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Oilseeds and Cereals Sector Review Chisinau, Moldova 14 June 2006 David Jackson, LMC International
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Structure of Presentation The productivity problem and solutions The processing sector Government policy and trade Recommendations
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Farm Productivity: Problems and Solutions
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Sunflower Production and Yields 120 160 200 240 280 320 360 400 1992/931994/951996/971998/992000/012002/03 Output ('000 tonnes) 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Yields (tonnes/ha) ProductionYield
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Cereal Production
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Yields of Major Cereals 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 1998199920002001200220032004 Tonnes per hectare WheatMaize
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Sunflower Productivity Production has increased, but this has been due to area expansion rather than yield increases Area expansion is derived from shortening rotations, not by cultivating new areas Shorter rotations are one important factor contributing to declining yields
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Cereal Productivity Cereal productivity has been broadly flat The 2003 wheat harvest was decimated by winter kill from frost and wind Cereal area is less constrained by agronomic rotations than sun
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Area of Major Arable Crops
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Gross Margins of Alternative Crops
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Reasons for Low Yields Shorter rotations (sunflower) Lack of credit Reduced inputs Low technological base Inferior seed quality
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Solutions for Low Yields Many of the problems can be traced to credit, such as: Seed quality Input applications Rotational practices (sunflower) Price incentives
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The Processing Sector
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Sunseed Output and Net Exports 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 1995/961997/981999/002001/022003/04 '000 tonnes ProductionNet ExportsDomestic Crushing
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Major Cereal Exports 0 100 200 300 400 1998199920002001200220032004 '000 tonnes WheatMaizeBarley
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Sun Crushing Costs Comparison
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Crushing Margins ($/tonne seed)
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Sun Crushing Issues Margins higher than risk premium Margins similar to Ukraine,where a 17% export tax was applied High margins attract entrants Domestic sector too small for two efficient crushers
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Government Policy and Trade
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Domestic Sunflower Seed Prices 100 140 180 220 260 1999/002000/012001/022002/032003/04 US$ per tonne MoldovaExport Parity
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Domestic Wheat Prices 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 20002001200220032004 US$ per tonne DomesticExport ParityImport Parity
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Domestic Maize Prices 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 20002001200220032004 US$ per tonne DomesticExport Parity
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Non-Transparent Trade Barriers Sunflower now less than export parity (17% 2001/2 to 11% 2003/4) Maize less than export parity Wheat did not rise to import parity
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Sun Crush Margin in “Free Market”
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Sun Non-Transparent Trade Barriers Prior to 2004: Export documentation Customs clearance Rail facilities
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Wheat Trade Barriers Domestic market intervention via state bakeries and import licence Fixed milling margins for low value bread State grain reserve Need for clear price stabilisation techniques
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Common Non-Transparent Barriers Post 2004: UCE single export channel UCE export fee Export payment system State rail monopoly
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Recommendations
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Sun - Key Policy Actions Access to credit Access to export markets Transparent pricing Seed quality
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Cereals - Key Policy Actions Strategic reserve guidelines Revise bread price controls Market access Market information
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Access to Credit Encourage land market Land titling/collateral Encourage crop financing (e.g. export market access) Efficient warehouse receipting
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Access to Export Market Remove single export channel Remove rail monopoly Facilitate rail transport Facilitate customs and borders Rationalise documentation
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Transparent Prices Published domestic, regional and international prices Mandatory seed pricing formula
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