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A Visit to the World's Next Agricultural Superpower
By Tom Dyson
July 14, 2008

I bent down to examine the seedpod. It had the shape and color of a peanut shell... with the texture of a tennis ball.

"Can I eat one?" I asked the farmer. "Uh... sure," he said.

A couple farmhands saw me pick the pod from the stalk and open it up. They put down their tools and stared. The farmer crossed his arms and leaned against a pickup truck. I popped a couple of beans into my mouth. As soon as I started to chew, my mouth filled with a foul, bitter taste. I spat the beans out in disgust. The farmhands burst into laughter.

"It's the chemicals," said the farmer. "They make the beans taste bitter. We'll wash them after the harvest."
 
Brazil is the world's largest exporter of soybeans. Three months ago, I went there to tour the soybean fields...

The soybean fields are in the center of Brazil, away from the coast. To get a better view of the terrain, I decided to travel by bus. For six hours, I gazed at the soybean fields from the window of the bus. The fields were so big, they made my vision blur.

I spent a few days in Lucas do Rio Verde... a farming town in the center of the soybean region. I visited several farms, a grain storage operation, and a tractor dealership... And I had dinner with the mayor's brother, also a soybean farmer.

The Brazilian soybean machine is incredible. In America, there's only one soybean harvest per year. In Brazil, some farmers can get three harvests per year.

The world's largest agricultural firms all have operations in Brazil's soybean complex. I saw operations owned by Archer Daniels Midland, Bunge, Monsanto, Syngenta, John Deere, and many others. Parades of soybean trucks clog up the towns and destroy the highways.

It's no exaggeration to say Brazil is becoming the world's agriculture superpower. The soybean is just one of Brazil's crops. Brazil is also the world's largest exporter of sugar cane, coffee, tropical fruits, and frozen concentrated orange juice. And it has the world's largest commercial cattle herd. It's also one of the world's top producers of corn, cotton, cocoa, tobacco, and forest products.

Here's the thing: Brazil's soybean region has terrible soil. If you planted corn in one of the soybean fields around Lucas do Rio Verde, it would rise about six inches and then stop growing.

Brazilians call the land where they grow soybeans "cerrado." Cerrado means "closed" or "inaccessible" in English. It's like savannah... Or the desert.

Rain is the reason. There's so much rain, farmers pray for dry weather at harvest time. Rain turns the roads into mud, and they can't move the combines around. And for thousands of years, the rain has leached all the nutrients from the soil.

How does Brazil grow soybeans in such poor soil? First, farmers use a special strain of soybeans. Second, they dump piles of fertilizer on their fields.

So nothing grows without huge applications of fertilizer and chemicals. This is why the soybeans I ate tasted so bitter.

(As an aside, this is a major benefit of the genetically modified crops we grow in the U.S. Farmers use much less pesticide and chemicals to grow them.)

Related Articles

How to Invest in the Most Efficient Way to Feed the World

The Answer to the World's Coming Food Crisis

There's a major investment opportunity here. Brazil has more unused arable land than all the cropland in the U.S. As the farmers clear the cerrado and plant more soybeans, fertilizer companies will make huge profits.

One opportunity to consider is Bunge (BG). This American company is the largest fertilizer manufacturer in Brazil. Brazilian oil giant Petrobras (PBR) also has a fertilizer division. And Fosfertil (FFTL4 on the Sao Paulo stock exchange) is the largest Brazilian fertilizer producer.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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Nickel, Zinc

The rising cost of materials and labor has the potential to put an end to the nuclear renaissance before it ever gets started.

Company estimates that have been released show costs for an individual unit could be as high as $12 billion, and one consultant expects those estimates could rise if material prices continue to escalate.

Florida Power & Light told the Florida Public Service Commission late last year that the cost for building new units at Turkey Point in south Florida could be up to $8,000 per kilowatt – or $24 billion for two units.

Earlier this year, Progress Energy pegged its cost estimates for two new units on Florida's west coast at about $14 billion plus $3 billion for transmission and distribution. While Progress' estimates are lower than FPL's, they are more than twice as much as the $2,000 per kilowatt that industry contractors promised for new nuclear plants just two years ago.

Energy Central

Aluminium prices hit a record after China's top 20 aluminium smelters announced plans to cut production by as much as 10 per cent from this month because of increasingly serious power supply problems across the country.

The benchmark three-month LME contract rose 5.8 per cent to a record $3,375 a tonne, up 40 per cent this year, making aluminium the best performing base metal in 2008.

As the smelters account for 70 per cent of Chinese capacity and about 30 per cent of world output, some analysts think the cuts could reduce global aluminium supplies by up to 1.3m tonnes, or 3 per cent, pushing the market into a supply deficit this year and beyond.
– Financial Times

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