grain exporters, following the USA, the EU, and Canada. Moreover, Ukraine currently ranks number one in global barley exports. 

Additionally, the Eastern European country became the third largest corn supplier in the world in 2011, surpassing Brazil and being the second runner-up to the USA and Argentina. In 2012, China - the world's largest corn consumer - imported Ukrainian corn for the first time. 

Suffice it to say that in 2011, Ukraine became the world's largest sunflower exporter, according to Erste Bank. The top consumer of Ukrainian sunflower oil is India - the country acquires around one quarter of the annual Ukrainian sunflower oil export, according toUkragroconsult. 

Given Ukraine's rich grain production in 2011, the country initiated the creation of the world's grain reserve under the auspices of the United Nations to ensure more efficient price regulation on the world grain market. Ukraine aimed to form a grain reserve of 10 to 12 million tons and use it for grain interventions.

ThePoultrySite News Desk

Tuesday, 13 November 2012

Ukraine may start maize export to China soon

Ukraine may start its first shipments of maize to China by the end of this year under an agreement which will allow the former Soviet republic pay back a $3 billion loan to the Asian giant. Ukrainian Agricultural Minister Mykola Prysyazhnyuk said on Monday that the way was clear for shipments to start after the two sides reached agreement on sanitary and other quality requirements for supplies of the commodity. 

"Shipments of Ukrainian maize will be made in accordance with inter-government agreements and by private companies as well," Prysyazhnyuk was quoted as saying by his ministry. The outline agreement should enable Ukraine to pay off $3 billion worth of credit extended by China this summer, he said. A list of Ukrainian exporting companies would be sent to China in the near future. 

Analysts say Ukraine, a major wheat producer which is also the world's fourth-biggest maize exporter, may in future be able to compete with the United States for China's maize market. The former Soviet republic said in July that it would supply 2.0 million to 2.5 million tonnes of maize to China every year to pay off the $3 billion loan. China's overall maize imports could total 6.0 million tonnes this year and might reach 8.0 million tonnes in 2013, according to Ukrainian agricultural ministry figures. 

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Australia's wheat output seen lower, exports to hit three-year low

Analysts and traders cut their estimate for Australia's 2012/13 wheat output to 20.47 million tonnes and said exports might shrink to a three-year low, a Reuters poll shows, as unfriendly crop weather dents yields. Both forecasts fall significantly short of most recent government estimates, with the output projection indicating a drop of more than 30 percent from last year's record harvest.

Australia is the world's second largest wheat exporter and worries about its crop at a time of lower output in Argentina and fears of export curbs by Russia and Ukraine are raising concerns about global food supplies. The fears have supported benchmark Chicago Board of Trade wheat, which is up 3 percent this week, having gained 34 percent in the last five months.

Reuters surveyed 10 analysts and traders, and their average estimate for the wheat crop came in at 20.47 million tonnes, or 9 percent below Australia's official forecast of 22.5 million tonnes reported in September. Australia's output last year was at an all-time high of 29.5 million tonnes. An earlier poll had forecast output at 21.44 million tonnes.

The poll pegged wheat exports at an average of 16.85 million tonnes, the lowest since 13.73 million tonnes were shipped in the 2009/10 season, data from the Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics and Sciences shows. The figure would also be about 27 percent below 2011/12's record exports of 23.04 million tonnes and fall 25 percent short of an Australian government estimate of 22.5 million tonnes. Export volumes typically include stocks carried over from the previous year.

The majority of Australian wheat is sent to South East Asia and its key consumers are Indonesia, Japan and China. Analysts said lower output was likely to boost prices of Australian wheat, which could prompt Asian customers to seek a substitute in US wheat, which freight costs usually make uncompetitive.

