Thursday, 08 December 2016 20:21
BANGKOK: Thailand's rice exports
this year will reach 10.5 million tonnes, the commerce minister said on
Thursday, above an earlier target of 9.5 million tonnes.Thailand, the world's
second biggest rice exporter, will see its rice export amount exceed its target
this year, Apiradee Tantraporn told reporters and rice traders at a Bangkok
event."I'm confident that Thai rice exports will reach 10.5 million
tonnes", she said. This exceeds the government's earlier target of 9.5
million tonnes.The amount is worth around 170 billion baht ($4.8 billion) to
180 billion baht ($5 billion), Charoen Laothamatas, president of Thai Rice
Exporters Association, told reporters.
Thailand has exported 9.33
million tonnes of the rice this year until the end of November, a 9 percent
increase from the same period last year, according to a ministry press
statement.Apiradee said she expected next year's rice export to be at least 10
million tonnes. The amount matched the forecast given by the Thai Rice
Exporters Association last week
http://www.brecorder.com/markets/commodities/asia/331044-thai-2016-rice-exports-exceed-target-at-105mn-t.html
Asia Rice: Prices Mostly Soften on Thin Demand
Hanoi . Rice
export prices in India and Vietnam weakened this week on thin demand, but still
failed to attract buyers, while prices widened in Thailand during a slowing
harvest, traders said on Wednesday (07/12). India's 5-percent broken parboiled
rice prices dropped $1 this week to $347-$351 per tonne, free-on-board (FOB)
basis, due to sluggish demand from African buyers, though supplies were limited
due to a cash crunch, they said.
"We
are not able to sign any big new deals. Prices are firm in the local market due
to limited supply. At this level, finding buyers is difficult," said an
exporter based in Kakinada, a city in the southern Indian state of Andhra
Pradesh.
He said
Thailand and Vietnam, which trail India in global rice exports, were offering
more competitive prices. India's summer-sown rice output is seen at a record
93.88 million tonnes in the crop year to June 2017, a 2.81 percent rise from
the year earlier, the farm ministry has said. Vietnamese rice prices also eased
this week as buyers were absent, traders said. The 5-percent broken rice prices
eased to $335-$340 a tonne, FOB basis, from $340-$350 last Wednesday, traders
said.
"Vietnam's
competitiveness is lower than Thailand's now," a trader in Ho Chi Minh
City said. Thai's benchmark 5-percent broken rice prices widened to $360-$365 a
tonne on Wednesday, FOB basis, from $360 last week, but a trader in Bangkok
said prices would remain stable as harvest was slowing. Another trader said the
gap in prices of Thai and Vietnamese rice could be a disadvantage.
"It's
quite a big gap," he said. "Vietnam could easily attract buyers."
Thailand's rice exports are on track to meet the 2016 target of 9.5 million
tonnes, the commerce ministry has said. The average price of Thai 5 percent
broken rice in January-November of 2016 rose 2.5 percent from a year ago to
$398/ton, FOB basis, while that of Vietnamese 5 percent broken rice edged down
0.8 percent in the same period to $349/ton, the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization said in its December report
Joha rice set to get GI tag
ROOPAK GOSWAMI
Guwahati, Dec. 7: Assam's aromatic joha rice is
all set to get the geographical indication (GI) tag provided there is no
opposition from any quarter. The office of GI under the ministry of commerce
says the tag will be given in the next few months if there is no opposition."All
the formalities and conditions towards getting the GI tag have been met. We
have advertised it in our journal to inform people that we intend to provide
the GI tag to joha rice. The application will be registered if no opposition is
received within four months," the official said. GI is a mechanism
employed to identify agricultural, natural or manufactured goods which possess
certain special qualities or characteristics based on the climatic or
production conditions unique to a geographical location. Assam Agricultural
University, Jorhat, and Seuj Satirtha, an NGO in Sivasagar, had moved the
application for joha rice.
"Joha rice varieties are genetically
distinct from other classes of rice cultivated in Assam and elsewhere. A study
on diversity analysis at the DNA-level based on molecular markers clearly
showed that joha rice varieties were distinct from others, as reflected in
separate groups from other varieties of Assam rice," the report in the GI
journal said.
AAU associate director (research) Prasanna
Kumar Pathak, who made the application, said the joha GI status would be for 43
known varieties of joha which exist in the region.It said the joha class of
rice is unique in aroma and grain characteristics and distinct from other
aromatic rice like basmati in biochemical and other quality attributes.
"The uniqueness of joha rice is mainly attributed to particular climatic
conditions prevalent in the area, together with varietal characters and systems
of rice cultivation, adding to the best expression of aroma and flavour in the
product. The aroma of joha rice is also considered to be distinctly different
from basmati rice," the report stated.
In 2007, the first consignment of 17MT of joha
rice was exported to three European countries - Germany, the UK and Switzerland
- where it was in high demand.Historically, joha rice, like khorika joha, finds
mention in the 14th century Assamese version of the Ramayan ( Saptakanda
Ramayana) attributed to poet Kaviraja Madhava Kandali. This work is also
considered one of the earliest written scriptures in Assamese. According to the
story, Kumbhakarn, the younger brother of Ravan, was woken up after Ravan
prepared a heap of delicious food made of khorika joha.
