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Midwest Soybeans Sitting Instead of Heading West

Storage space is stretched thin; product quality concerns begin to rise

Soybean Oil and Protein NIR Measurement

Piles of commodities during the harvest season aren’t exactly out of the ordinary, but the reasoning for this year’s stacks is unique says a report at Agri-Pulse.

For many grain elevators in the Dakotas and surrounding states, the soybean superhighway sending soybeans to export markets via the Pacific Northwest might as well be a cul-de-sac.

“The option in that part of the country is either a widening basis or no bids,” Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition, said in an interview with Agri-Pulse.

The basis – the difference between the futures price and the cash price paid at local elevators – is also causing USDA to explore how to give producers hit by the phenomenon an extra boost through its $12 billion trade assistance package.

American Soybean Association President John Heisdorffer, an Iowa producer, says farmers in that region are already stretched thin with storage – there are even anecdotal reports of grain being stored in machinery sheds – and now product quality concerns are coming to the surface.

Read the full report here.

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