Copyright Reuters, 2012

Friday, 20 July 2012

Nation in talks with Ukraine to boost agricultural trade ties


Experts say additional supply would reduce reliance on imports from US
China and Ukraine are in talks about deepening trade links, particularly in the food andagriculture sector.
Top government officials from both countries talked about starting importing Ukrainian corn tothe Chinese market during a recent meeting in Beijing.
Oleg Bakhmatyuk, chairman of the board of Ukrlandfarming Plc, the largest Ukrainian agro-industrial company, said he had been encouraged by talks between Minister of Agriculture HanChangfu and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Konstyantyn Hryshchenko.
"Chinese government officials have attached great importance to agricultural cooperation withUkraine and we believe we will soon have market access for Ukrainian corn to enter China,"Bakhmatyuk, who was part of the official Ukraine delegation, told a news conference.
He also said his company was in talks with major Chinese food companies, such as ChinaNational Cereals, and China Oil and Food Corporation, the country's largest State-owned foodconglomerate, about sales of Ukrainian corn into China, and that the signs were clear that thetwo countries will enhance their commercial ties.
In 2011, bilateral trade stood at $10 billion, well ahead of the target set by two governments.
China imported 1.88 million metric tons of corn during the first five months of this year, officialdata showed, compared with the total corn imports of 1.75 million in 2011.
Industry analysts estimate this year's total imports will be between 3 and 4 million tons, mostlyfrom the United States.
In June, the central banks of China and Ukraine signed a currency swap agreement totaling 15billion yuan ($2.3 billion).
Vadim Tolpeco, an aide to Bakhmatyuk, added: "The currency swap sets the scale for bilateraltrade, which will be led by agricultural trade."
Bakhmatyuk said that, looking wider than just corn, he expected Ukrainian farm producers ingeneral to "become major players in the Chinese market in the future".
Analysts agree that the two countries are highly complementary in the agricultural sector, andfood imports from Ukraine could help reduce China's reliance on traditional suppliers such asthe US.
"China can provide Ukraine with production materials such as seeds and agriculturalmachinery, while Ukraine can sell its products to China," said Huang Dejun, general manager ofBeijing Orient Agribusiness Consultant Ltd, a consulting firm specializing in agribusinessconsulting services to the food industry.
According to data from Ukrlandfarming, Ukrainian corn is highly competitive in price and couldbe imported to Shanghai for 25 percent less than US corn.
"The fact that Ukrainian corn is not genetically modified will also make it very popular in China,"Huang added.
Besides corn, China will also be interested in buying sugar, pork and sunflower seed oil fromUkraine in the near future, Huang said, as China's population nears an expected peak of 1.48billion by the end of 2020, putting huge strain on the country's food supply.
zhousiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Sunday, 1 July 2012

Major Black Sea wheat exporters face 22 percent crop fall


Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan's combined wheat crop will fall to 78.9 million tonnes this year, down 22 percent from 2011, with the biggest impact on yields from winterkill and spring drought in the Black Sea wheat powerhouses of Russia and Ukraine, a Reuters poll of 19 traders and analysts showed.

Concerns over falling wheat crops in Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan have lent support to global wheat markets this year, which anticipate a decline in shipments from the region which supplies around a quarter of world export volumes. Reduced crop prospects in the Black Sea region has coincided with a sharp deterioration in the outlook for the US corn crop to help spark a sharp rise in grain prices. Wheat prices in Paris have risen about 20 percent so far this year with the key new crop November contract peaking at 230.00 euros ($290) a tonne earlier this week, its highest level since May 2011.

"Recently there has been a palpable shift in sentiment (in grain markets) as a slew of both current and potential weather scenarios have reared their head," Barclays Capital analyst Sudakshina Unnikrishnan said in a market note this week. Though Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan are all expected to see declines in their harvests this year, Kazakhstan, whose harvest is expected to be hardest hit, could still sustain record exports this year with help from high stocks. Russia's median wheat crop forecast stood at 50.5 million tonnes, down from last year's 56.2 million tonnes, while over a third of respondents saw Russia's wheat crop below 50 million tonnes.

