Pak exporters to join
FoodEx Saudi
ISLAMABAD:
Pakistani exporters will be participating in FoodEx Saudi 2016 being held from
November 21 to 24 in Jeddah.Several Pakistani companies through the Trade
Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) will be participating in the
exhibition being arranged by the Saudi Exhibition Company a statement said
Wednesday.Pakistan is famous for the exquisite and aromatic basmati rice, and
seven established rice export companies, including Reem Rice Mills, Elahi Rice
Mills, Khalid Rice Mills, Bismillah Sehla Processing Plant, and Tooba Rice
Mills, are participating in the exhibition.
In the
category of bakery and confectionery items, ready to eat products, and frozen
food, Pakistan is introducing Golden Harvest Foods and their brand DAWN.
Pakistan hopes that the relationships forged and partnerships established at
FoodEx Saudi will go a long way in benefiting both the countries.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/165383-Briefs
Pakistani exporters to
participate in FoodEx Saudi exhibition
ISLAMABAD (APP):
Pakistani exporters will be participating in FoodEx Saudi 2016 exhibition,
being held from November 21 to 24 in Jeddah. Several Pakistani companies,
through the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP), will be
participating in the exhibition, being arranged by Saudi Exhibition Company,
said a message received here Wednesday from Jeddah. Pakistan is the original
home of "Basmati Rice", famed around the world for its exquisite
taste and aroma. The Government of Pakistan, through TDAP, is bringing 7
established companies that have proven themselves over the years as exporters
of genuine, high-quality exporters to the rest of the world. These companies
included Reem Rice Mills, Lahore; Elahi Rice Mills, Lahore; Khalid Rice Mills,
Lahore; Bismillah Sehla Processing Plant, Nankana; N.Y. Company, Karachi; Tooba
Rice Mills, Karachi; and Khan Rice Mills, Karachi.
In the category of
Bakery and Confectionery Items, Ready-to-Eat Products and Frozen Food, Pakistan
is introducing a company which has been singularly successful in establishing a
Food-Items brand with international recognition.
The company is GOLDEN
HARVEST FOODS from Karachi, and their brand is DAWN. By facilitating the
participation of these excellent companies in the prestigious exhibition,
FoodEx Saudi 2016, the Government of Pakistan is not only sending traders and
marketers to Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, but ambassadors of our land and our
people. Pakistan hopes that the relationships forged and partnerships
established at FoodEx Saudi will go a long way in benefiting both the Kingdom
of Saudi Arabia and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, and will only serve to
reinforce the already monumental relations of brotherly and spiritual love
that both peoples hold for each other
PAKISTANI
EXPORTERS TO PARTICIPATE IN FOODEX SAUDI EXHIBITION
Kathleen LuppiContact
Reporter
Stormy Waldeck eats lunch five days a week at Darya, an
acclaimed Persian restaurant in South Coast Plaza Village.
"Darya
has an exceptional staff that have become like family over the years," he
said.
It's been a family for some time as the fine dining,
Persian cuisine and good times for Darya's owners, staff and patrons will
celebrate the restaurant's 30th anniversary this month.
Customers, he said, range from out-of-state guests,
traveling businessmen and women and residents of Los Angeles and Orange
counties.To further its success and community outreach, Darya added marketing
director and event coordinator Arezou Hooshiarnejad to take care of delivery
and catering, the website and social media.Since Hooshiarnejad joined the staff
in 2013, the restaurant has almost doubled the catering department, providing
gourmet meals at off-site weddings, anniversaries and celebrations.
Thai government pledges to help rice farmers battle low prices
http://www.todayonline.com/world/asia/thai-government-pledges-help-rice-farmers-battle-low-prices
Indonesia sees rice stocks soar, no imports
planned until year-end
Food
court: President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo (right) talks with Agriculture Minister
Amran Sulaiman (center) and Village, Disadvantaged Regions and Transmigration
Minister Eko Putro Sandjojo in a rice field in Boyolali, during a visit to the
Central Java regency on Oct. 29. (Antara/Aloysius Jarot)
China’s
space station now has insects, weeds and rice on board
ARLINGTON, VA - Marketers and trend watchers constantly
tell us that today's customers are demanding more information about what they
are eating and also how their food is being produced, and they use buzzwords
like conservation and sustainability to push this agenda. At next month's
USA Rice Outlook Conference in Memphis, attendees will be able to take a deep
dive into this conversation with a two-part panel that will examine both
practical, on-farm conservation practices and in-market sustainability trends.
