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China expanding global corn trade: analyst

By Jack Freifelder in New York | China Daily USA | Updated: 2014-04-14 11:09

China's continued rejections of US corn and the inability for the two countries to gain traction in a dialogue about trade hiccups is evidence that China is looking for new partners to expand its growing corn trade, according to a grains analyst.

Shawn McCambridge, a senior grains analyst at Jefferies Bache Commodities LLC in Chicago, said China's effort to "diversify its origination base" amid continued biotechnology hang-ups with American producers helps reduce the country's risk of overreliance on a single corn supplier.

"One of the shifts that's taking place in the world markets is the emergence of China as an importer," McCambridge said. "From China's perspective the best thing you can do as a buyer is have as many origins as possible, and I think they're being proactive."

But the impetus to drive the dialogue over genetically modified (GM) corn is lacking because China "does not really need the imports right now", McCambridge said.

"China is stockpiling huge reserves right now, and some of the rejection is due to the abundance of corn that China has domestically," he said. "Domestic prices are higher than import prices and bringing in a lot of imports puts a real burden on domestic producers."

Chinese imports of corn and corn byproducts from the US last year totaled 2.5 million tons, according to the World Trade Atlas.

Since mid-November, China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine has turned away nearly 1 million tons of US corn and corn products.

Peng Yufa, chief scientist at China's Beijing-based committee on the safety of biotechnology, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying that China has dietary habits and ecosystems different from the West, so "we don't deem something safe just because foreign countries say it is". Peng said further understanding was needed on trans-genetic technology because it's still a new thing.

Kent Beadle, a manager with the Russell Consulting Group, an Iowa-based agricultural consultancy firm, said China has accepted GM corn in the past and "Chinese officials will do what they believe is best to manage supply and demand".

jackfreifelder@chinadailyusa.com

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