Pakistan sends three ships of rice to SL
2017-04-02
22:08:50
12
4856
The Government of Pakistan had
dispatched three relief ships containing 3000 Metric Tons (Three million kgs)
of rice, to as drought relief , Deputy Head of Mission Pakistan High Commission
in Sri Lanka Dr. Sarfraz Ahamad Khan said today.
“This relief tranche is a part
of total 10, 000 Metric Tons (10 million kgs) of rice approved by the Prime
Minister of Pakistan Muhammad Nawaz Sharif for drought affected people of Sri
Lanka. The remaining 7, 000 Metric Tons rice will also reach Colombo within
April 2017,” he said.
Dr. Khan said all consignments
were expected to reach Colombo by the third week in April this year.
“We have been maintaining sound
diplomatic relationship with Sri Lanka in the past and want to develop it
further,” Dr. Khan said while highlighting that Pakistan had helped Sri Lanka
whenever there was a natural disaster.
Earlier, in February 2017, the
Government of Pakistan sent a relief flight to Colombo containing 25 Metric
Tons of rice for drought affected people.
The High Commissioner of
Pakistan in Sri Lanka Maj. Gen. (R) Syed Shakeel Hussain will hand over the
relief consignments to Sri Lankan authorities at Colombo Port this week.
Both countries have been
assisting each other in challenging times especially in view of the
catastrophic situations. (Yohan
Perera)
- See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/article/Pakistan-sends-three-ships-of-rice-to-SL--126618.html#sthash.OA2UikCi.dpuf
By Kasun Warakapitiya
The Paddy Marketing Board (PMB) has sold paddy stocks stored at Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport at cut rate to W M Mendis and Co — a liquor manufacturing firm owned by the influential Aloysius Group, which is associated with the Central Bank bond issue now under investigation.The paddy was hawked off to the company at Rs 24 a kilogram. The PMB had bought the stocks for between Rs 38 and Rs 42 a kilogram. The loss to the Board is, therefore, between Rs 14 and Rs. 18 a kilogram.
The Paddy Marketing Board (PMB) has sold paddy stocks stored at Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport at cut rate to W M Mendis and Co — a liquor manufacturing firm owned by the influential Aloysius Group, which is associated with the Central Bank bond issue now under investigation.The paddy was hawked off to the company at Rs 24 a kilogram. The PMB had bought the stocks for between Rs 38 and Rs 42 a kilogram. The loss to the Board is, therefore, between Rs 14 and Rs. 18 a kilogram.
The total quantity of paddy sold
was 590 metric tonnes, PMB Chairman M.B. Dissanayake, said, claiming that it
was pushed off to Mendis because other buyers could not be found. This means
that the Board — which comes under the purview of the Rural Economic Affairs
Minister P. Harrison — has lost between Rs 8,260,000 and Rs 10,620,000.
Mr. Dissanayake insisted that the
stocks were too old to be used and needed to be cleared out. “We tried to
export the stocks, sell it to millers, vend it as animal feed but no one bought
it,” he said. Some of it was sold to the World Food Programme and certain other
buyers but he declined to name the latter. He also said tenders had been
called.
A leading union of farmer
associations and of small millers contested Mr Dissanayake’s numbers. The All-Island
Farmers’ Federation (AIFF) said that as much as 4,000 metric tonnes had been
sold to Mendis. If true, this would multiply the PMB’s losses to between Rs
56,000,000 and Rs 72,000,000 (on the basis of information provided by the PMB
on the prices it bought and sold the stocks at).
Even while claiming a shortage of
paddy in the country, these stocks were stored at MRIA without releasing them
to millers, AIFF National Organiser Namal Karunaratne charged. “Then they were
sold to a private company manufacturing liquor,” he claimed.
Significantly, the sweetheart
sale of paddy to Mendis comes amidst the company starting construction on a Rs
4 billion grain-based extra neutral alcohol (ENA) distillery in Kalkudah in the
Batticaloa district. Approval to set up the distillery was granted to the
company just 18 weeks after the presidential election was won, among other
things, on a premise of eradicating drugs and alcohol. Building is now
suspended on an order of the Koralaipattu Pradeshiya Sabha (PS). Local and provincial
officials are opposed to the project.
Excess stock from the 2015 paddy
harvest was dumped at MRIA in August-September that year due to a lack of
adequate storage space and the absence of a plan to distribute paddy to
millers. “When certain millers created an artificial rice shortage, the
Government had the opportunity to convert the paddy to rice using its own mills
at Hasalaka, Galgamuwa or Embilipitiya, said Mr Karunaratne. Some of the paddy
was released at animal stocks last year and in January 2017 in private business
deals of politicians, he alleged.
Local paddy is used to
manufacture beer, while imported rice is provided to consumers, said Mudith
Perera, President of the United Rice Millers’ Association (URMA). They too put
in tenders to buy some of these stocks but they were not released. There were
sufficient millers in Hambantota and other areas willing to purchase the paddy.
Yet the Food Committee of the Finance Ministry decided it should be sold to
Mendis at Rs 24 a kilogram. The Finance Ministry, through its Fiscal Policy
Department and Department of Excise — also approved the Kalkudah distillery.
The allegation that PMB stocks
were sold to a liquor company must be inquired into, State Finance Minister
Lakshman Yapa Abewardena told a news conference this week. He said he did not
know how tenders were called or how the decision to provide the paddy to Mendis
was made.
