Chinese buyers booked at least 10 cargoes of Argentine soybeans after Buenos Aires scrapped grain export taxes, three traders said on Tuesday, dealing another setback to U.S. farmers already shut out of their top market and hit by low prices.
Chinese buyers booked at least 10 cargoes of Argentine soybeans after Buenos Aires scrapped grain export taxes, three traders said on Tuesday, dealing another setback to U.S. farmers already shut out of their top market and hit by low prices.
It’s not going to be arable for much longer, corporate farms are creating dustbowl conditions by clear-cutting wind breaks for marginal gains. This has already resulted in dozens of injuries and even some fatalities in Illinois as wind storms pick up dry farmland dirt and turn them into zero visibility dust storms. Cover crops cost money so corporate farms refuse to use them.