KARACHI: The
US dollar surged to its 2.5-year-high against the Pakistan Rupee in the
interbank market on Wednesday, touching Rs108. After closing at Rs104.90 on
Tuesday, the dollar gained Rs3.12 to hit Rs108 today. In the curb market NBP
exchange quote was Rs105.90/106.40, lower than the interbank rate.
https://www.geo.tv/latest/148159-us-dollar-climbs-to-rs108-in-interbank-market
FAO Rice Price
Update – July | 2017
The FAO All Rice Price Index
(2002-04=100) rose for the seventh consecutive month in June 2017 to reach 209
points, up 7.3 points (4 percent) from its value a month earlier. Price
increases were most pronounced in the long-grain segment last month, with brisk
demand lifting the value of the Higher and Lower Quality Indica Indices by 12
points, each. Japonica prices also continued to regain ground, amid
deteriorating crop prospects in California. Instead, the Aromatic Index eased
by 1 percent month-on-month, as demand for Basmati rice tended to slow.
Export prices made further inroads in all the
major Asian origins during June, as suppliers remained busy meeting the rush in
orders placed by countries such as Iraq, Iran and Bangladesh in recent weeks.
Expectations of additional purchases by the Philippines, Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh tended to accentuate gains. It was only towards the latter part of
the month that prices subsided somewhat, amid easing pressure to secure
supplies and a lack of fresh interest. In the Americas, a sale to Iraq provided
a further boost to long-grain quotations in the United States, which had
already found support on continued concerns over flood-losses and a good pace
of shipments. An upbeat pace of sales also underpinned quotations in Argentina
and Uruguay, while prices took a downturn in Brazil, amid limited buying
interest and currency movements.
According to the FAO All Rice Price Index,
international prices in the first half of 2017 were on average 0.6 percent
above their level in the first semester of 2016. The relative stability masks
contrasting trends across the major origins, with quotations up in India and
Pakistan, remaining steady to lower in Thailand and Viet Nam, but noticeably
weak in the United States.
http://ricenewstoday.com/?p=117468
LAHORE: President Federation of Pakistan Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (FPCCI) Zubair Tufail said on Monday that furniture exhibitions would
play a significant role in attracting foreign investors and boosting local
hand-made furniture industry. Talking to a delegation of Pakistan
Furniture Council (PFC), headed by its Chief Executive Mian Kashif Ashfaq here,
he appreciated holding of successful exhibitions on self-help basis in Karachi,
Islamabad and Lahore.
He said that the forthcoming 8th 3-day mega "Interiors Pakistan"
expo, starting from July 7 in Karachi, would attract a good number of foreign
investors and local buyers as the world best hand-made wood furniture products
would be displayed there.
Zubair Tufail said that there was an urgent need to explore international
market for boosting our exports as there was a lot of potential for increasing
Pakistani furniture exports. He said that currently the volume of furniture
export was very low, but a beginning had been made, and with an aggressive
marketing strategy, it could be doubled in a short span of time.
He said that currently the textile sector was the country's largest industry in
terms of exports, exporting $14 billion worth of goods annually. The second
largest sector is rice, which generates $2 billion through exports, but
Pakistan's furniture exports stand at a meager $51 million. He said that if the
government extends support to the furniture companies, the volume of export
could touch the figure of $5 billion during the next five years.
PFC Chief Executive Mian Kashif Ashfaq, on this occasion, apprised the FPCCI
president of successful exhibitions of Interiors Pakistan. He said more than
100 leading companies and interior designers would display their products at
the 8th mega exhibition and over 250,000 people are expected to visit the
event.
He said the Pakistan furniture industry had a great potential and he predicted
that the increased exposure through Interiors Pakistan would highlight the
skill and talent in the country
http://www.brecorder.com/2017/07/03/356888/furniture-exhibitions-to-help-attract-foreign-investment/
Pak Agri
scientists praised
Agricultural scientists of
Pakistan deserve appreciation for inventing new technology to grow rice without
using water. Secretary Agriculture Punjab Muhammad Mehmood said this while
talking to APP here Monday.
He said the said technology would have far reaching benefit for the agriculture
sector and farming community of Pakistan and
other countries. “Our agri-scientists have proved that they are second to none
in the world and they are working hard to serve the mankind,” he said and added
that Pakistan’s scientists were best in the world.—APP
https://pakobserver.net/pak-agri-scientists-praised-2/
Dynamite
fishing, drugs, threaten Myanmar’s ‘sea gypsies’
With a swift breath the teenage
boy dives into the turquoise waters of southern Myanmar, a spear clutched in
his hand, but below him lies nothing but a graveyard of broken, grey coral.He
is one of the Moken, a nomadic seafaring tribe who have perfected this freedive
fishing technique over hundreds of years among the 800 islands that dot the
Myeik archipelago and neighbouring southern Thailand.