No matter where in the rice supply chain attendees are, they will not want to
miss this valuable session that immediately follows the Annual Rice Awards
Luncheon.The sessions will be moderated by USDA'S Chief of the Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Jason Weller, whose leadership and
vision of partner-driven conservation on private working lands has enabled the
USA Rice-Ducks Unlimited Stewardship Partnership program to flourish.
Part one is all about water conservation. Expert panelists, including Dr.
Michele Reba, research hydrologist, and Dr. Joe Massey, research agronomist,
both with USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS); Trey Cooke, executive
director of Delta F.A.R.M.; and Michael Sullivan, NRCS State Conservationist
for Arkansas, tackle important topics such as field design and resulting water
quantity, irrigation methods, and existing technology all designed to help the
rice farmer use water as efficiently as possible. They'll also talk about
programs that offer farmers assistance for making land and technology
improvements.
Prospects for unrest in Thailand’s rice bowl
Resentment growing in rural Thailand
Broader oppositional forces
Eroding support for Yingluck
Rice Mill Machine Market - BüHler,
Hunan Chenzhou, Zhejiang Qili Machinery, Hunan Xiangliang, Wufeng
Media
Relations Contact
8 PAU students get research scholarship
Tanzania
rice production to increase two fold by 2018
http://cctv-africa.com/2016/11/15/tanzania-rice-production-to-increase-two-fold-by-2018/
Rice Prices
Rice Comment
GCAP beneficiaries harvest 1.733 tonnes of rice
The sales manger for a Tustin-based insurance company will head
to the restaurant's bar, order the boneless chicken kebob and talk with the waitstaff,
cooks and clientele he sees on a near-daily basis.
It's been his routine for 20 years.
"Getting to share a meal with the other regulars is part of
the attraction," Waldeck said. "Many are soccer fans, and the
European professional soccer leagues play their matches during our lunch hour,
so it's good food, good company and enjoying a soccer match featuring the best
players in the world."
Back in 1986, Sam Salout and a partner opened the restaurant's
original location in Orange. With the kitchen's authentic Persian recipes —
boneless lamb kebab, borani and Basmati rice mixed with raisins, lentils, dates
and saffron — Darya, meaning "sea" in Farsi, grew a following of
Orange County residents and professionals.
So big of a following that loyal customer Henry Segerstrom, a
philanthropist, entrepreneur, patron of the arts and leader of retail center
South Coast Plaza, invited Darya's owners to relocate to the South Coast Plaza
Village in 1996.
Today, Salout's former partner continues to operate Darya in
Orange.
The Santa Ana location, which features a formal stairway, grand
piano, wall-to-wall French doors, beveled windows and an upstairs private
mezzanine room, seats about 200 guests and about 50 people on a patio that's
equipped with a large outdoor fountain.
"It's about the quality of food, service and
friendliness," said partner Ray Esfahanian, who co-owns Darya with Salout,
Ali Abedi and Mahmoud Parvari. "Our name was always good because we are
dedicated to the customer."
Darya, Hooshiarnejad said, has also become known to diners as a
place to celebrate Persian New Year in March, as well as Western observances
like Halloween and New Year's Day.Esfahanian, who immigrated from Iran in 1979
at age 18 and moved to Long Beach, where he found work as a dishwasher at Jack
in the Box,always wanted to work in the food industry.
After moving to Irvine, he formed friendships with Darya's co-owners,
and together he and the team, including the restaurant's chef for the past
three decades, envisioned a family-run restaurant that offered spiced Persian
foods.
To celebrate the restaurant's milestone, Darya will close Sunday
for a private party to thank neighbors, loyal customers and vendors for their
30 years of support.It will reopen Monday and roll back prices for two of its
most popular lunch and dinner items, the chelo beef kebab and boneless chicken
kebab.The restaurant will undergo a facelift with new carpet, new entree
listings and a catering department expansion, Esfahanian said, but before
implementing the touch-ups, the staff and patrons have one thing in mind:
A celebratory pomegranate martini.
