China's Longping sees Brazil corn expansion, targets seeds market
Date:06-01-2018
Longping High-Tech Agriculture Co, an agricultural firm controlled by China conglomerate CITIC Group Corp, sees Brazil expanding corn output up to 5 percent per year in coming years and is investing heavily to grab a third of the country’s corn seed market.
Longping, which bought its corn seed business from DowDuPont Inc in Brazil for $1.1 billion last year, brought 400 people including partners, distributors and executives from Brazil’s largest cooperatives to a luxury resort in Campinas, Sao Paulo state, this week to lay out its plans for the country.
The company said it will start building new seed plants in Brazil next year to increase production capacity beyond its current four installations. The plan is to boost its share in a market worth 15 billion reais ($4.02 billion) from 15 percent currently to 30 percent in five years.
The firm said a natural second step will be to enter the soy seeds business, which is dominated by U.S.-based Monsanto Inc.
General Manager of LATAM, Mozart Fogaca Junior (left), is seen with Kevin Chen, the Director of Market Projects for Chinese agricultural company Longping High-Tech in Campinas, Brazil, on Tuesday. Photo: Reuters
“You see the opportunity, you do the assessment, you calculate returns... we are open-minded, and the CITIC heads are very supportive,” Kevin Chen, who oversees Longping’s Brazilian projects, told reporters on Tuesday.
He declined to reveal specific cost estimates for Longping’s projects in the country but said that capital is not a problem. “We would put our whole weight into it, as long as there are opportunities,” he said.
Mozart Fogaça Jr, Longping’s head of operations for Latin America, said the company has no doubts regarding the continuing expansion of corn and soy production in Brazil and has a long-term plan to benefit from it.
“The new ethanol plants will boost demand for corn in Brazil’s center-west. And once logistics improves towards northern ports, soy and corn will continue to expand,” he said.
Brazilian producers in the nation’s key center-west agricultural belt usually plant soy in the summer and corn right after the oilseed is harvested in a crop rotation system.
“Soy brings corn together. If soy production expands, corn follows,” Fogaça said.
Along with the new factories, Longping plans to build research centers to improve its corn seeds and to start developing new soy and sorghum seeds, the executives said.
Chen said Longping and parent company CITIC were not worried about current political and economic instability in Brazil.
“We are here to stay a hundred years. We have confidence Brazilians will figure out solutions.”
($1 = 3.73 Brazilian reais)