Until recently the sea provided
them with everything they needed: a base for boats they lived in, fish and
seafood to eat and bounty such as pearls to trade with islanders for fuel and
rice.With a swift breath the teenage boy dives into the turquoise waters of
southern Myanmar, a spear clutched in his hand, but below him lies nothing but
a graveyard of broken, grey coral.
He is one of the Moken, a nomadic
seafaring tribe who have perfected this freedive fishing technique over
hundreds of years among the 800 islands that dot the Myeik archipelago and
neighbouring southern Thailand.Until recently the sea provided them with
everything they needed: a base for boats they lived in, fish and seafood to eat
and bounty such as pearls to trade with islanders for fuel and rice.
But the waters have been
devastated by the commercial fishing industry that has eaten away the area’s
once abundant marine life.The destruction has been wrought by fishing boats,
many believed to be from neighbouring Thailand, who use dynamite and trawlers
to sweep the seabed.In a cruel chain reaction, some Moken youths have ended up
working for the fishing fleets that are destroying the ecosystem that supported
them through the generations.“When we were young, a husband could easily
support his family,” Kar Shar, the Moken leader in Makyone Galet village,
recalled as he smoked his pipe outside his stilted, corrugated-iron house.
“Now the whole family has to work
to survive, and sometimes even that is not enough.”
In a cruel chain reaction, some
Moken youths have ended up working for the fishing fleets that are destroying
the ecosystem that supported them through the generations.
“When we were young, a husband
could easily support his family,” Kar Shar, the Moken leader in Makyone Galet
village, recalled as he smoked his pipe outside his stilted, corrugated-iron
house.
“Now the whole family has to work
to survive, and sometimes even that is not enough.”
Many islanders, including local
Karen and Burmese as well as the Moken — known as Salon in Myanmar or “Sea
Gypsies” in the West — have been caught up in the trade.
Impoverished, stateless and with
restricted working rights, some Moken began diving for fishing crews in the
early 90s and continued after the former military government forced many to
live on the islands.
“There is a lot of dynamite
fishing,” said Jacques Ivanoff, an expert at France’s CNRS and the Musee de
l’Homme who has spent decades working with the Moken.“Left alone… (they) have
no other choice to make a living.”
It’s risky, illegal work. The
fishermen travel to the deserted outer islands where they are less likely to be
caught.
There the divers search for the
best spot, before throwing in the dynamite and quickly reversing away.Some
breathe through thin plastic tubes hooked up to compressors, while others use
no equipment. Many suffer decompression sickness, which can leave them crippled
and unable to walk.
Others die as they swim up to the
surface, or never surface at all — a terrible price to pay for a business whose
profits largely slip overseas.“People say the boats are from Thailand,” said
54-year-old Moken man Ko Matt.For many the potential profits make the dangers
worth it. Divers can earn more than $100 in a night, compared to an average
wage of $3 a day on the islands.
Some Moken have turned to drugs
to cope with the strain of the work.Win Myat was a teenager when his uncle
died, lost to the caffeine-laced methamphetamine pills known as ‘yaba’ that
have flooded the area.
“He would spend all his money on
drugs,” the 20-year-old told foreign media agencies on Nyaung Wee island.
“In the end he was very weak and
always became angry if he did not have the pills,” he added, requesting his
name be changed.“He made a lot of trouble for our family. Then he died.”
Rights activist Khin Maung Htwe
estimates around 40 percent of Moken men on the islands use narcotics, either
yaba or heroin from Myanmar’s drug-producing borderlands.Most are young men,
leaving the Moken women to marry the local ethnic Karen and Burmese and settle
further into a more land-based culture.
“Now there are not as many Moken
men as women left,” said Tun Aung Soe, 20, whose mother is Moken and his father
ethnic Burmese.Experts say the Moken’s population in Myanmar has fallen from
around 5,000 — over 10,000 if you include other sea nomads the Moklen and Urak
Lawoi — to 2,000-3,000 today.
The collapse of fish stocks has
been a disaster for the Moken.A Norwegian fisheries research vessel which
surveyed the Myeik archipelago in 1980 and again in 2013 found rampant
overfishing had led to a 90 percent fall in the biomass of open ocean species
of fish.
Robert Howard, marine programme
advisor for environmental NGO Flora & Fauna International, said there are
an estimated 8,000 smaller boats and many other large trawlers operating in the
area.
“If that keeps going the fishery
will eventually collapse,” he warned.A Norwegian fisheries research vessel
which surveyed the Myeik archipelago in 1980 and again in 2013 found rampant
overfishing had led to a 90 percent fall in the biomass of open ocean species
of fish.
Robert Howard, marine programme
advisor for environmental NGO Flora & Fauna International, said there are
an estimated 8,000 smaller boats and many other large trawlers operating in the
area.
