Int’l Centre for Chemical & Biological
Sciences, China institute sign MoU on rice research
KARACHI:
An MoU on rice research was signed between International Center for Chemical
and Biological Sciences and China National Rice Research Institute (CNRRI) of
Hangzhou, China.
The objective of the agreement is to conduct research for developing new high yielding and disease resistant varieties of rice and such other areas as the two parties may agree upon.
The MoU was signed in an official ceremony held at Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), University of Karachi.
The objective of the agreement is to conduct research for developing new high yielding and disease resistant varieties of rice and such other areas as the two parties may agree upon.
The MoU was signed in an official ceremony held at Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), University of Karachi.
Prof Dr Muhammad Iqbal Choudhary, on behalf of
ICCBS and Deputy Director General CNRRI Dr Peisong Hu on behalf of his
institute signed the agreement.Speaking on the occasion, Prof Dr Atta-ur-Rahman
said that this was the positive sign that Pakistani and Chinese scientists were
jointly carrying out research on rice.Dr Iqbal Choudhary informed that the
Chinese institution will train the scholars from ICCBS in the field of rice
breeding and production of high quality hybrid rice seed.
As per
the agreement, both the institutions have agreed to enhance relations between
the two institutions and to develop academic exchange in the area of research,”
he said.Dr Peisong Hu said that CNRRI focused on basic and applied researches
with priority on solving significant scientific and technical problems in rice
production.
Agreement on rice research
March
13, 2015
Karachi
- An MoU on rice research was signed between International Center for Chemical
and Biological Sciences and China National Rice Research Institute (CNRRI) of
Hangzhou, China.The objective of the agreement is to conduct research for
developing new high yielding and disease resistant varieties of rice and such
other areas as the two parties may agree upon.
The MoU was signed in an official ceremony held at Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), University of Karachi.Prof Dr Muhammad Iqbal Choudhary, on behalf of ICCBS and Deputy Director General CNRRI Dr Peisong Hu on behalf of his institute signed the agreement.Speaking on the occasion, Prof Dr Atta-ur-Rahman said that this was the positive sign that Pakistani and Chinese scientists were jointly carrying out research on rice.Dr Iqbal Choudhary informed that the Chinese institution will train the scholars from ICCBS in the field of rice breeding and production of high quality hybrid rice seed.As per the agreement, both the institutions have agreed to enhance relations between the two institutions and to develop academic exchange in the area of research,” he said.
Dr Peisong Hu said that CNRRI focused on basic and applied researches with priority on solving significant scientific and technical problems in rice production.
The MoU was signed in an official ceremony held at Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), University of Karachi.Prof Dr Muhammad Iqbal Choudhary, on behalf of ICCBS and Deputy Director General CNRRI Dr Peisong Hu on behalf of his institute signed the agreement.Speaking on the occasion, Prof Dr Atta-ur-Rahman said that this was the positive sign that Pakistani and Chinese scientists were jointly carrying out research on rice.Dr Iqbal Choudhary informed that the Chinese institution will train the scholars from ICCBS in the field of rice breeding and production of high quality hybrid rice seed.As per the agreement, both the institutions have agreed to enhance relations between the two institutions and to develop academic exchange in the area of research,” he said.
Dr Peisong Hu said that CNRRI focused on basic and applied researches with priority on solving significant scientific and technical problems in rice production.
Golden Rice Campaign Launched
By Rubelle Tan · Mar 13th, 2015 · Golden rice, a genetically
modified rice variety by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), will
be distributed in India to compensate for the lack of vitamin A in
children. This genetically engineered
rise was the product of splicing of bacteria and maize genes into rice for it
to contain pro-vitamin A (beta-carotene).
Golden Rice grain in
screenhouse of Golden Rice plants.
The Allow Golden Rice Campaign Now, headed by Greenpeace
co-founder, Patrick Moore, was launched in the Philippines and Bangladesh last
March 6 and will continue in New Delhi and Mumbai, India on March 19.Vitamin A
deficiency has been observed in children in third-world countries, as well as
in adults. The campaign aims to do a “quick-fix” solution to vitamin A
deficiency that can lead to blindness.This campaign is not without objections,
however. Stop Golden Rice Alliance,
composed of 20 non-government organizations around the world, has been vocal in
its objections on the promotion of Golden Rice.“With inexpensive Vitamin A
available in abundance from various natural resources, produced by small-scale
and backyard producers, it is a mistake to turn blindly to golden rice, a crop
that the International Rice Research Institute itself admits it has not yet
determined if it can actually improve the Vitamin A intake,” said the Alliance.As
a response to these objections, Moore stated: “Golden rice is the obvious cure,
but because it was created with genetic science, Greenpeace and the anti-GMO
movement fervently oppose it. No country
has approved it for cultivation.”
“If golden rice was a cure for a disease like malaria, cancer, or
Ebola it would have been approved years ago,” he added. Vitamin A deficiency is
a significant health problem of over 75 countries worldwide. Vitamin A Deficiency (VAD) can cause severe
visual impairment, blindness, and increased risk for diseases like diarrhoeal
disease and measles in children.Countries where golden rice was initially
launched had mixed reviews. In the
Philippines, a Facebook campaign was launched by NGOs and scientists to stop
Moore’s advocacy for Golden Rice.“Our opposition to Golden Rice and other
genetically modified (GM) crops are founded on solid argumenta and actual
experiences of Filipino farmers on GM crops.
Filipino farmers who have been planting GM crops suffered negative
income, health problems and poisoned environment,” stated MASIPAG, a Filipino
farmer-led network of people’s organizations, NGOs and scientists.India, on the
other hand, has Modi government that is pro-technology. “The aim is to dispel fears about GM crops,
so that the country can join the US, China and Canada. GM crops are very important for India’s
agricultural growth,” says a senior agricultural ministry official.
Here are some facts on VAD:
14 million pre-schoolchildren have some eye damage due to VAD
350,000 (or more pre-school children become partially or totally
blind every year from VAD
About 60 percent of these children die within a few month of going
blind
Half of all childhood corneal blindness in developing countries is
caused by VAD, and half of that is from added measles infection
Photo: IRRI photos
ICCBS,
China NRRI sign MoU
March 13, 2015
RECORDER REPORTmemorandum of understanding (MoU) on rice research
was signed between International Centre for Chemical and Biological Sciences
(ICCBS), University of Karachi, and China National Rice Research Institute
(CNRRI) of Hangzhou, China, here on Thursday. A statement said that the
objective of the agreement is to conduct research for developing new high yielding
and disease resistant varieties of rice and such other areas as the two parties
may agree upon.
The MoU was signed in an official ceremony held at Dr Panjwani
Centre for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research (PCMD), University of Karachi.