The lowest estimate came from Russia's Agriculture Ministry, which made a long expected reduction in its outlook on Monday, forecasting 47.5 million tonnes of wheat. Higher forecasts could be subject to downgrade, analysts said. "In my view this is the first pertinent estimate," said a western European wheat analyst.

"There is still the whole of July to get through and the weather forecasts are not favourable. We shouldn't forget that in 2010 when the harvest was devastated the damage was done in July and August." The poll suggests that Russia, which returned as the world No 3 wheat exporter after 2010's drought, will decrease its grain harvest to 85.5 million tonnes from 94 million tonnes.

Ukraine's grain crop is expected to fall to 44.9 million tonnes, of which wheat can account for 13.6 million tonnes. Hardest hit is Kazakhstan, expected to harvest 16.6 million tonnes of grain, down from 27 million tonnes in 2011, of which wheat may account for 14.8 million tonnes.

The median forecast for total grain crops in the three countries is 147 million tonnes, a 17 percent decrease. The hit from the drought is a key contributor to a deficit of wheat forecast this year on the world market, seen by the USDA and the International Grains Council at about 10 million tonnes, Commerzbank noted in a research report this week. "Supplies are expected to shrink more rapidly than demand," Commerzbank analysts said.


Copyright Reuters, 2012

Saturday, 23 June 2012

Canadian agricultural prices higher than world rate, WTO says


A World Trade Organization analysis done last year has concluded that Canada's domestic agricultural producers are getting prices 11 per cent higher than world prices - due mainly to the supply management system that protects dairy and poultry producers.
That study has been cited in some of the many criticisms of Canada's protectionist policy posted by trade partners, including key participants in the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade negotiations that Canada was given permission to join this week.
"The report notes that Canada's domestic agriculture prices are 11 per cent higher than world prices due to domestic insulation from world markets," the Australian government said as part of the WTO's regular review of Canadian trade policies.
"Would Canadian consumers benefit from lower prices, and Canadian producers be more globally competitive, if Canada undertook further liberalization of the most heavily protected sectors?"
Questions about supply management were also posed at the WTO's agriculture committee during the review of Canada's trade policies by Brazil, Chile, China, Columbia, the Dominican Republic, the European Union, India, Korea, New Zealand, Thailand and Ukraine, says a Canadian government document obtained under the Access to Information Act.
Colombia, for instance, asked Canada "how it ensures that these support measures do not distort the domestic market price?"
In its replies to WTO members, the Canadian government didn't specifically address the issue of whether Canadian consumers are being gouged.
The queries at the WTO challenged the long-standing Canadian quota system for dairy and poultry producers that is supported by stiff tariffs on imports.
"Supply management is a system that ensures a stable supply of dairy, poultry and eggs to Canadian consumers and the agri-food industry," the Canadian government response states.
Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz asked the media last November to produce a study which showed that Canadian consumers would benefit from the elimination of supply management.
He pointed out that a Canadian Tire flyer in his mailbox had four litres of milk on sale for $4.19 and a dozen eggs for $1.29.
"So I don't see this increased price to consumers," Ritz said, asking journalists to "show me an economic study where if the dairy farmers of Canada were disbanded, or the poultry farmers were disbanded, that somehow that would benefit consumers."
Ritz's office didn't directly challenge the WTO's findings but referred to reports and statements from industry groups protected by supply management which reject assertions that consumers are being gouged.
"Deregulation of the dairy systems in the U.K. and Australia has caused farm prices to come down, but consumer prices kept increasing with inflation," states the Dairy Farmers of Canada.
"The intermediaries simply increased their own margin after deregulation. Neither farmer nor consumer benefit from deregulation."
Former Liberal MP Martha Hall Findlay published a report this week in favour of dismantling supply management which cited Statistics Canada data stating that the average price of four litres of whole milk in Canada was $9.60 in Canada, compared to $3.68 in the U.S.
The Dairy Farmers of Canada, in response to Hall Findlay's report published by the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy, accused her of using "misleading" data in a "flawed" report.
The $9.60 figure is "$3 to $4 more than what most consumers pay. This misleading data does not match the experience of consumers in the Canadian marketplace," the organization stated.
However, even the $5.60 to $6.60 figure the Dairy Farmers of Canada says consumers pay for four litres of whole milk remains well above the $3.68 US figure cited in Hall Findlay's report, which is based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
U.S. President Barack Obama announced this week that Canada and Mexico have been invited to participate in the ambitious TPP trade talks that already include the U.S., Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.
The U.S., Australia and New Zealand had previously resisted Canada's entry due to concerns about supply management and Canadian intellectual property law.
The Harper government has never budged from its 2011 throne speech commitment to "continue to stand up for Canadian farmers and industries by defending supply management - in all international forums and bilateral negotiations."
The government says it will continue to defend the system in the multilateral TPP talks, though it has also agreed that the matter will be the subject of negotiations.
"Canada has made clear to all TPP members that it would be prepared to discuss all issues as part of the TPP negotiations," states an October, 2011 Agriculture Canada briefing note.
"Canada has also indicated that we will not pre-negotiate or make down payments to join, and that the only appropriate place to discuss issues is at the negotiating table."
Poneil@postmedia.com
Twitter.com/poneilinottawa
Read my blog, Letter from Ottawa, at vancouversun.com/oneil
© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Saturday, 16 June 2012

