Brazil
November 26, 2004
USDA/FAS GAIN Report
Brazil
Oilseeds and Products
Approved by: William W. Westman, U.S. Embassy
Prepared by: Elizabeth Mello
Report Highlights
The Ministry of Agriculture’s first projection for crop year
2004/05 calls for an increase in production but with area
expansion less than expected. Costs of production continue to
rise and Brazil’s soy exports to China for the month of
September were down 36 percent. Crushing continues to be
stagnated as farmers hang on to their beans but the sector
anticipates an increase of 10 percent in the coming year.
Biotech soybeans will make up 20
percent of the 2004/05 crop.
Ministry of Agriculture in
Brazil releases its first projections for 2004/05
The Brazilian government’s first
official soybean production estimate for the 2004/05 crop year
is 60.8 million tons, a 22 percent increase from last year’s
crop. According to Agriculture Minister Rodrigues, this increase
in production is expected despite less growth than anticipated
in planted area. CONAB (USDA’s ERS and CCC equivalent in Brazil)
is projecting a planted area of between 22.0 and 22.4 million
hectares, an increase of approximately 1 million hectares or a
about a 5 percent increase over last year’s area.
The increase reflects producers’
anticipation of lower revenues in 2005. Increased costs of
production, pressured by high prices for petroleum and steel,
and a drop in international commodity prices are factors that
will reduce planting intentions in Brazil.
Decreased fertilizer use also had
an impact and made farmers more susceptible to climate
variations. CONAB reports that farmers are faced with irregular
rain patterns and in many areas, a lack of rain in general as
farmers begin spring planting. Water reserves in the South are
also below normal levels.
Commenting on Brazil’s storage and
transportation problems, the Minister said that the Brazilian
government will invest 62 million Reais (US$ 22.1 million) in
infrastructure improvements. The GOB anticipates that this
investment will generate $1 Billion of additional commodity
exports.
Current Factors
Soybean rust is continuing to
catch Brazilian farmers by surprise, but the impact of rust on
the current crop is unknown at this time. This year’s crop faces
a 20 percent increase in production costs over last year because
of rising input costs, and price projections that are 30 percent
lower than last year. Weather is the third main variable and
potential aggravation and precipitation in most areas is lower
than anticipated.
With tighter profit margins,
farmers are especially careful in purchasing inputs. Some
sources are reporting lower than average fertilizer and chemical
sales, a sign that farmers may again skimp on one or the other,
which will undoubtedly affect yields. Last year, farmers lost
4.6 million tons to rust, the equivalent of $1.2 billion worth
of soybeans and a total of $2.2 billion including farmer costs.
This year, the cost of fungicide is estimated at $60-$70 per
hectare. It is possible that farmers will choose to gamble and
not buy fungicide (or less than is recommended) rather than
using less fertilizer. One influencing factor is that chemicals,
unlike fertilizer and other inputs, cannot be returned if
unused.
Nonetheless, in the center-west,
where beans were planted less than a month before the release of
this report, rust was already being identified in irrigated
soybean areas, and farmers are reportedly ready to apply
fungicide. The center-west was the hardest-hit area with the
rust epidemic last year. In the state of São Paulo, rather than
rotating with a different crop, many producers planted
second-crop soybeans, which has reportedly allowed the rust to
survive. On November 18, Embrapa, the Brazilian Ag research
service, announced that Asian rust was found in the state of
Maranhão, in the southern municipality of Balsas. Maranhão is
the fifth state where Asian Rust has been officially detected
this crop season. Other states include Mato Grosso, Paraná, Rio
Grande do Sul,
and Goias.
