Turmoil hits rice millers
hard
Yasir Wardad
The
ongoing blockade which started from January 6 last has affected the operation
of nearly 80 per cent of rice mills during the peak Aman season.Meanwhile, the
city traders said the prices of rice have already recorded some rise and the
trend will continue because of their depleting stocks.
The
price of Swarna, the widely grown rice variety in Aman season is being traded
at Tk 35-36 per kg while Miniket at Tk 48-52 per kg, Paijam at Tk 38-40 (new)
and Tk 44-46 (old) per kg, Najirshail at Tk 56-57, Brri dhan-28 at Tk 42-44 per
kg, Brridhan 29 at Tk 40-42 per kg in the city's kitchen markets for the last
two weeks.Supply of rice from the big milling hubs including Dinajpur, Rangpur,
Kushtia, Joypurhat, Naogaon and Pabna has declined by 80 per cent for ten days,
Md Abdul Wahed, a rice trader at Kochukhet Bazar said."I need supply of 18
tonnes of rice per week.
The
last truck entered my godown Kochukhet Bazar on January 4," he said.Traders
at Maulovibazar, Chhoto Katra, Nowabganj Bazar and Mohammadpur Krishi market
also had the same views that of Mr Wahed.
They
said their stock will be exhausted in a few days which may cause increase in
price.Secretary of Bangladesh Auto Major and Husking Mills Owners' Association,
the biggest platform of the country's rice millers, KM Layek Ali, said that the
sector is incurring at least Tk 1.0 billion loss per day due to the suspension
of operation of 80 per cent mills.Nearly 7.0 million workers do not have any
work to do.He said 80 per cent out of 20000 mills across the country have
stopped their operation which will have a serious impact on market as price of
the staple may hike significantly.
He
said in peak seasons like Boro and Aman, millers husk nearly 60000 tonnes per
day (for three months) which has been reduced to just 15000 tonnes as orders
from Dhaka, Chittagong and elsewhere in the country are being cancelled fearing
vandalism in highways.Mr Layek said nearly 550-600 trucks laden with 10000 tonnes
of rice move to big cities per day from north-western region.
The
number has been reduced to now just 80-100, he said.Shahidur Rahman Patwary
Mohan, executive member of BAMHMOA said truck owners are not willing to ply
their vehicles and the owners who are taking risk is charging double
fare."Truck fare from Dinajpur has gone up to Tk 24000-25000 which was
Tk13500-14000 in pre-blockade period," he said.He said apart from the 22
million farmers, nearly 7.0 million people are directly involved in rice milling
and another 4.0 million are indirectly depend on it.
He
said the mill owners and the workers are passing a tough time due to the
blockade.Most of the mills depend on bank loans and count interest of 17-19 per
cent which is adjusted in three months' basis.He said, "Most of the
millers will not be able to pay back the loan in 45 days which will put them in
difficulties to get loans in future.
"However,
transport owners are in great fear to run their vehicles on highways during the
ongoing blockade despite the government's assurance of providing enough
security and compensation.Truck, bus and covered van owners said they were not
getting enough confidence to run their vehicles because of growing attacks on
transports like buses, trucks, pickups and covered vans on the country's
highways.Official data showed that a total of 230 vehicles were torched since
January 4 to January 15 by the pickets all over the country. The number
included 115 buses, 65 trucks, 65 covered vans and cargoes, 15 pickups and 8
cars.
Ensuring survival of jute
mills
The closure of as many as 25 jute mills, as a sequel to sluggish
jute export to the world market and plummeting demand for jute bags across the
globe, is an unpropitious development. It makes a sad commentary on the state
of affairs involving jute, once called the golden fibre of Bangladesh. On its
part, the government had framed the mandatory jute packaging law 2010 in a bid
to cushion the export-dependent industry against vagaries of international
trade.
Under the provisions of that
piece of law, jute sacks should have been used mandatorily to pack food grains
and other items. Even all rice millers and traders could be instructed to clear
their stock of plastic bags. But private sector businesses still remain
non-compliant -- citing higher costs of jute sacks than poly-propylene or
plastic bags.Furthermore, no effective step has yet been taken to help
diversify uses of jute although the International Jute Study Group (IJSG),
headquartered in Dhaka, has a good deal of expertise in this regard.
The IJSG could help its member-countries including Bangladesh
diversify the uses of jute by transferring low-cost technology. Without
diversification of products and implementation of the mandatory use of jute
bags locally, the country's jute mills would turn sick in the near future. It
is time to enforce effectively the provisions of the Jute Packaging Act to
create domestic demand for jute products. What is the import of the law if it
is not implemented even after five years? It is relevant to note that India,
Bangladesh's next-door neighbour, enforced its law about domestic uses of jute
goods in 1987 but that is still to be done so in this country.Diversification
of uses of jute can help restore the glory that it once enjoyed so enviably.
In neighbouring India, a United Nations Development
Programme-supported project (UNDP) has facilitated diversification of jute
sector by developing new technology, promoting employment opportunities by
encouraging new entrepreneurs to set up production units and developing
indigenous machine manufacturing sector. Some of the on-going projects there
are aimed at facilitating uses of jute for production of paper, needle-punched
carpets as well as development of multi-component yarn from wool, natural and
other fibres for floor coverings, blankets and knitwear.More than 400,000
people from farmers to exporters' level are involved in Bangladesh's jute
sector. A total of 145 jute mills are operating under the BJMA and 26 under
Bangladesh Jute Mills Corporation (BJMC), representing private and public sector
production units respectively.
Major government-owned jute
enterprises in the jute sector under the BJMC need to analyse more closely the
cost of production and its impacts on the viability of the private sector. The
private sector mills do also need to be encouraged pro-actively to be
innovative. At the same time, this has to be kept in mind that efficiency of
men and machine makes or breaks the industry. Therefore the situation needs to
be closely reviewed at that level. The sector has to look at means to achieving
greater efficiency if it is to survive. Also the fact remains incontestable
that in this situation, the government should implement the mandatory jute
packaging law immediately. In the future Bangladesh's jute goods would largely
have to be marketed locally.
Rice board head:
Cuban trade could be big for Louisiana
By - Associated
Press - Sunday, January 18, 2015
LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) - Lifting the U.S. trade
embargo against Cuba could mean the return of a major market for Louisiana
rice, Louisiana Rice Promotion Board chairman Kevin Berken says.He said Cuba
imports about 600,000 metric tons of rice a year, with Vietnam as its biggest
supplier.“Prior to the embargo, Cuba was the largest importer of Louisiana
rice,” he told a conference Friday at the Petroleum Club.
“So it
is critically important for us to be able open trade with other countries, Cuba
being the main focus. It has been a focus for the last 20 or 30 years.”Berken
was among four panelists, The Advertiser (http://bit.ly/1GfwpKt ) reported. It
happened to be a day after the government announced President Barack Obama’s
amendments to existing Cuban sanctions.Only Congress can fully end the 54-year
embargo.“Eventually, the embargo will be lifted, and there isn’t a thing in the
world that Cuba doesn’t need,” said Gary LaGrange, president and CEO of the
Port of New Orleans. Its location 700 miles from Louisiana’s coast makes New
Orleans an especially convenient port, he said.
Commerce Minister visits
Hong Kong for cooperation
Date : 18 มกราคม 2558
HONG KONG, 18 January 2015 (NNT) – The Thai Minster of Commerce is
on a business trip visiting Hong Kong to enhance the trade cooperation and push
forward the ASEAN - Hong Kong FTA framework to be completed by 2016. The
Minster of Commerce Gen. Chatchai Sarikulya has revealed his official meeting
with the Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development of Hong Kong Gregory
So, that he is satisfied with the meeting’s outcome.
