Costlier Fertilizer May Harm Brazil’s Sugarcane and Coffee Crops

Fertilizer High prices for soy and corn are spurring Brazilian farmers to plant more and the Brazilian fertilizer industry is expecting a record volume sales year. Fertilizers high cost, however, could have an impact for some crops in Brazil.

Mário Barbosa, president of Brazil's National Association for Distribution of Fertilizers (ANDA), said demand could surpass 26 million tons this year, compared with 24.6 million in 2007.

"We've been estimating growth of 5 or 6% up to now, but the decisive months are July and August when we'll have a clearer idea of how things are," said Barbosa, who is also president of Bunge Fertilizantes, the largest distributor of fertilizers in Brazil.

Barbosa said his estimate was conservative and had been revised upward after record fertilizer sales in the first half of the year. Sales rose to 11.3 million tons compared with 9.39 million in the first half of 2007, a 20% rise.

Though fertilizer costs have risen sharply in the last year depending on the crop and the soil it is grown in, the sharp rise in grains prices has cushioned the blow. But coffee and sugar cane growers say they are struggling with rising costs.

"In the case of sugar cane and coffee, it is quite probably that there will be a reduction in fertilizer use," said Barbosa.

Imports of fertilizer, which supply the bulk of Brazil's needs, rose in the first half of the year to meet demand. Domestic production has also increased.

"The industry (in Brazil) is working to capacity. We'll only see large growth in national production in 2010 when several projects come on line," Barbosa said, referring to Bunge's own planned investments to raise output.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Transgenics Is Like the Plague and Brazil Caught It

On March 4, 2005, Brazil’s Law of Biosecurity, which legalizes the planting and commercialization ...

Brazil Vows More Money and Less Red Tape to Jump-Start Mercosur

Brazil has plans to grant economic and trade aid to Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay ...

In Brazil, a Full Week of Bad News in Politics and the Market

Latin American markets ended mixed, with share movement somewhat muted. Brazil posted its fifth-straight ...

Brazil Frees 2,000 Slave Workers. Another 25,000 to Go.

One of the biggest challenges presently faced by organizations that fight against slave-like labor ...

RAPIDINHAS

Taste of BrazilBy Brazzil Magazine

Reality Check: Life in Brazil Through the Eyes of a Foreigner – An Excerpt

‘Reality Check: Life in Brazil through the eyes of a foreigner’ was published last ...

Loans in Brazilian Congress Were Just Way to Bypass the Law, Says Report

The joint preliminary report by the Post Office and Vote Buying Congressional Inquiry in ...

US Health Journal Praises Brazil for Playing Hard Against AIDS Drugs Makers

Brazil has set an example to other developing countries by employing "creative measures" to ...

Brazil Has No Senate. It’s Been Buried Under Corruption, Omission and Incompetence

The worst thing about a building collapse is that it silences the dead or ...

Rally Has Ended. Stocks Are Down in Brazil

Latin American shares moved lower amid significant losses in both Brazil and Mexico. Investors ...