Darya is located at 3800 South Plaza Drive, Santa Ana. For more
information, call (714) 557-6600 or visit daryasouthcoastplaza.com.
Twitter: @KathleenLuppi
http://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/entertainment/tn-wknd-et-1113-darya-restaurant-20161112-story.html
Thai government pledges to help rice farmers battle low prices
PUBLISHED: 4:00 AM, NOVEMBER 17, 2016
BANGKOK — Thailand’s junta government has vowed to help farmers
sell their rice at better prices and directly to consumers by cutting out the
middlemen, as efforts intensified to soften the impact of falling prices on
farming communities.Over the past week, military units in all regions have
bought both unmilled and milled rice from farmers totalling 18,991 tonnes, said
the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) deputy spokeswoman Colonel
Sirichan Ngathong. The junta is formally known as the NCPO. Col Sirichan said
the military cooperatives’ five millers have also milled 69 tonnes of rice for
farmers in the north-east.
Soldiers were also deployed to 44 provinces to help farmers
harvest rice, collect data and survey rice purchases by the 1,068 privately-run
rice millers. They also organised markets where 1,085 stalls were provided
space to sell rice to more than 20,000 consumers, Bangkok Post quoted her as
saying earlier this week.
She added the NCPO found most farmers were satisfied with the
assistance provided so far.
Rice prices in Thailand have been tumbling to record lows, hurting
farmers in the world’s second-largest rice exporter and prompting the junta to
roll out rescue packages to head off potential unrest. Rice exports account for
about 10 per cent of Thailand’s gross domestic product.
Earlier this month, the country’s rice committee announced new
loan schemes worth US$514 million (S$728 million) to help rice growers, as the
junta looked to gain support in rural areas ahead of an election next year. The
Thai navy had also pledged to buy rice directly from farmers and assign naval
ratings to help them harvest their grain.
Army chief General Chalermchai Sitthisart, who is also the NCPO
secretary-general, said the government is quickly implementing measures
designed to combat the problem of low rice prices. He also said the NCPO’s
Peace and Order Maintaining Council is exploring other ways to resolve the
problem of low rice prices and those of other crops in a more sustainable
manner.
The previous government headed by former prime minister Yingluck
Shinawatra won an election in 2011 in part by appealing to rice farmers with a
scheme to buy their grain at above-market rates. It cemented her popularity
among many farmers but led to huge stockpiles of unsold rice and galvanised
protests that led to her administration removal by the military following the
May 2014 coup.
In her latest gambit to connect with the party faithful, Yingluck
bought several truckloads of rice from struggling farmers and insisted on
Tuesday she had never taken advantage of the farmers by buying and re-selling
their rice.
Writing on Facebook, she said she bought the milled rice from
farmers in north-eastern provinces at a price of 20 baht (S$0.80) per kg, a
profitable price for farmers, and sold the rice at 20 baht per kg without
taking a profit.
“If I wanted to make a profit or pass the burden to the end
buyers, I would have had to sell the rice at 25 baht/kg,” she wrote.
“Regrettably, my intention as a citizen to help farmers during this hard time was
interpreted in other ways.” AGENCIES
Indonesia sees rice stocks soar, no imports
planned until year-end
·
Ina Parlina
The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Thu, November 17, 2016 | 10:17 am
After struggling to survive the impact of
the El Niño weather phenomenon last year, Indonesia has finally seen domestic
supply of the country’s most important staple food return to adequate levels,
putting aside the need to import by year-end.President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo
said Wednesday that the country’s national rice stock stood at 1.98
million tons in October, soaring from 1.03 million tons in the same month last
year, an achievement he attributed to friendly weather throughout this year.
“I can
assure you that there will be no [rice] imports until the end of the year,” he
said on the sidelines of his visit to the Army Strategic Reserves Command
(Kostrad) headquarters in Cilodong, on the outskirts of Jakarta.The El Niño
weather pattern, known to trigger a prolonged dry season, impacted rice
production in the country in the final months of last year.Soon after his
inauguration in late 2014, Jokowi announced that he was targeting
achieving rice self-sufficiency by 2017 and his government would give more
incentives to farmers to meet this objective.