Chinese officials, including Deputy Director General CNRRI Dr Peisong Hu, Dr
Liyong Cao, Dr Xinhua Wei, Ms Aijuan Ge, Patron-in-Chief ICCBS-KU, Professor Dr
Atta-ur-Rahman, Director ICCBS-KU, Professor Dr Muhammad Iqbal Chaudhary, and
other faculty members attended the ceremony. Professor Dr Muhammad Iqbal Chaudhary, on behalf of ICCBS-KU and
Deputy Director General CNRRI Dr Peisong Hu on behalf of his institute signed
the agreement. Professor Dr Atta-ur-Rahman said the agreement would further
promote collaborative research between the scientists of two countries.
He said it was a positive sign that Pakistani and Chinese
scientists were jointly carrying out research on rice. ICCBS was one of Pakistan's most eminent centres of excellence,
and one of the finest academic research establishments of chemical and
biological sciences in the developing world, he observed. Dr Iqbal Chaudhary
said the international centre was engaged in R&D of various fields of
chemical, biological, biomedical and genomic research. "The Chinese
institution will train the scholars from ICCBS in the field of rice breeding
and production of high quality hybrid rice seed.
According to MoU, both the institutions will work together in the
field of agricultural biotechnology". As per the agreement, both the institutions had agreed to enhance
relations between the two institutions and to develop academic exchange in the
area of research, he said. Dr Peisong Hu said CNRRI focused on basic and
applied researches with priority on solving significant scientific and
technical problems in rice production. "It also plays an important role in
co-ordination with priority rice research programmes throughout the country,
conducting national and international training, and scientific and technical
exchange, and, compiling and publishing academic journals and books on
rice," he maintained.
APEDA NEWS
Commodity-wise, Market-wise
Daily Price on 12-03-2015
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Product
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Market Center
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Variety
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Min Price
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Max Price
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Rice
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|||||||||
1
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Cachar (Assam)
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Other
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2000
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2500
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|||||
2
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Jhagadiya (Gujarat)
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Other
|
1950
|
3050
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|||||
3
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Bonai (Orissa)
|
Other
|
2000
|
2400
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|||||
Wheat
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|||||||||
1
|
Dehgam (Gujarat)
|
Other
|
1375
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1455
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|||||
2
|
Cherthala (Kerala)
|
Other
|
3250
|
3400
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|||||
3
|
Bonai(Orissa)
|
Other
|
1400
|
1600
|
|||||
Apple
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|||||||||
1
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Aroor (Kerala)
|
Other
|
5600
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5800
|
|||||
2
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Karanjia(Orissa)
|
Other
|
4000
|
4500
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|||||
3
|
Giridih(Jharkhand)
|
Other
|
6000
|
6100
|
|||||
Carrot
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|||||||||
1
|
Attingal (Kerala)
|
Other
|
3000
|
3500
|
|||||
2
|
Bonai (Orissa)
|
Other
|
2000
|
2500
|
|||||
3
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Gumla(Jharkhand)
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Other
|
800
|
1000
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|||||
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Price on 10-03-2015
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Product
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Market Center
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Price
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1
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Pune
|
285
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|||||||
2
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Nagapur
|
247
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|||||||
3
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Namakkal
|
260
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|||||||
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Price on: 12-03-2015
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Product
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Benchmark Indicators Name
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Price
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|||||||
Guar
Gum Powder
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|||||||||
1
|
Indian 100 mesh 3500
cps, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
|
2300
|
|||||||
2
|
Indian 200 mesh 3500
cps basis, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
|
1750
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|||||||
3
|
Indian 200 mesh 5000
cps, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
|
2825
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|||||||
Apricots
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|||||||||
1
|
Turkish No. 2 whole
pitted, CIF UK (USD/t)
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5875
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|||||||
2
|
Turkish No. 4 whole
pitted, CIF UK (USD/t)
|
4625
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|||||||
3
|
Turkish size 8, CIF
UK (USD/t)
|
3625
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|||||||
Honey
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|||||||||
1
|
Argentine 34mm, CIF
NW Europe (USD/t)
|
4435
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|||||||
2
|
Argentine 50mm, CIF
NW Europe (USD/t)
|
4360
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|||||||
3
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Argentine 85mm, CIF
NW Europe (USD/t)
|
4310
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Price on 10-03-2015
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Product
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Market Center
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Origin
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Variety
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Low
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High
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Mangoes |
Package: flats 1 layer
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||||||||
1
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Atlanta
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Peru
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Kent
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17.75
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17.75
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||||
2
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Chicago |
Mexico
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Kent
|
9
|
10
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||||
3
|
Miami |
Peru
|
Kent
|
7
|
8
|
||||
Cabbage |
Package: 50 lb sacks
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||||||||
1
|
Atlanta |
Florida
|
Round Green Type
|
10
|
11
|
||||
2
|
Chicago |
Texas
|
Round Green Type
|
9
|
9
|
||||
3
|
Miami |
Canada
|
Round Green Type
|
12
|
12
|
||||
Grapes |
Package: 18 lb containers bagged
|
||||||||
1
|
Atlanta
|
Chile
|
Black Seedless
|
30
|
31
|
||||
2
|
Chicago |
Chile
|
Black Seedless
|
Ask Well:
Arsenic in Rice Crackers?
By DEBORAH BLUM
MARCH 13, 2015
5:30 AM March 13, 2015 5:30 am
CreditAndrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Recently, I’ve
been reading about the presence of unacceptable levels of arsenic in both brown
and white rice. Are rice vinegar and rice crackers also affected?
Foods that contain rice, including rice crackers and vinegar,
routinely contain some level of arsenic, scientists say, as do products like
rice cakes, rice wine and cereals, and snack bars and baking mixes that contain
rice flour or bran. But it’s unclear how serious a health risk they pose.The
Food and Drug Administration has a list of rice-containing foods that focuses on inorganic arsenic, considered the most dangerous
form of the poison. One reason rice gets so much attention is that the plant is very good at pulling inorganic arsenicfrom soil and water and storing it in the edible grain.But
levels of contamination vary according to the type of rice and where it is
grown.
Brown rice, for example, tends to show higher levels than white
rice, which is stripped during processing of layers of the grain where arsenic
tends to collect. California rice frequently contains less arsenic than that grown in southern states, which tends to have higher
levels of arsenic in the soil. Consumer Reports found that basmati rice from India, Pakistan and California had markedly lower levels of
arsenic than other varieties.The F.D.A. found that arsenic levels ranged from
7.2 micrograms (a millionth of a gram) to 2.5 micrograms per serving. Rice
crackers averaged about five micrograms.