“If that keeps going the fishery
will eventually collapse,” he warned.Many of the Moken say fishing is no longer
enough to sustain them.
Today less than half of those
living on the Myeik archipelago lead the seafaring life of their ancestors, and
that number is declining.No one has made a kabang, the traditional wooden boat
in which people used to spend most of their lives, for a decade.Kar Shar, the
Moken leader in Makyone Galet village, longs for those days again.
“When we lived on the boats we
could move to other places if the current place was not good, but now we
cannot,” he said.“Life was better on the boats.”
https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2017/07/03/dynamite-fishing-drugs-threaten-myanmars-sea-gypsies/
Expos play significant role in
attracting foreign investors: FPCCI chief
Salim Ahmed
Lahore
Federation of Pakistan Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) President
Zubair Tufail said furniture exhibitions will play significant role to attract
foreign investors besides boosting local hand-made furniture industry, in
addition to enhancing its exports.Talking to a delegation of Pakistan Furniture
Council (PFC) headed by its Chief Executive Mian
Kashif Ashfaq here on Monday, the FPCCI Chief appreciated the PFC for
holding successful series of Interiors
Pakistan exhibitions on self help basis in Karachi ,
Islamabad and Lahore.
He said that the forthcoming 8th 3-days mega “Interiors Pakistan” expo starting
from July 7 in Karachi is poised to attract sizeable foreign
investors and local buyers as the world best
hand made wood furniture products will b e displayed ,a centre of attraction.Zubair
Tufail said there is an urgent need to explore international market for
boosting our exports as there is a lot of potential for increasing Pakistani
furniture export, adding he said the value of furniture export was very nominal
but the beginning had been made, and with aggressive marketing strategy the
value of exports could be doubled in a short span.
He said currently, the textile sector was the country’s largest industry in
terms of exports, exporting $14 billion worth of goods annually. The second
largest segment is rice, which generates $2 billion through exports, but
Pakistan’s furniture exports stand at a meager $51 million. He said if the
government extends its support to furniture companies, the volume of export
could touch the figure of $ 5 billions for the next five years.He suggested
that a programme for developing and promoting the furniture sector both in
rural and urban areas could be feasible, and also stressed upon urgent need for
implementing modern techniques which not only enhance productivity, develop
skills of labourers and meet requirements of
local and global markets.
PFC Chief
Executive Mian Kashif Ashfaq, on this occasion, apprising him
of successful exhibitions of Interiors Pakistan said more than nearly
100 leading companies and interior designers will
display their products in 8th mega exhibition while as many as 250,000 visitors
are expected to..He said the Pakistan furniture industry had a great potential
in future and he predicted that the increased exposure through Interiors
Pakistan would highlight the skill and talent in the country.
https://pakobserver.net/expos-play-significant-role-attracting-foreign-investors-fpcci-chief/
First Global
Sustainable Rice Conference & Exhibition
Date: 4-5 October,2017
Venue:Conventtion Centre Bangkok Thailand
The Sustainable Rice Platform (SRP)
is a multi-stakeholder partnership to promote resource efficiency and
sustainability both on-farm and throughout the rice value chain. SRP was
co-convened by the UN Environment and the International Rice Research Institute
in December 2011, and works in collaboration with partners in the public and
private sectors as well as the NGO community.
Each year, the SRP brings together
its members and dialogue partners to discuss collaborative approaches and
innovative solutions to critical sustainability challenges facing the rice
sector.
Conference
Tracks:
Track 1: Drivers of Global Rice Sector
Transformation
Track 2: Global Rice Markets and Food
Security
Track 3: Technology Convergence and
innovation: Tools for Climate-smart Agriculture
Track 4: Assurance and Smallholder Finance
Track 5: Crop Protection, Nutrient and
Water Management
Track 6: Incentives for Sustainability
Registration:http://www.sustainablericeconference.org/pricing
http://www.sustainablericeconference.org/
Importing an export problem: India
is becoming a high cost economy in agro-related items
There is a
rise of 30% in value of imports of three essential agro items, namely wheat,
pulses, vegetable/edible oils—indicative of substantive demand pull in the
country.
Data analysis of India’s seven select but vital agro-related items
of exports reveals that there is a sharp slump—40% in their overall
value—during last four years. There
is a rise of 30% in value of imports of three essential agro items, namely
wheat, pulses, vegetable/edible oils—indicative of substantive demand pull in
the country (see accompanying graph). Data analysis of India’s seven select but
vital agro-related items of exports reveals that there is a sharp slump—40% in
their overall value—during last four years. Commodities are wheat, rice, sugar,
cotton, soy meal, guar gum and beef+fish.
Exports falter when goods are not competitive or if there is a
lack of local production and/or poor demand overseas. Edible items are of daily
use. Thus, with rising population, the probability of lower demand abroad is
not logical. Two successive draughts in 2014-15 and 2015-16 may justify the
drop in production, but the lack of adoption of new technologies and efficient
farm practices is the root cause.