African Land Fertile Ground For Crops And Investors


In some countries of Africa, there's a land rush under way as investors claim farmland, establish mega-farms and try to cash in on high prices for food and biofuels. These deals are controversial. Critics accuse investors of dispossessing subsistence farmers.
But there's another side to this story. There are plenty of people working in economic development who believe that this surge of interest in African farmland, if it's handled well, could also be an opportunity for Africa.
Investors certainly think so. Among them is Jes Tarp, CEO of a company called Aslan Global Management. A native of Denmark and former pastor, Tarp now lives in Wisconsin and runs a company that owns tens of thousands of acres of farmland in Ukraine and Africa.
The money for these ventures comes from small investors: "There are farmers, there are doctors, there are insurance agents. People from all walks of life," Tarp says.
Tarp tells these investors that they will do well. The farms in Ukraine are already profitable. And Tarp thinks the one in Africa eventually will yield "solid returns" of 15 to 20 percent each year.
But according to Tarp, his investors also want to do some good in the world. "The one thing that they have in common is, they are looking for an investment where their investment will make a difference," he says.
Some of their money is transforming a remote corner of Mozambique, in southern Africa. It's financing a farm called Rei do Agro, Portuguese for "King of Agriculture."
Trying To Be A Model Corporate Neighbor
Chishamiso Mawoyo, who is in charge of this operation, takes me to the top of a rocky hill for a good view. He points to the right, to land covered by a green canopy of trees. That's how this whole area looked two years ago, he says.
Only a handful of people were living on this land, or growing crops here, before Rei do Agro showed up two years ago. Mawoyo says that's how the company wanted it. "We think it's easier dealing with trees than with people," he says.
And that's probably the main reason why people I met in the closest village had no problem with Rei do Agro moving in here — in contrast to their anger at another farm nearby, operated by the Portuguese company Quifel Natural Resources, which took over some of the best land.
But there's a cost to pushing the frontier. Clearing land is hard and expensive. Rei do Agro acquired 3,000 acres from the government almost two years ago, and so far, the company has managed to clear just 600 acres.
Also, the farm is 10 miles from any power lines. Mawoyo and his colleagues have to run a diesel generator almost nonstop to power their lights and computers.
It's a long way from his former life in the comfortable office of a big accounting firm in Zimbabwe. "But once you've gotten in, there's no way out. You've got to see it through," Mawoyo says. "That's part of the excitement, part of the exhilaration."
The company wants to get even bigger. It's hoping to acquire an additionanl 25,000 acres, which includes a small river that it could tap to irrigate some of its fields.
This farm is growing soybeans, which will go to feed chickens. One of the biggest chicken farmers in Mozambique, hundreds of miles south, is waiting to buy some of the harvest.
"[The chicken farmer will] send 15 of his trucks. In two weeks they'll be here. Because he's got a huge demand for soybeans," says Mawoyo.
It's a sign of Mozambique's economic growth. People are earning a little more money, so they're eating more chicken meat, and that means more demand for soybeans to fatten those chickens.
That upward curve of demand is the reason businesses are interested in commercial farming in Mozambique. It's the reason investors in Aslan Global Management and its subsidiary, Aslan Group Africa, expect to make money.
But what about their bigger ambition, to do some good with their money? Tarp, the CEO, is sure that they will. "We are there not to extract wealth from the community, but to build wealth in the community," he says.
Good For Companies, Good For Communities?
