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Future Is Close: In 10 Years Brazil Will Be Planet's Main Food Warehouse PDF Print E-mail
2007 - May 2007
Written by Cláudia Abreu and Joel dos Santos Guimarães   
Wednesday, 16 May 2007 17:14

Brazilian cattleThe adjectives are many and voiced loudly all around: Brazil is the world's warehouse; it is the world's source of food. Up to a little while ago, these words were just said, not taken seriously. Now, however, a scenery with ballast, anchored to solid bases, is being drawn for Brazilian agribusiness.

The picture has the support of institutions like the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the World Bank and the United Nations (UN) itself.

And the forecasts of these organizations show that the old idea of country of the future may, in fact, expand out of just the lyrics of songs and may reach the economy through the hands, arms and serious work of agriculture, livestock farming and agro-industry in Brazil. The year of glory may be 2017.

One of the reasons for the irrefutable Brazilian future leadership in the sector is that the country has favorable conditions for agricultural production. Brazil has natural resources that make it possible to expand production, accompanying consumer market growth tendencies, without knocking down any trees.

There are currently 388 million hectares of high-productivity fertile farmland - of which 90 million is still untouched. This factor alone already makes Brazil a country with a natural aptitude for agriculture and all the business related to its productive chains.

Another point to be considered is the fact that Brazil has invested heavily in agricultural research and technology in the last two decades and is now picking the fruit. The return comes in figures.

For example: with the modernization of agriculture it was possible, with little expansion of farmland, from 37.9 million hectares in 1990 to 45.6 million in 2007, to expand production from around 58 million tons to 127.6 million, the record crop to be picked by Brazil this year.

This scenery of conquests has caused the country to be considered the owner of the most modern and productive agricultural technology of the world.

To Eugênio Stefanello, a professor at the Federal University of Paraná and technician at the National Food Supply Company (Conab), these indices show that it is just a matter of time, organization and market strategy for Brazil to become the warehouse of the world. A world that, more and more, will need food for its inhabitants. It is estimated that the world population will have reached 8.5 billion by 2030.

"Populous countries like China and India, although they are great agricultural producers, will have difficulties to supply the demand, due to the saturation of farmland," explained the minister of Agriculture of Brazil, Luís Carlos Guedes Pinto. According to him, this has already started happening and is one of the explanations for the expansion of Brazilian exports to those countries, a fact that has been identified in recent years.

Between 2002 and 2006, foreign sales of Brazilian agribusiness grew 99%. They rose from US$ 24.8 billion to US$ 49.4 billion, according to figures supplied by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply. The growth continues in 2007.

In the first four months alone, sector foreign sales totaled US$ 16.5 billion - the value is 24.7% greater than that exported in the same period last year. The Middle East leads the ranking of regions that grew most as destinations for Brazilian exports - 67.4%, followed by the European Union (34.95%) and Africa (33.4%).

Brazil is already the main world exporter of ethanol, sugar, meats, cattle beef alone, coffee, orange juice and the soy complex (chaff, grain and oil). The country is also the second main exporter of soy grain, the second of chicken and the fourth of pork. In less than three decades Brazil has grown from an importer to the fifth main exporter of cotton.

The country is also the fifth main exporter of corn and is among the 20 main exporters of rice. In terms of production, the country is the main world producer of cattle beef, the third in terms of poultry and the fourth in terms of pork. Brazil is also the main producer of sugar, coffee, orange juice, the second main producer of soy (grain), and the fourth main producer of chaff and oil.

Ethanol

Brazilian sales of the sugar and alcohol complex grew the most - 243% in four years. In the case of ethanol, Brazil is way ahead of its main competitors. "Brazil has production expertise and is competitive in the entire productive chain, from sugarcane to industrialization and logistics, due to oil company Petrobras. The logistics bottleneck for alcohol is lower than for the transport of grain, for example. I therefore believe that by 2017, we will be the main global distributors of alcohol," stated Márcio Lopes e Freitas, president of the Organization of Brazilian Cooperatives (OCB).