In 2014,
the government, through the State Logistics Agency (Bulog), imported at least
425,000 tons of rice from Thailand and Vietnam
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2016/11/17/indonesia-sees-rice-stocks-soar-no-imports-planned-until-year-end.html
Dollar Exchange
Rate Climbs, Shakes Up Burma’s Business Community
By KYAW HSU MON 17 November 2016
RANGOON — The US dollar exchange rate—at its highest since the new
government came to power in April—has Burma’s business community looking for
better trade policy.“In the black market, the exchange rate is currently 1306
kyats [US$1] per dollar; it’s too high for importers. If the import demand
increases, it could impact the prices of daily commodities, making them
increase, too,” said U Zaw Min, a rice trader in Rangoon.
The Central Bank of Myanmar places the official exchange rate at
1287 kyats per dollar. Observers say that a major cause for the spike in the
exchange rate is less foreign direct investment to Burma, while local demand
for imported items has increased.
“It’s good for [foreign] exporters, since
the value of their dollar is strong,” he said.U Ye Min Aung, the newly elected
vice president of the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers and Commerce
Industry, told the Irrawaddy that Burma’s business could be facing trade
troubles if the government is unable to get a handle on the situation soon.“This
is the time when the government must act decisively, must create a better trade
policy—one that actually works,” U Ye Min Aung said. “For example, exporting
rice to China is legal in Burma, but in China, it’s illegal to import rice from
Burma, so earnings from rice exports don’t come into the local banking
industry,” he said, adding that rice is Burma’s major export item.
“Rice exports amount to 1 million tons per year and could yield
US$400 million per year, but not all of that money comes here,” he said.China
officially banned rice imports from Burma in 2014, but in lieu of assurances
that most rice be milled and meet certain quality standards, the trading rice
across the Sino-Burmese border accounts for a majority of Burma’s total rice
exports.U Ye Min Aung also stressed that Burma’s foreign direct investment
between April and September has also declined and might be playing a role in
the high dollar exchange rate.“A long-term solution would be to reassess trade
policy,” U Ye Min Aung said.U Khin Maung Nyo, an economist, echoed that the
Central Bank must step up and address Burma’s trade woes.“It seems like the
Central Bank isn’t taking any responsibility, but it must,” U Khin Maung Nyo
said. “Everything is related. Demand for imported items is increasing, and
consumers will be the ones who are harmed by the impact.
www.irrawaddy.com/business/dollar-exchange-rate-climbs-shakes-up-burmas-busines
China’s
space station now has insects, weeds and rice on board
INSECTS, weeds and rice are growing on the Chinese
space station, and could pave the way for future food sources for astronauts.
China’s Tiangong-2 space station
launched on 15 September, and two astronauts have been living there since
mid-October. The station includes experiments growing thale cress – an edible
weed – and rice in microgravity. Chinese news sources are reporting that the
cress has flowered and some of the rice plants are 10 centimetres tall.
The station also hosts an
experiment designed by Hong Kong middle school students involving six
silkworms, which previous studies have suggested could be protein sources for
long space journeys. Five of the silkworms have spun cocoons.When the
astronauts return to Earth, which is expected around 18 November, they will
bring cress samples back with them. The rice experiment will continue for
several months.
This is not the first time we’ve
grown food in space – astronauts on the International Space Station ate lettuce
grown in orbit. But the Tiangong-2 experiment lets scientists on Earth control
the incubator environment remotely.
This article appeared in print under the headline “Chinese space
food”
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23231005-000-chinas-space-station-now-has-insects-weeds-and-rice-on-board/
Conservation and Sustainability - Beyond the Buzz
Part two is a discussion on sustainability. It
means different things to different people, but no matter what it means to you,
if you are in the rice business, you won't want to miss this session. Panelists
Mary Grady, director of business development with Winrock International's
American Carbon Registry; Amy Braun, sustainability director with Kellogg
Company; Rod Snyder, president of Field to Market; and Jennifer James, Arkansas
rice farmer and chair of the USA Rice Sustainability Committee will talk about
the United Nations Paris Agreement and its impact on the average U.S. rice farmer.
