Another Banner Year for Brazil’s Agriculture

The production of cereals, legumes, and oilseed crops – that is, peanuts, rice, beans, corn, soybeans, and wheat, among others – could attain 134.522 million tons this year in Brazil. This would be 12.96% more than last year’s harvest of 119.085 million tons.

Increases are forecast for all major productive regions in comparison with 2004, most prominently the South (41.14%) and the Center-West (34.47%).


The figures, which were announced yesterday, February 23, represent the January estimate for the 2005 agricultural harvest, as projected by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) through its Systematic Survey of Agricultural Production (LSPA).


Just last month, the IBGE estimated that the 2005 harvest could be 13.29% greater than in 2004. At the time the forecast was for a total of 134.9 million tons. That estimate was part of the third prognosis on production and cultivated area, released January 27 by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics.


According to the IBGE, soybeans will play a substantial role in this year’s crop increase, unlike in 2004, when the product contributed to a 3.7% decline in relation to 2003.


The IBGE’s coordinator of Agriculture and Livestock, Carlos Alberto Lauria, said that soybeans account for 41% of the country’s grain production.


“The significant increase in soybeans is being attributed to the lack of alternatives for farmers to shift to other products,” he affirmed.


Herbaceous cotton, which was the standout in 2004, growing 62%, is expected to pull back this year in production and cultivated area, principally in the state of Mato Grosso.


This area is expected to produce 1.406 million tons, 18.16% less than in 2004. In terms of cultivated area, there has been expansion in the case of peanuts, unpolished rice, and soybeans.


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian President’s Closest Aide Involved in Senate’s Corruption Scandal

Brazil's chief of staff Dilma Rousseff, the closest aide to Brazilian president Luiz Inácio ...

US Harms Brazil as Much as Pirates, Says Minister

The effects of imposing barriers on Brazilian products are as damaging as the effects ...

Brazil Calls Bolivia Childish and Vows Not to Pay More for Gas

Brazil described as "childish and amateur" Bolivia's indication that it may cancel a scheduled ...

To End Chaos Brazil Airport Authority Forbids Sale of Tickets

In an attempt to control the chaotic situation in the airports, the Brazilian airport ...

Lower Ethanol Prices Help Brazilian Inflation Go Down

The Broad Consumer Price Index (IPCA) rose 0.21% in April, a slackening down from ...

In Brazil Electoral Rules Are Strict, But Candidates Know How to Get Round Them

Yesterday, July 19,  was the deadline for the registration of financial committees for presidential ...

In Three Weeks, Brazil Has Already Exported US$ 5 Billion

Brazil’s trade balance registered a US$ 292 million surplus in the third week of ...

Brazil Wants Its Own Atlantic-Pacific Road from Sea to Shining Sea

The presidents of Brazil, Bolivia and Chile want to step up plans to build a ...

TAM/TAP Codesharing Brings Brazil and Europe Closer Together

Direct flights leaving Rio, BrasÀ­lia and São Paulo, in Brazil, for Lisbon and Porto, ...

Ex-Secretary Says Death Threats Kept Her Quiet in Brazil’s Kickback Scandal

In her testimony before the Post Office Parliamentary Inquiry Committee (CPI dos Correios), the ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`