subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Mon, Nov 09 2009 

Resources

print this story   Print this story
  Post to del.icio.us

Published August 25, 2008 10:13 am - Across the country, from grain elevator to grain elevator, golden wheat and corn are piled in towering mounds, waiting for a rail car to haul them to market.

US grain exports snagged by infrastructure delays


CHRISTOPHER LEONARD and CATHERINE TSAI
Associated Press

Across the country, from grain elevator to grain elevator, golden wheat and corn are piled in towering mounds, waiting for a rail car to haul them to market.

Some grain can sit for a month or more on the ground, exposed to wind, rain and rats.

It’s the dark side of the booming global demand for U.S. corn, wheat and soybeans. The surge in exports is revealing inefficiencies in the country’s railways, highways and rivers that carry the grain that helps feed the world. And those bottlenecks are costing farmers, shippers and ultimately consumers millions of dollars a year.

Mark Hodges, the executive director of the Oklahoma Wheat Commission, has seen it firsthand. Earlier this summer, when consumers around the world hungered more than ever for American wheat and corn, he hopped into his pickup truck and toured local grain elevators.

Piles of grain sat like giant anthills, waiting to be shipped. Frantic managers couldn’t find enough rail cars to haul it.

“When you’re putting wheat on the ground, there’s going to be a loss,” Hodges said. “They don’t ever like to put it on the ground, but when wheat is $7, $8 or $10 a bushel, they sure don’t like to put it on the ground.”

A surprisingly large harvest this fall is expected to test the system even further. The U.S. Department of Agriculture predicts farmers will produce the second largest corn crop and fourth largest soybean crop in history.

Some agribusiness groups worry the bottlenecks could hurt the United States’ standing as a global food provider as other nations, such as Brazil and Argentina, compete for a lucrative share of the market.

In years past, bountiful harvests meant millions of bushels were stored outside overstuffed grain silos, waiting for shipment. Commodities loaded on barges faced long waits at outdated locks and dams on the Mississippi River, adding days and dollars to their transportation.

The barge delays alone added an average $72.6 million annually to cost of shipping goods down the Mississippi and Illinois rivers, according to a new Army Corps of Engineers analysis provided to The Associated Press.

Rail delays are costly as well. In 2006, an estimated 1 billion bushels of grain were stored outside or in improvised shelters in Iowa, Illinois and Indiana, adding an estimated $107 million to $160 million that year to the cost of transporting it, according to USDA figures. That’s about 1 percent of the combined $13.8 billion value of corn and soybean exports in 2006.

“We’re way, way behind in our infrastructure investment, both in the private sector and publicly,” said Peter Friedmann, executive director of the Agriculture Transportation Coalition, a trade group representing grain exporters. “And we need to move a lot on that or we will see other countries supplant us as they get greater investment in their infrastructure.”

The problem is likely to persist, if not worsen, in years to come.

Fixing the bottlenecks will take billions of dollars in investment over several years. In the meantime, exports are forecast to increase, with corn shipments expected to grow every year over the next decade from 54 million metric tons to 77 million metric tons, according to the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute.

Added costs from bigger bottlenecks could only hurt U.S. farmers in a competitive global industry.



print this story    email this story   






autoconx
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Premium Jobs

ADULT THERAPIST
LifeSkills has a full-time Adult Therapist position available for our service center in Metcalfe County. The position is...>MORE

ELECTRICIAN WANTED. KY LICENSE PREFERRED.
OSHA 10 hr. 10+ years exp., commercial, EOE, Drug free workplace. Job is located in Glasgow, KY. Interested applicants c...>MORE

OPENING FOR PET GROOMER-STYLIST
for bush pet boarding & grooming business. Pleasant working environment with established client base. 5 years experience...>MORE

MANAGEMENT (KEYHOLDER) POSITION WITH LOCAL
shoe store. Exciting career opportunity. Retail experience preferred. Competitive benefit package. Apply at SHOE SHOW, 2...>MORE

BLUEGRASS SUPPLY CHAIN SERVICES
Has immediate part time forklift operator openings at a client location in Edmonton, KY. Team members are responsible fo...>MORE