He has said that both sides have agreed to extend the trade
cooperation and exchanged beneficial comments for trade developments in the
future, especially for the ASEAN - Hong Kong Free Trade Area (FTA) agreement,
which Thailand is appointed as the coordinating country to push the FTA
framework forward towards the targeted time in the year 2016.
The ASEAN - Hong Kong FTA will benefit ASEAN countries in the
inclusion of utilizing the trade gateway of Hong Kong to mainland China free of
tax, while Hong Kong can extend its trade and investment to the ASEAN market
that houses 600 million residents. The Thai Minister has said that the Ministry
of Commerce has settled the strategies and plans to extend the Thai rice
exports to the Hong Kong market through various strains of rice to comply with
the individual demands in Hong Kong.
For example, the Hom Mali Rice is aimed for the domestic
consumption market through modern trade, and the Hom Patum Rice is aimed for
restaurants and hotels market, while the organic rice will be introduced to the
younger generations. In this occasion, the Minster of Commerce has given the
Best Friend of Thai Rice Award to the seven Hong Kong rice importers that have
imported Thai rice in the past ten years. He has also stressed that the Thai
government is aware of the Hong Kong market's importance to Thai rice, and will
control the quality of rice exports to be high in accordance with demand of
consumers in Hong Kong.
Million-Ton
Rice Export Goal Remains Elusive
This was
meant to be a milestone year for Cambodia’s rice industry, with the government
aiming to export 1 million tons of the country’s staple crop by the end of
2015.But with milled rice exports reaching just 387,061 tons in 2014, up a mere
2.2 percent from 378,856 tons in 2013, according the Agriculture Ministry, the
government has revised down its expectations for this year. And industry
experts say major hurdles remain if the country is to hit the ambitious export
target in the years to come.
Hean
Vanhan, deputy director-general in the Agriculture Ministry’s general directorate
of agriculture, estimated that Cambodia would export about 600,000 tons of
milled rice in 2015, depending on how successful the government and private
sector are at tapping into new foreign markets.“We are still in the middle of
big rice exporters in the region. We’ve just started [exporting] so it’s not a
bad result,” Mr. Vanhan said Sunday.“We need to find more markets and for
consumers to recognize Cambodian rice,” he added.In 2010, the government
created a new rice policy with the goal of increasing paddy production,
encouraging domestic milling and ultimately raising exports, all in a bid to
boost the country’s rural economy.
According
to an October economic update from the World Bank, significant gains were made
in the ensuing years.“[Cambodia’s] modern rice milling capacity (i.e. the
larger mills) increased sevenfold, from 96 tons per hour (tph)…in 2009 to over
700 tph in late 2013,” the report says.It adds that paddy production more than
doubled from 2003 to 2013, from 4.3 million tons to 9.3 tons, and notes that
Cambodia’s jasmine rice has been repeatedly named the world’s best rice by the
World Rice Conference.
Another
industry development came in May, when the country’s myriad miller and exporter
associations united to form the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF), electing Sok
Puthyvuth, the son of Deputy Prime Minister Sok An and CEO of local
conglomerate Soma Group, as its president.Upon being elected, Mr. Puthyvuth
said the two greatest obstacles to increasing exports were a lack of available funds
and the quality of crops.Nearly eight months later, Mr. Puthyvuth said this
year’s focus would be on improving seed quality, financing, transportation,
market access and branding of Cambodian rice.
“[It]
has been about 7 months now since the federation started, and it’s been
challenging trying to fulfill our members expectation and overcoming our
current internal and external challenges,” Mr. Puthyvuth said in an email last
week.The biggest blow to exports last year, he said, was due to the competition
from Cambodia’s neighbors.“Given that Myanmar [is] coming into the picture, and
Thailand still [has] a lot of surplus. Cambodia will need to work very hard
this year to improve our competitiveness,” he said.
From
January to March, year-on-year exports plummeted 11 percent, from 95,228 tons
in 2013 to 84,330 tons last year, due mainly to Thailand offloading its vast
rice stocks to international buyers following the crash of its state subsidy
plan.And Thailand’s rush to sell is showing no signs of slowing.According to
the Thai Rice Exporters Association, Thailand exported 9.49 million tons last
year, compared to 6.61 million tons in 2013, a figure expected to remain steady
this year.And since Burma entered a duty-free trade program with the European
Union in 2013—similar to the one that boosted Cambodia’s exports beginning in
2010—the country has emerged as a major rice exporter.
Srey
Chanthy, an independent economist who focuses on agriculture, said last week
that the fallout from Thailand’s failed subsidy program would continue to drag
down Cambodia’s exports. And with fierce competition from India, Pakistan and
Burma, he said, the 1-million-ton target remains a long way off.“Cambodia
cannot compete and I don’t think it’ll achieve the million ton target because
it is far beyond [our reach],” Mr. Chanthy said.Darren Cooper, a senior
economist at the London-based International Grains Council, said the CRF has
been integral to giving the industry a “credible platform,” adding that
Cambodia needed to find new markets for its rice if it hopes to increase
official export figures.
“Most
international forecasters would probably say that shipments are already at that
[1-million-ton] level when one takes into account unofficial or border trade
for instance,” Mr. Cooper said in an email earlier this month.“In the longer
term, the emphasis will be on further expanding the geographic diversity of the
country’s exports if they are to move significantly higher,” he said.In August,
Cambodia made a significant step toward upping its exports when it signed a
breakthrough deal with China to export 100,000 tons by April.
The
government inked a separate 30,000-ton deal with China later last year.But
Cambodia still lacks the transport infrastructure, facilities and capital to
guarantee the supply necessary for major trade deals, David Van, executive
director of rice miller and exporter Boost Riche Cambodia, said last week.Mr.
Van said the country also needs far more high-quality seeds than it currently
receives in order to produce bigger and better paddy yields. Due to a lack of
funds available to farmers and restrictive seed-import conditions set by the
government, the quantity of available seeds is “a far cry” from what is needed,
he said.
“You
need a license to import seeds. But it’s not easy to get a license because it
takes about six months and you have to submit seed samples and wait for the
Ministry of Agriculture to plant and test them,” he said.Another hindrance to
official exports is the informal cross-border trade in paddy, Mr. Van
added.“Millers don’t have easy access to loans to buy and store rice and
farmers have to sell the paddy to pay back their loans,” he said. “So if the
millers don’t have sufficient access to capital, its natural the paddy leaks
out to Vietnam.”The World Bank’s October report also notes that high fuel and
electricity costs in Cambodia make milling 30 percent more expensive than in
Vietnam and Thailand.
“In
theory, the existing milling capacity could process almost the entire paddy
surplus in Cambodia,” the report says.An area in which Cambodia has made
particularly slow progress is in forming institutions to certify and test crops
before shipment.According to a report released last week by the Geneva-based
International Trade Center, this was an impediment to trade for 89 percent of
agriculture exporters in the country last year.“Few agencies in Cambodia are
capable of testing and certification of products for export,” the report says.
Despite
a mountainous task ahead, Yaing Saing Koma, president of the Cambodian Center
for Study and Development in Agriculture, a local NGO, said on Friday that he
believed the government could hit its 1-million-ton target by 2017.“This year,
the government may make energy costs go down, which will also help the
profitability,” he said.“And if there are more government-to-government deals,
especially with China, we’ll be able to export more.”
