On the front lines: Trade war sinks North Dakota soybean farmers
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[August 22, 2019] By
Karl Plume
COLFAX, North Dakota (Reuters) - North
Dakota bet bigger on Chinese soybean demand than any other U.S. state.
The industry here - on the far northwestern edge of the U.S. farm belt,
close to Pacific ports - spent millions on grain storage and
rail-loading infrastructure while boosting plantings by five-fold in 20
years.
Now, as the world's top soybean importer shuns the U.S. market for a
second growing season, Dakota farmers are reeling from the loss of the
customer they spent two decades cultivating.
The state's experience underscores the uneven impact of the U.S.-China
trade war across the United States. Although China's tariffs target many
heartland states that, like North Dakota, supported President Donald
Trump's 2016 election, those further south and east are better able to
shift surplus soybeans to other markets such as Mexico and Europe. They
also have more processing plants to produce soymeal, along with larger
livestock and poultry industries to consume it.
For North Dakota, losing China - the buyer of about 70% of the state's
soybeans - has destroyed a staple source of income. Agriculture is North
Dakota's largest industry, surpassing energy and representing about 25%
of its economy.
"North Dakota has probably taken a bigger hit than anybody else from the
trade situation with China," said Jim Sutter, CEO of the U.S. Soybean
Export Council.
In its second-quarter agricultural credit conditions survey this month,
the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis said 74% of respondents in North
Dakota reported lower net farm income.
China shut the door to all U.S. agricultural purchases on Aug. 5 after
Trump intensified the conflict with threats to impose additional tariffs
on $300 billion in Chinese imports, some as soon as Sept. 1.
Some farmers were relying on the Trump administration's $28 billion in
farm aid payments to compensate them for trade war losses, only to be
disappointed with new payment rates for counties in North Dakota.
The rates are below those for some southern states that rely much less
on exports to China. The U.S. Department of Agriculture determined other
states had a higher "level of exposure" to tariffs than North Dakota
because they also grow other crops, such as cotton and sorghum, that
were hit by Chinese tariffs, according to a brief written statement from
the USDA in response to questions from Reuters.
(For a graphic on farm aid: https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-TRADE/0100B0D90TN/USA-TRADE-CHINA:Soybeans.jpg)
With record soy supplies still in storage and another crop to be
harvested soon, farmers in the U.S. soybean state with the best access
to ports serving China are unable to sell their crops at a profit.
Rail shippers would normally send more than 90 percent of the North
Dakota soybeans they buy to Pacific Northwest export terminals. Now they
are trying unsuccessfully to make up the shortfall by hauling corn,
wheat and other crops with limited demand. Some are moving soybeans
south and east to domestic users, a costlier endeavor that ultimately
thins margins for both shippers and farmers.
LOST DEMAND
Soy farmers who planted this spring - when the White House was talking
up a nearly finished trade deal with China - watched as those trade
talks collapsed in May, sending prices well below their costs of
production.
Vanessa Kummer's farm in Colfax, North Dakota, has yet to sell a single
soybean from the fall harvest because of the low prices. Normally, the
farm would have forward-sold 50% to 75% of the upcoming harvest.
[to top of second column] |
Vanessa Kummer checks the soybeans on the farm she and her husband
Paul own near Colfax, North Dakota, U.S., August 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Dan Koeck
She fears the U.S.-China soy trade is now "permanently damaged" as China shifts
its purchases to Brazil, uses less soy in animal feed and consumes less pork as
African swine fever kills of millions of the nation's pigs.
"It will take years to get back to any semblance of what we had over in China,"
Kummer said, standing in a sparse field of ankle-high soy plants, where two
weeks earlier she hosted a delegation of soy importers from Ecuador and Peru.
Though it is the No. 4 soy state overall, North Dakota is home to two of the top
three U.S. soy producing counties in the nation.
Options for North Dakota farmers are limited. U.S. wheat has been losing export
market share for years. Demand for specialty crops such as peas and lentils,
which grow well in the northern U.S., has been dampened by retaliatory tariffs
imposed by India, a major importer of both products.
ROOTS OF DEPENDENCE
North Dakota's farmers never set out to become so dependent on a single buyer of
one crop. But with wheat profits shrinking and Chinese demand for soy growing,
soybeans increasingly seemed like the obvious choice.
Companies including Berkshire Hathaway's BNSF expanded rail capacity to open up
a West Coast shipping corridor, and Pacific Northwest seaports expanded to
handle more exports to China. Seed companies offered North Dakota farmers new
varieties that allowed soybeans to thrive in the state's colder climate and
shorter growing season.
A $200 million crop two decades ago blossomed into a $2 billion crop, topping
the value of wheat, once North Dakota's top crop.
The number of high speed shuttle train loading terminals in North Dakota tripled
from about 20 in 2007 to more than 60 currently, according to industry data,
with investments totaling at least $800 million.
But one of those facilities, CHS Dakota Plains Ag elevator in Kindred, North
Dakota, has gone three or four months without loading a soybean train this year,
said Doug Lingen, a grain merchant there. Normally the elevator would load at
least one train a month with beans bound for the Pacific Northwest.
LIMPING ALONG
The drop in demand has soybean prices in North Dakota trading at an historic
discount to U.S. futures prices, and farmers are putting investments on hold.
Justin Sherlock, who grows corn, soybeans and other crops near Dazey, North
Dakota, had been planning to buy a used grain drier this year for around
$100,000 to $150,000, passing on a new one that would be at least $350,000.
But an uncertain future has now shelved those plans, even with the latest
promise for government aid. According to rates published last month, farmers in
Sherlock's county can apply for aid of $55 per acre, well below the maximum $150
rate offered in 22 counties nationwide.
Sherlock called the latest announcement "disappointing."
"I'm just going to defer all my investment," he said, "and try to limp along for
a few years."
(Reporting by Karl Plume in Chicago, additional reporting by P.J. Huffstutter;
Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Brian Thevenot)
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