Otago Daily Times

Bean in the wars

After losing the Chinese market to the trade war, US farmers are chasing any business they can get. P.J. Huffstutte­r and Karl Plume, of Reuters report from Addieville, Illinois.

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CLOUDS crowded the Illinois sky as Nick Harre walked away from his combine at the peak of harvest to join four fellow farmers in greeting some unlikely visitors.

Inside a nearby seed barn, they made their pitch to eight Sri Lankan government officials: Please buy our soybeans.

The wooing of such a tiny market underscore­s the depth of US farmers’ problems after losing their biggest customer, China, to a global trade war.

Sri Lanka bought about 3000 tonnes of US soybeans last year. China bought about 32 million tonnes — but now buys almost none after Beijing slapped a 25% tariff on US imports in July. The move came in retaliatio­n for US duties on Chinese goods imposed by US President Donald Trump.

US farmers would need about 11,000 markets the size of Sri Lanka to replace Chinese soybean purchases, but these days many growers will take any shred of new business they can get. A small but growing number of farmers have all but given up waiting for diplomatic solutions and started scrambling themselves to help open new markets and salvage existing ones disrupted by tariffs, according to dozens of interviews with producers, industry officials and trade lobbying groups.

They are lobbying lawmakers, joining overseas trade trips and hosting prospectiv­e buyers — often while neglecting or passing off farm duties during harvest.

Some tried jumping into politics as Democratic candidates this year, but had little success: fifthgener­ation Pennsylvan­ia dairy farmer Denny Wolff lost his fight for a congressio­nal seat, as did Mississipp­i poultry farmer Michael Evans — who is prolife, progun and antitariff­s.

Harre (29), a thirdgener­ation dairy and grain farmer, said he would rather talk directly to importers than trust the task to Washington.

‘‘I could care less about the politics, to be honest,’’ he said. ‘‘We’re lacking people advocating for us. If someone’s going to be telling our story, I’d rather it be myself.’’

The grassroots movement comes as the agrarian economy is in its fifth year of financial woe, with oversupply underminin­g revenues. Corn and soybean prices are hovering near decade lows and this year’s bumper harvest is further swelling US farmers’ massive stocks of unsold grain.

US net farm income will fall to $US65.7 billion ($NZ96.2 billion) this year, down 47% from just five years ago, the US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA) forecasts.

These activist farmers know they face overwhelmi­ng odds; China had traditiona­lly bought 60% of US soybean exports, and building new trade relationsh­ips can take years.

‘‘If we can get buyers to step away from the politics and see us as people, we can get them to trust us — even if they can’t trust Washington,’’ said Doug Schroeder, a fifthgener­ation farmer in Bellflower, Illinois. ‘‘If we can do that, they will want to buy from us again when the trade war ends.

‘‘As long as we’re still in business, of course.’’

A peace offering: cookies

As tensions with China escalated, Schroeder (57) reached out to neighbours and fellow farmers at the state soybean associatio­n, offering to host overseas buyers.

‘‘I’d do anything to get them back,’’ Schroeder said.

In midSeptemb­er, some 20 Chinese buyers arrived at his farm in a bus, a visit set up through the US Soybean Export Council, an industry group. Schroeder’s 89yearold mother baked them chocolate chip cookies.

When they arrived, adding a new stop to their annual tour of the US Midwest to survey soybean fields, their response was polite, but awkward.

‘‘We value your business,’’ Schroeder told them repeatedly.

The visitors said nothing, looking at the ground. They declined the cookies.

‘‘This isn’t going to work,’’ Schroeder recalled thinking at the time.

Losing ‘a generation’

A pileup of farm work made Duane Aistrope turn down two invitation­s to visit China with trade groups this year before most tariffs took effect.

But as soybean prices plummeted in August and Trump threatened to hit China with more tariffs, Aistrope dropped his chores and jumped on a plane to China for a trade mission arranged by the US Grains Council, an industry group financed in part with taxpayer money.

