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US corn acreage threatened by price cuts

  • Spanish Market: Agriculture, Fertilizers
  • 01/04/20

Plunging corn prices throughout the Midwest are likely to detract US farmers from planting the largest corn crop in eight years.

Growers in early March said they intended to plant 97mn acres of corn this season, but sinking demand for fuel over the last two weeks has slashed near-term corn demand.

The ratio between soybean and corn prices in the Corn Belt and Minnesota is now above the 2.5 threshold typically seen as encouraging farmers to plant soybeans. At the start of the month, when the US department of agriculture (USDA) was surveying farmers' planting plans, the ratio was under 2.5 and favored corn acreage.

The USDA's survey showed farmers plan to plant an additional 1.5mn acres of corn from last season across Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Minnesota while cutting 650,000 soybean acres.

But seed suppliers typically allow farmers flexibility to alter their planting plans until very close to planting, a dealer said today, which could enable some price-driven switching with much of the Corn Belt yet to start fieldwork.

Ethanol production dipped to a near to a seven-year low of 840,000 barrels/day last week, according to the EIA, 16pc below the prior week with gasoline demand tanking as coronavirus-driven lockdowns reduced travel.

The cuts in ethanol production could result in a loss of up to 500mn bushels of corn demand and buyers across the Midwest have subsequently lowered bids for old-crop and new-crop corn, enabling the price ratio between corn and soybean to favor soybean planting.

New-crop corn bids from terminals in the Corn Belt and Minnesota fell by 6-9pc from the start of the month, while soybean prices fell just 1-4pc, according to the USDA.

The USDA releases acreage estimates throughout the season, and the greatest difference between March survey and final planting to-date has been 3.1mn acres on corn and 3.3mn acres on soybeans.

Forward prices favor soybean planting over corn

US ethanol production plummets ’000 b/day

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25/07/24

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London, 25 July (Argus) — German agricultural group BayWa on Wednesday suspended its full-year profit forecast due on 8 August, citing ongoing restructuring. It posted a preliminary revenue of €10.7bn ($11.6bn) for the first half of the year, down by 15pc from €12.6bn a year ago. BayWa's first-half 2024 preliminary earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation stood at €149.5mn, less than half of the €322.1mn earned in the same period last year. BayWa said it continues to be in constructive talks with its financing partners, adding that it also has postponed publication of the final half-yearly results to 27 September, citing impairment reviews. The company commissioned a restructuring report on 12 July in response to a "strained financing situation". The Munich-headquartered BayWa Group operates in the fields of energy, agriculture — including fertilizers — and building materials. By Suzie Skipper Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Singapore shortlists consortia for NH3 power, bunkering


25/07/24
25/07/24

Singapore shortlists consortia for NH3 power, bunkering

Singapore, 25 July (Argus) — The Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and the Energy Market Authority (EMA) selected two consortia, with one of them likely to lead the project to develop ammonia as a low or zero-carbon solution for power generation and bunkering in the island nation. MPA and EMA selected the two consortia from a total of [six firms that were shortlisted in 2023]https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2501511), after a request for proposal (RFP) was launched. The final selection from the chosen two will be made in the first quarter of 2025. This project, which is part of Singapore's national hydrogen strategy , is looking at developing end-to-end ammonia solution that can generate 55-65MW of electricity via direct combustion in combined cycle gas turbines. Low- to zero-carbon ammonia would be imported and used for this purpose. The project is aiming for 100,000 t/yr of ammonia bunkering, starting with shore-to-ship bunkering followed by ship-to-ship bunkering. The two consortium leads are Singaporean conglomerate Keppel's arm Keppel Infrastructure, as well as Singaporean-based Sembcorp-SLNG. The consortia also include the following bunkering participants - Japan's shipping firm NYK Line, as well as Japanese trading firms Sumitomo and Itochu. By Mahua Chakravarty Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Feedstock imports shake up US biofuel production


24/07/24
24/07/24

Feedstock imports shake up US biofuel production

New York, 24 July (Argus) — Waste from around the world is increasingly being diverted to the US for biofuel production, helping decarbonize hard-to-electrify sectors like trucking and aviation. But as refiners turn away from conventional crop-based feedstocks, farm groups fear missing out on the biofuels boom. Driven by low-carbon fuel standards (LCFS) in states like California, US renewable diesel production capacity has more than doubled over the last two years to hit a record high of 4.1bn USG/yr in April according to the Energy Information Administration. Soybean and canola processors have invested in expanding crush capacity, expecting future biofuels growth to lift vegetable oil demand. 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By Cole Martin Waste imports crowd out soybean oil Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia's S04 makes first batch of SOP at Lake Way


24/07/24
24/07/24

Australia's S04 makes first batch of SOP at Lake Way

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