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ASA Participates in Soybean Quality Conference Mission
in Asia
November 18, 2010…Saint Louis, Missouri… Representatives from the
American Soybean Association (ASA), American Soybean Association
International Marketing (ASA-IM), United Soybean Board (USB), U.S.
Soybean Export Council (USSEC), and the University of Minnesota are
meeting with soy customers in China and South Korea this week to present
the findings of the 2010 U.S. Soybean Crop Quality report.
"International soy buyers enthusiastically anticipate these results
from the collected soybean samples," said ASA First Vice President Alan
Kemper, a soybean producer from Lafayette, Ind. "The levels of protein
and oil in soybeans determine how much soybean meal can be made and how
much soybean oil can be extracted from a bushel of soybeans, so protein
and oil has a direct impact on the value of soybeans when they are
processed."
About 10,000 U.S. farmers received soybean quality survey kits by
mail earlier in the year. Each soybean sample kit allows farmers to take
up to a 1-pound sample from a single soybean variety on their farm. The
kit also contains instructions and a postage-paid return envelope. In
exchange for a sample, each farmer receives back a free analysis of the
protein and oil content of the new crop soybeans they submit. Samples
received by Oct. 23, served as the basis for the 2010 U.S. Soybean Crop
Quality report.
USSEC, in collaboration with ASA and USB, sponsored the 26th annual
soybean crop quality survey this year. The annual crop quality survey
measures the compositional attributes, most notably protein and oil,
which international soy buyers seek from soybeans. Professor Seth Neave
at the University of Minnesota conducted the analysis this year, which
also measured levels of amino acids and fatty acids.
"Amino acids, which are the building blocks of protein, are important
because they are fundamentally what livestock feeders are buying when
they purchase soybean meal; most livestock rations are balanced on the
basis of amino acids, not protein," Kemper said. "Fatty acids levels
help determine the quality of the oil that is extracted from soybeans
and what type of processing might be necessary to make the final
consumer product."
U.S. soy exports had a total value of more than $21 billion for the
2009-10 marketing year ending August 31, 2010. The 1.9 billion bushel
equivalents of soybeans, soy meal and soy oil exported during the
marketing year set a record for the fourth consecutive year. Whole
soybean exports for the year were 1.45 billion bushels, up from the
08-09 total of 1.24 billion bushels. About 59 percent of U.S. soybean
production was exported, compared to 55 percent last year.
China was the top customer for U.S. soybeans, importing 825 million
bushels in the 09-10 marketing year. That was up from 686 million
bushels in 08-09. It is estimated that China imported a full one-fourth
(25 percent) of the 2009 U.S. soybean crop. Korea imported 25 million
bushels in the 09-10 marketing year. That was up from 13 million bushels
in 08-09.
"The Crop Quality report is just one of many ways that U.S. soybean
farmers develop long-term relationships with our export customers in
Asia," Kemper said. "Quality and reliability are important factors in
building customer preference for buying U.S. soybeans and soybean
products."
ASA Vice President Steve Wellman, a soybean producer from Syracuse,
Neb., along with representatives from ASA-IM, USB and USSEC, is also
participating in soybean quality conferences with U.S. soy customers in
Japan and Taiwan.
The activities of USSEC to expand international markets for U.S.
soybeans and products are made possible through ASA’s investment of
cost-share funding provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Foreign Agricultural Service, support from cooperating industry, and by
producer checkoff dollars invested by USB and various State Soybean
Councils.
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For more information contact:
Alan Kemper, ASA First Vice President, 765-714-2124, ark52@aol.com
Bob Callanan, Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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