By Ismail Shakil
OTTAWA (Reuters) -Canada on Tuesday accepted with situations U.S. grains service provider Bunge (NYSE:)’s $34 billion merger with Glencore-backed Viterra, clearing one of many remaining remaining obstacles for a world agriculture tie-up that’s unprecedented in greenback worth.
The situations for the approval embody Bunge’s divestiture of six grain elevators in Western Canada and a binding dedication from Bunge to speculate no less than C$520 million ($362 million) in Canada inside the subsequent 5 years, in accordance with a press release from the transport ministry.
The approval additionally requires strict and legally binding controls on Bunge’s minority stake in Saudi-owned grain firm G3 to make sure Bunge can not affect G3’s pricing or funding choices, the ministry mentioned. Bunge, Viterra and G3 account for a mixed one-third of Western Canada’s elevator capability.
The merger, introduced in 2023, would create a world crops buying and selling and processing large price $34 billion together with debt, nearer in scale with chief rivals Archer-Daniels-Midland Co and Cargill Inc.
“With the Canadian approval, we are nearing completion of the regulatory process and expect to close in early 2025,” Bunge mentioned in a press release to Reuters.
The deal, accepted by shareholders, would make the mixed firm higher in a position to capitalize on an anticipated surge in demand for soybean and canola oil to provide biofuels in coming years than its rivals, however extra consolidation within the trade leaves farmers with fewer consumers for his or her crops.
Canada’s antitrust watchdog flagged considerations across the deal in April, saying in a non-binding report that the transaction was prone to hurt competitors for grain buying in Western Canada, in addition to for promoting canola oil in Jap Canada.
The transport ministry mentioned its situations tackle the considerations raised in the course of the public curiosity evaluation of the acquisition.
Bunge CEO Greg Heckman had mentioned that he didn’t see the necessity for cures in Canada.
In clearing the deal, the transport minister has required the organising of a value safety program for sure purchasers of canola oil in Central and Atlantic Canada to safeguard truthful pricing and market stability.
“This decision underscores the importance of promoting economic growth in Canada, while maintaining robust oversight to protect competition and the public interest,” Transport Minister Anita Anand mentioned within the assertion.
($1 = 1.4355 Canadian {dollars})