Rice vinegar was even lower, around one microgram or less.“It
may be that you get some dilution with the vinegar” or wine, said Brian
Jackson, director of the Trace
Metal Analysis Core Facility at Dartmouth College.While these are all tiny amounts, inorganic
arsenic has been linked to disease in extremely low doses. Much of this
evidence comes from studies of arsenic in water.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency sets a 10-parts-per-billion safety standard for drinking water.Because of the complexities, it’s harder to
assess the risk from foods. “The
question for everyone is ‘Do I worry?’ ” Dr. Jackson admits.His recommendation:
“If you are a person who is eating rice every day, and also snacking on rice
products, then that five micrograms from rice crackers becomes significant,” he
said. “If once a month, not so much. The idea is to eat a varied diet — and be
aware of how much rice you are eating.”
Underdevelopment inertia
AT GROUND LEVEL By Satur C. Ocampo (The Philippine Star) | Updated
March 14, 2015 - 12:00am
Besides the slowdown in the
growth of gross domestic product last year (to 6.1% from 7.2% in 2013),
government economic planners have acknowledged that national poverty incidence
in the first half of 2014 rose to 25.8%, from 24.6% in first-half 2013. In 10
of the 17 regions the Philippine Statistics Authority recorded double-digit
spikes in poverty threshold —most significantly by14.2% in Region 8 (Leyte,
Samar, Biliran) and 13.5% in the National Capital Region.
Blamed for the poverty rise was high inflation, specifically higher
food prices, up by 6.5%.Furthermore, the National Economic and Development
Authority blamed the 12% increase in the prices of rice — which eats up 20% of
the budget of low-income families.The high inflation, NEDA pointed out,
practically negated the 6.4% increment in per-capita income.“At a time when the
world price of rice was declining, the domestic price… was skyrocketing,”
lamented NEDA director-general Arsenio M. Balisacan.To temper inflation and
drive down poverty, he added, rice prices must be reduced.How?
Balisacan urged reversing a 20-year government policy: remove the
limit on rice imports, called quantitative restriction or QR, which the
Philippine negotiators fought hard to get approved by the World Trade
Organization in 1995. The objective was to protect Filipino rice farmers and
enable them to become competitive producers under a regime of agricultural
trade liberalization. Upon appeal by the government, the QR has been extended
twice, to remain in effect until 2017.
But the QR hasn’t worked.Over two decades we have been a net
importer of rice — the world’s No. 1 importer by 2010. Just as shocking, we
also import a great deal of the other most common foods that we eat: coffee
(53.31% of consumption), mongo (50.96%), peanuts (43.71%), garlic (28.34%),
pork (8.31%), and shrimps and prawns (7.99%), among others.
Opinion ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
The declared objective to achieve rice self-sufficiency and food
security has remained unfulfilled, absent a determined program to
develop/modernize agriculture.This year the National Food Authority is
importing 500,000 metric tons of rice allegedly to augment locally-grown stock
in the “lean season” starting July.Yet the PSA points out that of the January
2015 NFA stock of 520,000 MT, 97% was imported. And the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization estimates that the government will again import 1.8 million MT
this year because growth in domestic production will be either insignificant or
nil.
Oddly, a PSA report, titled “Agricultural Indicators System Report
on Food Sufficiency and Security,” says that our country’s dependence on
imported rice dropped to 3.2% of total consumption (10.9 million MT) in 2013,
from 7.8% in 2012.If the FAO estimate is accurate, the 1.8-million MT import
will constitute about 10% of consumption.And if Balisacan’s proposal to scrap
the QR is adopted, rice imports will increase 10 times, according to the
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, which backstops the NEDA.
That will be disastrous to the Filipino rice farmers, who
constitute more than two million households reeling in poverty. As a recent
PIDS study affirms, the benefits from the GDP growth in recent years haven’t
“trickled down” to the poor, especially agriculture-dependent households.
Whereas agriculture accounted for 12% of GDP and 1/3 of the labor force in
2010, poverty incidence in 2009 among agriculture-dependent households was 57%
— compared with 17% in non-agricultural households.
But
the PIDS, echoing Balisacan, claims that huge rice imports will significantly
cut prices in the country. As a parallel move, the P-Noy government’s chief
economic planner proposes to augment, corresponding to inflation rate, the
P62.32-billion budget for the Conditional Cash Transfer program.Evidently the
exigency of checking the rise in poverty incidence — the Philippines has failed
to meet the Millenium Development Goal to reduce poverty to 16% by 2015 — is
prioritized over developing agriculture and attaining rice self-sufficiency and
food security. Balisacan states the issue thus:
“While we definitely need to support the agriculture sector in
general, we should also maximize the gains from trade and globalization.”Maximizing
the gains from neoliberal globalization has been the policy mantra since the
Ramos administration two decades ago. Yet what gains have the successive
governments to show for it?
Another PIDS study, titled “Is Poverty Really Decreasing? And if
Not, Why Not?” critiques a PSA report suggesting that the CCT program, among
other factors, induced a drop in poverty from first-half 2012 to first-half
2013.No clear evidence of that, the study avers.
Instead, PIDS cites three trends: 1) poverty rates remained
unchanged in the first-semester periods of 2006-2012 (only minute differences
within margins of error); 2) full-year poverty rates were also unchanged in
2006-2012; and 3) estimates of the proportion of the poor were lower in the
full year than in the first semester due to 13th-month wages and bonuses
received at yearend.At bottom, recent GDP growth rates haven’t affected the
persistence of poverty because the growth derives mainly from OFW remittances,
lower interest rates, and investments in business process outsourcing or BPOs —
not in marked increases in modern agricultural and industrial output, which we
do not have.(Of the 6.1% growth rate in 2014, industry contributed 2.5%,
agriculture, 0.2%.)
In its yearend 2014
briefing, IBON Foundation concludes:
“This is why (the growth rate’s) momentary impact has not been
enough to offset the inertia of underdevelopment reflected in moderate-trend
growth and in backward production, high unemployment, and deep poverty.”Yes,
very much more needs to be done for the Philippine economy to overcome the
“inertia of underdevelopment.”
Email: satur.ocampo@gmail.com
http://www.philstar.com/opinion/2015/03/14/1433344/underdevelopment-inertia#ixzz3UOe9OiLj
Peak food?
Can food tech supercharge crop yields and address global food security?
March
13, 2015
Globally, humanity has reached
“peak food,” according to a recent study by Ecology and Society. Peak rice
was back in 1988, causing some worry about the long-term
food security of this global staple crop. Peak
chicken was in 2006. Peak milk and wheat were in 2004.“People often talk of
substitution. If we run out of one substance we just substitute another. But if
multiple resources are running out, we’ve got a problem. Mankind needs to
accept that renewable raw materials are reaching their yield limits worldwide,” said Jianguo “Jack” Liu, of Michigan State University.