According to figures supplied by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply, Brazil will be producing 38.6 billion liters of alcohol by 2017, more than double the production of 2005. The domestic consumption is estimated at 28.4 billion liters and exports at 10.3 billion liters.

To continue on the right route, the country just needs to find the balance between cane and other crops and livestock farming.

"I believe that there will be changes in the production of cattle beef, for example. Extensive livestock farming will be replaced by intensive farming. In meat cattle farming, the use of technology is great, the market leaders, for example, are confining 14 heads of cattle per hectare. By 2017, we will have more cattle farms within this standard. What used to be grazing ground will become sugarcane plantations," stated Freitas.

The OCB president, however, warns to the fact that the government needs to take a stand with regard to the changes that are to come. "The government must take measures to guide production. It is necessary to guarantee income in other areas, to stimulate the integration of sugarcane crops with livestock farming and grain," he finished off.

As an example of the correct steps to be taken for a future without surprises, Freitas mentions the case of wheat. "Brazil consumes more wheat than it produces and suffers with the Argentine posture. All the country needs is an agricultural policy for production here and the imbroglio will be solved. Planting wheat may be alternated with the plantation of soy and corn, it is a winter culture.

"Farmers just don't plant it because the Argentineans have better conditions, so wheat gets here at cheaper prices. If we balance the Brazilian and Argentine prices and establish an industrial agreement, we will guarantee the supply of the domestic market and will generate income," explained the executive.

Meat Future

Brazil is currently the main world producer of cattle beef, the second main producer of chicken and the fourth of poultry. By 2015, the scenery forecasted by the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply shows that the country will remain as the leader of cattle beef, producing around 2.2 million tons a year, will become the leader of chicken (4.4 million tons) and will remain among the three greatest producers of pork - around 1.9 million tons.

Figures for the first four months of the year show that the Agriculture ministry forecasts are on the right route. Shipments totaled 888,000 tons that generate to the country a total of US$ 1.4 billion.

Raw meats alone answer to US$ 1.11 billion - an increase of 50% when compared to the same period last year. The good performance caused the sector to review growth forecasts for 2007 and to estimate it at around 35%. Early this year, the forecasted growth was just 10%.

The growth reflects the new positioning of the sector on the foreign market and also recovery with regard to last year, when Brazil lost its position due to foot and mouth disease. According to figures supplied by the Brazilian Beef Industry and Exporters Association (Abiec), the country is offering importers a product with greater added value, like more noble cuts. Another point is that large slaughterhouses like Bertin and Friboi established partnerships with distributors and are selling cattle beef directly to supermarkets, without intermediaries.

The promotion of cattle beef has also gained space on the sector agenda. The Abiec has been promoting promotional barbecues in buyer countries, teaching how to cook Brazilian beef, adding value to typical Brazilian cuts. Last week, for example, two barbecues were promoted in Arab countries: in Jordan and Morocco. In coming months, there will be events in Germany and Russia.

Chicken and Pork

To José Augusto Lima de Sá, Foreign Relations director at food sector company Sadia, the future of chicken and pork is also promising. The results may be even better than those forecasted by the Ministry of Agriculture.

"I believe that new opportunities will arise. For example, up to 2015, we may have entered markets like China, India, Mexico and the United States. In China, we are only just starting. India, Mexico and the United States are markets that we have not even entered. And, imagine, that is a market of two billion consumers. And they may consume Brazilian chicken. In the case of pork, the market is much larger."

Lima de Sá believes that the energy question may also be an opportunity for Brazilian beef. "The impacts of bioenergy - with the US producing ethanol from corn - will be felt in all countries that produce animal protein, due to the use of the grain in animal feed, but Brazil will feel it less. We will be more competitive than the United States. We will, but it will be lower than in the European Union (EU), for example. It is therefore an opportunity for the country," he said.

