The U.S. Grains Council (USGC) continued its promotion of the2020/2021 Corn Harvest Quality Reportwith a seminar last week for 360 buyers, end-users and other stakeholders in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.
The hybrid seminar was a continuation of annual activities that offer accurate and timely information about the availability and quality of U.S. corn.
“The three-country, three-language, virtual meeting was well-prepared and went smoothly,” says Tommy Hamamoto, USGC director in Japan. “The virtual environment saw active participation from Japanese participants, which helps instill further confidence in U.S. corn.”
All three countries involved in last week’s seminar rank in the top 10 U.S. corn importers. Japan is consistently the second-largest buyer, purchasing more than 10 million metric tons (nearly 395 million bushels) in 2019/2020, equating to 22 percent of all U.S. corn exports. South Korea ranked as the fourth largest market at 2.62 million metric tons (103 million bushels). Taiwan rounded out the top 10 at roughly 805,000 metric tons (31.7 million bushels).
在关键的个人,组织和公司ese top markets participated in the event last week. In addition to providing data on grade factors, physical factors and chemical composition, the program also served to demonstrate the openness and transparency of the U.S. grain chain – information that is unparalleled by competing suppliers.
“The webinar was a very timely and informative program for Korean buyers,” says Haksoo Kim, USGC director in South Korea. “The quality seminar is an important annual event that key industry players look forward to attending. This type of activity has proven very helpful in increasing confidence in U.S. corn quality and demonstrating USGC’s outstanding trade servicing.”
The primarily virtual seminar did include an in-person symposium for 130 attendees in Taiwan, where face-to-face activities have resumed following local health protocols and due to the country’s pandemic management. An additional 230 individuals from Japan and South Korea attended virtually.
“The regional crop quality seminar demonstrated the great collaboration USGC maintains across North Asia,” says Michael Lu, USGC director in Taiwan. “Taiwan attendees recognized how this great event provided valuable information they will use in their purchasing decisions. The transparent and detailed quality data will likely drive corn buyers in Taiwan and across the region to buy more U.S. corn this year.”
USGC continues to share corn quality information from the harvest report at events around the world. The second round of crop quality seminars will follow the release of the2020/2021 Corn Export Cargo Quality Report, scheduled for the spring. That report will measure corn quality at export terminals at the point of loading for international shipment, adding to the picture created by the harvest quality report.
Learn more about how USGC promotes corn quality around the world.