8 CapitalPress.com Friday, March 27, 2020 Kenya opens market for Pacific Northwest wheat Area in detail USDA announces new agreement AFRICA ETHIOPIA Ilemi Lake Triangle Turkana UGANDA PORTLAND — A new market is opening for wheat farmers in Oregon, Wash- ington and Idaho. After 12 years of nego- tiations, Kenya has agreed to lift its prohibition against U.S. wheat exports from the Pacific Northwest, the USDA has announced. As part of the agree- ment, the agency’s Animal and Plant Health Inspec- tion Service, or APHIS, will work with producers to increase crop surveillance for flag smut, a seed-borne and soil-borne fungal dis- ease that poses no human or animal health risks but can reduce wheat yields by as much as 50%. Greg Ibach, USDA SOM. KENYA Lake Victoria Nairobi TANZANIA EO Media Group File Wheat is harvested near Lexington, Ore. A new trade deal with Kenya will allow more wheat from the Pacific Northwest to be exported to that African nation. undersecretary for mar- keting and regulatory pro- grams, said Northwest farmers now have full access to the Kenyan wheat market, valued at nearly $500 million annually. “This action proves our commitment to securing fair treatment and greater access for U.S. products in the global marketplace,” Ibach said in a statement. Flag smut affects primar- ily dryland winter wheat, grown predominately across Eastern Oregon, Washing- ton and Idaho. Spores can survive for at least four years in the field. Symptoms of infected plants include stunted growth, twisted and distorted leaves and, in severe cases, no grain head development. The disease has been found periodically in U.S. wheat since the early N Mombasa Indian Ocean 200 miles Capital Press graphic 1900s, according to the USDA, though it has been controlled through the use of treated seed, crop rota- tion and modern produc- tion practices. Chemical seed treatments are the most effective method of con- trolling flag smut, research- ers at Oregon State Univer- sity say. Amanda Hoey, CEO of the Oregon Wheat Growers League and Oregon Wheat Commission, said the deal Wheat price outlook filled with uncertainty Uncertainty skews timing of China buying U.S. wheat Judge: Ranch’s grazing preference expired with permit By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press SPOKANE — The wheat market will be full of uncer- tainties for the foreseeable future, a Washington Grain Commission board member says. “Coronavirus is obvi- ously leading the charge,” Ty Jessup, an industry rep- resentative, said during his market outlook presentation at the commission meeting March 12. “We’re in a dif- ferent realm now. This is something that’s uncharted territory. Where’s it going to go? I have no idea.” Grower wheat-selling is essentially zero, and demand is light, Jessup said. Jessup said wheat prices have dropped 20 to 30 cents per bushel over the last month. That’s not all due to the virus, he said. There are other factors. “There’s a lot of uncer- tainty in the industry,” Jes- sup said. He’s not sure what the future price range could be. The virus may delay Chi- na’s purchase of wheat fol- lowing the new trade agree- ment with the U.S. Jessup said the expectation is that China will still buy wheat, but the timing may be “skewed.” “The longer this event changes things in the world, it’s just going to push it back,” he said. Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Ty Jessup, industry representative for the Washington Grain Commission, speaks during a board meeting discussion March 12 in Spokane. Regarding coronavirus and its effects on markets, Jessup says, “We’re in a different realm now.” The industry didn’t really expect China to begin pur- chasing until the second half of the year, with new crop, Jessup said. Jessup is marketing man- ager for HighLine Grain Growers in Waterville, Wash. Jessup also pointed to a large global supply of wheat. Australia is expected to have a 40% bigger crop as farmers there enter planting season. Current production pro- jections for the Black Sea region are 82 million tons in Russia, with the possibility of reaching 85 million tons, which Jessup said would set a record. Ukraine’s crop may be down a little, but 95% is rated “good to excellent,” he said. Glen Squires, CEO of the commission, said the wheat price received by Washing- ton farmers is typically 20 to 45 cents above the aver- age nationwide price. It’s been holding about 96 cents higher. That’s “unusual,” Squires said. The U.S. average wheat price received is $4.55 per bushel, while Washington is at $5.51. He pointed to lower prices nationally for hard red win- ter wheat, while Washing- ton farmers are boosted by demand for soft white wheat, a market class grown primar- ily in the Pacific Northwest. Squires uses the figures as a way to gauge the commis- sion’s budget. He expects it to be down about $500,000 compared to last year, due to lower winter wheat yields. The state’s wheat production dropped from 153 million to 142 million bushels, he said. The annual assessment on wheat is 0.75% of the net receipts at the first point of sale. The annual assessment on barley is 1% of the net receipts. “The average price so far is about the same,” he said. The commission will finalize its annual budget during its May meeting. And coronavirus impacts on wheat prices? “Who knows?” Squires said. “I have no idea.” Best Prices on Irrigation Supplies Sprinklers • Rain Guns Drip Tape • Dripline • Filters • Poly Hose Lay Flat Hose • Micro • Valves • Air Vents Fertilizer Injectors ...and much more! Fast & Free Shipping from Oregon 1-844-259-0640 www.irrigationking.com Uganda, since they both use Kenya’s port facili- ties. Between the two coun- tries, Hoey said they import about 1.6 million metric tons of wheat a year. “Even if we saw a 5% rise in the market share, it could be worth over $20M to the U.S. wheat industry,” she said. Steve Mercer, a spokes- man for U.S. Wheat Associ- ates in