Imports
Import of pulses jumped from $2.3 billion in 2013-14 to $4
billion—an increase of 74%. Out of 5.4 million tonnes (mt) of pulses shipped to
India, 50% or about 2.7 mt are peas/yellow peas from Canada/USA. Kharif acreage
of pulses is down by 33% which points to lower output, compelling higher
imports of Tur, Urad Moong. News of possible decline in production will make
imports costlier.
The government has been fronting state agencies for import
through bulk tendering. PSUs tenders escalate world prices, thereby pushing up
values for private import as well. When state agencies dispose pulses in the
domestic market at subsidised prices—that is at a loss—it disturbs the parity
of private imports because they cannot discount their costs. This may
discourage import, thereby creating more scarcity in the country.
Wheat
From exporter of wheat of about 14 million tonnes (approx $4
billion in 2012-13 to 2014-15), India has turned into a structural importer of
$1.5 billion of grain in the last three years. Spike in wheat import in 2016-17
over the previous year is 840% by value.
In 2014-15 and 2015-16, market estimates of production each year
varied 84-87 million tonnes (though Government claimed 93-95 mt). FCI stocks
depleted to 8 mt (buffer norm is 7.5mt) on April 1, 2017, and imports ballooned
to about 4 mt in 2016-17, thus validating the market’s view.
Wheat procurement pf 30 mt this year vs targets of 33 mt implies
that OMSS supply to flour millers will be restricted. This necessitates private
imports of 5-6 mt in 2017-18.Already importers are looking for cargos from
September 2017 onwards from Australia and Black sea at landed values of $240
and $205 respectively which will be cheaper than domestic wheat after 10% duty
paid
The government has rightly stayed away from importing wheat
directly for FCI and let privates fill the gap. This prudence has kept world
wheat prices range bound and non-inflationary, because traders import in
economical lots with the spread of time, instead of bulk tendering by the
public sector undertakings (PSUs), which often results in inflated import
values.
Vegetable oils
Import of palm/soy/sunflower oils has remained steady—value wise
between $8-9 billion per annum. There are strong pressures from oilseed
crushing industry to raise import tariff to create a disparity by having high
landed cost of overseas products so that locally produced oil could be cheaper.
The government has done well in levying moderate duties on oil to protect
consumers—60% of which are based in rural areas including farmers and not to
promote inefficient production and processing.
Unless high yielding oilseed varieties are available in the
country—the value and volume of vegetable oils import are bound to ascend.
Exports
In 2014-15, basmati/ non-basmati rice exports were $7.8 billion,
this has slipped to $5.8 billion in 2016-17, but still, India remains world’s
largest exporter of rice at 10 mt. Poor demand in Africa, especially in
Nigeria, of non-basmati rice, and slow down of basmati shipments to Iran and
Saudi Arabia could be possible reasons. Iran shipments declined over 50% from
1.44 million tonnes in 2013-14 to 0.7 million tonnes in 2016-17.
The outlook for non-basmati rice for 2017-18 appears positive as
strong demand from Nigeria via neighbouring Benin is supportive; Bangladesh
requires more than one million tonnes of rice desperately and trade is focused
on this demand. Indian non-Basmati rice prices are lower than the competition
from Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan.
The success of rice export business is attributed to minimal
interference by the government, diversity of paddy varieties, superior capability
for par-boiled rice, logistical advantages for Africa, botched-up past policies
of the Thai government in paddy pricing and poor performance of Pakistan.
Indian rice export is negligible to South-east Asia and China.
Cotton
Cotton exports tapered down from $3.8 billion to $1.4 billion
during 2013-14 and 2016-17—lower by 63%. Exports to China and Pakistan
suffered, while Bangladesh remained a consistent market. India’s share of
exports to China has dropped from almost 80% in 2011 to 10% in 2015. Indian
trade is diversifying to newer markets of Indonesia, Taiwan, Turkey and
Thailand to gain the momentum.
Soymeal/Guar gum/Beef and fish
There has been a drastic fall (86%) in soy meal exports from
$2.8 billion to $0.38 billion; likewise, guargum exports have been 75% lower
and beef and fish have witnessed a 48% decline in 2016-17 from their peak
performance of $10 billion in 2014-15. Beef exports are not likely to pick up
because of current confusion. GST complexities is another factor that is bound
to affect trade.
