Betting Brazil Over The U.S.: China's Soybean Strategy On Shaky Ground
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) China stopped buying U.S. soybeans in May to punish American tariffs and turned entirely to Brazil. Brazil now supplies roughly 71 percent of China's soybean imports-over 100 million tonnes this year.
Beijing hopes this strategy pressures Washington into lifting trade barriers. Brazil's farmers delivered record yields under near-perfect weather. China's planners count on that performance repeating.
Yet Brazil's climate swings between droughts and floods. A single severe weather event could slash its soybean output, leaving China short of the 100 million tonnes it needs beyond its 21 million-tonne domestic harvest.
China built strategic soybean reserves estimated at 45 million tonnes to cushion shocks. Officials have not said how much they would release during a supply crisis.
Farmers in Heilongjiang province receive up to US$300 per acre in subsidies, but labor shortages and lower soybean yields keep local production far below national demand.
Meanwhile, U.S. farmers endure low prices and storage costs, waiting for China's return. They planted this year expecting China to buy one-third of U.S. exports but sold under half a million tonnes instead of seven million tonnes last season.
Chicago soybean futures sank to five-year lows as the U.S. market went idle. China cannot sustain its sudden leap to Brazilian soy alone. A weather disaster in Brazil could trigger sharp meat and cooking-oil shortages across China.
U.S. farmers know that China needs them back. They remain patient, knowing that nature and necessity may force Beijing to reopen its doors to American soy.
Beijing hopes this strategy pressures Washington into lifting trade barriers. Brazil's farmers delivered record yields under near-perfect weather. China's planners count on that performance repeating.
Yet Brazil's climate swings between droughts and floods. A single severe weather event could slash its soybean output, leaving China short of the 100 million tonnes it needs beyond its 21 million-tonne domestic harvest.
China built strategic soybean reserves estimated at 45 million tonnes to cushion shocks. Officials have not said how much they would release during a supply crisis.
Farmers in Heilongjiang province receive up to US$300 per acre in subsidies, but labor shortages and lower soybean yields keep local production far below national demand.
Meanwhile, U.S. farmers endure low prices and storage costs, waiting for China's return. They planted this year expecting China to buy one-third of U.S. exports but sold under half a million tonnes instead of seven million tonnes last season.
Chicago soybean futures sank to five-year lows as the U.S. market went idle. China cannot sustain its sudden leap to Brazilian soy alone. A weather disaster in Brazil could trigger sharp meat and cooking-oil shortages across China.
U.S. farmers know that China needs them back. They remain patient, knowing that nature and necessity may force Beijing to reopen its doors to American soy.

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