The panel also will cover sustainable food sourcing, Field to Market's
Field Print Calculator that seeks to quantify the environmental benefits of
rice farming, and the USA Rice Sustainability Plan, and what this
industry-wide, multi-sector plan means for your company or operation.
It's not too late to get in on the conversation,
although the original hotel block at the Sheraton is sold out. Rooms are
available at the Crowne Plaza Memphis Downtown Hotel across the street and you
can make a reservation by calling 1-866-310-1173and asking for the special USA
Rice rate of $140. If you have any questions or issues, contact Jeanette
Davis at jdavis@usarice.com or 703-236-1447. The USA Rice Outlook
Conference is the largest conference in North America dedicated specifically to
rice. This year's conference will be held in Memphis, December 7-9
Prospects for unrest in Thailand’s rice bowl
Collapsing agricultural prices have forced the junta to offer
loans to rice farmers. Rice subsidisation in Thailand has historically proven
ill-fated; should this policy fail, what is the likelihood of rural unrest?
Thailand’s rice industry is in
crisis, at a time of great uncertainty generated from King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s passing. The junta has
resorted to providing
loans to jasmine rice farmers. Jasmine
rice accounts for approximately half of rice export incomes in Thailand – an
important source of foreign currency reserves. The market value of jasmine rice
has fallen over a third since 2013, and is at a nine-year low.
Past rice subsidy schemes have
proven ill-fated and attracted the ire of the junta. After they ousted Prime
Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in May 2014, they immediately halted her flagship
rice subsidy scheme which had allegedly squandered billions of dollars.
This article will not review that scheme; suffice to say,
despite ultimately failing it had provided farmers with immediate economic
security. Regions which thrived under that scheme have been hit by economic
strife. One such region is Isan, the northeast region where jasmine rice
production is concentrated. 21 million people live here, one third of
Thailand’s population.
Resentment growing in rural Thailand
This latest pledge will do little to ease growing resentment for
the junta in the rural heartlands. Here, support for the Shinawatra family is
well-documented.
Thaksin Shinawatra, who ruled between 2001 and 2006, was reputed
for his populist policies that appeased the poor and marginalised rice-growing
areas of Northern Thailand.
Thaksin was ousted in 2006 because of his perception among
members of the establishment as a corrupt figure who squandered taxes to buy
rural votes. The same fate befell Yingluck in 2014. Both times, the military
ousted governments which the northern regions were responsible for putting in
power.
This was effectively a message that the rural vote did not
matter. It was an insult to 15.5 million farmers (or 40% of Thailand’s total
labour force).
Voting data showing support for
the junta’s new
constitution reveals an overwhelming rejection
of the junta in the north and northeast – on top of the insurgency plagued
southern regions.
In contrast, Thaksin, responsible
for the modernisation and development of those regions, remains a ‘saintly
figure’ in rural Thailand. He is still widely seen as Thailand’s
most powerful politician, in part due to the influential pro-Shinawatra ‘Red
Shirts’ movement that is willing to do his bidding.
Broader oppositional forces
The Shinawatras were responsible for bringing a forgotten
section of society back into political play. But beyond party politics there
are broader forces adding to rice growers’ resentment.
Despite the importance of rice cultivation, the production which
yields the highest incomes is mainly under the control of the larger
conglomerates. Farmers also lose out on profits to powerful and influential
middlemen.
Farmers have little control over
their land. The junta’s article 44 can be used by the government agency
overseeing land redistribution, the Agricultural Land Reform Office (ALRO), to force farmers off land.
Many farmers have a mortgage with local businessmen, and are
mired in debt. Research shows that the percentage of farmers owning land in
Thailand has dropped dramatically – from 44% in 2004 to 15% in 2011. Analysts
see the land sales as a symptom of an expanding household debt crisis that
could plunge Isan into social instability.
Land rights problems have been exasperated by political
turbulence over the past fifteen years. Because of the opposition between the
Shinawatra clan and the establishment, rice farmers are used as a political
football. Very often, new governments fail to honour the land rights
commitments to farmers agreed under past regimes.
Eroding support for Yingluck
With the general election scheduled for late in 2017, the junta
hopes its pledge will prevent renewed political support for Yingluck. Should it
fail, how realistic is that renewed support?