Is it really as apocalyptic as it seems?
No, according to Hank Campbell, the founder of science communication site
Science 2.0. While projecting increases in population, the model Liu and his
colleagues used leaves food technology as static. Campbell wrote that the key
to avoiding such a catastrophe is in embracing food science innovations:
Since the 1970s American farmers,
who embrace science more than any in the world, have grown more food on less
land in a way 1970s projections believed was only science-fiction.
If Europe and the developing world embraced science the way American
agriculture does, not only could we grow the same food we have right now, we could let farmland
equivalent to the entire region of Amazonia go back to nature and not lose a
single carrot.As an example of food technology’s
ability to address leveled yields, in December researchers were able to
engineer rice genes to carry out a basicsupercharged photosynthesis process and increase productivity.
Many supporters of genetic
engineering note that for some crops the technology increases yields, often
with less input and while using less acreage. Anti-GMO activists vociferously
dispute that.There are two issues in play here: Do GM crops increase
yield? And if they do, is this yield increase even necessary considering how
much food goes to waste.In a 2009 polemic, Doug-Durian Sherman, then with the
Union of Concerned Scientists, wrote “Failure to Yield” in
which he argued that yield improvements over the previous 25 years were
the result of conventional breeding or farming practices, not GMOs.
Specifically herbicide-resistant
corn and soy have not had improved yields, while insect-resistant corn has
slightly improved.A USDA report last year supports that position in part. It indicates that yields
in the US increased only slightly over the first 15 years of the
commercialization of GMO crops. The advantage for farmers, it said is in saving
on insecticide due to using insect-resistant crops. However, surveys in the
developing world, home to more than half of the farms using GM crops, yields
have increased as much as 40 percent, in part because of improved efficiencies.
But does the world need more crops
and food? The popular view propagated on anti-GMO websites and even in the left
media which is dogmatically critical for the technology is “no.” The far left Nation framed the issue in polarized terms in its essay, “Can GMOs Help Feed a
Hot and Hungry World?”
The high cost of GMO field-testing may explain why the only
genetically modified crops that have made it to market are, in the words of
environmental scientist Jonathan Foley, “very disappointing” and “come with
some big problems.”“GMO efforts may have started off with good intentions to
improve food security,” Foley wrote in a column in the science magazine Ensia in February, “but they ended up in
crops that were better at improving profits.”
Strong opponents of genetic
modification claim that independent of the issue of safety, the world just
doesn’t need more crops—just better distribution. For example, GM
Education, a website supported by Citizens Concerned about GM which claims,
disingenuously, that it is not opposed to genetic engineering, writes that it’s
too simplistic to promote increases in food production as a way to feed the
world. It claims that the media that media inappropriately promotes GMO
technology rather than focusing on the “real” problem: not supply but
distribution:
The biggest problem with global malnutrition is politics.
Distribution and supply, skewed wealth and corrupt governments are doing more
harm to the starving masses than conventional food production ever will. There
is plenty of food, enough produced globally even now, for nine billion people.
We just need to tackle the more complicated political issues.
This is a familiar meme in the
anti-GMO press, which claims that genetic modification is a danger-riddled
technology that is just not necessary. Unfortunately, there is no magic bullet
to rework the global food distribution system. The challenges of waste and what
some consider “unfair” apportionment of food can be addressed, but only slowly
and over decades. Meanwhile, the global population is soaring, and people are
becoming more affluent in the developing world, sharply increasing the demand
for food.
Demanding reforms in food distribution doesn’t feed the hungry;
increasing food production in hard-pressed countries would.Even Gurian-Sherman,
who now works with the anti-GMO Center for Food Safety, agrees that current
yields will not meet growing demand; we need to increase yield—one way or
another. “If we are going to make headway in combating hunger due to
overpopulation and climate change, we will need to increase crop yields.” He
just disagrees on how.
“Traditional breeding outperforms genetic engineering hands down,”
he’s said.Therefore, raising yields remains a part of the work of the global
development research, yet studying the best policy environment in which to
release new technology has also become a priority. In the case of poor
farmers, while researchers at the International Rice Research Institute work on
genetically engineering a supercharged photosynthesis in rice could help raise
yields, colleagues at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
consider what supportive policy is needed.
Policy is so important, in fact,
that the 2014 IFPRI report on global hunger doesn’t mention
agricultural yield increases in its recommendation and instead focuses on
policy priorities for governments. However, it does point out the importance of
government support and incentives for scientists to develop nutritious seeds.
The point, however, is that this is
a shift in thinking. Nathaneal Johnson, a food writer at Grist, asked Shenggen Fan, the director of the IRPRI, if there had been a
change: “Yes,” he said. “It’s a sea change.”The IFPRI is a part of the
Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers, known as CGIAR. The
consortium is an independent international organization that got its start
during the Green Revolution, which pushed agricultural innovations like
hybridized seeds, pesticides and fertilizer as solutions to hunger.Fan said
that CGIAR used to be focused on yields, but in 2010, it made somereforms.
However, this isn’t necessarily a split from the past, and its
website explains, “Our
belief in science as a way to find humanitarian solutions has never wavered
though and is as strong as ever.”Fan still credits the role of science in the
Green Revolution with preventing famine, but his message is clear: Policy plays a key role in guiding and ensuring innovations have impact.The International
Rice Research Institute (IRRI)—also one of the CGIAR centers—has been leading
the work on supercharged photosynthesis, one innovation that is a
potential tool in the larger toolbox of poverty solutions.The researchers
altered the genes in rice to show that C4 photosynthesis could work in rice.“It’s
the first time we’ve seen evidence of the C4 cycle in rice, so it’s very
exciting,”said Thomas Brutnell, a researcher at the Danforth Plant Science Center
in St. Louis.
C4 photosynthesis helps plants grow
more efficiently by capturing carbon dioxide and fixing it in cells in the
leaves. It is what makes corn and sugarcane so productive. Researchers said
that it could boost rice and wheat yields by roughly 50 percent. With it, rice
farmers could achieve environmental efficiencies using far less water and
fertilizer. While scientists have made a breakthrough, the altered rice still
must undergo further breeding to fully use C4 photosynthesis. Scientists are
still identifying all of the genes needed to produce this process and say that
genome editing will likely hold the key.
Once scientists solve the puzzle in
rice, they say the process could be extended to other crops including potatoes,
tomatoes, apples and soybeans.Other research on rice is also working to improve
yields in the face of climate change by genetically improving rice to have drought-tolerant, heat-tolerant
traits and others.