Whether that's really true — whether foreign investment in African farmland is a good thing for local communities — is currently the subject of intense debate. Is it better, for instance, than providing aid directly to the farmers in those communities, most of whom grow crops by hand, on just a few acres?
On one side of this debate is Jake Walters, director of Mozambique operations for Technoserve. a nonprofit economic development group.
Investors have to preserve resources to make the land produce more or to produce more valuable crops, Walters says. "I think it's the combination of technology and access to markets on a massive scale that these companies have, that really brings that rural area to life in a way that, bit by bit, small people having a little bit of access to capital would not be able to do," he says.
Big companies employ more people, Walters continues. And getting a job is often the one thing that most powerfully transforms a subsistence farmer's life for the better.
On the other side of this debate is Danielle Nierenberg, director of the Worldwatch Institute's Nourishing the Planet project. She's not enthusiastic about 10,000-acre mega-farms growing a single crop.
And, she says, there are better alternatives, that preserve greater diversity in the landscape and in what people eat. Small farmers really can lift themselves out of poverty with just a little training and help — for instance, with irrigation. She has seen it happen in villages in Ethiopia.
"These were people who went from basically living in huts to being able to build their own houses, to buying bicycles, to sending their children to school for the first time. So you see that these things can work," she says.
Yet Nierenberg and Walters don't completely disagree. They both say that it's doesn't have to be one or the other. You can help small farmers and encourage big ones. In fact, the hot new trend among development agencies is trying to bring these two kinds of farming closer together.
To illustrate how this might work, let's go back to Rei do Agro. That farm hopes to bring in electricity, better roads and water for irrigation.
Keeping Promises
This is often the case with commercial farms. They have to build essential infrastructure. Chris Isaac, the Mozambique-based director of business development for an agricultural development group called AgDevCo, says that once they have built that infrastructure, others can use it, too. "Around those farms, you can extend the infrastructure, including irrigation, to small farmers," he says.
Rei do Agro isn't that far along yet. But it is doing some things that don't cost so much money. It has hired a full-time extension manager to work with a handful of local farmers — providing seeds, training, and storage for their crops at harvest time, so they can get better prices later.
One of those farmers is Caterina Alberto. She's tall, dignified, and one of the most prosperous farmers in her village — although like everybody else here, she still has to carry her cooking water from a nearby stream. She and her husband grow crops on about 25 acres, which is a lot for this area.
"We'd like to have more land," she says. "Maybe 60 acres. We have some goals to reach."
In a way, her goals are also those of Mawoyo, the man in charge of Rei do Agro.
In another 20 years, "I would love to see 10 other farms like ours here, with a good cluster of emerging farmers within and around us," he says.
For now, though, that's just a dream. There's not even any guarantee that this one farm will survive. It's a few years, at least, away from making money.
But the company is doubling its bet on Africa, moving into the country of Tanzania, just north of here. Aslan Global Management recently got preliminary approval to buy 75,000 acres of farmland there.
Copyright 2012 National Public Radio

Saturday, 26 May 2012

Agriculture: Drought parches wheat fields worldwide


Bloomberg News 
CHICAGO -- Droughts withering wheat crops from the United States to Russia to Australia will probably spur the biggest reduction in global supply estimates since 2003 and drive prices to the highest in almost a year.