The application says there is need to protect
this rice as there is legitimate concern among the farming community,
academicians and policy makers that the market potential of joha rice may be
jeopardised by some unscrupulous traders or middlemen who sell other small
grain aromatic rice developed elsewhere in the name of joha rice.
Trial of ousted Thai PM Yingluck to end in July 2017 – lawyer
Ousted former Thai Prime Minister Yingluck
Shinawatra speaks with members of Thai media as she arrives at the Supreme
Court for a trial on criminal negligence looking into her role in a debt-ridden
rice subsidy scheme during her administration, in Bangkok, Thailand December 9,
2016. REUTERS/Chaiwat Subprasom
A criminal negligence trial against ousted
former Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, Thailand's first female
premier, will end in July 2017, with a verdict expected soon after, her lawyer
said on Friday.Yingluck is accused of negligence over a rice-buying scheme that
helped sweep her to power in a 2011 general election.The scheme was aimed at
boosting rural incomes and was popular with rural voters, but the finance
ministry estimated it caused a loss of 536 billion baht (11.93 billion pounds)."We
think that the court will hand down a verdict in this rice case next year after
cross-examining the last witness in the middle of July," lawyer Sommai
Koosap told Reuters.
The trial against Yingluck began in 2015.She
denies any wrongdoing but faces up to 10 years in prison if she is found
guilty."I will fight this until the end," Yingluck told reporters on
Friday.Opposition to the rice-buying scheme helped embolden Yingluck's
opponents among royalist Bangkok elites and others in a movement that
ultimately led to her downfall.Thailand was once the world's top rice exporter
but lost its crown to India after the collapse of the scheme, which ensured
that farmers were cushioned by subsidies and that the state bought rice from
farmers at sometimes double the market rate.The end of the scheme left Thailand
with mountains of rice that the current military government is trying to
offload.Thailand has about 8 million tonnes of rice left over from the scheme
that it needs to get rid of, the commerce ministry said this month.
The military has said it would wean farmers off
farm subsidies since taking power following a May 2014 coup that toppled
Yingluck.However it has had to contend with disgruntled rice farmers struggling
with low prices and has back-pedalled somewhat on that pledge with a series of
rescue packages in recent weeks.Yingluck was retroactively impeached after the
2014 coup by the junta's legislature, which banned her from politics for five
years for failing to stop the rice programme.Her supporters say the move was
aimed at curbing her political influence.Yingluck has toured Thailand this year
as part of a series of appearances with her supporters that some analysts see
as a bid to ensure the survival of her political legacy.
(Reporting by Amy Sawitta Lefevre, Aukkarapon
Niyomyat and Patpicha Tanakasempipat; Writing by Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Editing
by Paul Tait)http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-thailand-politics-idUKKBN13Y0D0?il=0
USA Rice Outlook Conference Kicks Off
MEMPHIS, TN -- The 2016 USA Rice Outlook
Conference got underway here last night with an opening reception in the
exhibit hall and a fundraising dinner for the USA Rice Political Action
Committee. And today's General Session opened with a host state welcome
from Mississippi rice farmer Kirk Satterfield followed by keynote speakers
Shelly Van Treek with Kellogg Company and former NASA Astronaut Michael
Massimino. Van Treek, the global chief procurement officer for Kellogg,
said the company's core business driver is climate smart agriculture and
helping farmers improve yields in the face of climate challenges.
"Sustainable agriculture is at the heart of what we do," Van Treek
said. "Climate change is a core business driver so enabling and
fueling growth for us means using fewer natural resources." She
talked about the importance of rice in manufacturing different Kellogg
products, including the ubiquitous Rice Krispies, but also the more than 180
flavors of Pringles chips!
Massimino thanked
the rice industry for producing a great tasting already dehydrated food that's
easy to eat in zero gravity. He said food, real food, was important to
the space program not just for its nutritional value but also the psychological
element. "Thank you for what you do, growing food for all of us to
eat - that by the way, we love eating in space," said Massimino. He
shared video of a crewmate grabbing a bite out of a burrito as it floated by in
space and talked about making rice pilaf as one of his favorite meals on the Space
Shuttle.
The early morning
schedule included the debut of the Innovation Stage centrally located in the
Exhibit Hall. "The new Innovation Stage was a big hit and showcased
the latest and greatest technology has to offer the industry," said USA
Rice President & CEO Betsy Ward. "We really appreciate all of
our exhibitors and sponsors for their support and knew the change in venue
would move their messages front and center."
Ward said the
Annual Rice Awards Luncheon was a conference highlight. "Attendees
met the National Rice Month Scholarship winner, Heaven McKinley, and saw her
award winning video. They heard moving speeches from the Rice Award winners,
got to meet the 2017/19 Rice Leadership Development Program class, and
reconnected with people in the industry that they may not have seen since the
year before," she said.
The Outlook
conference is the largest annual rice-specific gathering in North America and
is an educational service of USA Rice. Next year's conference is
scheduled for December 10-12 in San Antonio,
Texas
Row rice could be important
production practice for the future
Louisiana rice farmers are finding furrow-irrigated or row rice
can work if it's done properly and "by the rules," says Scott
Franklin, one of the organizers of a meeting that focused on the practice in
Rayville, La.Louisiana rice farmers have seemingly abundant supplies of water
now, but that probably won’t always be the case, according to Scott Franklin,
vice president of the Northeast Louisiana Rice Growers Association.
