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Colombia Agribusiness Report Q3 2009Published by: Business Monitor International Published: Jul. 10, 2009 - 71 Pages Table of Contents
AbstractIn BMI's Colombia Agribusiness Report for Q3 2009 we introduce the new Livestock Outlook. Growth inColombia's beef production has been distinctly unimpressive over the past three decades. Through the1960s and 1970s beef production more than doubled reaching 664,000 tonnes in 1980. With the exceptionof a few unsustained spikes, production stayed around that level until the middle of this decade. In thepast few years, growth has taken off again. From 2004 to 2008, beef production grew 25.4% to 840,000tonnes.The recent expansion in the production has been driven by a combination of healthy economic growthand the success of President Alvaro Uribe's Democratic Security Policy. The improvement of the securitysituation has made investors more willing to pump money into expanding production and has also openedup new land previously considered too risky. The world economic slowdown will likely put a stop to therapid growth in beef production for the time being as consumers are forced to cut their food budgets anddemand for beef falls. Beyond the current turmoil, however, we expect production to pick up once againas Colombians have more money to spend on food. Beef consumption in Colombia at around 13kg in2008 is still low by Latin American standards suggesting there is plenty of room for growth. While cattle farming was stagnant through the 1980s and 1990s, Colombia's poultry sector took off. From1985 to 2005, poultry production expanded more than fivefold. With production in 2008 at just over 1mntonnes, poultry has now overtaken beef as Colombia's most significant meat product on a volume basis.Far less land intensive than cattle farming, poultry production has been able to prosper despite theinsurgencies raging in much of the countryside. Demand has also been driven by the lower price forchicken when compared to beef. We expect production to continue growing as larger, more efficientproducers develop. Away from livestock, 2009 looks set to be a poor year for Colombian agriculture. Unusually heavy rainsin the latter months of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 have seen yields fall in some of the country's keycrops. The coffee harvest is expected to be one of the smallest this decade as the rain has seen yieldsplummet. Even without the weather problems, production was expected to be lower owing to a fall infertiliser use owing to high prices and the continued work on rejuvenating old trees. In the first sevenmonths of coffee year 2009 (October 2008-April 2009) coffee production was 5.83mn bags, down from8.27mn in the same period of crop year 2008. The weather improved in the second quarter of the year and is expected to remain good through the rest ofthe season. Despite this, we are forecasting full-year production to be down 13.8% year-on-year at10.79mn bags. We warn, however, that the harvest could be as low as 10.50mn, the lowest since 2000.The fall in production is putting a squeeze on stocks and coffee imports will rise sharply this year astraders struggle to find enough coffee to meet export orders and domestic demand. Get Full Details About This Report >> |
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