He spent 10 days travelling with other farmers, visiting two dairy farms and meeting importers at a large feed maker.

They struck no deals; Chinese importers said they saw buying US soybeans as politicall­y untenable even if their prices continued to fall. Aistrope was left to hope his visit might make a difference in winning buyers back if the trade war ends.

Back at his farm in rural Randolph, Iowa, a friend helped empty out the last of Aistrope’s corn bins to make room for harvest, hauling truckloads of grain to a local ethanol plant.

Aistrope (61) is losing money on every bushel of corn and soy. He worries more about younger growers.

‘‘If something doesn’t happen soon,’’ he said, ‘‘we’re going to lose a generation of farmers.’’

Win by Washington standards

In Washington, the tradewar spin is far more optimistic.

Trump last month hailed a renegotiat­ed trade pact with Canada and Mexico as a huge win for US workers and farmers.

This year, USDA Undersecre­tary for Trade and Foreign Agricultur­al Affairs Ted McKinney has doubled the number of trade missions the agency takes, inviting farm groups and agricultur­al businesses to join him.

One trip this spring resulted in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador agreeing to jointly spend $US49 million over the next 12 months on US agricultur­al goods ranging from feed grains to wine.

McKinney described the deal as the largest financial agreement USDA had ever signed from a trade trip. But in the world of commodity exports, it amounts to a rounding error, equal to 0.035% of 2017 US agricultur­al exports.

‘‘Every journey of 10, a hundred, a thousand miles begins as a single step,’’ he said.

Hopes for Taiwan

Taiwanese buyers were particular­ly eager to visit the United States this year because US prices had fallen dramatical­ly and because China had gobbled up most South American soybeans in a shift to avoid tariffs on US crops.

For years, Minnesota farm groups have courted importers from Taiwan, which last year was the sixthlarge­st buyer of US corn and soybeans.

When the buyers arrived in September to sign a letter of intent to buy up to 3.9 million tonnes of US soybeans — potentiall­y Taiwan’s biggest purchase in a decade — farmer Kevin Paap, president of the Minnesota Farm Bureau, jumped into his SUV and raced to Governor Mark Dayton’s residence in St Paul to meet the Taiwanese buyers.

The deal was promising, but a ceremonial signing rather than a firm commitment. Paap says he remains confident Taiwan will come through, eventually.

Chasing Sri Lanka

For Harre and the Illinois farmers gathered inside the seed building in September, every market is worth chasing, including Sri Lanka.

Fourthgene­ration grain farmer David Droste cleared his throat, greeted the visitors and herded them inside a kitchen, taking questions on crop yields, seed traits and soybean exports. The group spent three days in the Midwest partly because low US soybean prices had intrigued buyers back home.

W.M.W. Weerakoon, an agronomist and directorge­neral at the Sri Lankan Department of Agricultur­e, asked about the impact of Chinese tariffs on US farmers.

The Americans winced. Droste explained that they had spent years growing more crops to export and now had no place to sell them.

Afterward, Droste shook Weerakoon’s hand.

‘‘We’d love to work with you,’’ he said.

Weerakoon smiled, without committing to anything, and the two men walked side by side into Droste’s soybean field.

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 ??  ?? Critical eye . . . A buyer from Sri Lanka examines soybeans at the PioneerDuP­ont Seed facility in Addieville.
Critical eye . . . A buyer from Sri Lanka examines soybeans at the PioneerDuP­ont Seed facility in Addieville.
 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Full attention . . . An Illinois Soybean Growers Associatio­n representa­tive listens to questions from Sri Lankan grain buyers in Addieville, Illinois.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Full attention . . . An Illinois Soybean Growers Associatio­n representa­tive listens to questions from Sri Lankan grain buyers in Addieville, Illinois.
 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Confidence . . . The sign at the PioneerDuP­ont Seed facility in Addieville.
PHOTO: REUTERS Confidence . . . The sign at the PioneerDuP­ont Seed facility in Addieville.

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