“As a young person, I have to
think about that,” says Franklin, a farmer who helped organize the Row Rice
Production meeting in Rayville, La., last month. Franklin believes
furrow-irrigated rice or row rice has the potential to save water and money –
if done properly. “It’s not a perfect science – it has a long way to go,” he
said. “But the potential is there.”
Although Franklin said growers
may see some reduction in harvest costs because fields are not as likely to be
as muddy in row rice situations as in conventional, flooded field conditions.
“I’m sure we’ve all driven by
fields of conventional rice and seen the combine buried up to the axle because
of field conditions at harvest,” he said. “You’re not as likely to see that in
furrow-irrigated rice.”In an interview following the meeting, Franklin said the
potential for water savings may be the biggest draw for rice row.
“I think row rice has a place,”
he said. “When we talk about the benefits of row rice the first thing we think
about is how much water you save, and as a young person, I think it is
important to think about that and have that mindset.”
Louisiana rice farmers have
seemingly abundant supplies of water now, but that probably won’t always be the
case. “One day there is going to be a battle for water – there’s no question
about it,” he said. “It’s already going on in California; it affects the rice
industry there. We have a plentiful supply, but you never know what the
future’s going to hold.”
Franklin said some producers in
northeast Louisiana are showing row rice can work. “We have some who have
proven that it is – when you take care and follow the rules – a smarter and
better way to farm rice. It’s not a perfect science, there’s still a long ways
to go, but more people have had success with it than didn’t.”
Kara Matheny, Texas AgriLife Extension Specialsit discusses ag
apps at TPPA conference.
Ag apps offer easy access to vast
amounts of information
Apps for agriculture are readily available, easy to access, free
or inexpensive and provide vast amounts of information for farmers and
ranchers. Producers should take an app for a test run before downloading.
As recently as 15 years ago, when farmers took information to and from the
field it was usually on paper—in a notebook, an Extension pamphlet, a pesticide
label—and they stored it either in a shoebox on the dashboard of their pickup
truck, in a metal file cabinet, or, after spending a few hours on the keyboard,
on their office computers.
Farmers and ranchers looked to
almanacs for historical data, printed crop production guides for in-season
decisions, and budget print-outs to check breakeven figures. They even checked
the back porch thermometer to see if they needed to wear a coat.
It was a paper first era of data
collection and management.
No longer. “We have apps for
that,” says Kara Matheny, Texas AgriLife Extension specialist in Washington
County. Matheny, along with this writer, discussed “Apps for Agriculture,”
during the opening session of the 28 th annual Texas Plant Protection
Association Conference in Bryan, Dec. 6.
Not only can producers find all
that information on their office computers, Matheny says, most have it
available in their pockets—on a smart phone or tablet.
Agriculture has developed
applications in recent years that provide information on most any aspect of
crop or livestock production—although Matheny admits that offerings for
livestock remain on the light side.
As smart phones and apps became
more common on farms and ranches, she perceived a need for more information
about what was available, what was useful and what was just
http://www.deltafarmpress.com/rice/row-rice-could-be-important-production-practice-future
China Okays
Cambodia Rice
Cambodian milled rice has passed quality and
food hygiene tests for export to China. A delegation of Chinese
experts inspected the quality and safety at 27 rice mills during a week-long
visit, said Hean Vanhan, director-general of the agriculture department at the
Agriculture Ministry.The result of the checks, Mr. Vanhan said,
will allow selected millers to export rice to China. “We
have an export quota of rice to China at about 200,000 tons per year, but China
wants to make sure the imported rice from Cambodia meets their requirement in
terms of quality and the absence of pests,” he said. The
Ministry of Agriculture earlier sent out reports on the 27 quality rice mills
for the Chinese government to check after the ministry inspected 60 rice mills
which had applied to export rice to China.
Last December, China asked Cambodia to evaluate its rice exporters to
determine whether they adhered to the hygiene laws in China, because officials
in the world’s second-largest economy did not trust all of the 71 rice
exporters registered with the Ministry of Commerce. “All of the
rice millers they have checked are of high enough quality to meet their
requirement. Therefore only those rice millers are allowed to export rice to
China,” Mr. Vanhan said.China is one of Cambodia’s big markets
for milled rice.In September, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in a
meeting with Prime Minister Hun Sen at the sidelines of the Asean Summit in
Laos, pledged to double China’s annual purchase of 100,000 tons of Cambodian
rice to 200,000 tons, starting next year. China also pledged a loan of $300
million to Cambodia’s rice millers for building warehouses with drying
facilities.
China also gave assurances that it will grant greater access for
Cambodia’s agricultural products to enter its markets. Cambodia
exported up to 100,000 tons of rice to China from January to November, while
total exports of rice in the period increased five percent to nearly 480,000
tons, government figures say
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/32940/china-okays-cambodia-rice/
Suspend ban on vehicle imports through land
borders, Reps tell FG
ON DECEMBER 9, 20165:34 AMIN NEWSCOMMENTS By Emman
Ovuakporie, Godwin Oritse & Johnbosco Agbakwuru ABUJA—The
House of Representatives, yesterday, asked the Federal Government to suspend
the ban on importation of vehicles through land borders in Nigeria.