Many varieties
of drought-tolerant rice are bred conventionally. So far, the IRRI
has released 17 varieties in Asia and Africa. But some research uses transgenic breeding,
such as a rice variety that uses a pepper gene to confer drought tolerance.In the meantime, José Graziano da
Silva, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization is asking
policymakers to support a range of approaches. In a speech in September 2014,
he said that we need to try it all, referring to both genetically modified
seeds and agroecology, which is often held up as the preferred option by
anti-GMO activists. “We need to explore these alternatives using an inclusive
approach based on science and evidences, not on ideologies,” he said.
He also pointed out, however, “we
cannot rely on an input intensive model to increase production and that the
solutions of the past have shown their limits.” But that means some
biotechnology solutions, like the C4 rice, could be a part of lowering use of
fertilizers and water while still providing more income for farmers.But to be
successful, of course, it needs backing from policymakers, who support
agriculture in a variety of ways from setting workable policies for crop insurance
to loan support to a viable regulatory environment for crops bred using genetic
tools.Whether we’ve reached “peak food” probably isn’t the point, so what
is? It’s how we respond to improve yields and ultimately incomes for farmers
using a variety of tools and methods.
Study on Plant Immune Systems May Lead to
Better Tomatoes, Rice and Other Crops
First Posted: Mar 13, 2015 05:49 AM EDT
Understanding plants' immune systems may just lead to better
tomatoes and other plants. (Photo : Flickr/Skånska Matupplevelser)
Understanding plants' immune systems may just lead to better
tomatoes and other plants. Scientists have taken a look at the bacteria that
infects plants to learn a bit more about plant immune systems and how to
potentially bolster plant defenses. "Each year, millions of dollars are
lost from damage to crops and ornamental plants caused by pathogens, which
include a bacteria known as Pseudomonas Syringae," said Antje Heese, one
of the researchers, in a news release.
"This bacteria directly affects tomatoes and causes speck
disease that permanently damage the fruit and leaves. In our study, we used Arabidopsis thaliana, a plant that has the same immune
response as tomatoes but grows at a faster rate, to study the immune response
of plants." Scientists once thought that a plant defended itself against
bacteria by activating a specific, several-step process. However, it seems as
if plants instead activate their immune systems using three separate
mechanisms.
In fact, the scientists found that each mechanism responding to
the infection did so independently of the two other mechanisms. In addition,
each mechanism had to have the right amount of specific proteins, called immune
receptors, in the right place in order to respond appropriate. Having the right
combination provided the plant with an effective and efficient immune response.So
what does this mean? The findings could allow scientists to create new
strategies to help plants fight off disease.
This could lead to more resistant crops that could save the
agricultural industry millions."Like any living organism, plants have
limited resources and they have to use these resources effectively," said
Heese. "If the plant makes too much of the proteins responsible for these
mechanisms, they will suffer in other areas, such as creating quality fruit.
This same discovery can be applied to many crops, including rice and soybeans,
and ornamental plants, including roses, pear and apple trees. The information
discovered in this study gives scientists something new to study in plants,
with the eventual goal of better crops and ornamental plants."The findings
are published in the journal PLOS Pathogens.
For more great science stories and general news, please visit our
sister site, Headlines and Global News (HNGN).
Nearly 70 percent of evangelicals do not view religion,
science as being in conflict
posted by news on march 13, 2015 -
2:00pm
Media
and popular culture might portray religion and science as being at odds, but
new research from Rice University suggests just the opposite.Findings from the
recently completed study "Religious Understandings of Science (RUS)"
reveal that despite many misconceptions regarding the intersection of science
and religion, nearly 70 percent of evangelical Christians do not view the two
as being in conflict with each other.The research was presented by Rice
sociologist Elaine Howard Ecklund today in Washington, D.C., during the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference,
Perceptions: Science and Religious Communities.
Ecklund,
the principal investigator and researcher for the RUS project, is the Autrey
Professor of Sociology and director of Rice's Religion and Public Life Program.Ecklund
noted that evangelicals are of interest in this study because they constitute
approximately 26 percent of the population in the U.S. and are often considered
the most hostile toward science."We really wanted to determine if this
claim was based in any truth," Ecklund said. "Although many
politicians and the media at large portray evangelicals as distrustful of
science, we found that this is more myth than reality."
Other key findings:
Nearly
half of evangelicals (48 percent) view science and religion as complementary to
one another; 21 percent view them as entirely independent of one another.Overall,
38 percent of Americans view religion and science as complementary, and 35 percent
of Americans view science and religion as entirely independent.In the U.S., 76
percent of scientists in the general population identify with a religious
tradition.
Only
15 percent of Americans and 14 percent of evangelicals agree that modern science
does more harm than good.Jews (42 percent), Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus (52
percent as a group) and the nonreligious (47 percent) are more interested in
new scientific discoveries than evangelicals (22 percent) are.Ecklund plans to
write a book about the survey findings with Chris Scheitle, a sociology
professor at the West Virginia University. She hopes the research will shed
light on how religious groups understand science and vice versa, in addition to
providing outreach and translation to individuals who might have difficulties
with some aspects of science.
RUS
is the largest study of American views on religion and science. It includes a
nationally representative survey of more than 10,000 Americans and more than
300 in-depth interviews with Christians, Jews and Muslims; more than 140 of the
latter three groups are evangelical Christians The study also included
extensive observations of 23 religious centers in Houston and Chicago. The
research is being provided to the AAAS Dialogue on Science Ethics and Religion
program to help foster communication between religious groups and scientists.
East Kootenay Regional
Science Fair
A judge congratulating a budding scientist at a
previous East Kootenay Regional Science Fair.
— Image Credit: Photo Submitted
posted Mar
13, 2015 at 11:00 AM
Science is an ever-evolving
discipline that has taken us as a society from shivering in a cave to exploring
Mars. With the pace of technology today, the scientists of the future need to
start young and with the East Kootenay Regional Science Fair, slated for April
10 and 11 at the College of the Rockies, local students are getting that head
start.“Our head judge, Dr. David Dick, from the college has rounded up 45
science professionals from around the area to judge the exhibits,” said Ann
Rice, science fair coordinator. “It’s a real networking community for these
people.
”Rice explained that on the Friday, the event will be a
competition for grades 6 through 12. On Saturday, it will be a non-competitive
show for the grades K through 5.“It’s also a science exhibition,” said Rice.
“Organizations and businesses will be on hand with displays. These exhibitions
will line the hallways and foyer of the College.This science fair has a history
of its student participants achieving acclaim. A few years ago Keltie Murdoch
ended up going to the national competition for her experiment that recaptured
geothermal heating. She then went on to compete in the Taiwan International
Science Fair, earning fourth place honours.
