In the shadow of uncertainty – Special Report

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Reading Time: 4 minutes

Published: March 14, 2002

The grain trade has been a strong part of Winnipeg’s downtown economy

for decades but

recently, its role has diminished – a situation that is affecting the

makeup of

the city’s downtown core.

Because of overbuilding in the early 20th century and the size of the

city economy, it has always been easy to get office space near Portage

and Main.

Today, those vacancies in the city’s downtown core are becoming even

more common.

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A wheat head in a ripe wheat field west of Marcelin, Saskatchewan, on August 27, 2022.

USDA’s August corn yield estimates are bearish

The yield estimates for wheat and soybeans were neutral to bullish, but these were largely a sideshow when compared with corn.

A few growing companies like CanWest Global and MTS are picking up some

of the slack but there are no large industries moving in to take the

grain industry’s place.

Arason said there’s still a solid core of grain industry expertise that

ensures Winnipeg will continue to be the centre of the Canadian grain

trade.

“The Canadian Grain Commission’s still here,” Arason said.

“The Canadian Wheat Board’s still here. The Winnipeg Commodity Exchange

is

still here. It’s still an important rail transportation centre for both

railway companies.

“That core, that anchor, is still here.”

That was the key reason Agricore located its headquarters in Winnipeg

rather than Calgary, Arason said.

“Being close to the board and the commission and the commodity exchange

and all the support around that was vital.”

The presence of Canada’s most influential marketing and regulatory

agencies has meant that few major players in the Canadian grain trade

have chosen to locate outside of Winnipeg.

Saskatchewan Wheat Pool is based in Regina, Alberta Wheat Pool was

based in Calgary and Louis Dreyfus set up its small headquarters in

Calgary.

But those companies have also maintained an active presence in the

Winnipeg grain trade scene.

Daryl Kraft, an agricultural economist at the University of Manitoba

says grain companies realize significant benefits from maintaining a

presence in Winnipeg, close to agencies like the CWB and the grain

commission.

But that location advantage could be lost, Kraft said, if mergers

continue and the Canadian industry loses the distinctive regulatory

regime that differentiates it from the U.S. industry.

“It’s a made-in-Canada set of regulations,” said Kraft.

“It’s a set of grain standards, marketing protections and grain

transportation regulations that makes it unique.”

Because of the interlocking nature of those standards, grain companies

operating in Western Canada must be well plugged in to the regulators,

railways and competitors.

“Unless you’re on top of them, you’re in trouble,” said Kraft. “You

can’t just sit back and be out of touch.”

Canadian companies have managed to operate successfully inside this

regulatory framework by working closely together and figuring out how

to haul and sell grain profitably within the system.

The complexity of the system has also made it difficult for giant

American multinationals to take over the prairie grain industry.

There was considerable fanfare when ConAgra and Louis Dreyfus set up

shop in Canada in the late 1990s, but those companies do not appear to

be expanding.

Today, rumours persist that ConAgra is ready to back away from Canada

in frustration.

Cargill owns a major grain elevator line in Canada, but that was not an

incursion from outside the country. Cargill bought National Grain Ltd.

from the Minneapolis-based Peavey Company in 1974, preserving the

American-owned, Canadian-based subsidiary that was founded in 1906.

Archer Daniels Midland has also entered the Canadian line elevator

business by taking a stake in UGG and melding it into the new Agricore

United. But this foray into the Canadian system was built largely on

resources that were already established within the Canadian system.

While all this seems to suggest that the western Canadian grain trade

will be forever based in Winnipeg, Kraft said the gradual lightening of

certain regulations could pull out that linchpin.

“As the regulations are slowly whittled away, it will be less important

to be connected,” said Kraft.

“The necessity to be right here starts to decline.”

For example, the erosion of the CWB monopoly would unravel much of the

rationale for maintaining a regional base for western Canada’s grain

industry.

“It would minimize the industry’s need to be in one location,” said

Kraft.

“If there was less politics in the wheat trade, we’d tend to see the

centralizing of the industry move away from Winnipeg, to all across

Western Canada and the United States.”

University of Manitoba agricultural economist Ed Tyrchniewicz said

another factor that undermines Winnipeg’s role as centre of the

Canadian industry is the disappearance of farmer-owned grain elevator

co-operatives.

Those companies were dominant players in the industry that lobbied hard

to ensure the existence of regulations that would promote a local

western Canadian industry.

At their height, they were powerful enough to keep the Canadian

industry distinct.

With two of the pools gone and the other in financial trouble, the

voice lobbying for special regulations is beginning to wane,

Tyrchniewicz said.

Added to that is the increasing north-south pull of North American

trade, which is weakening the east-west focus.

The drive to differentiate is being challenged by the desire to

integrate.

Tyrchniewicz agrees with Kraft that ending the wheat board monopoly

would kick a lot of the props from under the Canadian industry.

The wheat board will last as long as it justifies its existence to

farmers by proving it can pull a premium out of the world market,

Tyrchniewicz said.

But if the board is unable to deliver those premiums, the average

farmer would probably want to reconsider its monopoly, he added.

He warned that the weakening or disappearance of the wheat board might

not be beneficial to Canadian grain companies.

“It’s not going to make the industry suddenly boom, because it’s a very

competitive world industry.”

“People said wonderful things would happen if we got rid of the Crow.

Well, we got rid of the Crow.”

Tyrchniewicz said he doesn’t think Winnipeg’s grain industry will ever

disappear. But it may be transformed from the home of a few huge grain

companies to a looser collection of many small players who know how to

use the Canadian prairies’ wide range of small acreage crops.

A buildup of small, non-elevator

owning grain companies has been occurring in Winnipeg in recent years.

Dozens of offices in the Portage and

Main area are home to small trading companies that are taking advantage

of the growth in pulse crops, special crops and specialized varieties.

Those kinds of companies may be following a better path than the big

grain elevator companies, Tyrchniewicz said.

“As we move away from the bulk, low value handling system, it puts the

whole structure into a new light,” he said.

Some of Canada’s smaller grain companies, such as Parrish and

Heimbecker, Paterson and Sons and the Richardsons’ Pioneer, still seem

to be doing well, Tyrchniewicz noted.

And he thinks institutions like the Canadian International Grains

Institute

will continue to focus international buyers on Winnipeg as the place to

come to buy grain.

“The presence of that kind of an institution, maybe more than the

Canadian Wheat Board and the Canadian Grain Commission, gives Winnipeg

an international profile.”

That leaves him hopeful of Winnipeg’s future as a city key to the grain

trade, even if its role may significantly change.

“I’m still a believer that Winnipeg will continue to be the core of the

industry in Canada,” said Tyrchniewicz.

About the author

Ed White

Ed White

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