Consequently, the lawmakers, at plenary, mandated the Committees on
Governmental Affairs and Customs and Excise to ensure implementation and report
back to the House within six weeks for further legislative input.
This development was
based on a motion, entitled ‘’Need to suspend The Ban On Importation of
Vehicles Through Land Borders, promoted by Abdulahi Salame, APC, Sokoto.
Meantime, stakeholders in the maritime industry were divided on the issue,
yesterday. While some supported the ban, others kicked against it. Salame, in
his presentation, argued that those making these policies have failed to
patronise made-in-Nigeria goods, especially Nigerian assembled vehicles, which
are, in any case unaffordable for 80 percent of Nigerians. He said: “The percentage of Nigerians who can afford
cars has declined drastically, following the decline in the value of the Naira,
rising inflation, unemployment and high cost of living that have bedeviled
Nigeria where over 80 per cent of Nigerians live below $2 a day.
“The Federal Government has powers under Section 18 of the
Customs and Excise Management Act to restrict the movement of goods into and
out of Nigeria by land or inland waters and to appoint customs stations.
‘’However, similar exercise of such powers on rice importation through the land
borders in April 2016, has occasioned untold hardship on Nigerians, as a bag of
rice now sells for between N20,000 and N23,000, against N8,000 a few months
ago. “As it is now, the government has not put in place alternative measures to
ensure that Nigerians will have access to cars since it is cheaper to buy cars
from neighbouring countries and still generate revenue by ensuring that our
borders are secured to prevent smuggling, and also that there will be no job
losses.’’ Salame also expressed worry that “the ban will cause more harm than
good as it will certainly lead to increase in smuggling,deprive poor Nigerians
access to acquiring vehicles, skyrocket the prices of cars cleared at the
Wharf, increase inflation and further mount pressure on the already weak naira
and lead to idleness, insecurity and criminality at the border points.’’
Maritime stakeholders divided over policy In the maritime industry,
stakeholders were clearly divided on the issue.
While some kicked against the House of Representatives’
directive to the Federal Government to rescind the decision on the ban of
vehicles imported through land borders, others
welcomed the call to suspend the ban because it will not only affect
revenue but also put the Customs under pressure to check smuggling. Speaking to
Vanguard, National President of the National Council of Managing Director of
Licensed Customs Agents, NCMDLCA, Mr. Lucky Amiwero, said the government’s ban
on importation of vehicles through land borders was wrong. Amiwero said the
borders were entry points for cargoes, adding that government loses a lot of
revenue when the borders were closed. He explained that despite the closure,
quite a number of vehicles found their way into the country through smuggling
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/12/suspend-ban-vehicle-imports-land-borders-reps-tell-fg/
Africa Must Ditch Neoliberal
Policies To Improve Rice Sustainability – OpEd
Rice paddy field in Africa. Photo by Ji-Elle,
Wikipedia Commons.
BY WILLIAM LI DECEMBER 8, 2016
“The increasing role of rice in the food basket
of [Sub-Saharan African] consumers has made rice a political crop whose price
and accessibility directly influence social stability.” — Noted in Papa A.
Seck, Rising trends and variability of rice prices: Threats and opportunities
for sub-Saharan Africa (2010), 404.Nearly 40 percent of Africa’s rice
consumption is sustained by imports as a result of neoliberal Structural
Adjustment Programs (SAPs) that have been instituted since the 1980s. Policies
that promote domestic rice production should be pursued instead because
reversing reliance on foreign imports is imperative to agricultural
self-sufficiency within the continent.
The current issue with neoliberal policies is
that they force Sub-Saharan Africa to conform to Western economic values rather
than fulfilling its own interests. The intention of SAPs was to promote long
term economic growth in poor countries by providing loans through the World
Bank or International Monetary Fund. However, critics have often associated
these loans with blackmail as each is tied to a specific set of constraining
neoliberal requirements that the recipient is compelled to meet.
The demands from SAPs have firstly pressured
African countries to decrease agricultural subsidies at the expense of
smallholder rice farmers. In the Gambia, this resulted in a four-fold increase
in the price of fertilizer and a subsequent 40 percent drop in domestic rice
production as rural incomes could not keep up with rising farming costs.
Ironically, while Western institutions pressured Africa to cut subsidies,
agriculture continues to be massively subsidized in the US and in Asia.
Local rice farmers have also suffered because
SAPs influence Sub-Saharan governments to decrease trade barriers; as a result,
foreign imports have flooded the local rice markets in Africa. Smallholders are
no longer able to compete with the cheaper imported rice in their own
countries. Essentially, agricultural neoliberal policies have encouraged
Sub-Saharan nations to marginalize smallholders, once “the backbone of African
agriculture,” as a secondary concern.
In addition to the destruction of domestic
farming, a greater risk is posed for African rice consumers as a whole. Since
Africa has increased its dependence on rice imports to fulfill the demands of
growing urban populations, its inhabitants have become alarmingly vulnerable to
the ebb and flow of global food prices. When the price of rice shot up by 74
percent in 2008, African households were devastated. Loss of food security
translated to a series of destructive food riots in urban areas. Promoting
local self-sufficiency as a main food policy goal, therefore, is imperative to
maintaining social stability and protecting citizens from both hunger and
violence.