Cuban trade holds
many benefits for Louisiana
Jessica Goff7:29 p.m. CST January 17, 2015
Louisiana is ready to regain a major industry it lost 50 years ago
when the United States placed an embargo on Cuba. “Prior to the embargo, Cuba
was the largest importer of Louisiana rice,” said Kevin M. Berken, chairman of
Louisiana Rice Promotion Board, Friday inside the Petroleum Club. “So it is
critically important for us to be able open trade with other countries, Cuba
being the main focus. It has been a focus for the last 20 or 30 years.”Berken
was one of four panelists Friday who spoke during a conference addressing the
recent U.S. decision to lift portions of the longstanding embargo.
The conference was hosted by Le Centre International de
Lafayette.“We are not going to talk about politics. We are going to talk about
who’s against and who’s for,” said Philippe Gustin, international trade manager
for the center, before introducing speakers. “We are going to talk about how
Louisiana and Cuban people can work together to conduct business and conduct
cultural exchange and visit each other.”Other panelists included Gary P.
LaGrange, president and CEO of the Port of New Orleans; Charles Larroque,
executive director of Council for the Development of French in Louisiana; and
Larry Sides, president of SIDES & Associates.The conference came the day
after the U.S. Departments of the Treasury and Commerce announced President
Barack Obama’s amendments to existing Cuban sanctions, Gustin said.
“These changes will immediately enable the American people to
provide more resources to empower the Cuban population to become less dependent
upon the state-driven economy, and help facilitate our growing relationship
with the Cuban people,” the White House said in its press release Thursday.As
of now, Mexico is the largest importer of U.S. rice with 800,000 metric tons a
year, Berken said. But the rice industry wants to re-establish its relationship
with the Caribbean country that once demanded the domestically grown crop.“Cuba
is the second largest importer of rice in the Americas. They have the highest
per capita consumption of rice, which is about 200 pounds,” he said. Cuba grows
about 400,000 metric tons of its own rice, but imports 600,000 metric tons, or
$300 million worth, Berken said.
As of now, its biggest supplier is Vietnam.“When we were sending
rice there in the early 2000s, there were lines formed around the block and
people would wait for hours trying to get our rice,” Berken said. “The Cuban
people like the rice we grow here.
”Although the embargo was never lifted, tension between the U.S.
and Cuba eased a bit during the Clinton administration, Sides said.Sides has
traveled to Cuba 24 times in the last 15 year on the religious license. He said
he does not get involved in any political aspect of the country. He merely goes
for mission trips and for leisure, he said.“I’m simply fascinated with the
country,” Sides said Friday. The only way the U.S. will fully be able to
establish a diplomatic relationship with the country, and that includes
tourism, is for the U.S. to completely lift the embargo, he said.
LaGrange agrees.
“Eventually, the embargo will be lifted,” Lagrange said, “and there
isn’t a thing in the world that Cuba doesn’t need.”The country is only 700
miles from Louisiana’s coast, making it prime for convenient trade especially
from the Port of New Orleans, LaGrange said.There’s talk of a Cuban consulate
being built in the U.S. and New Orleans may be vying against Tampa, Florida, as
a host city, he said.Culturally, Cuba’s Creole heritage could be well connected
to Acadiana, Larroque said.“Louisiana should be next in line,” he said. “We
need a consulate in New Orleans.“I believe we have a wonderful opportunity to
resist the economic dark clouds that are on the horizon by again adding the
value to the true Louisiana brand, which is Creole,” he said. “It’s Cajun; it’s
Creole — it’s old colonial Creole and maybe a new element to the mix is Cuban
Creole.”
Look ‘Inside the Embargo’
Larry
Sides has made 24 humanitarian trips to Cuba over the past 14 years, using his
camera to document life inside the embargo. At 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Sides will
present “Inside the Embargo,” a look at life in Cuba at The Daily Advertiser
Community Room, 1100 Bertrand Drive, Lafayette.
(Photo: AP file photo)
Source with thanks:
Rice conference coming next week
Posted: Saturday, January 17, 2015 3:00 am
The Western Rice Belt Production Conference is
coming to the El Campo Civic Center Wednesday, Jan. 21 and rice producers are
encouraged to attend.“Each year we present current market information and
current production practices,” Wharton County Ag Extension Agent Corrie Bowen
said. “But two key points of interest to anyone in the rice market will be the
latest on farm policy and marketing for the 2015 crop.”
DA to expand rice R&D
efforts to boost output
January 18, 2015
QUEZON CITY, Jan. 18 -- The Department of Agriculture said that it
plans to expand its research and development efforts on rice to help further
improve the production of the crop.
Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala in a statement said the DA
also intends to intensify the commercialization of diversified and integrated
rice-based farming systems such as Palayamanan to enable farmers increase their
productivity and incomes. In Palayamanan, for instance, farmers are taught to
combine rice growing with the cultivation of vegetables and other high value
crops, as well as fish and livestock raising. DA promotes the technology
through the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) and National Rice
Program.Rice production in the Philippines has been on the uptrend for the past
three years. Between 2010 and 2013, milled rice production grew by an average
of 4.04 percent according to PhilRice. In 2014, palay harvest is projected to reach 18.88 million
MT, 2.4% bigger than the 2013 record output of 18.44 million MT.
Alcala said the entire country owes this to the farmers who
tirelessly worked to lead the country towards greater rice sufficiency and
increased food security."We could not have reached these milestones
without the farmers and without prompt and proper intervention from the
government. Never before has the
Philippines had this increment in rice," Alcala said.DA is also banking on
its current partnership with the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI),
in support of the government’s food security blueprint called the Food Staples
Sufficiency Program. Under the
agreement, DA and IRRI work together to produce and distribute high-quality and
improved rice seeds that are adaptable to climate change. In addition, best
agricultural practices and other support tools will be disseminated, including
skills-training for extension and field workers.
“The Department also intends to engage in profiling, finger
printing and purification of traditional varieties with export potentials,”
Alcala said.He added, regional or provincial location specific technology
development and adaptive studies for irrigated, rain-fed and upland ecosystem,
is also included in the DA’s agenda.Participatory varietal selection for
favorable and adverse environment is included in the DA’s expanded R&D
agenda for rice.The DA will also enhance rice research capability and capacity,
which includes improving and increasing facilities, equipment and manpower.
(DA-OSEC)
Published: January 18, 2015
"There is
a need to modernise our agricultural practices on the lines of advanced
economies," Parc Chairman Dr Iftikhar Ahmad. PHOTO: APP
ISLAMABAD: The Ministry of National Food
Security and Research will establish agriculture research and development
boards in all provinces in a bid to give a push to research and innovation in
the agricultural sector.This was discussed in a meeting held on Friday
at the Pakistan Agriculture Research Council (Parc), chaired by National Food
Security and Research Secretary Sirat Asghar and attended by different
stakeholders.The research boards will be part of the Agricultural Innovation
Programme, an initiative funded by the US Agency for International Development
(USAID) and managed by the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Programme
in partnership with Parc and other stakeholders.
The
objectives of the innovation programme are to increase crop productivity and
the production value of livestock, horticultural and cereal crops, resulting in
an increase in the income of Pakistan’s farmers.International centres like the
International Livestock Research Institute, International Rice Research
Institute, Asian Vegetable Research and Development Centre and University of
California, Davis are working as partners to support the agricultural research
community in achieving the goals of the programme.
