The endorsement provides producers with some protection against a price drop on insured crops. Each winter, AFSC sets a spring price for each crop. In October, AFSC determines a fall price. Both figures are based on market prices.
“This year, a 10 per cent claim deductible on SPE has been introduced, reducing those premiums by 20 to 30 per cent, depending on the crop selected,” Neil Blue, the provincial crop market analyst with Alberta Agriculture and Forestry, said in the article.
“The payment trigger remains the same. The fall market price needs to drop below the spring insurance price by at least 10 per cent.
“If the Spring Price Endorsement is triggered, … (it) will pay back up to 90 per cent of the spring insurance price on production produced, or deemed to be produced, up to the coverage elected.”
SPE coverage is limited to a 50 per cent drop from the spring price, the article said.
A claim under SPE can occur whether there is a production claim or not.
Producers can also use forward contracts or futures and options (if applicable) to protect themselves against price drops.
For more information about the Spring Price Endorsement, producers can call AFSC at 1-877-899-2372. Grain buyers are reliable sources to provide information on price contracts.