Three main policy changes are needed to improve
smallholder farming and restore self-sufficiency in Africa:
Increasing
the production and competitiveness of domestic farmers through public
investment in rural development: specific aims include improving seed
distribution and access to agricultural inputs, facilitating irrigation to
support more farmland, and promoting other crops that are better adapted to
local environments as substitute options for struggling rice farmers.
Reversing
urban-bias in food policy: Consumers are willing to pay more for local rice on
the condition that its quality matches or exceeds that of imported rice, so
investment in post-harvest rice quality is the first step in shifting urban
consumer demand away from foreign rice imports.
Improving
local rice access and quality: first, advancing road and transport
infrastructure would facilitate interregional commerce and subsequently provide
consumers access to a larger variety of food sources. Second, establishing food
for work and food transfer programs and improving methods of crop storage would
increase food availability for the most at risk during emergency periods of low
harvest (such as drought).
Without breaking free of neoliberal Structural
Adjustment Programs, Sub-Saharan Africa cannot accomplish its goals of
agricultural self-sufficiency. Instead, it will continue its trajectory of high
risk, low reward growth. Smallholder farming will be further repressed, African
countries will increase its import reliance, and urban inhabitants will be even
more vulnerable to international market shocks. Evidence has shown very minimal
economic growth, but high instability as a result of SAPs and other neoliberal
policies. Therefore, Africa must put agricultural self-sufficiency at the
centerpiece of its policies before opening up to the international market, but
it needs the support of international institutions through reformed
agricultural policies.* William Li studies agricultural policy in developing
countries as an undergraduate at the University of ennsylvania
http://www.eurasiareview.com/08122016-africa-must-ditch-neoliberal-policies-to-improve-rice-sustainability-oped/
Honored for helping rice
farmers
Thursday,
December 8th 2016, 5:35 am PKT Thursday,
December 8th 2016, 6:56 am PKT
By Theresa Schmidt, Reporter
(Source:
IFG Port Holdings)
JEFF DAVIS PARISH, LA
(KPLC)
Agriculture
is the no. 1 industry in Jeff Davis Parish, yet with flooding and economic
issues, it's been hard times for farmers.The Jeff Davis Economic Development
Commission is honoring the developer of an export grain terminal which may
have saved some farmers.Rice is a staple in Louisiana kitchens and all
over the world. Yet, with flooding and the disappointing demand of domestic
markets, some Jeff Davis rice farmers have struggled to survive. But now, IFG
Port Holdings' export grain terminal at the Port of Lake Charles has
become a key export point for Louisiana rice.
Kabir Ahmad, of New York City, is the
CEO of IFG Port Holdings. He is pleased to have helped create
this opportunity for farmers in our area."A lot of the farmers had not
previously thought that they could get access to the international export
markets and we started working with them.They loaded their first export vessel
and since then, over the past year, they've loaded more than 150,000 metric
tons of rice and have a brand new market to sell their rice," he said.
The
grain terminal here is described as state-of-the-art, with the latest equipment
to move rice and other commodities from truck or rail car to ship for export.
And there's a lab on-site for government testing of the grains. Ahmad calls
Lake Charles one of the premier export points for rice and sees tremendous potential
for growth."The farmers are very excited. I think they're looking
forward to having an opportunity to export to Mexico, to Latin America, Central
America and potentially Cuba in the future. From there sky's the limit for
them," he said.
Ahmad
was presented with the inaugural award of the Jeff Davis Parish Economic
Development Commission at a luncheon in Welsh.The Jeff Davis Economic
Development Office plans to give the award yearly for outstanding contributions
to the agriculture industry in our area. Jeff Davis parish has more
than 150 rice producers that work more than 77,000 acres of land.
Copyright
2016 KPLC .
All rights reserved.
http://www.kplctv.com/story/34001437/ceo-of-export-grain-terminal-honored-for-helping-rice-farmers
Japan grants $3M for purchase
of U.S. rice to Haiti
Thursday
December 8, 2016
Haiti Sentinel
PORT-AU-PRINCE,
Haiti (sentinel.ht) – Japan granted $3 million [USD] to Haiti on Thursday for
the purchase of U.S. rice as part of a food security agreement the two
countries have with each other.Pierrot Delienne, the Minister of Foreign
Affairs and Yoshiaki Hatta, Ambassador of Japan in Haiti signed a Grant
Agreement for the Food Assistance (KR) project for 2016.
As part of this project, the Government of
Japan will make available to the Haitian Government, as a donation, 350 million
Yen ($3 million). This amount will be used to purchase rice, which will be sold
at preferential prices by the Office of Monetization of Development Aid
Programs (BMPAD) to stabilize the local market. The Government of Japan
expressed its desire to see the donation benefit the many affected families to
prevent hunger and improve the nutritional status of the country along with the
development of agricultural capacity
http://sentinel.ht/2016/12/08/japan-grants-3m-purchase-u-s-rice-haiti/
Cambodia exports 107,091 tons
of milled rice to China in 11 months
Xinhua, December 8, 2016
Cambodia
had exported 107,091 tons of milled rice to China in the first 11 months of
2016, up 16.5 percent from 91,883 tons over the same period last year, the
latest report said Thursday.The report released by the Secretariat of One
Window Service for Rice Export showed that China is the top buyer of Cambodian
rice, followed by France and Poland.
