US Grains Council working to end Vietnam suspension of distillers grain imports

Vietnam on Monday said it would suspend all imports of U.S. DDGS from mid-December due to contamination with the Ballion variety of beetle, according to a Vietnamese government directive also seen by Reuters. Media in the Southeast Asian nation reported the step earlier this week.
 
The loss of Vietnamese imports would be a big hit for U.S. DDGS suppliers as the country is one of the fastest growing feed grain markets in the world, with a rapidly growing middle class developing a taste for hamburgers and steak.
 
The move by the No.3 importer of U.S. DDGS could also drag on prices for the byproduct of corn-based ethanol DDGS-ILLINOIS, with markets already smarting after China last month said it would impose anti-dumping and anti-subsidy duties on U.S. imports.
 
"Both shippers and buyers are in a difficult situation as it will be tough to sell a cargo rejected by Vietnam because it is contaminated by the beetles to a third country," said a Vietnamese trader at a foreign firm in Ho Chi Minh City. He declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.
 
U.S. DDGS prices have now dropped to around $190 per tonne, on a cost and freight basis to Vietnamese ports, from $210-$220 per tonne before the directive was signed, traders in Vietnam said.
 
The inspection of all U.S. DDGS cargoes will be tightened in the run-up to the suspension date, Deputy Agriculture Minister Le Quoc Doanh said in the directive.
 
The U.S. Grains Council did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Prior to news of the suspension, it had forecast Vietnam would import a record volume of 1 million tonnes of U.S. DDGS this year, a surge of 82 percent from 2015.
 
Vietnam through the first eight months of the year imported 687,620 tonnes of U.S. DDGS, about 9 percent of total U.S. exports and double the amount it shipped in a year earlier, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
 
China’s DDGS imports total 26 percent of U.S. exports, but slid 61 percent from a year ago to 1.96 million tonnes in the first eight months of 2016.