According
to an official of Parc, each of the provincial boards will have the board of
directors and an executive committee to run the affairs and channel grants to
the province.The research boards will support expansion of provincial linkages
to national, regional and international communities through a mechanism of
coordination. They will play a growing role in the administration of
competitive grants.National Food Security and Research Secretary Sirat Asghar
commented that the innovation programme was playing an important role in
strengthening agricultural research.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 18th,
2015.
Source with thanks: The Express Tribune
Andhra Pradesh
government inks pact with ICRISAT to boost sustainable farming
By
PTI | 18 Jan, 2015, 02.25PM IST
"The
agreement with ICRISAT is part of the state government's plans to increase
productivity of agriculture and allied sectors," the state government
said.HYDERABAD: The Andhra
Pradesh government has signed a pact with International Crop Research
Institute for Semi-arid Tropics (ICRISAT) to provide assistance in making agriculture
sustainable and profitable. "The agreement with ICRISAT is part of the state government's plans to increase
productivity of agriculture and allied sectors," the state government
said. The Memorandum of Agreement was signed yesterday in the presence of Chief
Minister N Chandrababu
Naidu by Special Chief Secretary (Planning) S P Tucker and ICRISAT
Director-General David Bergvinson.
Through
the agreement, the best technological tools and scientific practices from
across the world will be incorporated into primary sector activities, said a
state government release quoting the Chief Minister. As part of the agreement,
the ICRISAT would prepare a "strategy paper" for primary sector
mission, hold research and development and establish "sites of
learning" in districts. ICRISAT would also bring in international
expertise from other CGIAR centres
like International Livestock Research Centre (ILRI), International Rice
Research Institute (IRRI), International Water Management (IWMI), Asia
Vegetable Research and Development Centre (AVRDC), International Centre for
Improvement of Maize and Development Centre (AVRDC), World Fish Centre and
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). This consortium (of
international organisations) will also bring in regional and national research
institutions for the benefit of farmers.
Facilitation
of detailed plan preparations for operationalising the mission annually by
providing guidance and technical support to mission coordinator would also be
done by the ICRISAT. The institute would establish pilot sites of learning in
13 districts (10,000 hectares each) of AP for increasing productivity,
profitability and sustainability through science-led development and
climate-smart agriculture.
ICRISAT
would also develop quality assurance system for soil analytical laboratories in
the state, undertake capacity building for staff and help in upgrading existing
soil labs for complete nutrient profile analysis. It would assist in developing
PPP mode guidelines, mobilising private entrepreneurs and preparing DPRs and
organise Global Investors Meet, the release added.
Saturday,
17 January 2015 17:26
Written
by Marcel Mbamalu
EVEN as
the rice market experiences its peak season, serious crisis may be looming in
the value chain due mainly to regulatory snag, sharp market practices and bogus
investment speculations by investors, checks by The Guardian has
revealed. Rice production has been hailed to be Nigeria’s
next income spinner, with mills sprouting in the different parts of the country
and markets flooded with locally made rice. But feelers from government
quarters and the millers suggest that all is not well with the so-called rice
revolution.
The first hint of worry was dropped last week
when the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina,
raised the alarm that foreign investors were sabotaging Federal Government’s
efforts in the rice value chain, claiming that excess import duties on rice
imports owed by investors amounted to billions of naira. But
the Nigerian Rice Millers Association (NRMA) said the allegations were
“baseless and misconceived,” noting that a retroactive quota allocation by the
ministry was to blame. Also, they argued that the quotas were skewed in favour
of speculated investors who have no real investments on ground to show for
their interest in rice production.
However, a document obtained from a source,
who is a major stakeholder in the rice industry, revealed that the crisis in
the sector was mostly caused by sharp practices of Indian and Thai merchants
and traders who import finished, packaged rice, causing glut in the Nigerian
rice market. According to the source: “Indian and Thailand merchants and
traders have dumped large imports of finished packaged rice into the Nigerian
rice market. This has led to a major glut in the local rice market with
consequent collapse of prices. Locally milled rice cannot compete against cheap
and low quality imported rice from foreign countries. Subsidies and export
incentives have been granted to these merchants in their home countries.
Also recently, the Nigerian-Vietnam Chambers of Commerce reportedly disclosed
that Nigeria spends about $500 million (about N90bn) annually on rice
importation from Vietnam; whereas the latter spends a paltry $100 million to
import agricultural products like raw cashew nuts, cassava and oil palm from
Nigeria. Mr. Oye Akinsemoyin, the President of the Chamber, reportedly
gave the figures. Mr. Timothy Obadina, a Lagos-based licensed
Customs agent, had harped on the matter and rued Nigeria’s penchant for importing
“things that are produced locally.”
“This is the figure for Vietnam; we have not added the ones from Thailand,
China and Indonesia. By the time we put all the figures together, it will be
astronomical. Yet, you hear government officials using every opportunity
to say how they have been growing the economy,” Obadina was quoted as saying.
An email from a rice farmer, who is very conversant with the
‘import quota system,’ at the weekend, explained the far-reaching implications
of the development, saying: “Nigerian rice farmers cannot sell their produce of
paddy.
This is the peak season for rice in Nigeria,
but farmers cannot sell because market prices are low. Prices now offered by
local rice millers are substantially below their cost of production. Farmers
are losing, and the earlier gains recorded in the sector are being wiped out by
the current crisis.” Rice farmers generally complain of low patronage of
locally milled rice due to prejudice and preference for imported products,
which have caused farmers severe losses. The source claimed that, “even
government agencies buy imported rice for all their social functions. Some of
these agencies include National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and others
involved in Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) activities.”
“Local farmers are in cash crisis. They are discouraged, frustrated and are
unwilling to go back to production. Local rice millers face business failure or
may collapse. They are left to contend with unsold stocks, zero profits, and
compounded losses. There is also the huge infrastructure burden of
electricity,” it stated. Alleging poor management of rice imports and
governments unfulfilled promises to local farmers and millers, the document
said: “poor management of import tariff and smuggling; import quota not
released on time and ineffectual control and management of imports are the
immediate and remote causes of the crisis. There is also the tardy
implementation of otherwise good policies and strategies.
Promised improvements were not implemented
such as staple crop processing centers, silo lease, paddy aggregation centers,
agriculture mechanization, and irrigation schemes reactivation. “Current import
quotas are not fairly distributed. New investors without actual investments on
ground are favoured far more than people who have actual assets and investments
on ground. Traders and speculators are favoured against serious local players
who are already producing with massive investments. Government has encouraged
speculators instead of farmers and serious rice millers.”
The debate
The
Federal Government, last week, alleged that foreign investors were sabotaging
the rice policy, claiming that some of them owe the government debts amounting
to about N36.56bn, which was incurred for exceeding their preferential
allocated quotas for imports. The Minister of Agriculture and
Rural Development, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, citing data from Nigerian Customs,
identified Popular Farms and Mills as well as other importers as responsible
for exceeding their import quotas under the new policy.
However, The Nigerian Rice Millers Association
(NRMA), at the weekend, said the Minister only imposed quota in December 2014,
and requested payment of excess duties for importations made when quota was not
in place. They accused the Federal Government of imposing penalties
retroactively.Claiming that they do not owe the Federal Government, the rice
millers maintained that the figures are “misconceived and baseless.” They said
that the letters written by some of their members to the Minister shouldn’t be
mistaken as an attempt at sabotage, as members had worked out their costs,
sales prices and planned ahead based on an earlier circular.
The ministry had identified three other companies, including Conti-Agro, Central
Trading and Export and African firms as having imported 98,285 metric tonnes of
rice without approved quotas, thereby owing the treasury N8.16 billion.