We are becoming a high-cost economy in agro-related items. If we
continue to dither in our export earnings by the lack of
quality/procedures/poor yields/price parities, resultant suffering will be
transmitted via trade to the farmers and another undesirable cycle of
joblessness and loan waivers will commence
http://www.financialexpress.com/opinion/importing-an-export-problem-india-is-becoming-a-high-cost-economy-in-agro-related-items/749496/
The crisis that could have been
avoided
Published at 12:48 AM July 05, 2017
Last updated at 01:54 PM July 05, 2017
Photo: Syed Zakir Hossain
The current
retail price of coarse rice is Tk48 – which is Tk18 higher than what the price
was this time last year
Bangladesh is seeing a record
hike in rice prices this year, even after the harvest season, as the government
reserve of rice has hit a record low in at least a decade.Rice traders and
farmers say the government’s persistent stance against increasing its reserve
by importing rice, keeping the import duty at 28% to restrict import by private
traders, damage to boro paddy due to a recent flash flood in Haor areas, and a
lack of monitoring over the private sector are the major reasons behind the
crisis.
According to the Ministry of
Food, the current retail price of coarse rice is Tk48 – which is Tk18 higher
than what the price was this time last year.
Furthermore, on June 21, the
government rice reserve stood at 173,000 tonnes – a whopping 445,000
tonnes less than the 618,000-tonne reserve on the same day last year.
This situation did not arise
overnight, but has been happening over the last six months, said market
insiders, who blamed the government for overlooking the rapidly depleting
government stock and not initiating the import of rice sooner.
“The government is too late. It
should have approached the international market for importing rice much sooner
than it did when it noticed the depleting reserve,” said Quazi Shahabuddin,
agricultural economist and former director general of Bangladesh Institute of
Development Studies (BIDS).
However, on Wednesday, Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina said at parliament that the country was currently not
facing a crisis of its staple food.She said as of June 28, the government
reserve stood at 188,000 tonnes of rice, whereas the government-approved rice
mills had around 5.4 million tonnes in stock and the retail-wholesale markets
had a further 5 million tonnes.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture, Bangladesh lost around
two million tonnes of paddy during the boro season in April-May – the highest
yielding season of paddy in a year – due to the flash flood in Haor basin and a
blast disease epidemic in different regions Syed Zakir Hossain
Where did the paddy go?
According to the Ministry of
Agriculture, Bangladesh lost around two million tonnes of paddy during the boro
season in April-May – the highest yielding season of paddy in a year – due to
the flash flood in Haor basin and a blast disease epidemic in different
regions.
Ministry data shows the boro
yield last year was 19 million tonnes. Taking that into account, right now the
country should have roughly around 17 million tonnes of paddy.
Like every year, the government
has been procuring boro rice and paddy for its own reserve since May 2, with
the target of procuring 800,000 tonnes of rice and 700,000 tonnes of paddy by
August 1, mostly to run its social safety net programme and emergency disaster
relief.
But as of now, the government has
managed to procure only 49,159 tonnes of rice – a measly amount compared to
last year’s procurement of around 1 million tonnes.
Owners of rice mills, from whom
the government is procuring the rice this year, claim that there is not enough
paddy in the local market, which is why they are unable to supply the rice to
the government.
“This year, we do not have enough
stock to run our business for long,” said Nirod Boron Saha, president of
Naogaon Rice Wholesalers’ Association.
Asked where all the paddy has gone
just two months after harvest, Nirod said: “Some unscrupulous traders and
farmers may have hoarded the paddy as the price was good during the harvest
period.”
Millers irked by govt procurement
rate
Another reason why the rice mill
owners have backtracked from supplying rice to the government reserve is the
procurement rate set by the government, said Nirod.
For this boro season, the
government has fixed the procurement price as Tk24 per kg of paddy and Tk34 per
kg of rice.
These rates contradict with the
“paddy-to-rice conversion” method and will cause losses to the millers, he
added.
“A maund (around 37.32kg) of rice
is produced from around a maund and a half of paddy. If the price of paddy is
Tk24 per kg, naturally the price of rice will be Tk36,” he explained. “If the
government rates are to be followed, millers will have to count a Tk2 loss per
kg of rice that they supply to the government reserve.”
Because of these “ridiculous”
rates, the government would not get rice from the millers this season, Nirod
told the Dhaka Tribune.
Import is the solution
To overcome the current
situation, the government has already initiated import of rice from different
countries, including Vietnam and India.
An agreement to this end has been
signed with Vietnam, while the authorities concerned are looking into the
Indian market.
In addition, the government has
cut down the import duty on rice to 10% from 28% so the private sector can
immediately start importing rice.
However, this year rice price is
higher in the international market as well.
A tonne of rice is priced at
around $410-450 in India, Vietnam, Pakistan and Thailand, which means the price
of imported rice in the local market would be around Tk36-42 per kg, according
to the Ministry of Food.
Market insiders believe the
upward trend of rice price will continue, or at least the current situation
will remain as it is, if the government fails to control the market by
importing enough amount of rice.
Agricultural economist Quazi
Shahabuddin said importing rice is the only option for the government to tackle
the situation at the moment.
He advised the government to
reduce the import duty down to zero so private sector importers could make some
profit, seeing as rice prices are high in the global market as well.