COMPETITIVE PHARMACEUTICAL DISTRIBUTOR IS
seeking full-time tele-sales reps. Base pay plus commissions. You must possess strong work ethics, good attendance rec...>MORE

CAREER MINDED INDIVIDUALS SEARCHING FOR A HOME
We offer HOME ON WEEKENDS!!
2500 miles per week
100% no touch freight
No force dispatch to NYC. Safety &
...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Autos

LOOKING FOR A GREAT AUTO DEAL?.....
Looking to buy or sell?
Check here for the Premium Auto Section.
You can post an ad with unlimited text and
...>MORE

1990 CHEVY SPORT TRUCK
350, black, automatic, air conditioned, power windows, alloy wheels. $3,500. 651-3906.

...>MORE

2005 DODGE MAGNUM SXT WITH 73,000 MILES.
White ext., gray leather int., automatic, 6 cylinder, 3.5L engine. Asking $10,900. Call 270-202-2346.

...>MORE

1997 CHRYSLER LHS, 4 DOOR, AUTO,
loaded, leather, sunroof, 84K actual miles. $3,400. OBO. Call 646-5017.

...>MORE

2002 HARLEY DAVIDSON ROAD KING,
black, leather bags, $7,000. Call 270-678-9502....>MORE

1997 GEO TRACKER, 2 DR. AUTO, 2 WD., 4 CYL. GAS
no a/c manual steering, great gass mileage, $2,200. Call 646-8122....>MORE

1999 DODGE WORK VAN, LWB, V8, AUTO,
a/c, pb, ps, cruise 110k mi. $2,700 OBO Call 270-646-8440...>MORE

05 KIA - $4,995; 02 CHEVY MALIBU 80k mi. $4,995;
02 Dodge Intrepid, very low miles; 04 Saturn 4 dr nice $4,995; 2000 Pontiac Grand Am 4 dr; 99 Mustang LX; 96 Mustang; 03...>MORE

2007 PT CRUISER, 56K MILES
excellent condition. $7,500.00. Call 270-590-4725.

...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Homes

2 BR, 1 BA APARTMENT, WATER PAID,
elec. paid up to $100, fridge, stove & air furnished, $450 mo., $200 dep. 270-576-4209....>MORE

ONE ROOM GARAGE APARTMENT.
Country setting, electric, water & trash included. $400 mo. + $400 dep. 678-4503, leave message....>MORE

3200 SQ FT, 4 BR, 3 BA on Finney Rd. 1.1 acres.
2 car garage, lg. family room, finished bsmt. only 3 yrs old! Must sell! 270-256-6333...>MORE

3 BR, 1 BA HOUSE, STOVE, FRIDGE, D/W FURNISHED.
C/H/A all electric, service animals only. $575 mo. + dep. 270-678-6100.

...>MORE

NICE 1 1/2 STORY HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY.
C/H/A, WD hookup, blacktop drive & road. $450 mo. + $450 deposit. 16 miles from Glasgow, 4 miles from Edmonton. 432-2592...>MORE

2 HOMES FOR RENT: 118 Celtic Circle,
3 BR, 2 BA garage, full bsmt, $700/mo. Also, 113 Childress, 3 BR, 1 BA, garage, $650/mo. Call 270-659-0059 anytime....>MORE

2 BR, 1 BA HOUSE IN GLASGOW,
$390 mo. $300 dep. Service animals only. Call 563-3662 or 270-799-6666.

...>MORE

SEARY ST. LOCATION 3300 sq. ft. 3 BR, 3 BA, LR, DR, UR
open beam den, bsmt w/ finished rec rm. Florida rm, utility rm, 2 car garage, 1 ac lot. 270-842-461...>MORE

205 N. Morgan St. Glasgow 2 BR, 1 BA hardwood flrs,
oak cabinets, gas stove, fridge, W/D inc. Gas heat, WAC $57,500 270-590-2680 for appt...>MORE

NICE 3 BR, 2 BA HOUSE ON LARGE LOT.
Lexington Dr. area. $98,900. 270-678-2198.

...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index