Brazil is shipping corn to South Africa, a traditional maize
exporter suffering from an El Niño-related drought, as it seeks new
markets for its growing corn production.
Brazil exported 321,662 tonnes of corn to South Africa in
2015, up from none the previous year, data from the Trade Ministry
showed on Wednesday.
Three more cargoes are on the way or likely to leave
Brazilian ports soon, according to shipping data as well as a South
African trade source.
The exports are an indication of Brazil's growing influence
as a corn producer with two annual crops and ample room to plant new
fields.
The figures are also indicative of the global trade disruption caused
by the El Niño climate phenomenon. South Africa may need to import as
much as 5 million tonnes of maize this year, roughly half of its
requirements, due to its worst drought in three decades, the country's
largest producer group said on Wednesday.
India, another traditional corn exporter suffering from drought,
issued a tender to import 320,000 tonnes of yellow corn free of
genetically-modified organisms (GMOs), European traders said on Tuesday.
Brazilian trade data showed 4,020 tonnes of corn were exported to
India from January to November 2015, up sharply from 126 tonnes in the
same period in 2014, though corn exports to India were not included in
the full-year report.
Ministry representatives were not immediately available to explain that omission.
No Brazilian corn cargoes are currently scheduled to sail to India.
Brazil is the world's No. 2 corn exporter after the United States,
and its overall corn exports in 2015 totaled a record 30.7 million
tonnes thanks in part to a weaker local currency making them more
affordable, the cereal exporters' association Anec said.
Buyers will soon have to look elsewhere for corn, however, as
Brazil's ports will switch from corn to soybean exports in late February
or early March.
Paulo Molinari, a corn analyst at Brazil's Safras & Mercado
consultancy, said Brazil would likely export 5.5 million tonnes of
already-sold corn in January and then see exports fall off in February,
with new corn sales starting up again in June or July.
But the plentiful corn supply and high demand may delay the start of
soy export season, said Sergio Mendes, director-general of Anec, who
also said he thought corn exports would continue well into March.
By: Reuters.
Review: Emerging Market Formulations & Research Unit, Flagship Records.
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