Your Reading List

Canadian Wheat Board to tweak name

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 29, 2012

,

The Canadian Wheat Board will shorten its name, one of the most storied and well known in global grain trading, to simply "CWB," as it starts to compete in an open market.

The board will give up its 69-year-old Western Canada wheat marketing monopoly on Aug. 1 under new Canadian law, but grain handlers are already buying farmers’ 2012 crops for delivery this autumn.

The Wheat Board is expected to join them in buying 2012 crops on forward contracts as early as this week, starting with its staples: spring wheat, durum and barley.

Read Also

Ukraine maintains high corn export rates, with shipments increasing to 1.2 million tons in January 1-15 from 1.06 million tons in December 1-15 and 822,000 in the first half of November. Photo: sandsun/Getty Images Plus

Ukraine wheat exports remain low amid Russian attacks on ports, weak demand

Ukraine’s wheat exports remained relatively low in the first half of January amid Russian attacks on Ukrainian seaports and low external demand, data from the country’s grain traders union UGA showed on Wednesday.

"It’s going to be (known as) CWB," said Ken Motiuk, one of five government-appointed directors of the board, on the sidelines of the Wild Oats GrainWorld conference here Tuesday.

"You have to differentiate yourself from the past" while maintaining some continuity, he said.

The Wheat Board has long been informally called the CWB.

It’s not unheard of for companies to shed their full names in favour of their accepted abbreviations, such as CHS (Cenex Harvest States), BASF (Badische Anilin- + Soda-Fabrik) and 3M (Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co.).

explore

Stories from our other publications