Something special for this year’s event is that people can see
and hear Abigail Harrison, known as ‘Astronaut Abby’, who has devoted nearly
her entire 17 years to becoming one of the first astronauts on Mars. Check out
Astronautabby.com for her full story.So this coming April 10 and 11, come down
to the College of the Rockies and see the science of tomorrow
during the East Kootenay Regional Science Fair.
USA Rice Looks for Market Opportunities in the
Philippines
The Honorable Philip
Goldberg
MANILA,
PHILIPPINES -- This week, USA Rice is participating in a USDA-sponsored
Agribusiness Trade Mission to Malaysia and the Philippines led by Under
Secretary for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services Michael Scuse. Today, USA Rice Vice President for
International Promotion Jim Guinn received a detailed briefing on the economic,
agricultural, and political situation in the region from U.S. Ambassador Philip
Goldberg and his embassy staff.
Following the briefing, Guinn met with Ludovico Jarina, Deputy
Administrator of the National Food Authority (NFA), the agency responsible for
all governmental purchases of rice. As
expected, Jarina emphasized the sensitive nature of rice in the country.NFA,
once under the authority of the Agricultural Ministry, is now under control of
the Presidential Advisor on Agricultural Modernization and Food Security. Discussions centered on the current market
situation, the controlled access system of a tariff rate quota with attendant
country specific quotas (the U.S. does not hold a CSP), and what may take place
when the TRQ is scheduled to expire in 2017.
Total rice imports into the Philippines, including smuggled rice, will
equal approximately 1.5 million metric tons this year.
NFA's Jarina said there is a strong
market preference for long grain, but opportunities for U.S. rice here are
rather limited due to much lower priced long grain rice available from nearby
Thailand and Vietnam. However, sushi is
growing in popularity here, and Guinn thinks this may present niche market
opportunities for U.S. medium grain rice, which could be imported under the
omnibus (global) quota.
Contact: Deborah Willenborg
(703) 236-1444
Japan Announces Results of 14th Ordinary Import Tender in FY
2014
Courtesy: USA Rice Federation
Japan
Announces Results of 14th Ordinary Import Tender in FY 2014
|
Courtesy: USA Rice Federation
USA Rice Federation at
2015 Mid-South Farm & Gin Show
The USA Rice Federation is the commodity association that represents all industry
aspects (growers, millers, merchants) of the rice industry; they have members
in all 6 major rice producing states. While at the 2015 Mid-South Farm & Gin Show, Randy Jemison,
Director of Louisiana Field Operations for USA Rice Federation, spoke with
Chuck Zimmerman about their role in supporting rice production.
When asked about current
priorities for USA Rice Federation, Jemison said, “Our #1 priority is to make
all of our industry aspects viable, and profitable. On our production side,
it’s important to maintain markets and improve marketing via trade.” When Trade
Promotion Authority came up in conversation, Jemison stressed the importance of
trade for rice growers in the USA: “Anything dealing with trade that will allow
our government to make sure we are dealing on a level playing field is always
part of our focus.”Jemison mentioned price slide being a major concern due to
rice overstock around the world. “Our growers are growing the best rice in the
world but they’re fighting a tough battle right now with low prices so we’re
doing our best to protect and expand our markets.”
Sacramento Valley Rice Farmers
Considering Selling Water to SoCal
Posted Friday, March 13th 2015 @ 11am by KFBK News -
James Rojas
The rice industry in Sacramento
Valley has taken some hard hits in the past few years because of the drought. Now
farmers are now considering a big deal in Southern California for their
water. The Metropolitan Water District is offering to buy 37 billion
gallons of water for $71 million. This would give rice farmers the chance to
make more of a profit than they could from their crops. Almost all of
the buyers are located south of the Delta, where the water shortage is more
critical than here in the Sacramento Valley.California's rice industry has been
struggling, especially last year, when 140,000 acres were left unplanted.Nine
irrigation districts along the Feather River basin already have deals to sell a
portion of their water later this summer.The sale is voluntary, but it's going
to be hard for many to pass up the offer, especially with drought conditions
not expected to improve any time soon.
http://www.kfbk.com/articles/kfbk-news-461777/sacramento-valley-rice-farmers-considering-selling-13407672/#ixzz3UOhoTAAc
CME Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures
CME Group (Prelim): Closing Rough Rice Futures for March 13
|
Courtesy: USA Rice Federation
As drought worsens, L.A. water agency
offers cash to Sacramento Valley farmers
03/12/2015 4:48 PM
03/12/2015 11:48 PM
Almost all of the buyers
are located south of the Delta, where the water shortage is generally more
critical than in the Sacramento Valley.As many as 115,000 acre-feet of water
could be sold, or more than 37 billion gallons, to Metropolitan and its fellow
buyers. The result: a reduction in the amount of rice planted as farmers take
fields out of production. As it is, California’s rice industry is struggling to
recover from a difficult 2014, in which 140,000 acres were idled due to drought
and one-fourth of the crop didn’t get planted.on California’s water
allocations.
A generation ago, many in Northern California agriculture fought
tooth-and-nail against Metropolitan, which they viewed as the big bully from
Los Angeles that would use any means necessary to grab their water. Nowadays,
farmers are more apt to cut deals with the water giant, which serves 19 million
customers, figuring it makes more sense to negotiate than to wage war against
an entity with enormous political clout.If farmers don’t sell to Southern
California, “we could really be open to a lot of criticism from various parties
around the state,” said Bryce Lundberg of Lundberg Family
Farms, a Butte County rice grower that plans to participate in the
big water transfer. “You could get opened to more than just criticism.
”The deal also shows how severe the drought has become. A year ago,
some of the same Sacramento Valley water districts shipped some of their water
south at what seemed like an exorbitant price: $500 an acre-foot.This year’s
transaction will make 2014 look like a steal. Metropolitan and the others are
paying $700 an acre-foot. An acre-foot is 326,000 gallons, roughly a year’s
supply for two Southern California households.“
That reflects the desperation and the competition from the people
down there,” said Ted Trimble, general manager of the Western Canal WaterDistrict
in Richvale, Butte County, one of the participating sellers.Western Canal and
eight other Sacramento Valley water districts agreed to the tentative sale to a
group of purchasers led by the State Water Contractors, which represents
agencies that rely on the State Water Project. Metropolitan will get 61 percent
of the water and the Kern County Water Agency will get 31 percent. The rest
will be split among seven smaller agencies, mostly south of the Delta.
The volume of water ultimately directed south could shrink.
