Competition is king in northern B.C.

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Published: July 4, 2002

DAWSON CREEK, B.C. – Choice is the name of the game in this northern

British Columbia city.

If a farmer doesn’t like the price Agricore United is offering, he can

drive across the street to Pioneer, Louis Dreyfus or Parrish &

Heimbecker. If he has feed grain he can take it to Wanham Valley Feeds

or Agro Source or load his own producer car.

“The competition is tremendous,” said Ross Ravelli, a third generation

Dawson Creek farmer whose farmland circles the city.

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“I don’t think there’s another area like it,” he said.

“You have the option to deliver grain when you want to deliver it.”

There are more than one million arable acres in the region, about half

seeded to grain, oilseeds and grass seed and half dedicated to pasture.

So far this crop year, more than 103,000 tonnes of grain have been

shipped from Dawson Creek, up from 75,000 last year, said Paul Graham

of the Canadian Grain Commission.

Garry Scott, a Dawson Creek farmer, agreed that northern B.C. farmers

are in an enviable position.

“From time to time there are some real opportunities to lock in good

grain prices.”

He said it’s not unusual for grain companies to offer premiums when

they need an order filled fast.

Thousands of bushels of feed grain are shipped south from Dawson Creek

on BC Rail to Fraser Valley farms or to southern Alberta feedlots.

Dawson Creek also has one of the lowest freight rates in Western

Canada, with competition from two rail lines: Canadian National Railway

and BC Rail.

Agricore United and Pioneer are on the CN line on the east side of town

and Louis Dreyfus and Parrish and Heimbecker are on BC Rail’s line on

the west side.

Both lines are on two Canadian Wheat Board shipping blocks, ensuring a

good supply of rail cars.

“By having two different shipping blocks, it keeps things moving,” said

Scott.

The different shipping blocks keep the companies aggressively bidding

for farmers’ grain and ensuring a steady stream of grain cars, he added.

Dawson Creek hasn’t always been in such an enviable position, but the

combination of rail line abandonment in Alberta, grain company

amalgamation and two rail lines has created a model of competition.

“It’s quite a good situation,” Scott said.

This past November, Louis Dreyfus opened a 22,000 tonne grain elevator

in Dawson Creek, 100 kilometres west of Rycroft, Alta., where Agricore,

United Grain Growers and Cargill built their concrete high-throughput

elevators a few years earlier.

This spring Louis Dreyfus traded its elevator in Regina to AU in

exchange for AU Alberta elevators in Rycroft and Falher. They will take

possession in August.

Railway lines are almost nonexistent these days on the Alberta side of

the Peace region, and farmers have to haul their grain by truck to

Rycroft or Falher, the nearest elevators south of the Peace River.

Since many northern Alberta farmers have to truck their grain long

distances anyway, many are taking a look at Dawson Creek, with its

cheaper freight rates.

The maximum freight rate from Rycroft is $28.06 per tonne. From High

Level, Alta., in the far north, the maximum rate is $39 a tonne. At

Dawson Creek, it’s $25.07 a tonne.

Dawson Creek has the second cheapest freight rate in Western Canada,

second only to Calgary at $23.99.

Tracy Lussier, program manager with Louis Dreyfus, said the combination

of railways and good freight rates gives farmers “tremendous”

opportunity to move grain.

About 75 percent of the grain shipped from the company’s Dawson Creek

elevator comes from Alberta. A lot of that is from the far north in La

Crete and Manning.

“Once the grain is on the truck, there’s not a lot of difference in

costs when it’s coming from the far north,” Lussier said.

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