According
to the report, the Southeast Asian country had sold a total of 479,689 tons of
milled rice to 64 countries and regions during the January-November period this
year, representing a 5-percent rise over the same period last year.Cambodia is
an agrarian country with some 80 percent of the population being farmers. Last
year, the country produced over 9 million tons of paddy rice, according to
figures of the Ministry of Agriculture. Enditem
http://www.china.org.cn/world/Off_the_Wire/2016-12/08/content_39875416.htm
Christmas:
Lagos to sell bag of rice for N13,000 from December 15
The Lagos State Government on Thursday said it
was ready to roll out Lake Rice on December 15 to Lagosians at N13,000 per 50
kg towards the Yuletide celebrations.The sale will come as succour for millions
of Lagosians who like their counterparts in most parts of the country have had
to pay over N20,000 for a bag of rice, mostly imported.
Sanni Okanlawan, Special Adviser on Food
Security to Governor Akinwumi Ambode, made the disclosure in Lagos during the
Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) National Agriculture Stakeholders
Summit.
Mr. Okanlawan said that sales of the rice would
be made at all the 57 Local Government Areas (LGAs) and Local Council
Development Areas (LCDAs) in the state to ensure proper distribution.“Lake Rice
is the acronym of both Lagos and Kebbi States joint product which will be out
to the public on December 15 at the rate of N13,000 per 50kg bag as it is
already subsidised by the government.
“To make it more available, the rice will be
sold at the 57 LGAs and LCDAs for easy accessibility and to guard against unwanted
persons diverting the product.“The state government has put in place a
committee that will ensure that Lagosians have the best Christmas celebration,
that is why we are offering the wholesome and well packaged rice,” Mr.
Okanlawan said.The special adviser also said that the state had established a
Department of Agribusiness, an Agriculture Trust Fund and Commodity Exchange
Market to be set up soon
10,000 tonnes of rice sold to
Venezuelan buyers; amount to increase- Agri. Minister
December 8, 2016
Guyana’s Agriculture Minister, Noel Holder
Guyana’s
rice is no longer purchased by the Venezuelan government, but private buyers in
Guyana’s spanish-speaking neighbour have purchased thousands of tonnes of rice
directly from Guyanese millers.Agriculture Minister Noel Holder confirmed this
yesterday to Demerara Waves Online.“It is not government to government but
private to private,” Minister Holder explained noting that the arrangement sees
buyers coming from Venezuela and purchasing directly from millers in Guyana.This
arrangement has been ongoing for the past four or fives months, Holder noted,
and the amount of rice already-purchased, some 10,000 tonnes, is expected to
increase as the arrangement continues.
Holder said the Guyana government continues to
engage with Panama, Mexico, Italy, and Spain on purchasing agreements between
governments. The Agriculture Minister expects the Mexican team in Guyana during
January 2017.It is still too early to tell how much rice Mexico will purchase
from Guyana. The Agriculture Minister explained Mexico’s rice demand is some
1.8M tonnes, while Guyana can only produce 600,000 tonnes.Asked whether the
Guyana government benefits from the private-private rice trade between Guyanese
sellers and Venezuelan buyers, Minister Holder responded, “of course it does.”
“Nothing
can leave here without it being given a certificate,” Minister Holder
explained, noting the Guyana Rice Development Board must approve of the
shipment. “You gotta pay US$8 a tonne on every tonne of rice that leaves. Every
bit of rice leaving here, we gotta give it a certificate before it goes on the
boat.”
Relations
between Guyana and Venezuela have grown difficult since the coming into office
of the David Granger administration. A more than 100-year-old border
controversy between the two countries had escalated in 2015 to the point where
the Venezuelan government was no longer trading ‘oil for rice’ with Guyana in
the Petrocaribe arrangement.Venezuela is currently experiencing an economic
pitfall as global oil prices remain low; negatively affecting the
petroleum-dependent country
http://demerarawaves.com/2016/12/08/10000-tonnes-of-rice-sold-to-venezuelan-buyers-amount-to-increase-agri-minister/
Rotting rice to be used to make
ethanol
Move aims to prevent shortage of
biofuel
Officials check the quality of
pledged rice. Decaying rice will be used as feedstock to produce ethanol as the
production of molasses is being delayed by the later sugar-crushing season.
PATTANAPONG HIRUNARD
Almost 4 million tonnes of
decaying rice kept in government stocks for more than two years is expected to
be used as feedstock to produce ethanol, due to be in short supply soon,
according to the Department of Energy Business (DOEB).
The DOEB was informed by the
central government that the rice bought from farmers during the Yingluck
Shinawatra administration's rice-pledging scheme that has not been sold is
decaying. It has become inedible, suitable only as feedstock to produce
ethanol.