A
statement from the ministry hinted that the companies had imported 634,270.16
metric tonnes of finished rice without directives by the inter-ministerial
committees or issuance of quotas. Adesina had said: “Nigeria cannot lose
any revenue due to the economy. All companies who have imported rice above
their allocated quotas must pay fully the amounts due to the treasury. With the
devaluation of the Naira, all hands must be on deck to ensure that all leakages
are blocked. Nigeria is not for sale.
“I will not be intimidated, bought or corrupted. I will not sell my country to
any foreign company. The President has given us a clear matching order to make
Nigeria self-sufficient in rice and we will fully achieve this. All who owe the
Federal Government must pay what they owe and Nigeria must lose no single
naira. No amount of malicious representation will derail the new policy.”
According to the statement, “rather than pay the levies owed, the two firms
wrote letters to the Minister asking for a revision of their rice import
quotas; Olam asked for 400,000 metric tonnes rice import quota, to cover the
quantities of rice that they had gone ahead to import (or still desire to
import) without any approved quotas or Domestic Rice Production Plans (DRPP) as
required, but a mere agreement with Nigerian Customs that they would pay the
duties due once the quota allocations are out.”
But the NRMA, in a statement, said that
the minister didn’t present the true picture of things, as there must have been
gaps in information passed to him. According to the statement, “Sometime in May
2014, the Minister of Finance issued a circular titled, 2014-2017 Fiscal Policy
Measures on Rice, in which it states that the President had granted approval
for the review of the fiscal policy measures on rice to encourage investments
in the rice value chain through backward integration with effect from May, 26,
2014.” The circular, according to the NRMA read: “Importation of Husked
Brown rice (H.S. Code 10006.2000.00) and semi-milled or wholly milled rice,
whether or not polished or glazed (H.S. Code 10006.3010.00), by investors with
rice milling capacity and verifiable backward integration programme, shall
attract 10 percent duty rate with a levy of 20 percent and will be limited to
the national supply gap to be determined by the Committee (for a period of
fours) and; Importation of Husked Brown rice (H.S. Code 10006.2000.00) and
semi-milled or wholly milled rice, whether or not polished or glazed (H.S. Code
10006.3010.00), by pure traders, shall attract an import duty rate of 10
percent plus 60 percent levy.”
After
complying with the dictates of the circular, importing rice to meet the
national supply gap, the NRMA claimed to have received a letter early in
December dated November, 27, in which the Minister of Agriculture and Rural
Development, informed them that an import quota had been tentatively assigned
to each of the rice importers and demanded that they pay into the national
treasury a higher tariff of 10 percent duty and 60 percent levy for a
surplus. According to the statement, “The circular came into immediate
effect and our members with clearly verifiable backward integration investments
proceeded to import rice and paid duties and levies based on the circular.
This
step was timely as it helped to stabilize the price of rice in line with the
Federal Government’s objective.Surprisingly, by a letter dated November, 27,
2014, received by importers early in December 2014, the Honourable Minister for
Agriculture and Rural Development informed our members that an import quota has
been tentatively and unilaterally allocated to each of the rice importers and
demanded that they should pay into the national treasury a higher tariff of 10
percent duty and 60 percent levy for surplus. The surplus arose from a quota
allocated six months after the circular.” “The quota allocated bore no
relationship to the billions of naira invested by the rice millers.
Instead
it weighed heavily in favour of intending investors who propose to go into
production in 2017. Apart from the relatively low quota, and the retroactive
imposition of very steep penalty, the Honourable Minister’s letter also imposed
the requirement of a Domestic Importers and Rice Production Performance Bond
without due consultation with the stakeholders and highlighted several
penalties to be meted out in the event of non-compliance,” it read. The
NRMA claimed that the letters written by its members was intended to put
matters in proper perspective and shouldn’t be misconstrued as an attempt to
sabotage local rice production, noting that the accusation was serious and
alarming.
Interest
Rates And The Nigerian Rice Market Situation
SIMILARLY,
the Federal Government’s recent monetary policy has been quite harsh on the
rice industry. Nigeria has an estimated rice demand of 5.6
to 6 million tons per year out of which the domestic production is put at 3.2
million tons per year; creating a short fall of about 2.8 million tons, which
Nigeria imports from India, Thailand and other South Eastern countries of
Vietnam, Bangladesh and others. Nigeria is the world’s second largest importer
of milled Rice next to Philippines. Thus, it spends about
$1.56 to $2.2 billion to import the shortfall of 2 to 3 million tonnes of
milled rice per year.
Yet,
analysts argue that Nigeria has suitable ecology for rice production but needs
to invest resources to create irrigation facilities, mechanisation and equip
the farmers with skills and knowhow to grow several croppings of rice per year
based on the supply of good inputs and support services.
But a
source, who would “not want to be part of the public debate with the Ministry,”
said, “if current agricultural initiatives and momentum are maintained,
Nigeria can produce all the rice it needs and can, indeed, export to
neighbouring countries within the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) within a short period of time. This is the strategy of Agriculture
Transformation agenda as promoted by the Hon. Minister of Agriculture, Dr.
Adesina. He said that, with careful planning, “Nigeria can
save $1.56 to $2.2 billion if she can grow our own rice and stop importation.
Moreover, the local rice production is of high quality, many experts have
argued.
“The new
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), governor had, from the onset, identified rice as
one of the key products, which can be grown locally and had started a new strategy
of backward integration aimed at driving new investments into the local rice
production within a short period. “This would be achieved by
providing low cost capital to investors in the Rice Value Chain (through
CBN-CACS. “Unfortunately, the panic measures embarked upon by CBN to
support and shore up the value of the naira will impact very adversely on the
efforts being made to promote the local production of rice,” said the
source. The source further argued that the “increase in interest
rate is a catastrophic blow to the laudable initiative towards local rice
production.”
Based on the new monetary policy rate (at
which the apex bank lends to the banks), which was changed from 12 percent to
13 percent, the banks have hiked interest rate to as much as 30 percent per
annum. CBN took steps to devalue the Naira in order to reduce pressure on the
local currency, as people seek to purchase the US Dollar.
To
mitigate some of the effects of increased lending rates in banks, the CBN is
pushing a zero-charge regime in banking services, a development being privately
protested by the banks. It is feared that high interest rate will frustrate
investments and discourage those making investments in the productive sectors
of the economy such as in the local rice production. Industry
experts argue that local production is the only way of getting out of the
crisis.
Gravy on that rice:
Louisiana farmers eyeing trade with Cuba
Embargo still stands, but
trade rules loosen
Jan. 18, 2015
Louisiana rice farmers would be one of the
biggest beneficiaries of
expanded trade with Cuba, a
country ruled by a communist regime that has been under varying degrees of a
U.S. trade embargo since the 1960s.“It’s critically important for the United
States to open up trade with Cuba,” said Kevin Berken, a rice farmer in the
Jefferson Davis Parish town of Lake Arthur who speaks for the industry in
Washington.Berken was a speaker Friday in Lafayette at a
Le
Centre International de Lafayette-sponsored Conference on Cuba.
In December, after 18 months of secret
U.S.-Cuba negotiations that led to Cuba freeing 53 political prisoners,
President Barack Obama announced the nations — 90 miles apart — had
restored diplomatic relations. On Friday, more trade rules
were relaxed.Though only Congress can end the embargo, the recent changes
loosen the rules greatly.Berken said Louisiana rice farmers, who he said grow
rice that is the envy of the world, got a taste in the 2000s of how lucrative
it can be to sell the commodity to Cuba. But later changes instituted by the
U.S. on the way Cuba had to pay for goods — cash up front instead of credit —
brought the amount of rice Louisiana was selling to the island nation to zero
by 2009, Berken said.
