Commodity Conversations Weekly Press Summary

Cargill is planning to invest USD 118 million in Brazil in 2018 in developing waterways and rail transport as an alternative to trucks, and its Santos Port terminal. Cargill already acquired the remaining stake in the Cevasa sugar and ethanol mill and, with SJC Bioenergia, is banking on the booming corn-to-ethanol business. The head of the Brazilian operations said that regardless of the uncertainties brought by the elections Brazil will continue to be a major global food producer, adding that the challenge lies in bringing these crops to port.

Wilmar and the India-based group Adani via their joint venture Bangladesh Edible Oil Ltd (BEOL) are planning to spend USD 350 million to build an agro-based foods and allied products industrial park in Bangladesh. BEOL said the popularity of its edible oil was encouraging the investment.

Olam has announced the launch of AtSource, a technological solution for a sustainable agricultural supply chain which allows customers to see the social and environmental footprint of a commodity. The dashboard will start by showing the supply chain for West African cocoa and cashew, as well as Brazilian and Vietnamese coffee, among others. It’s target is for all of its products to be on AtSource by 2025.

Similarly, Hershey has launched Cocoa For Good, a USD 500 million initiative to help cocoa farmers improve their livelihoods as well as promote sustainable farming practices as the company aims for all of its cocoa to come from certified sustainable sources by 2020. The company is working with Sourcemap to make its supply chain more transparent.

The exiting head of Sucden’s cocoa trading desk, who has been in the business for 50 years, is arguing that the drive to grow sustainable cocoa is keeping farmers poor. He explained that the system allowed the various companies involved – including NGOs – to cash in on sustainability practices but that West African cocoa farmers are probably poorer today than they were before.

In Brazil, conservation groups have offered USD 5 million in grants to help turn deforested and degraded Amazon land into 1,700sq km of cocoa tree plantations. Cocoa trees are financially more interesting than using the land for cattle ranching, which faces additional rules designed to curb further expansion into the forest. Brazil’s Cocoa Processing Industry expects production to double to 400,000mt/year by 2028, which would increase global production by 5%.

China’s high birth rate and rising middle class allowed Danone to increase its sale of baby formula, dairy products and water brands in the country. In Europe, on the other hand, sales of dairy products during the first three months of the year were 0.3% lower than last year as the firm is trying to adapt to changing tastes and slow demand growth.

Nestle reportedly made some progress over a dispute with AgeCore, which represents six retailers in Europe, which started in September last year over supply terms. AgeCore, whose membership includes Switzerland’s Coop and Germany’s Edeka, has been encouraging its retailers to boycott Nestle products. And in the US, Nestle Waters has abandoned a plan to build a bottling plant in Pennsylvania, although it might look for alternative sites. Food & Water Watch welcomed the news and highlighted the strong opposition the project had faced.

In the UK, the dairy and meat industries – with the support of NGOs such as the animal rights group RSPCA – are trying to change the name of “veal” to “rosé beef” in an attempt to convince more people to eat veal; this could give an outlet for male calves that are otherwise killed at birth. The Guardian found that as many as 95,000 calves are killed at birth as it is cheaper to kill them than to keep them alive.

In the US, cell-cultured meat – so-called clean meat – is causing regulatory confusion. The US beef industry is divided between those who say it should count as meat as it comes from a stem cell and those who argue that it is technically a food additive. Whether it is the former or the latter could impact the definition of “meat” as we know it. It is also unclear which government body should take the call. Some say it falls under the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), others argue it’s in the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) department and others still say that only Congress can take the call.

A recent study looking at – and grading – how supermarkets in the US work to reduce food waste found that none of the major groups managed to score an A. The company that fared best was Walmart thanks to policies like clearer labeling which distinguish between “Best if Used By” and “Use By” dates, among others. The study found that part of the problem was that the supermarkets are not disclosing data, making it hard to assess how much is actually being wasted, and therefore making it harder to find solutions.

The European Commission has allowed member states to declare dual standard food as illegal, after Central and Eastern European countries complained that multinational firms were selling lower quality food in their countries despite identical packaging. For example, eastern countries complained that animal fat was often substituted with vegetable fat and sugar was substituted with artificial sweeteners or corn syrup. In response, food producers had argued that these differences were designed to suit local tastes.

Finally this week, a new book, called The Food Explorer, tells the unusual tale of an American botanist and explorer, who at the age of 22 founded the USDA’s Section of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction. Over 37 years of travel, David Fairchild travelled to more than 50 countries to bring back new or better fruits and vegetables, such as mangos, quinoa, dates, cotton or soybeans. He even befriended Bavarian beer makers to bring back some of their high quality hops. Kazakhstan gave him apples, New Guinea gave him bananas and China oranges and lemons: The food we eat is indeed the product of a globalised world.

This report was produced by ECRUU

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