“SSGA is focused on the logistics and the business behind this trade,” Wenberg said. “As a learning and listening organization, we’re going to have conversations and figure out what to do next. Shipping and transportation is the backbone of what we do.”
In marketing year 2021/2022, the United States exported more than 2 billion bushels of soybeans, yet only about two percent left the country via the St. Lawrence Seaway. Why? Smentek posed another question.
“Why not Duluth?” said Smentek, who’s toured Europe, North Africa and Asia in efforts to knock down trade barriers on behalf of Minnesota Soybean. “We’ve had really great conversations with feed mills in Morocco. They want soy from Minnesota because they know the quality of the product that we have. There is a lot of opportunity for bulk shipments, especially port to port.”
If removing trade barriers was easy, everyone would be doing it. That’s why the Council and MSGA are engaging in what Smentek calls “sweat equity” projects.
“There are still barriers,” Smentek said. “The biggest one right now is economics. It is cheaper out of Houston and Norfolk. Highway H20 is working on a study to say, ‘Here is the cost that goes into the St. Lawrence Seaway and here’s the cost that goes into Houston.’”
Furthermore, exporting out of Houston is cheaper because the state of Texas pays most of the costs associated with shipping and transportation.
“The question is, what fees can we tap into?” Smentek said. “If there is a pilot fee on a dock, can the state of Minnesota pay for the pilot to come into Duluth? Can we start doing those things? But those questions haven’t even been asked yet. So that’s really what this effort is about.”
Luckily, Minnesota soybean farmers don’t shy away from addressing challenges.
“It’s nice to have farmers – the experts – in the room to ask those questions,” Smentek said.
As a Halifax See for Yourself sponsor, MSR&PC continues wisely investing checkoff dollars in ventures that illustrate and emphasize the importance of increasing demand for Minnesota soybeans.
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