Exchange Rate

Two factors may affect the situation of meats: exchange rates between the Brazilian real and the dollar and avian flu. Exchange rates, according to Lima de Sá, are bad (the Brazilian real is appreciated against the dollar), they make things harder, but the sector is already used to it. "It has never been easy for chicken, we have always had to compensate these 'exchange losses' with competitiveness, productivity and efficiency," stated the executive.

Regarding avian flu, recalls Lima de Sá, it is important to remain aware. "Brazil is lucky, the risk of the disease coming here is lower than that of other countries in Asia and Europe, due to the migratory route of birds. Before coming here it has to reach the United States and Canada, which have very rigorous control. But the presence of new cases, albeit in regions far from Brazil, may reduce the global consumption of chicken," he finished off.

Anba - www.anba.com.br



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Comments (21)Add Comment
World largest Warehouse.....and Whorehouse !
written by ch.c., May 17, 2007
largest warehouse.....probably in the next decade or so !
largest whorehouse....already the case....today !

Brazil will definitely feed the world appetite for food and sex !

Stupid question : of these industries which of the 2 will be the largest ?

But as long as you are competitive in prices, keep growing......both industries !!!!!

Today, in SP wholesale markets, fresh chicken prices are around 1 Real per kg, and around 2 Reals if chilled.
Swine prices are declining and your producers are struggling.
Cattles farmers are struggling too.
Sugar prices are down over 50 % in the last 15 months. Not so great for your sugarcane farmers...most certainly
Ethanol prices have declined on a year over year basis. Not so great for Consan, the largest ethanol producer. Its stock price declined around 30 % from last year high....despite the BOVESPA is making new high. Thus it should not be so rosy.......as you want us to swallow your propaganda.
Coffee prices are down too in US$, year over year !!! Thus down even more in your local currency !
Land Farms prices, although it stabilized since the end of last year, is still DOWN from it 2004 peak ! Down around 40 % when at the recent bottom, prices were down 50 % and even
as much as 72 % in Mato Grosso.

Ask any Brazilian farmer of your choice in your new farming frontier, if things are as rosy as we read in the news here or there !
I am talking of those in Mato Grosso, Bahia, Tocantins, Goias and the likes. Things are better in other areas such as in the south east such as Para etc etc.
Ask any Brazilian farmer of your choice, what went really up in the last few years. They will all sing : THE INPUT COSTS, fertilizers, pesticides, fungicides, transportation, and also
the machinery needed (tractors, harvesters, seedlers, chisels, landlevellers etc etc).
A grain harvester costs now around US$ 300'000.-, and a sugarcane harvester US$ 500'000.- !!!!Yesssssssss.....


Yessssss....lets face it, the biggest beneficiaries are trucks manufacturers, pesticides and fungicides manufacturers, GMO seeds producers, farm machinery manufacturers.
Yesssss.......lets face it again, they are mostly FOREIGN COMPANIES !!!!!
Everyone can look at their stock prices....ALL AT AN ALL TIMES HIGH......while the Brazilian companies stock prices involved in agriculture production, dont perform as well......despite the increased production !!!!

Conclusion : if one truly believes that Brazil is an agricultural miracle, the surest way to make money is by investing in the.....foreign companies involved, such as
DEERE, CATERPILLAR, SYNGENTA, NOVARTIS, BAYER, MONSANTO....etc etc...! But certainly NOT in Brazilian companies.


Anyway, keep smiling, you will struggle more, the more you produce, anmd we will enjoy the most by investing in the foreign companies, and buying your cheap food !
...
written by aes, May 17, 2007
Buy agricultural land. As you say it is cheap and in ten years you will double or triple your investment. The machinery will be made in Brazil, with a decrease in interest rates the ability to invest in capital improvement and therefore production is self evident. The Real is again worh its weight in the belief that it is backed by the near potential to feed the world. It is odd that exports increase even while the Real strengthens, for every Real exported it is like receiving 1.3 Reals. The world market will determine the credibility of your contentions.

