Author: admin

  • PM orders early prep amid heavy rains forecast

    PM orders early prep amid heavy rains forecast

    Shehbaz stresses that Pakistan can not afford another season of preventable disaster


    ISLAMABAD:

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  • Global experts map out the practical steps that help extend life expectancy

    Global experts map out the practical steps that help extend life expectancy

    A global panel of scientists and community leaders shows how biology, lifestyle, and culture can work together to help people live longer, healthier, and more purposeful lives.

    The illustration conceptualizes how fostering bonds…

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  • Style Edit: Swatch Neon gives 1980s watches an eye-popping, hi-tech makeover

    Style Edit: Swatch Neon gives 1980s watches an eye-popping, hi-tech makeover

    When Swatch launched in 1983, it was like a bomb had gone off in the world of horology. This was a Swiss watch brand like none before it – it was the one that made watches cool. In so many ways, Swatch was ahead of its time, helping to usher in…

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  • FORMULA 1 HEINEKEN LAS VEGAS GRAND PRIX 2025 – free digital race programme

    FORMULA 1 HEINEKEN LAS VEGAS GRAND PRIX 2025 – free digital race programme

    Check out the all-new digital race programme for the Formula 1 Heineken Las Vegas Grand Prix 2025, with everything you need to know about the GP weekend, whether you are attending in person or tuning in from afar.

    Discover the big talking points…

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  • Ollie Bearman explains what transformed his F1 season after difficult 2025 season start

    Ollie Bearman explains what transformed his F1 season after difficult 2025 season start

    Ollie Bearman has said there’s no single magic bullet behind his late-season surge with Haas. But the mix of a better car, a new structure over the race weekends, and a more mature mindset has yielded results that…

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  • The Silent Driver of China’s Mobile Gaming Growth

    The Silent Driver of China’s Mobile Gaming Growth

    China’s rise in the global mobile gaming space has been nothing short of extraordinary. In 2024 alone, China generated ¥325.8 billion (US $44.8 billion) in total gaming revenue, with mobile games contributing ¥238.2 billion (US $32.7…

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  • Over Decade In Making: Illuminating New Possibilities With Lanthanide Nanocrystals

    Over Decade In Making: Illuminating New Possibilities With Lanthanide Nanocrystals

    In a discovery shaped by more than a decade of steady, incremental effort rather than a dramatic breakthrough, scientists from the National University of Singapore (NUS) and their collaborators demonstrated that great ideas flourish when paired…

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  • Correlation Between Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Exam and Pure-Tone Audiometry Tests of Patients With Meniere’s Disease

    Correlation Between Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Exam and Pure-Tone Audiometry Tests of Patients With Meniere’s Disease

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  • Should US Growers Look to Africa as the Next Big Market? Understanding Africa’s Soy Import Demand

    Should US Growers Look to Africa as the Next Big Market? Understanding Africa’s Soy Import Demand

    Introduction

    The Soybean Innovation Lab (SIL) introduces readers to the question whether Sub Saharan Africa (SSA) presents a new market opportunity for US soybean growers. Over the next three weeks SIL and farmdoc will deliver three articles on the topic of Africa as a potential export market for US soybeans. The African market presents a very complex landscape. While it is large, diverse, and growing rapidly, there exists great uncertainty, significant business risks, and demand for soybean and associated products are just beginning to emerge.

    This first article in the series focused on the larger food and oil trends dominating the African continent (see farmdoc daily from November 13, 2025).  Today’s article delves into the import flows of soybean, oil, and meal into Africa.  The third article will wrap up the series by outlining four specific country examples – Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania – touching on their imports of soy and soy products, logistics infrastructure, and existing policies on genetically modified soybean imports. The third and final article will also include a relevant literature review on the subject of soy trade and Africa.

