Tag Archives: agriculture

How Farmland Became Canada’s Hottest Real Estate Market

JEFF RUBIN The Globe and Mail Published Wednesday, Sep. 18 2013 Buy land, advised Mark Twain, because, as the punch line goes, they ain’t making any more of it. Fast forward to 2013 and that advice, as a look at prices for farmland shows, seems as prescient as ever. As any farmer will readily tell you, the agriculture business has had a tough run. Agriculture was once an economic mainstay. Turn back the clock to 1950 and the sector employed nearly a fifth of Canada’s work force. Today, agriculture accounts for less than 2 per cent of the country’s employed workers, while its share of gross domestic product is also a shadow of what it once was. Farm prices have languished for decades, as Canada’s population has shifted from rural to urban. By the 1990s, North America was losing two acres of productive farmland to development every minute. How the world has changed for Canada’s farmers in 2013. The hottest sector of the country’s real estate market is, you guessed it, farmland. The price of farmland in Canada has outpaced both residential and commercial real estate, gaining an average of 12 per cent over the last five years. In some hotspots, such as southwestern Ontario, the price-per-acre has been going up by as much as 50 per cent a year. Even pension plans and hedge funds have become players in the pursuit of prime agricultural land, interest that is only sending prices that much higher. If global food prices are any indication, such investments could be a solid bet. Over the last decade, global food prices have more than doubled, according to the United Nations FAO Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in prices for international food commodities. The food riots stemming from that price inflation were part of the spark that set off the Arab Spring. So far this year prices have been falling, but they still remain within shouting distance of the record highs reached in 2011. The strength in global food prices is no accident. The growth in global food demand is unrelenting. Part of the reason is due to population growth. The world is at 7-billion people and counting. But that’s not the only thing straining food supply. World grain demand has also soared, as households in fast-growing Asian countries trade in rice bowls for cheeseburgers. It takes seven pounds of grain to raise a pound of beef. That’s a whole lot more than it takes to make a loaf of bread. The newfound economic clout in emerging economies such as China and India, which between them have roughly 2.5 billion people, has allowed more people to diversify their diets. In turn, global meat consumption has bounded ahead at double the rate of population growth over the last two decades. All that demand for protein bodes well for the world’s breadbaskets. That is if Mother Nature doesn’t get in the way first. A severe drought a few years ago forced Russia, the world’s third largest producer of wheat, barley and rye, to suspend grain exports for nearly a year. Before that a drought in China caused a spike in grain prices that affected everything from the price of pasta in Italy to the cost of tortillas in Mexico. Closer to home the US Midwest has been grinding through one of the worst droughts in more than half a century. Climate change scientists warn that droughts and other agricultural shocks will be even more common in the future. Against a backdrop of climbing temperatures, Canada sits in an interesting spot. With a wealth of arable land and 7 per cent of the world’s fresh water, Canada’s agricultural potential is considerable. It’s also possible the amount of land under cultivation in Canada could actually increase as global temperatures continue to rise and the wheat belt climbs farther north. Could it be that in the coming years we’ll also see farmers actually start reclaiming acres from far-flung suburbs? The idea is much more plausible now than it was only a few years ago. It was depressed farm prices that allowed prime agricultural land to be paved over in the first place. As food becomes more precious and more expensive, it will only add to the market forces that will push some of those farms to come back. Jeff Rubin is a former chief economist of CIBC World Markets and the author of the award-winning Why Your World Is About To Get A Whole Lot Smaller as well as The End of Growth. Continue reading

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USDA Releases $15.5 Million In Support Of Biofuel