Thailand is the global capital of whoremongering, I dont know if you have been their, but it makes Brazil look like a church choir.
...
written by aes, May 17, 2007
BTW you dont actually need to buy the combine or harvester or seeder, you can lease it. If Brazil can build cars they can certainly build a lawn mower.
Laugh....laugh...laugh ! Brazil can build cars !
written by ch.c., May 17, 2007
Please name the Brazilian car manufacturer...of your choice !!!!!!!

No need to buy harvesters and tractors, because you can lease them !
Well said...but at what interests rate ? Still the world highest.....after inflation....despite 15 cuts !
And what about amortizing them, a word you dont even know, based on your recent comments.
Because harvesters and all mechanical stuffs loses value....year after year, and dont increase in value......contrary to what you
suggested recently !

Who is going to lend to Brazilian farmers ? Certainly not the brazilian banks, unless the loans are guaranteed by the government.
And again at what rate ?
Could be loans fronm the BNDES, as they intend to subsdidizes several industries if you read the other article.
But curiously they wont subsidize more the farmers....already deep in debts and unable to repay.....despite the propaganda about their
success !

And AES the dumb, why dont you ask any exporter or farmer of your choice, if the actual exchange rate is like receving 1,3 Real for every Real they export ?
More idiot, hard to find !!!!!! You are already the world only "Master in Finances" that sold gold at US$ 830.-, a price never reached in the last 25 years !

You should replace the new agricultural minister, or Meireles the President of the Central Bank !
You should also replace and give your advice to the FIESP.....because they are struggling to find a guy like you !


Laugh....laugh....laugh.....!!!!!!
To:Ch.C
written by João da Silva, May 18, 2007
You should replace the new agricultural minister, or Meireles the President of the Central Bank !


Explain more
Ch.c: BTW Bovespa hit 51,957 Yesterday and the Real was R$ 1.9550
written by aes, May 18, 2007
We in the U.S. use the term depreciation to essentialy describe your use of the word amortization. And yes as a manufacturer of jewelry there was considerable machinery from vaccum casters, to polishers, platers, to sand blasting machines used in finishing. In 1980 Reagan inorder to 'jump start' the economy introduced what was called 'accelerated depreciation' that is you could 'write off' the cost of the capital investment in less than five years, the net result was that the company paid less income tax, and as a consequence purchased hard capital assets, since depreciation is an expense the taxes paid on the net profit was less, and the investment in capital goods increased production and as a consequence gross income. This single idea was one of the things that caused the great prosperity in the U.S. begining in 1980. It was responsible for the development of the computer industry and a myriad other innovative industries, from cell phone technology, to robotics.

The lending of money as you put it to farmers to purchase farm machinery is secured by the machinery itself. The land also provides the capital to secure the loan. The harvest for all intents and purposes have already been sold, especially as commodity prices remain high. This is the time to encourage agriculture while there is global demand and the commodity prices are high.

These are the things that bankers look at to determine the security of lending.

Interest rates will fall in Brazil, it is self evident. Business follows logic. Inorder to reduce the strength of the Real and thus insure a continuence of competitive pricing of commodities the Central Bank will continue reducing intrest rates until balance between the value of the Real and the amount of product that will sell at that price is reached.

I have been in the manufacturing of gold since 1973 in Los Angeles. In January of 1980 I melted everything down and stopped manufacturing for wholesale and opened a retail operation in Waikiki, Hawaii.
$684.00 01/15/80
$760.00 01/16/80
$750.00 01/17/80
$830.00 01/18/80
$850.00 01/19/80


London Gold Fix 1980
http://www.usagold.com/reference/prices/1980.html
Ch.c
written by João da Silva, May 18, 2007
London Gold Fix 1980
http://www.usagold.com/reference/prices/1980.html


