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FARM NEWS
Argentina looks to soybean windfall
by Staff Writers
Buenos Aires (UPI) Sep 27, 2012


Ex-Aussie PM criticises UN on food security
Hong Kong (AFP) Sept 27, 2012 - Former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd on Thursday criticised the UN food agency for failing to do enough on food security, as fears mount of a repeat of the 2007-2008 food crisis.

Rudd told a conference in Hong Kong that the leadership of the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), based in Rome, needed to get its act together and not just release "another set of reports".

"The fact that we're having this kind of conference is an indictment of the failure of the FAO," he told the meeting -- titled "Feeding the world: Asia's Prospect of Plenty" -- which was organised by The Economist magazine.

"The execution of its mandate, which is food security, must now be done.

"A practical programme against the billions of people who are hungry in the world today needs to be done -- not another set of reports, not another set of committees. Action, action, action," he told reporters later.

The FAO has called for "swift, coordinated international action" this month as a sharp rise in maize, wheat and soybean prices renews fears of a looming food crisis.

Drought in the United States has pushed grain prices to record highs, and the FAO has cut its global 2012 rice output forecast due to low monsoon rainfall in India.

UN estimates say the world population is projected to increase by two billion people between 2012 and 2050 to around nine billion, with Asia accounting for more than half of the increase.

"Hunger is the world's most challenging problem," UN World Food Programme China director Brett Rierson said.

"There is a common perception that hunger is an African problem, but two-thirds of them are from Asia so hunger is here in Asia," he said.

Manila-based Asian Development Bank warned in April that food shortages could slow poverty reduction, and a rise of 10 percent in domestic food prices could push 64 million more Asians into poverty.

Argentine expectations of windfall profits from recent hikes in soybean prices are complicating the government's fraught relationship with farmers.

President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has earned the ire of farmers' representatives over tariff and taxation policies that the agriculture sector sees as an obstacle to its growth and equitable distribution of income among farmers.

Farmers' representatives and Fernandez have been at loggerheads over more or less the same issues -- taxation and government intervention -- before the president won a second term in office last year.

The landslide victory in October 2011 was welcomed by the president's supporters but greeted with dismay by farmers' groups who saw their demands ignored again.

Recent spikes in soybean markets gave Argentine officials cause to celebrate what they predicted would be a bonanza for Argentina amid sweeping austerity and deep cuts in imports.

Argentine agriculture experts are unconcerned over price drops in response to reports of high U.S. yields, pointing out that the upward trend in soy prices is likely to continue through 2013.

The soybean market isn't stable, however. Recent reports of big crops in Argentina, Brazil and other South American countries as well as the United States cast a shadow on the market. Traders said the price fluctuations are temporary.

Analysts said that soybean prices could still be affected by lower-than-expected soybean crush in the United States and declining demand from China.

Fears of low yields in Argentina and other South American countries in the path of La Nina drought phenomenon pushed prices up earlier in the year before calm returned to the markets.

Predictions of a drought-related scarcity of supplies, similar to that experienced in 2008-09, haven't been supported by events.

Analysts said the government's optimism over the soybean yields this year could still be misguided and the expected windfall might simply not occur.

La Nina also affected corn crops in Argentina and neighboring countries, a fact often not reported in the regional media.

A grains and oilseeds study estimates Argentina's soy crop could increase 38 percent in 2013, when world supply will become more dependent on South America because of anticipated smaller yields in China and the United States.

'The world market will become more and more dependent on South American supplies in March/September 2013 because of soybean inventories significantly lower in the U.S., China and other countries towards February 2013," Oil World consultancy said in a report.

At the beginning of next year South America will begin harvesting an enormous crop of soy with a strong export demand that will help alleviate the tight global supply, following the severe drought suffered in the Americas.

In this scenario Oil World estimates Argentina's soy crop to increase 38 percent to 56 million tons from the 40.5 million tons of 2012, while Brazil is expected to harvest 82 million tons compared to this year's 66.4 million tons, MercoPress reported.

Brazil and the United States lead the soybean market, with Argentina the immediate third major exporter of the commodity.

Other South American countries soybean crops are also expected to be bountiful, the study said, citing expected output in Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay.

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