Grains & oilseeds

We operate on an integrated global basis to source, store, trade, process and distribute grains and oilseeds including wheat, corn, oilseeds, barley and sorghum, as well as vegetable oils and meals. We have a broad global presence in grain origination, shipping and processing and we have developed significant expertise in handling identity preserved and differentiated products.

Our supply chain efficiency combined with origin and logistical flexibility enables us to deliver significant value to our customers around the world. We also work closely with Royal Cargill’s finance and risk management businesses to offer a range of financial and hedging products.

Distribution
Meeting the world’s increasing need

Our global network of facilities, including grain elevators and port terminals, covers the world’s largest agricultural production regions and the areas of fast-growing food consumption. It is also designed to be close to major transportation systems. We support these physical assets with marketing units, trading offices and joint venture operations across six continents.

Our focus in grains has been to fill gaps and capture new flows.

From entire nations to small livestock producers.

Our global network of facilities, including grain elevators and port terminals, covers the world’s largest agricultural production regions and the areas of fast-growing food consumption. It is also designed to be close to major transportation systems. We support these physical assets with marketing units, trading offices and joint venture operations across six continents.

Soybean Meal

In terms of soybean meal, the volume exported in 2018 totaled 16.8 million tons, an increase of 19.2% compared to the 14.1 million tons of the previous year. In terms of revenue, Brazil exported US $ 6.7 billion last year, an increase of 34.9% compared to the US $ 4.9 billion the previous year.

Brazilian Soybean Exports

Brazilian Soybean – Brazil is the second largest producer of soybeans after the United States. In the 2014/2015 crop, culture occupied an area of 31.57 million hectares, which totaled a production of 95.07 million tons. The average productivity of Brazilian soybeans was 3011 kg per hectare.

In the late 60, two internal factors did Brazil begin to see soy as a commercial product, a fact that later influence on the world stage production of the grain. At the time, wheat was the main South culture of Brazil and soybeans emerged as a summer option in succession to wheat. Brazil also initiated an effort for the production of pork and poultry, generating demand for soybean meal. In 1966, commercial production of soybeans was already a strategic necessity, and produced about 500 thousand tons in the country.

The explosion in soybean prices on the world market in the mid 1970s, further arouses the farmers and the Brazilian government itself. The country benefits from a competitive advantage over other producing countries: the flow of Brazilian harvest occurs in the American off-season when prices reach the highest prices. Since then, the country has to invest in technology to adapt the culture to Brazilian conditions, process led by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation.

Investments in research led to “tropicalisation” soybean, allowing for the first time in history that the grain was successfully planted in low-latitude regions, between the Tropic of Capricorn and the equator. This achievement of Brazilian scientists revolutionized the world history of soy and its impact began to be noticed by the market from the end of the 80’s and most notably in the 90s, when grain prices began to fall. Currently, the world leader in soybean production worldwide is the United States, Brazil, Argentina, China, India and Paraguay.

Main Brazilian Soybean Types / Specification

Soybeans are a high protein plant food that people can prepare and eat in a variety of ways. They belong to the pea family. Soybeans come in many colors, including:

Green soybeans: Young green soybeans are also called edamame. People can steam them and eat them out of the pod as an appetizer. Shelled edamame is also available in salads, stir-fries, and soups.

Yellow soybeans: Producers typically use yellow soybeans to make soy milk, tofu, tempeh, and tamari. They also play a role in the production of soy flour for baking.

Black soybeans: Several Asian food cultures use simmered or fermented black soybeans in traditional dishes. Soy milk and cheese are also options for those looking to replace dairy in the diet.

Soybeans also provide soy oil, which people can use for cooking or as an ingredient. After removing the oil from soybeans, people can use the remaining material to make food for farm animals and pets. Some manufacturers make protein powder and isoflavone supplements from soy. Isoflavones are plant compounds that have a similar structure to estrogen.

In general, there are three types of soy: GM, conventional and organic. The first, in its production, offers several types of transgenic soybeans, which are currently being developed. The best known and commercially grown a plant that is received by means of biotechnology techniques, a gene from another organism able to make it tolerant to the use of a type herbicide glyphosate.

FCY GENERAL TRADING L.L.C is a leading supplier of premium quality Brazilian Sugar. We supply granulated refined crystal white sugar Icumsa type 45 / 100 / 150 and granulated brown sugar (VHP) all in strong 50 kg pp bags. With an international sales team, having more than 20 years experience in the Brazilian sugar-market trade and logistics, we are able to get your requested sugar type packed and transported to the port of Santos, with compatible shipping costs to your indicated final destinations fast and reliably.

Variety: Fine Crystal Sugar | Big Granulated sugar | Extra Fine Crystal Sugar | Sugar Powder | Fine Crystal Sugar | Raw Sugar