Yingluck currently faces charges from the National
Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) for corruption and a perceived dereliction of
duty relating to her rice scheme.
If found guilty, Yingluck faces
up to 10 years in prison, which could prove politically volatile. It may rally
her supporters while Yingluck sits in prison, as a martyr, akin to a Thai ‘Aung
San Suu Kyi’. The military likely do not want to push too far, and instead want
to limit her current influence (despite her recent publicity
stunt).
Yingluck’s imprisonment would also cause Thailand unwelcome
publicity and international scrutiny, which the junta will not want. They may
prefer to pile on the criminal charges to smear her political reputation and
reduce the likelihood of her governing again.
However, one key aspect of Yingluck’s ouster was that she had
lost the support of the farmers. In December 2013, her government failed to
approve a renewed budget for rice subsidisation, and in January 2014 it
defaulted on existing payments to farmers.
These failures provoked the 2014 movement, and those protesting
were mostly voters who had originally elected Yingluck. Thus compared to her
brother, who remains in self-imposed exile, she is hardly a galvanising figure
in Thai politics.
Whether or not support for either
Shinawatra is revived, today the opposition has been cowed by the military.
After the coup the military significantly cracked down on dissent, making the
‘Red Shirts’ once again politically weak (although there is a risk of radicalisation if they are oppressed too much). Overall, the 2014 coup reinforced
the reality that anytime provincial and rural interests threaten to control the
system, the junta have the capacity to intervene and reinforce the status quo.
Conclusion
Since the 2014 coup, the economy has hit crisis and
struggled to regain momentum. Thailand’s history of rural exclusion, combined
with a growing debt crisis for the farmers, suggests that the conditions are
ripe for protests. This is especially since the new Crown Prince may face
difficulties in legitimising the junta’s regime. However, in contrast to
Thaksin, Yingluck has lost the confidence of her key constituency. Moreover,
the junta’s absolute power has limited the capacity for organised dissent. The
junta will certainly be confident in this knowledge. Nevertheless, we can
expect them to throw more money at the rice farmers to ensure they remain
onside during this politically sensitive period.
http://globalriskinsights.com/2016/11/prospects-unrest-thailands-rice-bowl/
Rice Mill Machine Market - BüHler,
Hunan Chenzhou, Zhejiang Qili Machinery, Hunan Xiangliang, Wufeng
Global Rice
Mill Machine Industry Market Research 2016
Deerfield
Beach, FL -- (SBWIRE) -- 11/16/2016 -- Rice Mill
Machine research report presents an in–depth analysis
of the global market by growth, market segments and geographic markets. The
review has been based on the report titled, " Rice Mill Machine Market -
Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast, 2016 - 2020."
Firstly, Rice Mill Machine Report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. The market analysis is provided for the international market including development history, competitive landscape analysis, and major regions' development status.
Request for Sample Report @http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046#RequestSample
This research report incorporates an in-depth analysis of the R&D technologies, including market estimations and trends through 2016. Major players, competitive intelligence, innovative technologies, market dynamics and geographic opportunities are discussed in detail in the report. The report also examines recent developments and product portfolios of the major players along with their market shares.
Market Segment by Manufacturers cover in this report :
Satake Manufacturing
BueHler
Hunan Chenzhou
Hubei Yongxiang
Zhejiang Qili Machinery
Hunan Xiangliang
Wufeng
Jiangsu Hexi Machinery
Yangzhou Zhengda Machinery
The report includes Profiles of the manufacturers of the leading products are analyzed, their specific product strategies are outlined, and their pipeline of products is discussed.Market figures are based on cost,price,revenues,growth rate and import/export in the current worldwide Rice Mill Machine market.
Inquiry for Buying Report @http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046#InquiryForBuying
The report is arranged to provide an overview of the Rice Mill Machine market by product, company and geography. Forecasts are broken down by geographic region or by country. The worldwide market is analyzed and data provided for each disease sub-segment.
Firstly, Rice Mill Machine Report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. The market analysis is provided for the international market including development history, competitive landscape analysis, and major regions' development status.
