Brazil Needs US$ 31 Billion to Finance Crop

Brazil’s Superior Council of Agriculture and Livestock Raising (Rural Brasil), integrated by representatives of both the productive and cooperative sectors, estimates that US$ 31.6 billion (81.4 billion reais) will be necessary to finance the 2005/2006 crop.

The estimate will be the basis for the Agriculture and Livestock Raising Plan for the next two years, and is part of a proposal given April 13 to the Minister of Agriculture, Roberto Rodrigues.


Of this total, US$ 26.6 billion (68.6 billion reais) will finance costs and commercialization of cotton, rice, beans, manioc, corn, soy, sorghum, wheat, castor beans, Arabica coffee, sugarcane, and cacao.


According to the head of the Economic Department of the Brazilian Confederation of Agriculture and Livestock Raising (CNA), Getúlio Pernambuco, volume resources available to the rural sector need to be 75.2% higher than what was available in 2004.


The 2005 harvest could be 13.29% greater than in 2004. The forecast is for a total of 134.9 million tons. This estimate is part of the third prognosis on production and cultivated area, released ealier this year by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE).


According to the IBGE, soybeans will play a substantial role in this year’s crop increase, unlike in 2004, when the product contributed to a 3.7% decline in relation to 2003.


The IBGE’s coordinator of Agriculture and Livestock, Carlos Alberto Lauria, said that soybeans account for 41% of the country’s grain production.


“The significant increase in soybeans is being attributed to the lack of alternatives for farmers to shift to other products,” he affirmed.


Herbaceous cotton, which was the standout in 2004, growing 62%, is expected to pull back this year in production and cultivated area, principally in the state of Mato Grosso.


This area is expected to produce 1.406 million tons, 18.16% less than in 2004. In terms of cultivated area, there has been expansion in the case of peanuts, unpolished rice, and soybeans.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s President-Elect Expected to Cut Spending and Interest Rates

Brazil’s President-elect Dilma Rousseff’s efforts to restrain public spending will allow the Brazilian central ...

Brazil: Lula Beats Cardoso in 2006

In a hypothetical election against former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Brazilian President Lula would ...

Water Wonderland

Recife is full of surprises: bright sun, ever-blue skies tempered by the ocean breeze, ...

9 Years of Privatization Bring US$ 5 Bi in Investments to Brazil’s Railways

Brazilian railways transported 178.3 billion ton-kilometers in the third quarter of the year, according ...

Before Banning Brazil’s Beef, Russia Was Biggest Client

Exports of Brazilian beef in natura to Russia from January to September of this ...

He invented the Brazilian novela

CDs or Books by Keyword, Title or Author By Francesco Neves "God is a ...

Women Make Up 90% of People Handling Brazil’s Zero Hunger Funds

A study by the Brazilian Ministry of Social Development has found that 90% of ...

Brazilian Astronaut Will Pay Homage in Space to Santos Dumont, Father of Aviation

A Brazilian is just about to reach the final frontier: space. Marcos Pontes, the ...

Brazil to Start Producing Second-Generation Ethanol in September

Brazilian president's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's Chief of Staff Dilma Roussef stated that ...

Big Challenge for Brazil’s New President Is Going Beyond Lula

“I would like that every father and mother in the country today look at ...