The supply of ethanol, which is blended with petrol to produce
gasohol, is expected to fall short of demand in December and January due to the
delay of the sugar-crushing season, which also means a delay in the production
of molasses, the major feedstock for ethanol.Director-general Witoon Kulcha-
roenwirat said his department is preparing to temporarily switch feedstock from
molasses to decaying rice from the government's stock in order to prevent a
shortage of ethanol.
He said Thailand's ethanol production capacity stands at an
average of 4 million litres per day with daily consumption of 3.6-3.8 million
litres.But the shortage of molasses caused by unfavourable weather that delayed
sugar crushing and molasses production, as well as mismanagement among ethanol
producers that exported some ethanol during the mid-year, are likely to cause a
shortage this month.Mr Witoon said the state Oil Fund would be ready to provide
subsidies if the cost of producing ethanol from rice is higher than producing
ethanol from molasses. Details of the subsidies are expected to be discussed
later.The government now controls 8.4 million tonnes of rice bought from
farmers since 2011, of which half is good quality and the remainder suitable
for industrial use.
To prevent ethanol shortage in
the long term, the DOEB has ordered ethanol producers, traders and oil
retailers to report production, inventories and production capacity every day
until the end of February.The DOEB expects ethanol production in December to be
around 3.7 million litres per day with demand of around 3.8 million litres.
Given the uncertain ethanol
production, the DOEB might delay the phase-out of E10, or gasohol 91, from January
next year to January 2018, when there would only be E20 petrol available for
all vehicles in Thailand.The delay in the mandatory use of E20 nationwide means
a delay in greater ethanol demand to be blended with petrol.Previously, energy
policymakers planned to slash E10 and leave only E20 available on the market
within the next 10 years.However, Mr Witoon said major oil retailers are
unlikely to bring their ethanol reserve of around 1% of total consumption to be
sold, which would be sufficient for slightly over three days.
Major oil retailers recently
expressed concern that ethanol production would be short for up to 5-6 days as
demand for petrol in the first 10 months of this year rose by as much as 14%
during the time that global oil prices remain low.Besides, the DOEB could also
amend regulations related to ethanol production in order to help maintain
sustainable ethanol production for the energy sector.The development of
biofuels in Thailand started around a decade ago, when global oil prices rose
above US$100 a barrel.
Demand for biofuels has grown
rapidly with the production of biofuels blended with petrol helping to reduce
demand for pure petrol by up to 75 million litres per day.According to a report
by the Department of Alternative Energy Development and Efficiency in
September, Thailand has a total of 4 million vehicles with petrol-compatible
engines, 2.5 million compatible with ethanol-blended petrol, or gasohol, and
around 1 million compatible with E20.
The Bangkok Post
Global Rice Seed Market 2016 – Dupont Pioneer, Bayer,
Nuziveedu Seeds, Kaveri, Mahyco, RiceTec, Krishidhan, Rasi Seeds, JK
seeds, Syngenta
December
9, 2016
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Several key players operating in the Global
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better strategies for a desired business outcome.http://aperturegames.com/2923/global-rice-seed-market-2016-2021/
Rice price rise helps increase real income by
0.11pc: Study
FE Report
Increase in rice prices helps raise real income
by 0.11 per cent in the country, a latest study has revealed.The disclosure was
made in a research styled 'Rice Prices and their Relationship to Growth and
Development', conducted by the think-tank Bangladesh Institute of Development
Studies (BIDS)
The research finding found its place in the
BIDS Research Almanac 2016, jointly authored by BIDS Director General Dr K A S
Murshid and Senior Research Fellow of the Institute Dr Mohammad Yunus.The paper
was presented by Dr Yunus at the first session of the concluding day of BIDS
Almanac 2016, held at a city hotel on Thursday. It was organised by the
Institute. Talking about rice prices and
their relationship with local growth and development, the research showed that
a 10 per cent hike in rice prices at farm, wholesale and retail levels, has
helped increase real income by 0.11 per cent in the country.
The research also showed that if rice prices
increase by 10 per cent, it causes rise in labour wages by 20 per cent.
The national Net Benefit Ratio (NBR) is 1.4 per
cent (if rice prices increase by 10 per cent), it said. Average income in Bangladesh will rise by
0.2 per cent in the long run while poverty rate will also fall slightly if rice
prices maintain usual rise, it said.The paper said such a hike (10 pc) in rice
prices even can reduce poverty rate to 31.23 per cent from 31.5 per cent.Dr
Murshid said, "We have to give up the old notion on increase in rice
prices that it could extend a blow."
"But we have to realise that hike in rice
prices to some extent has little impact over poverty eradication process; it
rather helps boost rural economy," he said. He said the price of rice hasn't
increased in last ten years in real terms. This means farmers are the ultimate
losers.A rice variety was sold at Tk 38-Tk 40 a kg in 2010. If its price remain
the same now, it indicates that the price of the product declined in real term,
he said.Asked, he said the primary trading of paddy by the farmer community
will be included in the research in future which could give more diverse
scenario.