Kansas, the top U.S. grower of winter wheat, is poised for its driest May on record, the state's climatologist estimates. Ukraine and Russia, accounting for 11 percent of world output, have endured drought conditions for three months, University College London data show. The U.S. Department of Agriculture may cut its global crop estimate by 1.2 percent next month, the biggest drop in a June report since 2003, according to the average of 18 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Wheat traded in Chicago rose as much as 18 percent in the 10 days through May 21 on concern that the market is returning to the droughts of 2010. Russia and Ukraine curbed exports that year and prices more than doubled to $9.1675 a bushel by February 2011, the month when world food costs tracked by the United Nations rose to a record. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect futures to gain 12 percent to $7.51 by mid-July.

"In 2010, everyone was talking about dryness in Russia even in May, but no one was paying attention," said Chris Gadd, an analyst at Macquarie Group in London. "Because you've had the history of 2010, people are going to the other extreme and overreacting a little. If weather conditions deteriorate further, production estimates could go a lot lower."

Futures surged to an eight-month high of $7.22 on May 21 on the Chicago Board of Trade. The grain's 2.6 percent advance this year makes it the third best performer in the Standard & Poor's GSCI Index of 24 commodities behind soybeans and gasoline. The gauge's 4.1 percent drop since the start of January compares with a 0.2 percent gain in the MSCI All-Country World Index of equities. Treasuries returned 1.4 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

The USDA said May 10 that global wheat output will decline 2.5 percent to 677.56 million metric tons in the crop year beginning June 1, leaving stockpiles of 188.1 million tons at the lowest relative to demand since 2009. The department will probably cut the production forecast to 669.15 million tons in its June 12 report and reduce the inventory estimate to 183.3 million tons, according to the Bloomberg survey.

Kansas got 0.39 inch (0.99 centimeter) of rain in the first 20 days of May, according to Mary Knapp, the state's climatologist. The record low of 0.98 inch for the entire month was set in 1966, the Manhattan, Kansas-based scientist said. Analysts were predicting record wheat yields for the state as recently as three weeks ago.

As much as 30 percent of the grain harvest in eastern and southern Ukraine may be lost because of damage from dry weather, said Tetiana Adamenko, the head of the agro-meteorology department at the National Meteorology Center in Kiev. Russian wheat output may drop 15 percent this year if below-average rainfall persists in southern regions during the flowering period for the next two weeks, Macquarie estimates.

While dry weather is depriving winter plants of the water needed to develop kernels, there's still time for improvements before harvesting starts next month. Futures jumped 29 percent in July and August last year because of concern about drought, before tumbling 23 percent in the following month as rainfall revived crops and harvests exceeded analysts' estimates.

Winter wheat accounted for about 75 percent of U.S. output last year and is the main variety grown in the Black Sea region.
Original Article Here

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Pak-Ukrine to finalize air service, agriculture deal soon: Envoy


ISLAMABAD, May 15 (APP): Pakistan and Ukraine are making efforts to finalize the deals of air service, agriculture and to accept the degrees of each other said Ukrainian Ambassador Volodymyr Lakomov while talking to media persons here Tuesday.The Ambassador said “these deals would make our relation more strong with Pakistan”. Ukraine is the true friend of Pakistan and has always helped him at the time of need. While giving the example he said Ukraine has sent daily use items, cloths and life saving drugs for the flood victims in Pakistan. He told that matter is ready to make the commission for economic relation and trade between Pakistan and Ukraine and the concern authorities from the both side are considering it very seriously.
Original Article Here

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...