Tight Storage Pressures Grain Movement: ‘Like Attaching a Garden Hose to a Fire Hydrant’

Mike Steenhoek, with the Soy Transportation Commission, shares his outlook on current grain stocks and transportation lines amid bumper crops filling bins across the United States.

ANKENY, Iowa (RFD-TV) — Tight grain storage is adding pressure on transportation networks this fall. Supplies are exceeding available storage for the first time since 2016, which is pushing more grain onto railroads, highways, and river systems.

Mike Steenhoek with Soy Transportation Commission joined us on Friday’s Market Day Report with his outlook on current grain strains on stocks and transportation lines. In his interview with RFD-TV News, Steenhoek explained how grain transport experts prepared for a large grain crop and where logistical backlogs remain.

“One of the things you never want to end up doing is attaching a garden hose to a fire hydrant, and that’s somewhat of the area we find ourselves in within agriculture,” Steenhook said. “You’ve got this very abundant crop, but then, sometimes you can have what’s analogous to a fire hydrant that’s providing this significant amount of volume, but sometimes you have constrictions — sometimes that can be with our supply chain, but it can also be things like a lack of international demand. So there’s this backup. You’re not able to move the product as efficiently as you intended, so things get backed up.”

Steenhoek said added pressure is worse in some regions than others due to a general dip in international demand for U.S. grains — particularly areas where there is less demand for grain feedstocks and producers historically relied on international trade.

“That’s one of the things we’re witnessing, particularly in certain areas of the country right now, where because you don’t have this strong demand pull — and certainly it’s gotten better over the last month with the news coming out of China and some of the shipments that have occurred — but we still don’t have as strong of a demand pull as what we normally would expect and what we experienced,” he said. “So what’s happened is farmers are putting more crops in storage ... so you’re seeing more of a backup that’s certainly occurring.”

Marion is a digital content manager for RFD-TV and The Cowboy Channel. She started working for Rural Media Group in May 2022, adding a decade of experience in the digital side of broadcast media and some cooking experience to the team.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Ohio AgNet’s Dusty Sonnenberg takes us up in the cab with a popcorn farmer bringing in this year’s haul.
The DOJ’s new antitrust probe could reshape beef-packer behavior, with potential impacts on fed-cattle prices, processor margins, and long-term competition across the supply chain.
Congressman Blake Moore of Utah discusses the bill’s potential to promote both economic growth and healthier forests on this week’s Champions of Rural America.
Mike Newland with the Propane Education & Research Council shares how producers can prepare for winter weather and the benefits of propane.
Stagger buys and diversifies fertilizer sources — watch CBAM, India’s tenders, and Brazil’s import pace to time urea, phosphate, and potash purchases.
Recognizing phosphorus and potash as critical minerals underscores their importance in crop production and food security, providing producers with an added layer of risk protection.