Request for Sample Report @http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046#RequestSample
This research report incorporates an in-depth analysis of the R&D technologies, including market estimations and trends through 2016. Major players, competitive intelligence, innovative technologies, market dynamics and geographic opportunities are discussed in detail in the report. The report also examines recent developments and product portfolios of the major players along with their market shares.
Market Segment by Manufacturers cover in this report :
Satake Manufacturing
BueHler
Hunan Chenzhou
Hubei Yongxiang
Zhejiang Qili Machinery
Hunan Xiangliang
Wufeng
Jiangsu Hexi Machinery
Yangzhou Zhengda Machinery
The report includes Profiles of the manufacturers of the leading products are analyzed, their specific product strategies are outlined, and their pipeline of products is discussed.Market figures are based on cost,price,revenues,growth rate and import/export in the current worldwide Rice Mill Machine market.
Inquiry for Buying Report @http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046#InquiryForBuying
The report is arranged to provide an overview of the Rice Mill Machine market by product, company and geography. Forecasts are broken down by geographic region or by country. The worldwide market is analyzed and data provided for each disease sub-segment.
For more
information on this press release visit: http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/rice-mill-machine-market-bhler-hunan-chenzhou-zhejiang-qili-machinery-hunan-xiangliang-wufeng-742595.htm
Media
Relations Contact
Joel John
Corporate Sales Specialist
Market Research Store
Telephone: 386-310-3803
Email: Click to Email Joel John
Web: http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046
Corporate Sales Specialist
Market Research Store
Telephone: 386-310-3803
Email: Click to Email Joel John
Web: http://www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-rice-mill-machine-industry-market-research-2016-82046
http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/3145755
8 PAU students get research scholarship
Tribune News Service
Ludhiana, November 16
Eight students from Punjab
Agricultural University (PAU) are among the 24 Indians who have received the
Monsanto Beachell – Borlaug International Scholars Program (MBBISP) Research
Scholarship.The students are Bhanu Kalia whose research is focused on the
methodology for efficient mapping of alien introgression for adult plant
resistance to leaf rust and other agronomic traits in wheat Aegilops Tauschii
Hybrids; Amandeep Sandhu whose research is focused on mapping and
characterizing Leaf Rust Resistance Gene transferred from Triticum Monococcum L
to wheat (Triticum Aestivum L); Dharminder Bhatia who is researching on the
Molecular Characterisation of Inter-Specific Backcross Inbred Lines of Rice for
mapping of Yield Related QTLs; Amandeep Kaur who is doing the research on
evaluating wild species germplasm for variation in activity of bran lipase
(RBL); Mitaly Bansal whose research is focused on fine mapping and identifying
candidate genes for stripe and leaf rust resistance transferred from Aegilopsumbellulata
to bread wheat (Triticumaestivum); Palvi Malik whose research topic is Genome
wide selection for rapid introgression of desirable alleles for productivity
traits from OryzaRufipogon into Oryza Sativa; Gurcharn Singh Brar working on
improving genetic resistance to Fusarium Head Blight in durum; and Karminderbir
Kaur who is working on the development of an in vivo haploid induction system
in rice through distant hybridisation and manipulation of CenH3 gene.
MBBISP is a global programme that
receives applications from researchers in the field of agriculture. The
programme encourages young scientists and university students to develop new
plant breeding research for rice and wheat production. Arnab Das, Director
(Corporate Engagement), Monsanto, said: “Through the scholars programme, we are
encouraging the students to undertake research and find solutions to tackle the
challenges of hunger and food security. Indian students have great potential
which has been showcased by these researchers.”