Several of the sellers, including Western Canal, won’t participate if their
allocations for this year are cut by the state.To that end, Metropolitan is
trying to scare up additional supplies from Northern California.“We’re hoping
to grow this pie larger,” said Steve Hirsch, the agency’s manager of water
transfers and exchanges, in remarks made earlier this week to Metropolitan’s
directors. “We’re still pursuing sellers.
”Southern California’s thirst for Sacramento Valley water doesn’t
sit well with some. Barbara Vlamis of AquAlliance, an advocacy group in Chico,
said selling water to Southern California harms the Valley’s environment and
economy.“When someone fallows 20 percent of their rice ground, it reverberates
through the ag community,” she said.Jim Morris, spokesman for the California
Rice Commission, said the commission wasn’t familiar with the tentative sale
and couldn’t comment on its impact on this year’s crop. “We’re still looking at
what the upcoming season will hold,” he said.
For growers, participating in the sale is voluntary, but the
economics make it hard to say no. Trimble said farmers in his district figure
to make a profit of about $1,000 to $1,500 an acre planting rice. Idling an
acre of rice would yield more than 3 acre-feet of water, or more than $2,100.Despite
the big payoff, the district won’t idle more than 10,740 acres, or about
one-sixth of its total. Trimble said growers have to take the long view; idling
all their land would mean the financial ruin of the mills and other businesses
that serve the rice industry, crippling farmers when the price of water drops
and they want to plant again.
“There’s a big industry here built up around the rice; we’ve got
to keep that going,” he said.Growers along the Feather River are in a position
of relative strength – water wise. Blessed with senior water rights, they
received 100 percent of their State Water Project allocation last year. While
this year’s allocation could be cut by as much as half, they’re better off than
many growers in other parts of the state. Last month the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation announced that farmers can expect nothing this year from the federal government’s
Central Valley Project, a major water source for many.As water becomes more
precious, the notion of selling some torments many farmers.
“We have growers in the district – they’re never going to sell a
drop of water,” said Thad Bettner, general manager of the Glenn-Colusa
Irrigation District.Glenn-Colusa, which draws from the Sacramento River, isn’t
involved in the sale to the Metropolitan group. But it has sold water at times.
Last year it made deals with a neighboring agency, the Tehama Colusa Canal
Authority, and the San Luis & Delta Mendota Water Authority, which serves a
vast swath of the San Joaquin Valley.Water sales also are occurring in
Sacramento’s backyard. Conaway Ranch, a 17,000-acre Yolo County farm controlled
by Sacramento land baron Angelo K. Tsakopoulos, has made deals with farmers who
own vineyards and almond orchards – permanent crops that must be watered every
year.
Conaway’s rice and other field crops can be idled.Conaway sold
some of its water last year at $325 an acre-foot and is fielding offers this
year on pricier terms, said general manager Bob Thomas.“Water is getting much
more expensive,” he said. “South of the Delta, the price is going to be much
higher.”Metropolitan isn’t thrilled about paying $700 an acre-foot for water.
But the Los Angeles agency needs the additional supply, despite having spent
billions of dollars on storage and conservation projects over the last few
years.
The State Water Project, which provides about one-third of
Southern California’s water, expects to deliver only 20 percent of normal
allocations this year. The Colorado River, Metropolitan’s other main source, is
running at less than 50 percent of normal. This year marks the first time since
2010 that Metropolitan has gone into the market to buy water from the
Sacramento Valley.
Hirsch said Metropolitan and its partners had to compete against
three other bidders, including the San Joaquin Valley’s massive Westlands Water
District, to make the deal for the Sacramento Valley water.“What a difficult
year it’s been to negotiate transfers,” the Metropolitan official told the
agency’s water planning and stewardship committee earlier this week. “It
reflects the competition ... and another year of drought.”
http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/water-and-drought/article13908632.html#storylink=cpy
Govt to Aid Farmers by Increasing Price of Rice
By Investor Daily on 10:17 pm Mar 12, 2015
Category Business, Commodities
Tags: Bulog, Indonesia
rice, Rice price
Jakarta. The government plans to raise the
price for unhusked rice in an attempt to boost farmers’ income during harvest
season, a time of year when an increase in supply pushes down prices,
Agriculture Minister Amran Sulaiman said on Wednesday.Amran
declined to elaborate on when the price hike will take place and by how much.
The rice harvest peaks between March and April. State-run Indonesian
Bureau of Logistics (Bulog) bought unhulled rice from farmers at about Rp
3,300 (25 cents) a kilogram in February. Prices have gradually
increased since then due to a short supply, reaching as high Rp 13,000 per
kilogram at retail consumer level. “It would be better for Bulog to buy
both hulled and unhulled rice at a high price, then sell them at a lower price
to consumers,” Amran said.
Investor Daily
Vietnam,
Thailand To Develop Sustainable Rice Markets
HANOI, March 13 (Bernama) -- Vietnam and Thailand's
agriculture ministers on Friday discussed cooperation on creating sustainable
rice markets and increasing value of farm produce exports.Thai Minister
Petipong Pungbun Naaydhya noted at the meeting with Vietnamese Minister Cao Duc
Phat that both countries are the two biggest exporters of agricultural products
in Southeast Asia and are among leading exporters in the world, Vietnam News
Agency (VNA) reported.
However, competitive global prices of farm produce have
pushed down prices of key staples such as rice, rubber, seafood, vegetables,
fruits and sugarcane and impacting farmers negatively.Vietnam and Thailand grow
similar rice seeds which collectively comprise more than half of global rice
exports.Petipong suggested both countries implement a strategy to develop a
sustainable farm produce market for their long-term mutual interests, including
defining grain standards, prices and quality.Phat reiterated Vietnam's desire
to work closely with Thailand to generate mutual long-term benefits.Vietnam is
home to four million hectares of rice and one million hectares of rubber.
-- BERNAMA
Vietnam, Thailand cooperate to develop agricultural
produce market
Vietnamese
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Cao Duc Phat talked with Thai
Minister of Agriculture and Cooperatives Petipong Pungbun Naaydhya about
cooperation in building a sustainable rice market and increasing the value of
export farm produce on March 12. Farmers harvest rice in Hon Dat District, Kien
Giang Province (Photo: SGGP)
Mr. Petipong
Pungbun Naaydhya said that Thailand and Vietnam are the two largest farm
produce exporters in the Southeast Asia and among the world top nations.However
competition among businesses have pushed up prices of many key export products
such as rice, rubber, seafood, vegetables and sugar causing damage for farmers.According
to a commitment joined by exporters in the region, they are not permitted to
offer rubber price of below US$1,500 a ton. However, a business shipped it at
US$1,450 under FOB (Free on Board) term from Da Nang Port in January, he cited.Similarly,
Thailand’s rice export price is lower than Vietnam’s. It averaged US$390 a ton
in the first two months this year while Vietnamese rice was priced at US$400.