Nirod Boron Saha agreed. “The
government should also increase the number of beneficiaries in and the amount
of rice allotted to its social safety net programme to reduce the demand in the
local market,” he added.
www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/07/05/the-crisis-that-could-have-been-avoided/
Punjab Ahrtiyas honour Capt
Amarinder Singh with Fakhar-E-Qaum title
July 04, 2017 07:17 PM
Share
Punjab News Express/Satinder Bains
CHANDIGARH: A day after Punjab Chief
Minister Capt Amarinder Singh made an appeal to Ahrtiyas(Commissionagents) to
charge low interest rates from debt riddeen farmers, the Punjab Ahrtiya
Association honoured Chief Minister here with title of Fakhar-E-Qaum.An
official spokesman said that Capt Amarinder Singh was honoured in recognition
of his outstanding contribution to ensuring hassle free and smooth procurement
of wheat.
The Chief Minister was honoured with
a plaque, with inscription of title 'Fakhar-e-Qaum', at a mega felicitation
function organized by the federation here at Kisan Bhawan.Thanking the aartiyas
for the honour bestowed on him, the Chief Minister said a sincere beginning had
been made by his government to safeguard the interests of the farmers. He cited
the landmark decisions taken by the government, including abolition of Kurki
and debt waiver to 10.25 lac farmers in the state. He also referred to the
government’s decision to abolish the truck unions, which he said were arm
twisting the aartiyas and industrialists, thus jeopardizing the procurement
operations and transportation of industrial goods.
The Chief Minister urged the
aartiyas to extend full support and cooperation to the state government to bail
out the distressed peasantry from the current agrarian crisis. He appreciated
the age-old ties of farmers with aartiya community and hoped that these bonds would
be strengthened further to win over the confidence of the beleaguered farmers.Captain
Amarinder said his government was committed to provide a level playing field to
all the stakeholders, including aartiyas, farmers and officials of the
procurement agencies, to resolve their problems amicably. He also asked the
Chairman Mandi Board to have a joint meeting of aartiyas and rice millers to
settle all their pending issues to the satisfaction of both the parties.
Chairman Mandi Board Lal Singh said
the Chief Minister did not possess a magic wand, rather it was his
administrative capability and firm commitment to protect the rights of the
farming community which resulted in smooth procurement operations and timely
payment to the farmers. Lal Singh lambasted the Akalis for ruining the farmers
and bringing economic ruin to the state. They also deliberately obstructed any
discussion on the government’s white paper as that would have completely
exposed their financial misdeeds, he added.
Earlier, in his welcome address,
President Emeritus of the Federation Bal Krishan Singla said that the gigantic
procurement operation of wheat undertaken recently under the Captain Amarinder
regime resulted in timely payment of Rs.14,000 crore to the farmers besides
procurement of 20 crore bags. He recalled that Captain Amarinder was credited
with ensuring ten flawless procurements of Wheat and Paddy during his last
regime as Chief Minister from 2002-2007, which not only reinforced the
confidence of the state peasantry in his government's farmer friendly policies
but also helped in forging better and congenial ties between them and aartiyas.
He assured the Chief Minister on behalf of the federation that the aartiyas
would not charge more than the fixed monthly interest rate of 1.5% from the
farmers.
Earlier, federation president Vijay
Kalra welcomed the Chief Minister and expressed gratitude to him for smooth and
hassle free procurement of Wheat during Rabi 2017 immediately after taking the
reins. He lauded Captain Amarinder Singh for announcing a debt waiver for small
and marginal farmers through a budgetary provision of Rs.1500 crore despite
acute financial crunch in the state.
Among those who attended the
function were Senior Advisor to Chief Minister Lieutenant General (Retd.) T.S.
Shergill, Media Advisor to Chief Minister Raveen Thukral, Advisor to Chief
Minister BIS Chahal, Secretary Mandi Board Amit Dhaka and Deputy Principal
Secretary to Chief Minister Amrit Kaur Gill.
http://punjabnewsexpress.com/punjab/news/punjab-ahrtiyas-honour-capt-amarinder-singh-with-fakhar-e-qaum-title-62778.aspx
Sowing seeds for growth
A farmer ploughs his field on the
outskirts of Phnom Penh. KT/Chor Sokunthea
The government is to set a long-term plan for
agriculture to make it more competitive, inclusive, resilient and sustainable.The
Agricultural Master Plan 2030 – a strategic framework for agricultural sector
development – aims to provide high-quality services with a sound scientific,
technological and legislative base.
Srey Vuthy, director of the department of planning and statistics
at the Ministry of Agriculture, said the plan was to enhance inclusive
agricultural growth by increasing productivity, diversification,
competitiveness and agricultural commercialisation.It also promotes sustainable
agriculture land use, forestry and fisheries resources management and
development.