Are you now going to say that this site is being run by the Brazilians and false data have been introduzed? You should have done an independent research before accusing any one of falsehood.
...
written by Ric, May 18, 2007
No one in his right mind would buy Brazilian farmland as a future investment hedge. You absolutely cannot hold it, keep it from being overrun, invaded, unless you are willing to spend big money to protect it 24/7. Personnel, electronics, lawyers, deeds, comity with local officials.
Ric: The definition of a horse race.
written by aes, May 18, 2007
That is what makes a horse race. One opinion against another. If agriculatural land is cheap and Brazil is the garden of the future, their will be billions of dollars investing in the acquisition of agricultural land. The details of provincial primacy will be ovethrown by the sheer volume of monies appropriated to the acquisition of agricultural land and its obvious economical potential. The future of Brazil is obviously in the wind, and the times are changing. Look at Bovespa, look at the Real. Brazil is the garden of the world, and its land is undervalued as to the potential of the prospects of its potential production. The economic world is not a fool, and everything has a price. The price of Brazil is cheap and is in global competition for its acquisition it is inevitible that it will be acquired locally or in conjunction with international consortiums, but the garden of Brazil will be made manifest within the next ten years.
...
written by João da Silva, May 19, 2007
The price of Brazil is cheap and is in global competition for its acquisition it is inevitible that it will be acquired locally or in conjunction with international consortiums, but the garden of Brazil will be made manifest within the next ten years.


And any one who is not going to make use of this opportunity is an idiot. Ah,AES, we are chopping and chopping and no chips are flying.

Personnel, electronics, lawyers, deeds, comity with local officials.


Rickey, my friend, we all know that these are Hyennas,but remember that there are millions of honest Brazilians. Bo has similar problems,but still he is fighting against these jackasses. Ric, what we need to say to these Hyennas is " go f**k yourself"
FOOD FOR STARVED NOT FOR EXPORTATION!
written by pobrissima da rocinha, May 19, 2007
LARGEST FOOD WAREHOUSE?
THIS MEANS WE WILL BE ABLE TO FEED OUR STARVED PEOPLE
f**k THE EXPORTATION smilies/angry.gif
Brazil is already a major player but
written by Ric, May 19, 2007
The article says that Brazil will become the planet´s Main Food Warehouse. Aside from the fact that production is one thing and warehousing is another, I think he means that Brazil will be number one in ag output. I am not saying it won´t be huge, but I can´t envision a scenario in which it becomes the largest producer.

The US Midwest has millions upon millions of acres of flat farmland with ten feet or more of topsoil. In the thirties the Dust Bowl blew some of that away in SE Colorado, OK and Kansas and the Texas panhandle, but moving north and east of there it´s still intact. (I once found a Model T Ford on our family ranch in CO which had been buried years before up to the bottom of the windshield. Silt.)

The only place is South America approaching the quality of the US heartland is the Pampas of Argentina, but it´s much smaller.

The Central Valley of California, or from the top, the Sacramento, San Juaquin and Imperial Valleys, plus the Salinas Valley, plus other smaller areas like Santa Maria, and yes, there are still ag fields on Lincoln between Anaheim and Lakewood, produce more in volume and value than every bit of real estate from the Rio Grande to the tip of South America. That´s just one state.

No one wishes Brazil more success than I do, but there are competing issues here. You can´t have mega production from small farms using inefficient methods, and yet the pressure is on to procede with more Agrarian Reform.

The Trans-Amazon Highway had an Agrovila every 100 km, cooperatives, I was out there when it started, most of the farmers were migrants from the NE, they gave up and went home. The elements were not there for success. At least they had the rain.

In the 1930 census in the USA a middle class family was defined as having one or two hired servants. The USA had two potential sources of a civil timebomb in those days, underpaid and overworked farm laborers and domestic servants. But that era ended peacefully because they found real jobs in industry.

If Brazil becomes number one, it had better start with projects like the Hetch-Hetchy, the Friant-Kern Canal, the Mono/LA project. It had better find a way to bring half of its population into the system without giving them the false promise of becoming a new and improved Jeca Tatuziho with only 10 hectares of land. It could start by having the Cearenses, who are more creative than those in the South, tackle the problem of transporting natural gas from the source to the destination without pipelines, because the main ingredient in fertilizer is Natural Gas and most Brazilian soil is not good enough to produce big time without fertilizer.