The research found that paddy covers 13 million
farmers, 48 per cent of rural economy, 70 per cent of agricultural GDP and the
cereal also meets two-thirds of calorie needs of the nation.BIDS former
Director General Dr Quazi Shahabuddin chaired the first session while farm
economists Dr Mohammad A Jabbar and Dr Sattar Mandol also spoke. Two more papers related to vegetable and
fruit production and their exports were presented on the concluding day of the
programme.Eleven research papers were disseminated during the two-day BIDS
Almanac 2016 aiming to bring
stakeholders, and policymakers to research domain to boost
socio-economic development of the country, organisers said
Uganda: Shs50.7 Billion to
Benefit Scientists in Research Training
By Lilian
Namagembe
Kampala — Uganda is one of the African countries set to gain
from the Science Granting Councils Initiative (SGCI) fund worth $14m (about
Shs50.7 billion) to train scientists in grant management, as part of efforts to
boost research on the continent.The fund is intended to strengthen the Uganda
National Council for Science and Technology (UNCST), a body charged with
integrating science and technology into the national development system, to
move research evidence based policies.
Mr Ismail Barugahara, the Deputy executive secretary of UNCST
said the overall target is to enable the trainees identify key interest areas
for allocation of research grants and promote appropriate technology."Ordinary
people will therefore benefit from the research findings steered by the
council," Mr Barugahare explained.He told Daily Monitor in an interview
during the Science Grating Councils Initiative regional training workshop
organised by the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) , an economic
development program of the African Union in Kampala.
Started in 2015, SGCI is a brain child of the Irrigated Rice
Research Consortium (IRRC) the Department for International Development (DFID)
and the National Research Foundation of South Africa, meant to solve research
challenges in sub-Saharan Africa.Speaking on behalf of Mr Elioda Tumwesigye,
the minister for science technology and innovation, Dr Peter Ndemere, the
executive secretary of UNCST, said unlike in the past where training grants
have been limited to scientists in the public institutions, they are opening
the window to scientists in private intuitions as well."Government will
use the research fund to employ competitive grants so that technology and
research become the drivers of economic growth," he said.
Uganda
http://allafrica.com/stories/201612090046.html
Quintana
Sherill Quintana is the founder and
president of Oryspa Spa Solutions, Inc., the leading maker of health and beauty
products made from all-natural rice bran.It won the “Most Promising Franchise”
at the 2015 Franchise Excellence Awards and the “Asean Business Awards for
Excellence in Healthcare” at the Asean Business Summit at Vientiane, Laos last
Sept. 5, 2016.A multi-awarded entrepreneur, Quintana was named “Asean Woman
Entrepreneur” in Hanoi, Vietnam and one of Go Negosyo’s “Most Inspiring
Filipina”, both in 2016.She shares here her thoughts on how she started Oryspa
and her goal of making it a global brand.
Q: You
started as a toll manufacturer. Please briefly share with us your business
genesis.
A: Sixteen
years ago, I was making candles in my kitchen and practicing aromatherapy to
kill time during a difficult pregnancy.
I never
planned to be an entrepreneur. In fact, I was looking forward to going back to
development work. But, I wasn’t able to find an available nanny. So with the
help of a sturdy baby car seat, I brought my son with me to bazaars in Ateneo
and Miriam College.
Then and
there, I realized that entrepreneurship was a good fit for mommies.
After 10
years and three more children, the business still had no projections and not much
of a system. It had its ups and downs. I ran it like my household.
Later on, I
learned that most micro-entrepreneurs like me were losing opportunities to
build an empire and touch more lives because business systems were not in
place.
For several
years, we became an indirect exporter and supplied some spas with massage oils.
However,
without a differentiating factor, my products suffered greatly during price
wars.
Q: How did
you discover the raw material rice bran (‘darak’) and what made you decide to use
it as a key ingredient in your spa products?
A: In 2008,
I came across a study on Japan’s rice wine and I had a eureka moment after
reading the side comments on the article: “the Japanese workers exposed to the
bran being removed from the rice have fair and smooth skin”.
It also
helps that I am married to an agriculturist, who specialized in plant breeding
and was adept at rice research.
We both set
up a research laboratory where we developed the first five products, later
branded Oryspa.
Q: How did
you face branding and positioning challenges since ‘darak’ is commonly fed to
pigs here in the Philippines.
A: It was
challenging to introduce Oryspa to the market. I had to intensify product
awareness.
I also
reviewed client feedback and listened to the consumers to determine which
products were in need.
Studies
showed that there was an increasing consciousness about the carcinogenic
effects of chemical-laden topical products.
Also,
alternative organic products proved to be more in demand to sustain a healthy lifestyle.
Oryspa focused on offering products to address these needs.
The brand
was named after the scientific name of rice – Oryza sativa.
Q: Your
vision is for Oryspa to become an international Filipino brand. Tell us the
thought process behind this.
A: From
exporting products before Oryspa, I learned that the strategies we had for
almost a decade can never be applied to the new brand, if I wanted different
results.
One thing
that was wrong before was I lacked a clear vision.
Vision as
part of a brand’s DNA answers your where and why. Brand founders should be
clear about this at the onset.
Part of my
“why” is the desire to be known as a Filipino brand.
I believe
that changing the culture of your business changes your game.
It has
always been fulfilling for me to build a homegrown brand and making it ready
for global trade.
Vietnam’s fertile ‘rice bowl’
threatened by climate shifts, Chinese dams
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/dec/7/vietnams-fertile-rice-bowl-threatened-by-climate-s/?
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