“The overall policy goal is
to increase agricultural growth by around five percent per annum and expand
agricultural exports with high quality and safety through enhancing
agricultural productivity, value adding and enabling competition, taking into
account the sustainable use of land and ensuring sustainable and forestry
resource management,” Mr Vuthy said.
Speaking at a consultation workshop on “The new path of Cambodia’s
agriculture growth” yesterday at the Ministry of Economy and Finance, Vongsey
Vissoth, secretary of state of economy and finance, told more than 100
participants it was time to think about the long-term strategic framework in
agriculture, avoiding short-term measures which solve current issues but not
the root problem.
“Currently, the agriculture sector is facing complicated issues and
these have become hot issues in the whole country from production to the
market,” Mr Vissoth said.“The big issue is coming from the big transformation
of the structure of the economy as a whole and in agriculture as a part with
the effort of government,” he said.But he said Cambodia lacked management and
preparation to support of the transformation.
“The share of the agriculture sector in the country’s GDP was more
than 40 percent in 1990,” Mr. Vissoth said.“It is 29 percent this year but the
volume and value is big, so we have to think what we are going to do in the
next five or ten years.“We have to re-evaluate which way to go, what the
prioritised products are and what we do to support the complicated change.”
Agriculture Minister Veng Sakhon told yesterday’s forum that it was
an opportunity to check, evaluate and seek deep understanding on the issue of
the draft policy on the agriculture development for the medium and long term to
achieve agricultural production chain goals as well as maintaining natural
resources sustainability.
“Agricultural produces have increased remarkably which means there
is a need to solve issues including market access,” Mr Sakhon said. “Thus, in
order to modernise and boost production, diversification, and commercialisation
in agriculture to help solve issues facing farmers, especially smallholder
farmers, we will continue taking measures for effective and efficient
renovation of infrastructure in the production chain and competition in the
market,” Mr Sakhon said.
Phou Puy, CEO of the Cambodia Rice Bank, suggested that government
and stakeholders solve urgent issues first without waiting for the master plan.He
suggested having a working group to solve current issues in agriculture.“We
want an exact community market for farmers to bring their products to
purchasers or rice millers in one place,” Mr Puy said.
“Farmers want exact
purchasers and exact prices. Famers want more convenient roads for transporting
agriculture products and for the government to negotiate with Thailand to allow
easy access for Cambodian agriculture products.”Mr Vissoth said Cambodia should
have a medium and long-term master plan to keep Cambodia agriculture sector
sustainable and avoid problems.
He said the government would also think about a short-term plan to
help farmers and the agriculture sector. Chan Sophal, director of the Centre
for Policy Studies, said there were two issues in agriculture, output and
input.He said that for output, the government should have proper irrigation
systems and lower logistic costs from the rice field to the market.
“For input in agriculture, there are also issues including
regulation of imported fertiliser and pesticide which lack effectiveness and which cost a lot for the
private sector.
The quality of checking imported agriculture pesticide was not
clear, so the government must strengthen regulations,” Mr Sophal said.Economy
and finance secretary of state Vongsey Vissoth said agriculture was the
backbone of the economy.One part was pushing growth and reducing poverty, and
the other part was maintaining the environment by managing water and
fertilisers.
“We have to boost productivity, diversification and
commercialisation, human resources training to build capacity and market share
while agro-business or agro-processing are key to solving issues,” Mr. Vissoth
said.Mr Vissoth identified the three
priority areas next year would be production, processing and market share.
He said that government would consider subsidising seedlings for
farmers, checking the regulation on the quality and standard of fertiliser,
animal feeds, pesticide imports, checking fertiliser, animal and pesticide
imports and animal house slaughter, reviewing import tax, checking the cost of
transport and distribution, and reviewing the electricity tariff.
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/39985/sowing-seeds-for-growth/http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/39985/sowing-seeds-for-growth/
Govt sets up GST Facilitation
Cell for MSMEs
Source: The Hitavada
Date: 05 Jul 2017 09:42:09
Business Bureau,
MSME-DI Nagpur recently organised awareness programme on
implementation of GST Nagpur for the members of Rice Mill Cluster, Ramtek, Dal
Mill Cluster Nagpur and Orange City Garment Cluster, Nagpur. The programme
received overwhelming response as 150 members of clusters participated in the
programme.Prashant Warker, Superintendent of Central Excise and Customs,
Nagpur, CA Anand Daga, Sunil R. Khujnare, Assistant Director, and Rahulkumar
Mishra, Assistant Director of MSME-DI Nagpur, Manohar Bhojwani from Dal Mill
Cluster, Vipul Panchmatia from Orange City Garment Cluster, and Prakash Chok
from Rice Millers and Packers Cluster Ramtek were present on the dais.