    Soy Import Demand in SSA

    Is SSA soy import demand significant, or at least potentially significant?  The answer is yes. Soy product demand is potentially very significant.  Using the soybean equivalent import metric, Africa imported a soybean equivalent of 2.1 billion bushels on average per year for the period 2010-2022.  That equals the production of about 40 million acres, about 47% of US plantings (see Figure 1).  Most of that value results from palm oil imports (64%).  Soybean oil, meal, and grain imports amount to 21%, 8%, and 7%, respectively.

    The Africa soybean grain import equivalent metric comprises the sum of: 1) soybean imports, 2) soybean oil imports, 3) soybean meal imports, and 4) palm oil imports all corrected to soybean grain equivalents.  That is, based on current soy and palm product imports, were it grain, the metric captures how much grain would theoretically be demanded by Africa’s processors and manufacturers. The grain equivalent metric melds both current import activity and the potential to expand soybean export demand by taking market share from palm oil.  The equivalent metric, when measured in bushels and acres also allows comparison with US production.

    These imports grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.82% between 2010 and 2022.  Soybean grain imports lead the group growing at a CAGR of 8.04%, with palm oil, soybean oil, and soybean meal growing at 4.46%, 2.05%, and -0.34%, respectively.

    African soybean production currently amounts to 270 million bushels or about 6% of US production and 2% of global production (see Figure 2).   Global soybean output over the last ten years has grown at a CAGR of 2% while African production has grown at an annual rate of 11%. While growing rapidly, Africa will remain far from being self- sufficient in the future and require significant imports. For example, forecasts to 2050 show Africa would still only be able to supply 35% of its current soybean equivalent import demand, even assuming the current soybean production growth rate.

    Line chart displaying global soybean production by region from 1961 to 2023, measured in billion bushels. World production (black line) grew from approximately 1 billion bushels in 1961 to nearly 14 billion bushels by 2023. The United States (blue line) shows steady growth from about 0.7 to 4 billion bushels. Brazil (green line) shows dramatic expansion, particularly after 2000, reaching approximately 5.5 billion bushels by 2023. Argentina (light blue line) remained minimal until the mid-1990s, then grew rapidly to peak at around 2 billion bushels in the mid-2010s before declining sharply to approximately 1 billion bushels by 2023. Africa (pink line) remains nearly flat near zero throughout the period. Background features faded soybean imagery.

    Finally, African soybean processors in the 1960’s had very little use for soybean, processing less than 20% of the region’s soybean crop to produce food oil (see Figure 3).  Over time, processors have expanded capacity and by 2002 the industry switched from an under capacity position to overcapacity where local supplies were not sufficient to meet demand resulting in significant acceleration in the imports of soybean grain.  Most recently, processors are 40-60% overcapacity relative to domestic supply and import about 200 million bushels of soybeans to keep their factories operating.  Demand for soybean grain imports since 2010 has been quite fast with a compound annual growth rate of just over 8%.

    Dual-axis line chart showing African processor demand versus imported soybeans from 1961 to 2021. The blue line represents processor demand as a percentage of local grain supply (left axis, 0-200%), while the green line shows soybean grain imports in million bushels (right axis, 0-250). A gray vertical line marks 2002, when processors began demanding more soybeans than were locally available. Processor demand fluctuates between 100-175% after 2002, while imports rise sharply from near zero to over 200 million bushels by 2021.

    Note: The Soybean Innovation Lab (SIL) at the University of Illinois is the world’s leading organization focused on establishing soybean as the feed, oil, industrial materials, and biofuels standard in Sub Sharan Africa (SSA).  SIL’s strong network across 31 countries, experienced team, track record of success, and partners on the ground support clients looking to serve the fastest growing and a potentially large new soy market.

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  • ‘It’s going to be trickier’ – Norris wary of Las Vegas Grand Prix success despite back-to-back victories

    ‘It’s going to be trickier’ – Norris wary of Las Vegas Grand Prix success despite back-to-back victories

    Lando Norris believes “expectations are not to the same level” this weekend for the Las Vegas Grand Prix as at previous races this season, with the McLaren driver admitting “it’s going to be trickier” due to the track layout and cold…

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