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Logistics not getting better!

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    Logistics not getting better!

    50000 cars short, 50 ships sitting, but some
    farmers or guys on here still think we have to be
    better marketers and canada is a world class
    country. f$&k do some need a kick in the ass.
    We're a fricking shit show. Nothing is changing
    this is total BS. Grow all you can we will find a
    home for it and sell it all. Yea one thing is true
    welcome to canada where the lowest price is the
    law! BS just BS.
    The ongoing logistical problems in Western
    Canada have actually gotten worse over the past
    month or so, according to the executive director of
    the Western Grain Elevator Association.

    Wade Sobkowich said this week the railcar
    shortfall across the Prairies has now ballooned to
    about 55,000 cars, up from 51,000 about two
    weeks ago and 40,000 to 45,000 a month earlier.
    Given that each railcar can accommodate 90
    tonnes of grain, western Canadian grain
    companies are collectively running about 5 million
    tonnes behind on shipping just to meet sales that
    have already been made.

    Describing the 55,000 railcar shortfall as “huge,”
    Sobkowich said that as a result, there are now
    about 50 ships waiting off the Canadian west
    coast to load grain that is plentiful in the interior
    but in short supply at the actual port terminals. In
    fact, port terminal stocks are near all-time lows,
    he said, adding that country elevators are still
    stuffed to the rafters at around 98% capacity.

    If the railways continue to provide approximately
    5,000 cars per week from now until the end of the
    crop year, Sobkowich estimated the total carryout
    of Canadian crops could soar to 30 million tonnes,
    far above the more typical 5 million to 8 million
    tonnes. Even if the railways doubled their
    allotment to 10,000 cars per week (near the best
    week they had in the fall), the carryout would still
    be about 23 million tonnes, he added.

    With a potential massive carryout to end the
    2013-14 crop year, and the likelihood of even just
    an average crop in 2014 adding to the pile,
    Sobkowich said the shipping backlogs may
    continue for months or potentially even years
    longer.

    “We’re not going to clear out this backlog. We’re
    going to run into this year’s harvest with this
    inventory. . . the problem is just going to be
    perpetuated.”

    Yea the boom is. Continuing, maybe but not for us
    Canadians. My USA relatives would be up in arms
    but at home we blame the farmer and do nothing.
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