The Thai Minister said that offering low
export price has resulted THB30 billion (US$914.47 million) in losses for their
country for the last couples of years.Vietnam and Thailand have many similar
rice varieties which account for 50 percent of the global rice export volume.He
proposed the two countries to map out cooperation strategies for a sustainable
export market with long term benefits and put an end to unhealthy competition
among businesses.Specifically they can work together to build strategies on
rice standards, prices, quality and productivity, he added.Minister Cao Duc
Phat affirmed that Vietnam would closely work with Thailand to take action for
long term benefits of the two sides.Vietnam is cultivating four million
hectares of rice and over one million hectare of rubber plants.
http://www.saigon-gpdaily.com.vn/National/2015/3/112986/
Top commerce officials fired for fake G2G Thai rice
deal with China
BY EDITOR ON 2015-03-13
THAILAND
Top commerce officials fired for fake
G2G rice deal with China
BANGKOK:
— The subcommittee of the Civil Service Commission has resolved to dismiss two
senior commerce officials involved with the fake G2G rice sale with China with
reason it caused severest damages to the country.It also resolved to halt
pension payment not to a retired senior commerce official who helped to
facilitate the fake deal.Minister of Commerce General Chatchai Sarikalya
revealed that the subcommittee of the Civil Service Commission has approved
during its meeting earlier today, the immediate firing of two commerce
officials, Tikhamporn Nataworntat, deputy director-general of the Internal
Trade Department and Akkarapong Teepwatchara, former director-general of the
Foreign Rice Trade Office, for the serious offences.
He
said at the same time the subcommittee also resolved to stop paying pension
indefinitely to the former director-general of the Department of Foreign Trade,
Manas Soiploy, for the same serious offences.According to minister, the three
persons were allegedly involved in assisting the unauthorized Chinese private
sector in getting the G2G rice deal through fraudulent channel.The move has
caused tremendous damages to the country.The minister said the three persons
could appeal for their case within 30 days.Their cases would be later forwarded
to the Civil and Criminal courts accordingly.
Rice
farmer upbeat about good harvest
March 13th, 2015 | by New Era Staff Reporter
OSHITEYATEMO – While mahangu and
maize farmers are preparing for a failed crop – one subsistence rice farmer is
certain about a good harvest. Rauna
Kleopas from Oshiteyatemo in Omusati Region grows rice in addition to mahangu.Kleopas
ventured into rice growing in 1999 and has over the years sustained her family
of 18.Growing only one rice variety at the time, she was able to produce enough
surplus to sell to earn a little income to help her fulfill other needs.
Today Kleopas counts among seasoned rice farmers and has
successfully transformed herself from growing one rice variety to growing three
varieties.“Although the mahangu crops have died, I will still be able to
produce enough rice to feed my family this year,” said Kleopas.Kleopas was
motivating and encouraging potential rice farmers at a Namibia-Japan rice and
mahangu project field day held at Oshiteyatemo on Tuesday.
The event was organized by the University of Namibia’s Ogongo
campus in Omusati Region.With her wide experience in planting and transplanting
rice, Kleopas has also trained more than 20 farmers on how to plant and
transplant rice in their own fields.Kleopas has undergone training from
preparing her field to harvesting, at Unam’s Ogongo campus.Although the project
has been going very well, Kleopas relates that lack of equipment, timing, land
preparation and lack of motivation are among many factors that are a challenge
to growing rice successfully.
“Some farmers that we started off with at the project dropped
out mainly because of inexperience. We also started with direct planting
instead of transplanting and there was also a delay in harvesting,” recalled
Kleopas.However she encouraged other potential rice farmers to grow rice to
sustain their families in instances where the rain is too much or too little,
such as this year when rains have been erratic.She said farmers living close to
low-lying areas that have water for sustained periods of time should utilize
such places to increase crop production.Potential rice farmers are encouraged
to visit the Ogongo campus for basic training and information sharing on how to
grow rice successfully.The Namibia-Japan rice and mahangu project was
introduced three years ago.
Details of
rice, rubber deals ironed out
13 Mar 2015
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
| WRITER: PHUSADEE
ARUNMAS
Thailand and China were
able to sort out a 2-million-tonne rice and 200,000-tonne rubber deal on
Thursday, agreeing to sign two contracts in Beijing on May 8.Commerce Minister
Chatchai Sarikulya said the two parties agreed the rice deal would be based on
the free-on-board price and China would be responsible for providing the
shipping lines and determining the rice volume on each shipment.They also
agreed to hire independent surveyors to inspect the rice quality, ensuring it
meets qualifications and standards as stipulated in the contract.Delivery is
anticipated from July onwards.
Gen Chatchai spoke at the end of a two-day
Thailand-China meeting in Bangkok about monitoring the progress of the
memorandum of understanding (MoU) for the 2-million-tonne rice sale.The
MoU was signed last December for 1 million tonnes each of old and new grains
along with 200,000 tonnes of rubber.Deliveries of rice and
rubber were set for this year and next.The contract will be made through
the China National Cereals, Oils and Foodstuffs Corporation,
the giant state enterprise that oversees rice imports, to ensure
transparency.The transaction with China is unrelated to an earlier deal
for 1 million tonnes struck by the Yingluck Shinawatra government.
Thailand has already delivered 300,000
tonnes as part of that deal.Gen Chatchai said Chinese officials urged Thailand
to speed up shipping the remaining 700,000 tonnes. Of that 700,000 tonnes,
China instructed Thailand to ship 300,000 tonnes at market prices by this July.
Delivery for the remaining 400,000 tonnes will be tabled for further discussion
at the May 8 Beijing meeting.For the rubber contract, he said the government
assigned the Rubber Estate Organization to sign with China's state-owned
Sinochem.
Of the
planned 200,000 tonnes, 150,000 tonnes will be ribbed smoked sheet and 50,000
tonnes rubber block.The government has vowed to dispose of 17 million tonnes
of rice in state stockpiles within two years, with 10 million tonnes
to be sold this year.On March 5, it sold 780,000 tonnes in the second auction
of state rice this year, fetching more than 8 billion baht.Last month, the
government endorsed the sale of 496,243 tonnes worth 7.85 billion baht in the
year's first auction. The ministry has called five auctions since
last May, selling a combined 1.12 million tonnes for 13.6 billion baht.Also
this month it secured a government-to-government contract
to sell 200,000 tonnes of rice to the Philippines.Get full Bangkok
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Courtesy: Bangkok Post
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