The
Port of New Orleans’ chief
executive, Gary LaGrange, told the conference Friday the new rules include
Americans in Cuba being able to spend any amount of money they wish, a change
from the former restriction of less than $200 a day. Americans also can now
purchase goods with U.S. credit cards and can return home with Cuba’s famous
cigars without breaking the law.LaGrange said efforts are underway to further
open trade. On Saturday, six members of Congress, all Democrats, traveled to
Havana for more talks.Still, Cuba’s evolution as a full trading partner, where
commerce flows both ways, faces barriers, LaGrange said.
“There’s not a thing in this room that Cuba
doesn’t need,” said LaGrange, pointing around the meeting room at the Lafayette
Petroleum Club, where the conference was held.The country also needs a middle
class that will take it from one of the hemisphere’s poorest nations to one with
a vibrant economy, LaGrange said.“But we’re not going to get there until the
embargo is lifted,” he said.
Unfettered tourist travel to Cuba remains
off-limits, but it’s opening up, Larry Sides said.Since 2000, Sides has
journeyed to Cuba 24 times under special grants, such as entering the country
under religious license as part of the Episcopal Diocese of Cuba.Sides said
that while the government remains communist, the vast majority of the
population is not.“The Cuban people want a good economy,” Sides said.
The government, which since the 1959 Cuban
revolution has been ruled by communists Fidel Castro and his brother Raul, also
wants a good economy, Sides said.But pushed into a corner, the government
always “will opt for the principles of the revolution,” Sides said.Expanded
trade with Cuba has its detractors, namely a faction of Cuban exiles who left
as a result of Castro’s takeover in 1959.Even officials at Le Centre
International who put on the conference Friday received complaints.
Philippe Gustin, international trade manager at
Le Centre, acknowledged “the political realities” inherent in widening trade
with Cuba.“But we’re not going to talk about politics,” Gustin said before
introducing the speakers. “We’re going to talk about how people in Louisiana
can work with Cuba.”
Diets as medicine:
Dr. Jenkins puts emphasis on health effects of food
Published on: January
18, 2015Last Updated: January 18,
2015 9:00 AM EST
Dr. David Jenkins’s research has more to do
with improving health than getting rid of unwanted pounds, but his most
significant contribution is the proof that following a specific diet can
replicate the results offered by medication.
David
Jenkinst a time of year when we’re all taking a long, hard look at our
diets, McGill is welcoming Dr. David Jenkins to speak about his extensive
career studying the health effects of food.Jenkins is Canada Research Chair in
Nutrition and Metabolism and a member of the faculty of Nutritional Sciences at
the University of Toronto. He developed the glycemic index, widely used to
determine the extent carbohydrates affect blood sugar, and the Portfolio Diet
designed to reduce cholesterol.
He is also this year’s winner of McGill’s Bloomberg
Manulife Prize, presented to a researcher who has been instrumental in the
promotion of active health.To be clear, Jenkins’s research has more to do with
improving health than getting rid of unwanted pounds, something we tend to
overlook in a society where diet is synonymous with weight loss. But Jenkins’s
most significant contribution is the proof that following a specific diet can
replicate the results offered by medication. And for Canadians, his knowledge
has been put to use by Loblaws, who consulted with Jenkins in the development
of their healthy Blue Menu products.
The glycemic index is beneficial for diabetics who need to
keep an eye on their blood sugar, but it’s also helpful for a society whose collective
waistbands are expanding at what health experts consider an alarming rate.The
(diabetic) population is growing,” Jenkins said. “It used to be four per cent
or so, but now it’s up to eight per cent. And we expect it to double again in
the next 20 years.”
Fewer heart
attacks
Type 2
diabetes is linked with obesity, which is why anyone who has trouble keeping
their weight at a healthy range should choose carbs with a low GI. Not only
will it trigger a slower rise in blood sugar, compared to carbs with a high GI,
it has been associated with higher levels of HDL cholesterol (the
good cholesterol) and fewer heart attacks.Examples of foods with a low GI are
pasta, lentils, barley, sweet potatoes, peas and most fruit. Medium GI foods
include oatmeal (rolled or steel cut), whole wheat, rye and pita bread, brown,
wild or basmati rice and couscous.
High GI
foods that promote a quick spike in blood sugar include russet potatoes,
waffles, doughnuts, potato chips, raisins, ice cream and many highly processed
foods like crackers,
cakes, soft drinks, sugary breakfast cereals and white rice and bread
and bagels.A growing number of nutrition researchers
suggest that a diet heavy in high GI foods is the cause of much of today’s
obesity problems. The boost in insulin that goes hand in hand with a boost in
blood sugar promotes fat storage, which is where the diets of today’s society
go wrong, they claim.
So instead of limiting foods high in fat, as
we have been doing for the past few decades, we should be limiting foods with a
high GI.Jenkins says his research team hasn’t looked specifically into the
association of a high GI diet with the nation’s climbing rates of obesity, but
he acknowledges that we have become increasingly enamoured with highly
processed carbohydrate-laden foods.“The trouble is that carbs are pleasant,”
Jenkins said. “Dr. Atkins’s diet (a popular low-carb diet) is tolerable, but
it’s not overly pleasant. To be honest, people are not eating enough fruits and
veggies.”
Fruits,
vegetables key feature in diet
Jenkins
addresses the lack of fruits and vegetables by making them a key feature in his
Portfolio Diet. Based on the belief that your diet, like your financial
portfolio, is healthier when diversified, it also features plenty of proven
cholesterol-lowering foods including vegetables, fruit, nuts and legumes.In
fact, the Portfolio Diet can be as effective at lowering cholesterol as
medication.
Vegetarian based, it features foods like
oatmeal, lentils, peas, barley, okra and eggplant as well as healthy fats and
soy products such as soy milk and tofu, and foods fortified with plant sterols
like margarine,
broccoli, salmon, tuna and orange juice.Jenkins
cautions that anyone hoping to maximize benefits from either the GI or the
Portfolio Diet should eat as many of its healthy foods as possible. So forget
about singling out any one food as a super food, a practice that has become
increasingly popular.“Most people don’t follow the Portfolio Diet strictly and
don’t benefit from the 30-per-cent reduction in cholesterol that comes with the
perfect use of the diet,” Jenkins said. “But even if they only use half the
diet, they still get half the benefit.
”For
those of you who are already healthy and active with no signs of elevated
cholesterol, heart disease and/or diabetes, Jenkins says his diets won’t
provide any added health benefits. That said, there is very little downside to
making a habit of staying away from carbs with a high GI. The same goes with
the Portfolio Diet. The best results come from absolute compliance, but any
improvement you make in your diet is a step in the right direction.
Dr. Jenkins will be speaking at McGill
University Centre Ballroom, 3480 McTavish on Wednesday,
Jan. 21 at 12:30 p.m. Call 514-398-1248 for more
information.
Tractor the future with robotics
RODERICK MAKIM
19 Jan, 2015 03:20 PM
AUSTRALIAN
farmers could have an on-farm version of Google's driverless car if a
self-driving tractor trial near Jerilderie continues according to plan. A robotic tractor has been trialled in a joint
program with Rice Research Australia, Japanese companies Hitachi Zosen
Corporation and Yanmar Co. and three Australian universities.
