SAO PAULO, Jan 16 (Reuters) - A Brazilian truckers' protest entered
its fourth day on Monday, preventing grain-carrying vehicles from taking
a key road for soy and corn shipments in the state of Mato Grosso,
police and the highway operator said.
The demonstration started on Friday as truck owners demanded greater
compensation from commodities traders and transportation companies to
transport soy and corn from the state to exporting ports in southern
Brazil.
The main harvest has just started in Mato Grosso, Brazil's No. 1 soy
and corn producing state, where farmers are expected to collect 30
million tonnes of soybeans.
Police said protesting truck drivers were stopping all trucks
carrying grains at two points in the BR-364 road and asking them to
park. The protest is not aimed at stopping flow of other vehicles.
Road operator Rota do Oeste, controlled by Brazilian conglomerate
Odebrecht, confirmed that grain-carrying trucks are being parked on the
side of the road, reducing the room for normal traffic.
Gilson Baitaca, one of the protest's leaders, told Reuters on Friday
the demonstration aimed to force commodities traders with large
operations in the state, such as Bunge and Archer Daniels Midland, to
renegotiate compensation for truck owners.
A manager at a large grain elevator in the area, who asked not to be
named, told Reuters on Monday that he had no reports of problems so far
to get grain out of the region. Trucks might be avoiding the protests by
taking alternate roads.
Abiove, the Brazilian association representing commodities traders
and processors, and Aprosoja, a Mato Grosso farmers association,
declined to comment.(Reporting by Gustavo Bonato and Marcelo Teixeira; Editing by Paul Simao)
Source: Successful Farming
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