Soybeans
in sentence
60 examples of Soybeans in a sentence
These
soybeans
are being shipped to Europe and to China as animal feed, especially after the mad cow disease scare about a decade ago, where we don't want to feed animals animal protein anymore, because that can transmit disease.
The green areas are the areas we use to grow crops, like wheat or
soybeans
or corn or rice or whatever.
The very farms that used to sustain bees are now agricultural food deserts, dominated by one or two plant species like corn and
soybeans.
"Well, how long would you have talked to me if I told you we're in soybeans?"
And extract from
soybeans.
It is empty, because the European Commission has no budget to buy US
soybeans
or any means to impel EU consumers to do so.
It is easy to fulfill, because China has already imposed tariffs on US
soybeans
in retaliation for US tariffs on its exports, meaning that non-US soybean producers are now likely to shift their exports to the Chinese market, freeing up the EU market for US producers.
The main impact of Chinese tariffs on US
soybeans
will thus be the redirection of global soybean flows.
But China’s role extends beyond
soybeans.
Whereas the US imports tens of thousands of Chinese products, China imports a narrow range of products from the US, such as soybeans, corn, computer chips, and aircraft.
Argentina exports corn, soybeans, fruits, and wine – as well as cars and auto parts to the rest of the regional Mercosur trade bloc, where it enjoys ample tariff protection against third-country competition.
The rapid rise in world prices for all basic food crops – corn, wheat, soybeans, and rice – along with other foods like cooking oils, has been devastating for poor households all over the world.
While we have become familiar with China’s ardent interest in natural resources such as oil, coal, steel, copper, and soybeans, we are far less acquainted with other kinds of Chinese investments, including outright acquisitions of foreign companies.
South America is booming, as India and China swallow up its exports of iron, copper, soybeans, coffee, coal, oil, wheat, poultry, beef, and sugar.
Fundamentally, technology is a way to transform “the world as I found it” into “the world as I want it to be” – from pastures to milk, from
soybeans
to chicken tenders, from silicon to smartphones.
In response to increased trade restrictions, China could limit imports of aircraft or agricultural products such as
soybeans
from the US.
Commodities like sugar, soybeans, oil, and gas are relatively standardized products, meaning that they can be traded instantly and globally through the use of derivative contracts.
The situation was even worse for Argentina and Venezuela, both of which depend heavily on commodity exports – mainly
soybeans
and oil – not only to finance imports, but also as their main source of government revenue.
For example, retaliatory tariffs by China – the third-largest and fastest-growing US export market – could put a real crimp in America’s leading exports to the country: soybeans, aircraft, a broad array of machinery, and motor vehicles parts.
According to The Economist, “price increases in corn and
soybeans
are not thought likely to trigger a food crisis, as they did in 2007-08, as global rice and wheat supplies remain plentiful.”
What did Trump get from the Europeans, other than a return to a trade negotiation straight out of the Obama era?Trump claimed, at the press conference and subsequently, that he won a pledge from Juncker to buy more natural gas and “a lot of soybeans.”
At the same time, Juncker does not buy
soybeans
– the European Commission has no such budget, and any such imports would ultimately be a private-sector decision.
The price of
soybeans
has fallen sharply in recent months, owing to China’s imposition of tariffs on US soybeans, in retaliation to higher US tariffs on some Chinese exports.
The price of US
soybeans
has fallen significantly more than has the price of Brazilian soybeans, as Brazil is not subject to the new Chinese tariff.
Given this, it makes sense that the European private sector will buy more US soybeans, regardless of what Juncker says or does.
US
soybeans
are already sold tariff-free in Europe, and, because China accounts for one-third of all US
soybeans
exports, there is plenty of product available.
Furthermore, Europeans’ purchases of
soybeans
are less than a quarter of China’s.
This would drive up the price for cereals, soybeans, and wheat by 70%, causing the number of malnourished children in the region to rise by 11 million.
China’s population is eating more, notably more meat, which in turn requires the importation of higher volumes of animal feed made from
soybeans
and maize.
And, with more maize and
soybeans
being used for fuels rather than food, the food supply tightens even more.
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