DA to expand rice R&D
efforts to boost output
Sunday, January 18, 2015
THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said that it plans to expand its
research and development efforts on rice to help further improve the production
of the crop.Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala said in a statement that the
DA also intends to intensify the commercialization of diversified and
integrated rice-based farming systems such as Palayamanan to enable farmers
increase their productivity and incomes.In Palayamanan, for instance, farmers
are taught to combine rice growing with the cultivation of vegetables and other
high value crops, as well as fish and livestock raising. DA promotes the
technology through the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) and
National Rice Program.Rice production in the Philippines has been on the
uptrend for the past three years.
Between 2010 and 2013,
milled rice production grew by an average of 4.04 percent according to
PhilRice. In 2014, palay harvest is projected to reach 18.88 million MT, 2.4%
bigger than the 2013 record output of 18.44 million MT.Alcala said the entire
country owes this to the farmers who tirelessly worked to lead the country
toward greater rice sufficiency and increased food security."We could not
have reached these milestones without the farmers and without prompt and proper
intervention from the government. Never before has the Philippines had this
increment in rice," Alcala said.DA is also banking on its current
partnership with the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), in support
of the government’s food security blueprint called the Food Staples Sufficiency
Program.
Under the agreement, DA and IRRI work together to produce and
distribute high-quality and improved rice seeds that are adaptable to climate
change. In addition, best agricultural practices and other support tools will
be disseminated, including skills training for extension and field workers.“The
Department also intends to engage in profiling, finger printing and
purification of traditional varieties with export potentials,” Alcala said.He
added, regional or provincial location specific technology development and
adaptive studies for irrigated, rain-fed and upland ecosystem, is also included
in the DA’s agenda.
Participatory varietal selection for favorable and adverse
environment is included in the DA’s expanded R&D agenda for rice.The DA
will also enhance rice research capability and capacity, which includes
improving and increasing facilities, equipment and manpower. (PR)
Explore Global basmati rice
industry, 2015
WhaTech Channel: Consumer Market Research Reports
Published on Monday, 19 January 2015 06:35
Submitted by Salil Modak WhaTech Premium
News from: Reportstack™ -
Browse and Buy Market Research Reports
The report includes Basmati Rice new project SWOT analysis,
investment feasibility analysis, investment return analysis, and development
analysis.Reportstack has announced a new market research report on the 2015
Market Research Report on Global Basmati Rice Industry. This report is a
professional and depth research report on Global Basmati Rice industry
For overview analysis, the report introduces Basmati Rice basic
information including definition, classification, application, industry chain
structure, industry overview, policy analysis, and news analysis, etc
For international and China market analysis, the report analyzes
Basmati Rice markets in China and other countries or regions (such as US,
Europe, Japan, etc) by presenting research on global products of different
types and applications developments and trends of market, technology, and
competitive landscape, and leading suppliers and countries’2009-2014 capacity,
production, cost, price, profit, production value, and gross margin. For
leading suppliers, related information is listed as products, customers,
application, capacity, market position, and company contact information, etc.
2015-2020 forecast on capacity, production, cost, price, profit, production
value, and gross margin for these markets are also included.
For technical data and manufacturing plants analysis, the report
analyzes Basmati Rice leading suppliers on capacity, commercial production
date, manufacturing plants distribution, R&D Status, technology sources,
and raw materials sources.This report also presents product specification,
manufacturing process, and product cost structure etc. Production is separated
by regions, technology and applications. Analysis also covers upstream raw
materials, equipment, downstream client survey, marketing channels, industry
development trend and proposals.
In conclusion, it is a deep research report on Global Basmati Rice
industry. Here, we express our thanks for the support and assistance from
Basmati Rice industry chain related technical experts and marketing engineers
during Research Team’s survey and interviews.
Companies mentioned
Charoen, Hai Rice, Tilda, Riviana, Basmati, Uncle bens, Hamsons,
Coocosun, COFCO, Ming Da, Zhao Fa, Fu Ji, Zhong Xing, Xin Li
To access full report with TOC, please visit 2015 Market Research
Report on Global Basmati Rice Industry
<2015 Market
Research Report on Global Basmati Rice Industry> is a professional and depth
research report on Global Basmati Rice industry
For overview analysis, the report introduces
Basmati Rice basic information including definition, classification,
application, industry chain structure, industry overview, policy analysis, and
news analysis, etc
For international and China market analysis, the
report analyzes Basmati Rice markets in China and other countries or regions
(such as US, Europe, Japan, etc) by presenting research on global products of
different types and applications developments and trends of market, technology,
and competitive landscape, and leading suppliers and countries’2009-2014
capacity, production, cost, price, profit, production value, and gross margin.
For leading suppliers, related information is listed as products, customers,
application, capacity, market position, and company contact information, etc.
2015-2020 forecast on capacity, production, cost, price, profit, production
value, and gross margin for these markets are also included.
For technical data and manufacturing plants
analysis, the report analyzes Basmati Rice leading suppliers on capacity,
commercial production date, manufacturing plants distribution, R&D Status,
technology sources, and raw materials sources.
This report also presents product specification,
manufacturing process, and product cost structure etc. Production is separated
by regions, technology and applications. Analysis also covers upstream raw
materials, equipment, downstream client survey, marketing channels, industry
development trend and proposals.
In the end, the export includes Basmati Rice new
project SWOT analysis, investment feasibility analysis, investment return
analysis, and development analysis. In conclusion, it is a deep research report
on Global Basmati Rice industry. Here, we express our thanks for the support
and assistance from Basmati Rice industry chain related technical experts and
marketing engineers during Research Team’s survey and interviews.