I don´t even want to get into the Greenie/Cargill issue, but I think this prognosis is a stretch. None of this has anything to do with the fact that yes, millions of Brazilians are honest.
Pobrissima
written by Ric, May 19, 2007
Don´t worry. While Brazil may one day be the biggest SOYBEAN exporter in the world, nobody eats soybeans. Except Asians. And vegetarians and those who can´t tolerate dairy products. All but a tiny fraction ends up as feed for animals, and oil. The kind that´s bad for you if they hydoginate it, trans fats. They heat it up and expose it to hydrogen and a little nickel (Ni) and it makes it firm and gives it body, like lard. Great donuts, wonderful artery-clogging properties.

Problem is for us that while the producers are Brazilians, all the big middlemen are multinationals with English or Asian names, so they are the ones making all the bucks.
Ric: It seems their are more solutions than problems.
written by aes, May 20, 2007
Well I suggest that Brazil begin marketing its production itself, eliminating the 'bogey man' middle man. It seems that this is going on as we speak with contracts with China, Japan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia are all made without middlemen, or at least non Brazilian middlemen.

Your perception of Soy, how it is grown, its uses, non tillage agronomy, is wanting.http://www.rolf-derpsch.com/notill.htm

The Cerrado http://www.extension.iastate.e...Oct00.html
AES
written by João da Silva, May 20, 2007
Well I suggest that Brazil begin marketing its production itself, eliminating the 'bogey man' middle man


AES,well said and I love it. I have been screaming and yelling about this for years.Finally I found an ally.I like your power of positive thinking. We will come back and develop tua colocação.You make sure that your Skol is cold.
...
written by Ric, May 20, 2007
If any of my perceptions are wanting I could not be more pleased that the one concerning soy farming is included.
funny some of..
written by bo, May 20, 2007
these articles. Ric hit the nail on the head. The U.S. is by far and away the largest food producer in the world and brazil simply won't be close in the next ten or twenty years.

Here are some suggestions for titles to future articles.


Brazil - A technological giant.

Brazil - The safest cities on planet earth.

Brazil - A place where racism doesn't exist.

Brazil pioneers space travel and puts the first monkey on mars.
Bo: Hope your friend is doing better.
written by aes, May 20, 2007
A chicken in every pot two cars in every garage.

Peace in our time.

Casinos open in Copacabana

Justice prevails

BOVESPA hits 90,000

Interest rates drop to 5%

Trains hit 200 mph

National Highway System Established

Brazil ends tarrifs on imported cars.

New gold and diamond finds discovered in Minas, largest in world.

Brazil becomes largest military power in South America

Favelas privatized

Brazilian police on par with Singapore

Brazil justice system on par with Holland.

A lot can change in twenty years for better and worse.
CH.C Toma cuidado
written by aiocabrasil, May 22, 2007
World largest Warehouse.....and Whorehouse !
written by ch.c., 2007-05-17 08:03:05

largest warehouse.....probably in the next decade or so !
largest whorehouse....already the case....today !

Espero que a proxima vez vc 'ta trepando um menor da rua ( deve ser que vc gosta disso ) que papai noel lhe dar um presente massa: duas malas cheia de maconha portando arma e com fome aquele na barriga, fome que dar dor de cabeca, fome suficiente pra matar e roubar um nojento safado como vc. Seja bem vindo ao brasil cara, seja bem vindo.
...
written by Ric, May 22, 2007
Diabéisso, cara? Tu quer frescar com a cara dele? Tá qui no Brasil não, tá lá na carraducaraí!
aop
written by bo, May 26, 2007
Although Ch.C may be a little rough on the edges, I rarely see him make statements that are untrue. And to be honest, this country could stand a dose of 50 million brazilian Ch.C's!!!

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