MBBISP was launched in India in 2009
by scientist Dr MS Swaminathan
http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/ludhiana/education/8-pau-students-get-research-scholarship/324366.html
Tanzania
rice production to increase two fold by 2018
Tanzania has launched a rice production project that seeks to
double the rice produced in its borders by 2018
The project that seeks to support small holders’ efforts to
improve rice production and seek markets for them through a partnership with
the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) according to the
Citizen
“This project will provide small scale farmers with an
opportunity to acquire new agricultural practices and benefit more from the
crop,” said FAO country representative, Mr. Fred Kafeero
Tanzania’s third staple food from Maize and Cassava is rice
which has a local production of about 1.35 million tonnes a year with small
holder farmers producing 75 percent of the rice.Rice plays a major role in the
East African’s nation economy since it is a major source of food, employment
and income generating business for many locals. However, Tanzania still relies
heavily on rice imports.“It is good to see that of late Tanzania has made major
strides in rice farming, whereby measures taken by the government have enabled
the country to increase its production to the extent that it meets the local
demand” said Kefeero
http://cctv-africa.com/2016/11/15/tanzania-rice-production-to-increase-two-fold-by-2018/
Rice Prices
as on : 17-11-2016 01:47:14 PM
Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
|
Price
|
|||||
Current
|
%
change |
Season
cumulative |
Modal
|
Prev.
Modal |
Prev.Yr
%change |
|
Rice
|
||||||
Gadarpur(Utr)
|
350.00
|
-58.73
|
193814.00
|
2055
|
1898
|
11.38
|
Cachar(ASM)
|
60.00
|
50
|
4470.00
|
2200
|
2200
|
-18.52
|
Srirampur(ASM)
|
60.00
|
-33.33
|
3020.00
|
3000
|
3000
|
0.67
|
Saharanpur(UP)
|
40.00
|
-20
|
7011.00
|
2280
|
2300
|
9.62
|
Khatra(WB)
|
39.00
|
14.71
|
1595.00
|
2300
|
2300
|
NC
|
Gazipur(UP)
|
35.00
|
9.38
|
3770.00
|
2210
|
2210
|
9.68
|
Gauripur(ASM)
|
34.00
|
6.25
|
3336.80
|
4500
|
4500
|
NC
|
Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)
|
30.00
|
-25
|
606.00
|
2300
|
2300
|
-
|
Udala(Ori)
|
13.00
|
-18.75
|
812.00
|
2800
|
2800
|
NC
|
Dibrugarh(ASM)
|
11.60
|
36.47
|
215.60
|
2250
|
2250
|
-
|
Kolhapur(Laxmipuri)(Mah)
|
11.00
|
NC
|
2470.00
|
3000
|
3000
|
-14.29
|
Islampur(WB)
|
10.00
|
-33.33
|
578.90
|
2400
|
2400
|
11.63
|
Kaliaganj(WB)
|
10.00
|
-16.67
|
1255.00
|
2550
|
2550
|
-5.56
|
North Lakhimpur(ASM)
|
9.80
|
50.77
|
2259.90
|
1900
|
1900
|
NC
|
Chengannur(Ker)
|
6.50
|
NC
|
651.00
|
2400
|
2300
|
-4.00
|
Jeypore(Kotpad)(Ori)
|
5.80
|
61.11
|
343.50
|
4100
|
4100
|
26.15
|
Jeypore(Ori)
|
3.90
|
-29.09
|
363.70
|
4100
|
4100
|
NC
|
Kalyanpur(Tri)
|
3.00
|
NC
|
31.10
|
2800
|
2800
|
12.00
|
Lakhimpur(UP)
|
2.60
|
-93.5
|
365.95
|
2150
|
2190
|
-2.71
|
Kasipur(WB)
|
1.10
|
57.14
|
47.20
|
2240
|
2350
|
4.19
|
Ernakulam(Ker)
|
0.56
|
NC
|
15.36
|
3500
|
3500
|
-1.41
|
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/article9356920.ece
Arkansas Farm Bureau:
Daily Commodity Report
Rice
High
|
Low
|
|
Long Grain Cash Bids
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
Long Grain New Crop
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
|
Futures:
|
|
Rice Comment
Rice futures were unchanged to fractionally lower
today after posting sharp losses to open the week Monday. The market set new
contract lows in early dealing before closing near the middle of the day's
relatively narrow trading range. USDA's November production estimate was 234.8
million cwt, down 1.2 million cwt from the October report, due to a decrease in
the yield forecast of 39 pounds per acre. The production decrease carried over
into the ending stocks column as well, as usage remained steady. However,
exports have been slow to materialize, and there is currently a lot of rice to
move.
http://www.arfb.com/ag-markets-statistics/report/
GCAP beneficiaries harvest 1.733 tonnes of rice
World
Bank would continue to support initiatives to increase agricultural production
in the country
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