Table of Contents
Chapter One Basmati Rice Industry Overview
1.1 Basmati Rice Definition
1.2 Basmati Rice Classification and Application
1.3 Basmati Rice Industry Chain Structure
1.4 Basmati Rice Industry Overview
Chapter Two Global Basmati Rice Market Status
Analysis
2.1 Global Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
2.1.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
2.1.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
2.1.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Supply Demand and
Shortage
2.1.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin
2.1.5 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
2.1.6 Global market research conclusion
Chapter Three Major Regions Basmati Rice Market
Status Analysis
3.1 Asia Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
3.1.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
3.1.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
3.1.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Supply Demand and
Shortage
3.1.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin
3.1.5 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
3.1.6 Asia market research conclusion
3.2 Europe Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
3.2.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
3.2.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
3.2.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Supply Demand and
Shortage
3.2.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin
3.2.5 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
3.2.6 Europe market research conclusion
3.3 North America Basmati Rice Productions
Supply Sales and Price Demand Market Analysis
3.3.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
3.3.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
3.3.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Supply Demand and
Shortage
3.3.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin
3.3.5 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
3.3.6 North America market research conclusion
3.4 Rest of World Basmati Rice Productions
Supply Sales and Price Demand Market Analysis
3.4.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
3.4.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
3.4.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Supply Demand and
Shortage
3.4.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin
3.4.5 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
3.4.6 Rest of World market research conclusion
Chapter Four Major Countries Basmati Rice Market
Status and Analysis
4.1 China Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
4.1.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
4.1.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
4.1.3 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Import and
Export Status
4.1.4 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Supply and
Sales Analysis
4.1.5 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin Analysis
4.1.6 China market research conclusion
(Yesterday Today Tomorrow)
4.2 Thailand Basmati Rice Productions Supply
Sales and Price Demand Market Analysis
4.2.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
4.2.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
4.2.3 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Import and
Export Status
4.2.4 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Supply and
Sales Analysis
4.2.5 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin Analysis
4.2.6 Thailand market research conclusion
(Yesterday Today Tomorrow)
4.3 USA Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
4.3.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
4.3.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
4.3.3 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Import and
Export Status
4.3.4 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Supply and
Sales Analysis
4.3.5 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin Analysis
4.3.6 USA market research conclusion (Yesterday
Today Tomorrow)
4.4 England Basmati Rice Productions Supply
Sales and Price Demand Market Analysis
4.4.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
4.4.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
4.4.3 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Import and
Export Status
4.4.4 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Supply and
Sales Analysis
4.4.5 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin Analysis
4.4.6 England market research conclusion
(Yesterday Today Tomorrow)
4.5 India Basmati Rice Productions Supply Sales
and Price Demand Market Analysis
4.5.1 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Status
4.5.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Sales and Price
Market Status
4.5.3 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Import and
Export Status
4.5.4 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Supply and
Sales Analysis
4.5.5 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Cost Price
Production Value Gross Margin Analysis
4.5.6 India market research conclusion
(Yesterday Today Tomorrow)
Chapter Five Major Companies Basmati Rice Market
Status and Analysis
5.1 Charoen
5.1.1 Company Profile
5.1.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.1.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.1.4 Contact Information
5.2 Hai Rice
5.2.1 Company Profile
5.2.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.2.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.2.4 Contact Information
5.3 Tilda
5.3.1 Company Profile
5.3.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.3.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.3.4 Contact Information
5.4 Riviana
5.4.1 Company Profile
5.4.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.4.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.4.4 Contact Information
5.5 Basmati
5.5.1 Company Profile
5.5.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.5.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.5.4 Contact Information
5.6 Uncle bens
5.6.1 Company Profile
5.6.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.6.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.6.4 Contact Information
5.7 Hamsons
5.7.1 Company Profile
5.7.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.7.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.7.4 Contact Information
5.8 Coocosun
5.8.1 Company Profile
5.8.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.8.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.8.4 Contact Information
5.9 COFCO
5.9.1 Company Profile
5.9.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.9.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.9.4 Contact Information
5.10 Ming Da
5.10.1 Company Profile
5.10.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.10.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.10.4 Contact Information
5.11 Zhao Fa
5.11.1 Company Profile
5.11.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.11.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.11.4 Contact Information
5.12 Fu Ji
5.12.1 Company Profile
5.12.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.12.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.12.4 Contact Information
5.13 Zhong Xing
5.13.1 Company Profile
5.13.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.13.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.13.4 Contact Information
5.14 Xin Li
5.14.1 Company Profile
5.14.2 Product Picture and Specification
5.14.3 Capacity Production Price Cost Production
Value
5.14.4 Contact Information
Chapter Six Basmati Rice Industry Chain and
Marketing Channels Analysis
6.1 Basmati Rice Industry chain structure Analysis
6.2 Upstream Major Raw Materials Price 2009-2014
6.3 Upstream Key Suppliers Analysis
6.4 Down Steam Applications Scale 2009-2014
6.5 Down Stream Key Clients Analysis
6.6 Basmati Rice Marketing Channels Status
6.7 Basmati Rice Marketing Channels Characteristic
6.8 Basmati Rice Marketing Channels Development
Trend
Chapter Seven Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Analysis
7.1 Basmati Rice Industry Sub-Product Market
Structure
7.2 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
long-shaped rice Market Sales and Price Status
7.3 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
polished round-grainer rice Market Sales and Price Status
7.4 2009-2014 Basmati Rice Industry Segment CCC
Market Sales and Price Status
Chapter Eight Basmati Rice Industry Development
Trend
8.1 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Demand Forecast
8.2 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Production and
Capacity Forecast
8.3 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Cost Price Production
Value Gross Margin Forecast
8.4 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Status
Chapter Nine Basmati Rice New Project Investment
Feasibility Analysis
9.1 Basmati Rice Project SWOT Analysis
9.2 Basmati Rice New Project Investment
Feasibility Analysis
Chapter Ten Global Basmati Rice Industry
Research Conclusions
List of Figures
Tables and Figures
Figure Basmati Rice Product Picture
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Chain Structure
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Sales (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 Global Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Demand
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Supply
Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Global Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Region)
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Product)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Sales (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 Asia Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Demand (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Supply Demand
and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Asia Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Kg Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD) Gross
Margin List
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Region)
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Product)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Sales
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 Europe Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Demand
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Supply
Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Europe Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Region)
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Product)
Table 2009-2014 North America Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Capacity Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Sales (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Sales-Output Ratio
Table 2009-2014 North America Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Demand (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Supply Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 North America Basmati Rice
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Region)
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Product)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Capacity Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Sales (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Sales-Output Ratio
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Major
Manufacturers Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Demand (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Supply Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Rest of World Basmati Rice
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Region)
Figure Basmati Rice Industry Segment Market
Structure (by Product)
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Sales (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 China Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Production
Import Export Consumption (Unit) List
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Demand (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Supply Demand
and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 China Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Sales
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice
Sales-Output Ratio
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Production
Import Export Consumption (Unit) List
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Demand
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Supply
Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 Thailand Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Sales (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 USA Major Manufacturers Basmati
Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Production
Import Export Consumption (Unit) List
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Demand (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Supply Demand
and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 USA Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Sales
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice
Sales-Output Ratio
Table 2009-2014 England Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Production
Import Export Consumption (Unit) List
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Demand
(Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Supply
Demand and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 England Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity and Total Capacity (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Capacity Market Share
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production and Total Production (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Production Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Capacity
Utilization Rate List
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales and Total Sales (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Sales Market Share
Figure 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Sales (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Sales-Output
Ratio
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Major Manufacturers
Basmati Rice Price (USD/Unit)
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Production
Import Export Consumption (Unit) List
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Demand (Unit)
and Growth Rate
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Supply Demand
and Shortage (Unit)
Table 2009-2014 INDIA Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value (Million USD)
Gross Margin List
Table 2009-2014 Charoens Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production(Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Charoens Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Charoens Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 HAI RICE Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production(Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 HAI RICE Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 HAI RICE Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Tilda Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production(Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Tilda Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Tilda Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Riviana Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Riviana Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Riviana Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 BASMATI Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production(Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 BASMATI Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 BASMATI Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Uncle bens Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Uncle bens Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Uncle bens Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Hamsons Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Hamsons Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Hamsons Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 COOCOSUN Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production(Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/Unit) Production Value(Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 COOCOSUN Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 COOCOSUN Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 COFCO Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 COFCO Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 COFCO Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Ming Da Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Ming Da Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Ming Da Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 ZHAO FA Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 ZHAO FA Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 ZHAO FA Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 Fu Ji Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 Fu Ji Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Fu Ji Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table Zhong Xing Basmati Rice Product
Specification
Figure 2009-2014 Zhong Xing Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 Zhong Xing Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2009-2014 XIN LI Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million
USD) Gross Margin List
Figure 2009-2014 XIN LI Basmati Rice Product
Capacity Production (Unit) and Growth Rate
Figure 2009-2014 XIN LI Basmati Rice Product
Production Global Market Share
Table 2015-2020 Global Basmati Rice Demand
Forecast
Table 2015-2020 Global Basmati Rice Capacity
Production Forecast
Table 2015-2020 Global Basmati Rice Capacity
Production (Unit) Price Cost Gross ($/pc) Production Value (Million USD) Gross
Margin List
Table 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Structure (by Region)
Table 2015-2020 Basmati Rice Industry Segment
Market Structure (by Product)
Table Basmati Rice New Project SWOT Analysis
Table 10000 Unit/Year Basmati Rice New Project
Investment Feasibility Analysis
Source
with thanks: http://www.whatech.com/market-research-reports/press-release/consumer/39306-explore-global-basmati-rice-industry-2015
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