Hundreds of trucks arrive to load soy flour at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
A tractor loads and unloads mountains of soy flour at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
Mountains of soy flour in the warehouses at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
Soy flour fresh from the extractor at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
The Management Secretary, Natalia Pariente, tours the soy flour processing plants at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
Mountains of soy flour in the warehouses at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
Mountains of soy flour in the warehouses at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg
A ship is being loaded with soybeans, with the Paraná River waterway in the background at a Molinos Agro soybean processing and crushing facility in Rosario, Santa Fe province, Argentina, on Tuesday, March 26, 2024. The vast amounts of soybeans set to be crushed for its oil — a key feedstock in making renewable diesel — will create piles of co-product meal in the US, posing a threat to Argentina's biggest export. Photographer: Sebastian Lopez Brach/Bloomberg