September 12, 2013 By Editors of Electric Light & Power/ POWERGRID International Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said the U.S. Department of Agriculture is making payments to support the production of advanced biofuel. The USDA is making nearly $15.5 million in payments to 188 producers through the Advanced Biofuel Payment Program, which was established in the 2008 Farm Bill. Under this program, payments are made to eligible producers based on the amount of advanced biofuels produced from renewable biomass , other than corn kernel starch. Examples of eligible feedstocks include but are not limited to: crop residue, food waste, yard waste, vegetable oil and animal fat. Through the Advanced Biofuel Payment Program and other USDA programs, the department is working to support the research, investment and infrastructure necessary to build a biofuels industry that creates jobs and broadens the range of feedstocks used to produce renewable energy. More than 290 producers in 47 states and territories have received $211 million in payments since the program’s inception. It has supported the production of more than 3 billion gallons of advanced biofuel and the equivalent of more than 36 billion kWh of electric energy. For example, Riverview LLP, a Minnesota-based company, will be receiving an $8,040 payment to help offset the cost of producing electricity from two anaerobic digesters. The two digesters use manure from two of the company’s dairy operations to produce electricity, which is sold to Great River Energy. During the last quarter of 2012, the anaerobic digesters produced almost 4.9 million kWh of electricity, enough to power more than 400 homes a year. http://www.elp.com/a…of-biofuel.html Continue reading

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Preparing For Thursday’s USDA Reports

Stu Ellis, FarmGate Blog September 9, 2013    USDA’s September series of crop reports will be released at 11 am central on Thursday, Sept. 12. These include the Crop Production Report and the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) Report. Both are highly anticipated by the market and are expected to further clarify the size of the corn and soybean crop. The trade will get a much better handle on the size of the soybean crop because many soybean field sampled by USDA crop enumerators in August were not setting pods yet. Nearly all fields will be somewhere between the pod-setting phase and harvest at this time and yield numbers will be better determined. The market has been projecting its pre-report estimates during the past week and those estimates follow. Corn USDA last sampled cornfields at the first of August, and here is what enumerators found: USDA’s August estimate was a 154.4 bu./A yield with a total crop at 13.763 bil. bu. USDA projected harvested acres at 89.1 mil. In August USDA forecast 2012-13 carryout of 719 mil. bu. and 1.837 bil. bu. for the 2013-14 marketing year surplus.  Globally, USDA projected surplus of 123.11 mmt for 2012-13 and 150.17 mmt for 2013-14. 1) The average trade estimate for the US corn yield is 153.7 bu./A, with harvested acreage at 88.6 and total corn production of 13.620 bil. bu. The trade estimate for 2012-13 corn carryout is 718 mil. bu. The market expects 2013-2014 domestic ending stocks to be 1.732 bil. bu. The trade is also estimating global corn carryout of 122.8 mmt for the 2012-13 crop; and global carryout for the new crop is expected by traders to be 146.9 mmt. 2) Informa Economics forecasts a corn yield of 157.2 bu./A, down from its estimate of 158.6 bu. in Aug. with total production at 14.013 bil. bu., down from 14.14 bil. in Aug. Although, unsaid, the use of USDA’s August numbers for expected demand for the new crop leaves a carryout over 2.0 bil. 3) FC Stone is projecting a 2013 corn yield of 156.4 bu./A with total crop of 13.942 bil. bu. 4) Lanworth is projecting a 13.320 bil. bu. corn crop, based on 151.6 bu./A Soybeans When USDA last surveyed soybeans the first of August, here is what enumerators found: USDA’s August projection was 42.6 bu./A and a 3.255 bil. bu. total crop. USDA had projected harvested acreage at 76.4 mil. acres. Ending stocks were forecast at 125 mil. bu. for the 2012-13 crop and 220 mil. bu. for the 2013-14 crop. Globally, USDA had projected old crop carryout at 62.2 mmt and new crop carryout at 72.3 mmt. 1) The average estimate from the market is a 41.2 bu./A national yield, with harvested acreage at 76.2 mil. and a total crop of 3.14 bil. bu. The trade is also expecting tight carryout of 123 mil. for the 2012-13 crop and 165 mil. for the 2013-14 crop. The average guess for the market is for a global carryout of 61.7 mmt for the old crop and 71.2 mmt for the new crop. 2) Informa Economics projects a 42.4 bu./A national yield, producing a 3.239 bil. bu. national crop.  Informa is also forecasting only 74 mil. acres planted to soybeans. Using USDA’s August projections for demand, Informa’s estimates would result in a 205 mil. bu. new crop carryout.   3) FC Stone is forecasting a 3.146 bil. bu soybean crop, based on yields of 41.2 bu./A. 4) Lanworth projects 2013-14 soybean production of 3.114 bil. bu., based on 40.4 bu./A. Continue reading

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