Brazil clears bottlenecks to oust US as top corn exporter
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[August 24, 2023] By
Ana Mano
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazil is set to overtake the U.S. this year as
the world's top corn exporter, reflecting both a bumper harvest and
logistical breakthroughs such as the consolidation of northern export
routes, which are boosting the competitiveness of the South American
grains powerhouse.
Corn exports through Brazil's northern ports, which use the waterways of
the Amazon River basin to ship grains globally, are on track to beat
volumes via the most traditional port of Santos for a third consecutive
year, according to a Reuters analysis of grain shipping data.
The shift underscores how Brazil, which churns out three corn crops per
year and still has huge expanses of under-used farm land, is finally
overcoming some of the infrastructure bottlenecks that have long made it
hard to get its bountiful harvests to global markets.
That and a new supply deal with China announced last year suggest Brazil
may be opening a longer era of supremacy over U.S. corn exports, unlike
the last time the Brazilians briefly grabbed the global corn crown
during North America's drought-hit 2012/13 season.
The improved export capacity helped Brazil to fill gaps in the global
corn market amid disruptions from the war in major grain exporter
Ukraine and trade tensions between the U.S. and China.
"We celebrated a lot... when (corn export) volumes via northern ports
equaled Santos," said Sergio Mendes, head of Brazilian grain exporter
group Anec. "By using northern ports... you are saving 20 reais ($4.12)
per ton (of corn)."
Major new investments in Brazil have begun to ease several chokepoints
and bring down logistics costs sharply, helping to undercut U.S.
farmers.
Northern export routes in particular have benefited from a 2013 law that
encouraged grains traders such as Cargill and Bunge, and barge operator
Hidrovias do Brasil, to build out new private-use port terminals (TUPs).
Their transshipment stations on the Tapajos and Madeira rivers have
linked up the heart of Brazilian farm country and up-and-coming
Amazonian ports such as Itacoatiara, Santarem and Barcarena.
The Tegram grain terminal at Itaqui, built and operated by foreign and
Brazilian grain merchants including Louis Dreyfus Commodities and Amaggi,
boosted its grain export volumes by 306% in eight years to more than 13
million tons in 2022, according to data provided by the firms.
The TUP legal framework, unlike a traditional concession for a limited
period, has unlocked a wave of long-term port investments in Brazil.
Some 39 billion reais ($8.0 billion) have poured into building and
expanding 112 new private-use terminals under the new law, according to
a 2020 study by Brazil's TCU federal audit court.
Brazil's farm industry, however, is not past all of its logistical woes.
On-farm storage capacity still pales next to rival grain powers like
Canada, the U.S. and Argentina.
In the No. 1 grains state of Mato Grosso, the storage gap had surged to
46 million metric tons, according to state government data through 2021,
after the annual corn harvest tripled in a decade to over 90 million
tons, faster than new silos could be built.
A lack of storage space means Brazilian farmers are forced to quickly
sell their harvests or pile their corn outside warehouses and hope for
good weather. As a result, much of the Brazil harvest crowds onto the
roads during a narrow seasonal window, which can make for expensive
traffic jams.
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A combine harvester is seen as it
harvests corns at a farm near Brasilia, Brazil August 22, 2023.
REUTERS/Adriano Machado
CHEAPER ROUTE TO CHINA
The new export capacity has helped grains shipped from Brazil's
northern ports to compete on logistics costs with U.S. farmers.
Shipping a ton of soybeans in 2008 from Iowa to Shanghai was 77% of
the price of using Brazil's northern ports, but by March 2023 it was
5% more expensive shipping it from the U.S., according to U.S.
Department of Agriculture and Brazil's ESALQ-LOG data. For corn,
freight values are very similar, says Thiago Pera, logistics
research coordinator at ESALQ-LOG.
The Amazon basin has also become competitive with the southeastern
port of Santos, long the powerhouse of Brazilian grains exports.
Some 37% of Brazil's total corn exports flowed through Barcarena,
Itaqui, Itacoatiara and Santarem ports in the first half of 2023,
according to Brazil's crop agency Conab. Just 24% flowed through
Santos.
By comparison, Santos exported almost three times more corn than
those four northern ports in 2015, before heavy investments expanded
port capacity in the Amazon region.
"The greater share of shipments through northern ports reflects
cheaper freight costs compared to routes to the ports in the south
and southeast," said Thome Guth, a Conab official.
Conab forecasts Brazil's 2023 total corn output at nearly 130
million metric tons, the highest ever, and exports reaching 50
million metric tons for the first time.
Corn futures in Chicago have fallen from a 10-year high in April
2022 to a two-and-a-half-year low this month, in part due to ample
supplies from Brazil.
Brazil's surging export infrastructure shows little sign of letting
up, even though lower prices may discourage farmers from expanding
plantings as rapidly.
Chinese state-owned trader COFCO is now building a major new grains
terminal at Santos after getting a 25-year license to operate a unit
with capacity for 14 million tons. Shipments from COFCO's STS11
terminal are scheduled to begin in 2026.
A highway license issued two years ago has also modernized a key
Amazonian grain corridor stretching over 1,000 kilometers (625
miles) from Mato Grosso to ports in Para state, known as BR-163.
For years, caravans of grain trucks would get stuck regularly in
deep mud on that road when they got caught in the rain on their way
to northern ports.
Major rail projects still face an array of bureaucratic obstacles,
but a few have gotten off the drawing board.
Brazil's largest rail company Rumo just finished an investment of 4
billion reais on the Ferrovia Norte Sul, started in 2019. The line
connects Santos port to farm states Tocantins, Goias, Minas Gerais
and Mato Grosso, reinforcing another key route to get Brazilian
harvests to global markets.
($1 = 4.8769 reais)
(Reporting by Ana Mano; Editing by Brad Haynes and Marguerita Choy)
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