Exports
Decreasing internal and external
prices, lower crushing margins, and weak international demand
caused Brazilian exports to fall in October. Total Brazilian
exports of the soy complex totaled $570 million, down 36% from
October of 2003. Export growth began to slow in April, when
numerous shipments of soybeans were rejected by China due to
fungicide contamination, which Brazilian producers argued was an
attempt to get out of the contracts. At that point, farmers
began to lose confidence that they would be paid for their
commodity sent to China, and soon after, prices that were at $10
a bushel dropped to $5. Exports to China, Brazil’s largest
market, have dropped 21% to $5.9 billion in the past 12 months.
The fall in exports to China is an about-face from previous
years, where over the period from 1999-2003 the value of
Brazil’s exports to China jumped from 620 thousand tons to 6.1
million tons.
Shipping problems in Brazil
continue to escalate. According to industry sources, there are
fewer and fewer ships available, trucking is more expensive, and
there are new regulations in the port of Paranaguá. Charges for
demurrage have increased from $10,000 to $40,000 a day. Overtime
has been temporarily suspended for port workers and port
premiums are in jeopardy for 2005.
Appreciation of the Brazilian
currency (currently at R$2.80 to the dollar) is another concern
for 2004/05 exports. Some industry sources question if Brazilian
soy producers can maintain profit margins with the combination
of current international soy prices and the current exchange
rate. Producers claim they need at last R$ 3.0 to the US dollar
to remain competitive at current prices.
Crushing
Although crushing levels are at
below-average levels, the recent temporary closings of crushing
facilities, including those owned by Cargill, ADM, and some
producer-owned cooperatives, are considered normal at this time
of year because of maintenance schedules. Also, crushing margins
are down as a result of low prices. The majority of
farmers stopped selling beans as prices dropped, and at least 15
percent of the harvest, equaling about 7 million tons, is now
left in the hands of the producers. With a saturated
international market due to the large U.S. and Argentine
harvests, and another record harvest expected in Brazil,
producers must also shoulder storage expenses for their unsold
product. With planting in full swing, they also must sell to
generate cash for planting expenses and inputs. Due to the sheer
volume on the market, the crush in Brazil for crop year 2004/05
is expected to be up 5-10 percent.
Biotech Beans
Biotech soybeans will make up 20
percent of the total 2004/05 soybean harvest, according to
CONAB. They are expecting 12 million metric tons of biotech
soybeans, which is a 9.8 percent increase over last year’s
transgenic crop. Provisional Measure 223 (MP 223) allows for the
legal planting and marketing of biotech soybeans for those
farmers who signed a statement of responsibility (see BR4626).
However, in Paraná, Brazil’s second largest soybean producing
state, the governor’s office decided that the state should be
free of biotech soybeans, regardless of MP 223. To enforce their
point, authorities there have been intercepting truckloads of
soybeans traveling through Mato Grosso on their way to Paraná.
In an attempt to influence farmers, the governor aired
testimonies of U.S. and Canadian farmers who allegedly regretted
planting biotech soybeans on state
television.
With the temporary legalization of
planting biotech soybean seed, Monsanto will continue to assess
royalties on roundup ready soybeans based on the system
negotiated with farmers in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina.
Soybean growers may declare at the elevator that the beans are
roundup ready and pay a fee of 20 Reais, or about US $7 per
metric ton (last year, Monsanto offered a rebate of 10 Reais, or
about US $3.50 per metric ton to implement the plan). If the
grower claims that his load contains conventional soybeans, the
load is tested on site using a lateral flow strip test. If the
test detects the transgenic trait, the grower pays the fee plus
a penalty. Ninety-eight percent of grain handlers (elevators,
processors, crushers and grower co-ops) in the southern states
of Brazil are under contract with Monsanto to collect royalties
for the technology.
Estimated Production Costs for
2004/05: Conventional Vs. Biotech
The following data was compiled by
the Paraná Department of Agriculture (SEABDERAL) in September
2004. Costs are from producers in Western Paraná, with a yield
of 3120 kilos per hectare. Production costs have increased on an
average of US$100 per hectare since the emergence of Asian rust
in Brazil. Half of this amount goes for the
purchase of fungicide (see table).
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