USDA, attachés differ on South American soybeans

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: January 12, 2026

, ,

USDA, attachés differ on South American soybeans

Glacier FarmMedia — Prior to the January supply and demand report being released by the United States Department of Agriculture, its attachés in Argentina and Brazil issued their respective reports on oilseed production for 2025/26.

Why it matters: South American soybean production is a major influence on canola futures and the Chicago soy complex.

For the most part, there was little difference between the USDA’s numbers in its World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates released on Jan 12 and the attaché reports out a few days earlier.

Read Also

CUSMA replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which was active from 1994 to 2020. The current trilateral agreement allows producers in all three countries to trade with each other in a mostly tariff-free environment. Photo: ehrlif/istock/GettyImages

CUSMA: a guide to the review and what it means for the agriculture sector

The upcoming Canada-Unites States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) review could set the tone for the future of Canadian agri-food trade. Here’s everything you need to know about CUSMA, the upcoming review process and what it could mean for the agriculture sector.

Argentina:

• The Buenos Aires desk projected a soybean harvest of 47.50 million tonnes, down from 50.50 million in 2024/25. The USDA is at 48.50 million tonnes, compared to 51.11 million the previous year.

• The attaché said delays to planting due to heavy rains and farmers switching to corn were the reasons for the decline.

• The attaché said soyoil production is to be 8.60 million tonnes and the USDA estimated 8.18 million.

• Soyoil exports are to be 6.45 million tonnes according to the attaché with the USDA at 6.15 million.

Brazil:

• The USDA attaché in Brasilia estimated soybean harvest at 177 million tonnes and the department upped its call by three million to now 178 million tonnes. Either number would be record production for Brazil, which provides well in excess of 40 per cent of the world’s soybeans.

• The impetus for such enormous production is increased cultivated acres due to Brazil’s new B15 biofuel mandate. The attaché placed harvested area at 49.10 million hectares, inline with the USDA’s official call and up from 48.80 million estimated in December.

• Also, Brazil exports a majority of its soybeans. The Brasilia desk projected those exports to hit 113 million tonnes while the official department call rose 1.5 million tonnes to 114 million.

About the author

Glen Hallick - MarketsFarm

Glen Hallick - MarketsFarm

Reporter

Glen Hallick grew up in rural Manitoba near Starbuck, where his family farmed. Glen has a degree in political studies from the University of Manitoba and studied creative communications at Red River College. Before joining Glacier FarmMedia, Glen was an award-winning reporter and editor with several community newspapers and group editor for the Interlake Publishing Group. Glen is an avid history buff and enjoys following politics.

explore

Stories from our other publications