Arlington, Va., said the industry supports con- tinued free trade negotia- tions with Kenya, which could provide a model for other African countries to follow. “Africa is a fast-growing continent, but one that the U.S. has had limited oppor- tunity for trade negotiations with,” Mercer said. “A high standard (free trade agree- ment) with Kenya should open the door for additional African countries to pursue two-way trade negotiations with the U.S.” An Oregon ranch’s “pri- ority” access to neighboring public lands in Idaho expired along with the landowner’s grazing permit, regardless of who now operates the prop- erty, according to a federal judge. The ruling affirms a deci- sion by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management that “threatens to subvert the entire system of public land live- stock grazing,” according to cattlemen’s groups tracking the dispute. The dispute relates to the “preference” for grazing per- mits provided to private “base” ranches that neighbor federal property. In this case, the 1,900-acre Hanley Ranch near Jordan Valley, Ore., once served as the “base property” for access to public grazing allotments on 30,000 acres of BLM land across the state border in Idaho. However, the federal gov- ernment refused to renew the landowner’s grazing permit due to an “extensive record of noncompliance,” such as “trespass on the public lands by grazing cattle in excess of approved numbers.” The ranch’s owners, Michael and Linda Lee Han- ley, leased the base property to their daughter and her hus- band, Martha and John Cor- rigan, who requested a trans- fer of the property’s “grazing preference” to them. However, the BLM deter- mined the base property’s preference was extinguished along with the grazing per- mit for the Trout Springs and Hanley Fenced Federal Range allotments. In 2018, the Corri- gans challenged the agency’s decision in federal court. The Corrigans argued this “new disappearing preference theory” violates the Taylor Grazing Act, a foundational 1934 law governing pub- lic rangeland management, as well as the BLM’s own regulations. According to their com- plaint, the grazing prefer- ence or priority is attached to the ranch property itself and serves “a separate and differ- ent function” than the graz- ing permit, which regulates the activities of specific peo- ple and their livestock. The BLM has conflated the two concepts in a way that “leads to irrational results,” such as potentially terminat- ing a property’s grazing pref- erence if the landowner leases the ranch to someone who doesn’t qualify for a grazing permit, the plaintiffs argued. In other words, “the owner of the base property will have lost the grazing preference independent of any of his own actions, without any notice or process,” according to the Corrigans. The Corrigans were joined in their arguments by the Owyhee Cattlemen’s Asso- ciation and the Idaho Cat- tlemen’s Association, which filed a legal brief claiming that BLM’s “new interpretation turns a fundamental aspect of the Taylor Grazing Act on its head.” The federal agency’s deci- sion in this case “effectively destroys the concept of graz- ing preferences” and could “devalue private lands across the West” for ranches whose owners don’t get permits renewed for whatever reason, the groups argued. “Even if a rancher has a permit that is not renewed for reasons that do not stem from improper livestock manage- ment (e.g., non-use or changed resource conditions), there is the threat that his grazing pref- erence will disappear, creating a penalty without an offense,” their brief said. The Western Watersheds Project, an environmental group, intervened on behalf of the government to argue the grazing preference was prop- erly canceled to protect pub- lic lands from “further grazing abuses.” The plaintiff’s under- standing of grazing prefer- ences would basically cre- ate an “indefinite entitlement or property-based right” that would undermine environ- mental protections, since ranchers would always be first in line for a permit regardless of their conduct, the environ- mental group said. U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill ultimately sided with the federal government and environmental group, ruling that grazing prefer- ences cease to exist when per- mit renewals are denied for non-compliance. If the Hanleys had simply sold the ranch with the graz- ing permit in good standing, the preference would still have been attached to the base prop- erty, the judge said. However, failing to comply with the per- mit’s conditions means the preference is also lost. “A preference is not some self-contained privilege that needs to be separately can- celled with notice and a hear- ing,” Winmill said. “It is instead a privilege to renew a permit — once the permit is not renewed due to noncom- pliance, the preference disap- pears at the same moment the permit disappears.” NEW ITEMS! 1 1 / 2 QT. BASKETS and (3) PINT TRAYS 10% OFF PROMO CODE: CAP10 S178874-1 503-588-8313 877-233-5548 2561 Pringle Rd. SE Salem, OR Call for Pricing. Subject to stock on hand. www.rosepaper.com S179379-1 By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press with Kenya provides new opportunities for Oregon growers. The vast majority of Oregon wheat, between 85% and 90%, is exported. “We need as many open markets as we are able to secure for our wheat,” Hoey said. “The acceptance of export phytosanitary inspection and certification provides access to a market restricted to Oregon grow- ers for more than a decade.” Kenya imports much of its annual wheat supply, since domestic production only supports about 10% of the country’s overall con- sumption. Most imports come from suppliers such as Russia, Ukraine and the European Union. The U.S. currently provides only 5% of Kenya’s wheat imports, or about 120,000 metric tons. The deal struck between APHIS and Kenya also has an impact on U.S. wheat being sold into landlocked