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IKAR in Mass MediaMR BEAN GOES TO THE US, PARAGUAY, BRAZIL TOO – RUSSIAN SOYBEAN SECTOR TO CHALLENGE AMERICAN IMPORT SUPREMACY25 августа 2015 года The soybean is an edible legume native to East Asia. For Russians that means it’s a native of Siberia. Eighteen months ago, President Vladimir Putin declared Russian soybeans to be the best in the world.![]() MR BEAN GOES TO THE US, PARAGUAY, BRAZIL TOO – RUSSIAN SOYBEAN SECTOR TO CHALLENGE AMERICAN IMPORT SUPREMACY Key: brown = ‘000 hectares, green = ‘000 tonnes Most of the soy which is grown in the world comes from the US, Brazil and Argentina, so at the current output level of 2 million tonnes per annum, Russian soybean production is dwarfed by the others. November 19, 2014 – source: http://www.mapsofworld.com/ For its import requirement, Russia has depended on three countries, two of which are now at war with the Kremlin. In 2013, the main soy suppliers were Paraguay, the US and Ukraine. The latest Russian customs figures show that Paraguay continues to lead, followed by Brazil. Imports of soybeans from Paraguay are roughly double last year’s volume. Imports from Ukraine were cut in 2014; they have been eliminated altogether this year. Shipments from the US have continued: they totalled 208,274 tonnes in 2013; 390,008 tonnes in 2014; and 256,134 tonnes in the first half of this year. This means the volume of US soybeans imported to Russia is growing by about 30%. For Russian consumption of soybeans, about 95% goes to feed animals; 5% to such products as soy milk, tofu (soybean curd), and okara (used in the manufacture of vegetarian soy burgers). The proportion is roughly the same in China, but significantly less than the US proportions, where human consumption of soy amounts to roughly 50% of demand. The Kremlin plan is for expansion of the human food proportion as the volume of the home-grown harvest increases. Source: http://ab-centre.ru/ As the chart indicates, Amur leads the country in the Far East (24.4%), followed by Krasnodar in the southwest (19.2%). Other fareastern producing areas include Primorsky Krai (10.3%) and the Jewish Autonomous Region (3.7%). Among the major agro-industrial companies engaged in crop cultivation, soybeans are relatively new. Rusagro, United Grain Company, Yug Rossii, and Miratorg are the largest growers. Sodruzhestvo (“Commonwealth”) of Kaliningrad is the largest processor of soybeans into meal. But it doesn’t grow its own, and only 5% of its throughput comes from domestic growers. Efko is a leading processor of soybeans for oil. The major growers are all announcing plans to expand their sowing of soybeans, and expanding the acreage for the soybean crop in the Far East. The processors appear not to be interested in moving upstream to farming. Bunge, the US-based international food combine, has reportedly acquired a 25% stake in Efko, for $16 million; that was in 2006, but five years later Efko repurchased the stake and bought Bunge out. A reported Bunge interest in a 25% shareholding in Sodruzhestvo has not materialized. The experts agree that Russia will see accelerating growth in livestock and meat production, and so in soybean meal for feedstock, as well as in human consumption. But will soybean production grow faster than consumer demand, so that imports will shrink? Dmitry Rylko, general director of the Institute for Agricultural Market Studies (IKAR) in Moscow is confident that soybean production in Russia will increase, but not as rapidly as projected in the state programme. “There are major constraints that will hinder the development of this crop in Russia. The first is natural and climatic characteristics: in some regions of the country it is too dry for soybeans, in others, too cold. Growing crops in the Far East have their own special conditions.” Andrei Sizov, who heads the Sovecon consulting company in Moscow, cautions that just because officials and industry groups want to see significant production growth doesn’t mean this will materialize. But he acknowledges that soybean production “is a very profitable business, which is interesting for many companies.” He estimates the profit margin for soybeans at “several tens of percent.” At IKAR, head of research and forecasting Irina Kuguchina (right) said: “For the future we see the same conditions for the development of soybean production as in the past; that’s growth in consumption and demand from the livestock sector, and the great potential for import substitution. Regarding the regional spread of soybean cultivation, the [Russian] Far East is a potential market for exports, mainly to China. But self-sufficiency is unlikely to be achieved. We buy imported soybeans with high protein content. Due to the climatic conditions, we can’t produce the same quality of soybeans in Russia. We cannot expect completely to abandon imports.” Source: johnhelmer.net | #grain | Comments: 0 Views: 89
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