The Sunday Times contacted W M
Mendis and Co. Officials there declined comment, even after inviting this
journalist to its head office at Welisara in Wattala. Subsequent phone calls to
the company went unanswered
http://www.sundaytimes.lk/170402/news/pmb-paddy-at-cut-rate-for-aloysius-liquor-company-235196.html
Q1
rice output increased 5.3%
Rice harvests in the first
quarter of 2017 increased by over 5 percent from a year ago, despite the
smaller production area, Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said over the weekend.
Piñol said rice production, based
on the Philippine satellite monitoring data which validated on the ground,
reached 4.14 million metric tons in January to March, up 5.3 percent from
3.93 million MT harvested in the same period last year.
He said the growth in rice output came despite the smaller production
area of 997,687 hectares in the first quarter this year from 1.081 million
hectares a year earlier.
Piñol attributed the growth in rice output to improved productivity in 2017.
Philippine Rice Research Institute executive director Sailila Abdula
confirmed that for the first time in the history of rice farming, Filipino
farmers posted a 4.15-metric-ton average yield per hectare per harvest this
year, breaking the previous average of only 3.9 MT per hectare.
“The PRiSM satellite-generated
data validated my earlier projection based on ocular appreciation that the
country will enjoy a bumper harvest this planting season,” Piñol said.
He said the higher rice
production was achieved despite the destruction caused by typhoon Niña which affected
the Bicol region.
Bicol or Region V harvested just
159,611 metric tons from an area of 44,336 hectares out of the region’s rice
area of 101,000 hectares, translating into a low average yield of 3.6 metric
tons per hectare.
Central Luzon posted the highest
average yield per region at 4.84 metric tons per hectare.
“The higher average yield in the
Central Luzon area is credited mainly to the increasing number of farmers who
are using hybrid rice seeds,” Piñol said.
Piñol said in Nueva Ecija where
almost half of the farmers were already using hybrid rice seeds, the average
yield per hectare reached 6.09 metric tons.
“The Department of Agriculture is
promoting the nationwide use of hybrid rice seeds which have been proven to
produce double the production average of inbred rice seeds,” Piñol said.
Piñol said with the improving
rice productivity, the Philippines was on track to achieving self sufficiency
in the staple by 2020.
“The national hybrid rice seeds
program, along with the provision of small-scale irrigation systems,
mechanization and the availability of easy credit and financing for the
farmers, is expected to boost the country’s rice production and achieve rice
sufficiency by 2020,” Piñol said.
http://thestandard.com.ph/business/csr-mining/233386/q1-rice-output-increased-5-3-.html
Basmati rice exports may grow to Rs 22,000-22,500 cr in FY18:
ICRA
"In FY18, the value of exports is likely to grow to Rs
22,000–22,500 crore, with export volumes growing to around 4.09 million tonne
and supported by an increase in average realisations," Jotwani added.
Basmati rice exports is likely to
grow to Rs 22,000–22,500 crore and volume to around 4.09 million tonne mainly
supported by an increase in average realisations, rating agency ICRA said in a
report today.
"We expect the export
volumes in FY17 to be around 4 million tonne (almost similar to the volumes in
FY2016). However, muted average realisations are expected to keep the value of
these exports to under Rs 21,000 crore, against Rs 22,718 crore in FY16,"
said ICRA Assistant Vice President Deepak Jotwani.
"In FY18, the value of
exports is likely to grow to Rs 22,000–22,500 crore, with export volumes
growing to around 4.09 million tonne and supported by an increase in average
realisations," Jotwani added.
This is likely to push up Basmati
rice prices in the next fiscal, he said.
Resumption of imports by Iran
will be keenly watched by the industry as it has the potential to provide an
impetus to exports, he added.
"Going forward, the coming
financial year is expected to witness better revenue growth supported by a rise
in average realisations, as paddy prices firm up during the current procurement
season. Moreover, resumption of imports by Iran will also be crucial for
driving industry growth in the next fiscal," Jotwani said.
The basmati rice industry
witnessed moderation over the last few years on the back of subdued
international demand, partly attributable to the delay in resumption of imports
by Iran.
However, 2016-17 has seen some
stabilisation in demand, ICRA said, adding after peaking at Rs 29,300 crore in
FY14, the value of basmati rice exports went on a downward trajectory.
While volumes saw some growth
over the last few years, the decline in value is primarily owing to continued
pressure on average realisations (declined from a high of Rs 77,988 per tonne
in FY14 to Rs 56,149 per tonne in FY16) in the light of moderation in demand in
the global market, ICRA said.
Nevertheless, the export volumes
in the current fiscal have largely been in line with last year, being supported
by the increasing domestic demand for basmati rice, the report added.
It said, the industry has
registered milling gains on paddy procured at a fairly low rate in the last
procurement season and favourable foreign exchange rate movement.
For the next fiscal, the industry
is expected to benefit from the rising paddy prices, ICRA said.
After declining considerably during the procurement season in
FY16, basmati paddy prices have firmed up by 20-25 per cent across various
varieties, primarily due to the relatively lower production, in the recent
procurement season - October to December 2016, the agency noted
http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/economy/basmati-rice-exports-may-grow-to-rs-22000-22500-cr-in-fy18-icra-2249507.html
Basmati rice shares in focus; LT Foods, KRBL hit
new highs
In FY17, LT Foods and Kohinoor Foods rallied more than
100%
SI Reporter | Mumbai March
31, 2017 Last Updated at 10:09 IST
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