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From Northwest Public Radio:
A possible strike or lock out at Northwest grain terminals would have a profound effect on U.S. wheat exports.
Longshoremen in Portland have been in tense labor negotiations that could affect six grain terminals in Portland, Vancouver and Puget Sound. Those talks have stalled for the moment.
Northwest ports make up the largest wheat export gateway in the U.S. This is the third largest grain export region in the world. Joe Victor works for the futures and options marketplace, Minneapolis Grain Exchange. He says if Northwest longshoremen strike, there’s no other good route to feed grain to Asia. The Mississippi River has low water right now which is hard for barges. Victor says initially a strike or lock out in Portland could drive wheat prices up.
“But if we can’t export the wheat, we are taking ourselves out of the market and calendar days are passing by that we’re not exporting that hard red spring wheat and that has a negative effect on the cash price,” Victor says.
Victor says affluent countries short on wheat or other grains will likely find what they need elsewhere. The Northwest had a bumper wheat crop this year...
Excerpts from Wednesday’s Columbian:
Brad Clark, president of the ILWU Local No. 4 in Vancouver — which has 203 longshore workers — said “our interest is to continue to go to work.”
He said the union has requested additional dates for further negotiations and that “our intention has been to get an agreement.”
However, he said, the grain terminal owners are pushing for too many concessions from the union, noting the owners are proposing 757 changes to the contract compared with the 17 proffered by the longshore workers.
Clark said the 80-year-old contract is “mature,” and that the terminal owners are pressing to reduce it to an “infant agreement.”
Terminal operators have prepared for a lockout or strike, including bringing in security personnel. Gettier, a Wilmington, Del., company whose services include protection of replacement workers and videotaping picket line activities, has visited the premises of United Grain Corp. and other sites, sources have confirmed to The Columbian.
More in the Columbian
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