In his welcome address, Sunil Khujnare, Assistant Director of MSME-DI, Nagpur
spoke on what is GST and the need for GST Bill. He said, GST Facilitation Cell
for MSMEs throughout India has been set up at DC (MSME), New Delhi and
MSME-DIs. He also welcomed and appreciated the co-operation and participation
of cluster members.
CA Anand Daga said that GST has subsumed all the indirect taxes and brought all
of them under a single umbrella. The Bill aims to eliminate the cascading
effect of taxes on production and distribution prices on goods and services. He
also gave power point presentation on GST. His presentation was cluster
specific and covered all the aspects related to Rice Mill Cluster, Ramtek, Dal
mill Cluster Nagpur and Orange City Garment Cluster, Nagpur.
Prashant Warkar said, GST bill is India’s biggest tax reform which
will simplify the current system of taxation. The Bill converts the country
into a unified market by replacing all indirect taxes with one tax. He also
gave power point presentation on implementation of GST. Panel discussion was
also organised wherein all the experts replied to the queries of the
participants. The programme was co-ordinated by Sunil R. Khujnare and
Rahulkumar Mishra proposed the vote of thanks.
http://thehitavada.com/Encyc/2017/7/5/Govt-sets-up-GST-Facilitation-Cell-for-MSMEs.aspx
Government not ruling out rise in price of imported rice
A file picture or Ahmad Shabery
taken on April 12, 2017- Bernama
SITIAWAN: The Agriculture and Agro-Based Industry Ministry has
not dismissed the possibility that the price of imported rice may rise in the
future as it is not a controlled item.Minister Datuk Seri Ahmad Shabery
Cheek (pic) said
several factors could contribute to the rise in price, including the higher
global price of rice and the depreciation of the ringgit.
"However, this is mere
speculation. The ceiling price of imported rice is not controlled but according
to regulations, it cannot be sold at a lower price than local rice to protect the
national rice industry.
"Maybe, what the Rice
Wholesalers' Association said is correct since there are signs that the global
price of rice has risen.
"One tonne of imported rice
used to be between US$340 (RM1,461) and US$350 (RM1,504), but now there are
signs that it can reach US$400 (RM1,719) per tonne," he told a press
conference after attending the launch of the Sultan Nazrin Muizzuddin Shah
Fisheries College at Kampung Acheh Fisheries Complex by the Perak's Sultan
Nazrin Shah on Tuesday.
Ahmad Shabery also said that rise
of global oil prices could affect the price of imported rice, while natural
disasters like the one in Bangladesh recently resulted in a rise in demand for
the commodity.Earlier, Malaysian Rice Wholesalers Association president Wu Zi
Lian predicted that the price of imported rice could rise by 10% by the end of
the year. – Bernama
House
probe on state of PH rice inventory sought
• July
2, 2017
• Written
by Ryan Ponce Pacpaco
• Published
in Nation
A HOUSE leader has urged the House
of Representatives to pursue its inquiry into the “true state” of the country’s
rice inventory amid the scheduled arrival of the first tranche of imports of
the grain this July and the lower rice inventory ahead of the traditional
post-summer lean months.Camarines Sur Rep. LRay Villafuerte,vice chairman of
the House committee on appropriations, reiterated his call for a congressional
inquiry following the latest report by the Philippine Statistics Authority
(PSA) that the country’s rice stocks as of May 1 dropped by 13 percent to 3.21
million metric tons (MT) from 3.69 million MT a year ago.
“We should ensure that we have sufficient rice stocks in the coming
weeks and months as the lean season kicks in, which is why I am calling for a
congressional probe to find out the actual volume of stocks in store in our
commercial warehouses, the NFA (National Food Authority) and our households,”
said Villafuerte.
The first batch of some 250,000 MT
of imported rice is expected to arrive by end-July to augment existing stocks,
according to the NFA. In House Resolution (HR) No. 993, Villafuerte called on
the appropriate committee of the House of Representatives to “conduct an
inquiry in aid of legislation on the true state of rice inventory in the
Philippines to ensure adequate and affordable rice supply during the
traditional lean months.”
Through such an inquiry, Villafuerte said Congress could immediately
determine “the true state of the country’s rice inventory that is crucial to
the timely drawing of proposals for the government to ensure ample and
affordable rice supply” for the remainder of the year and onwards.Villafuerte
cited an earlier report to him by NFA CamarinEs Sur provincial manager Dr.
Yolanda Navarro that the province’s buffer stock only totaled 42,293 cavans (or
50-kilo bags) as of April 30, or equivalent to only three days’ consumption at
CamSur’s daily rice requirement of 13,840 cavans.
Navarro informed
Villafuerte in her letter that the Legislative-Executive Department Advisory
Council (LEDAC) had prescribed for the NFA a buffer stock level equivalent to
30 days’ consumption at the onset of the July-September lean months.http://www.journal.com.ph/news/nation/house-probe-on-state-of-ph-rice-inventory-sought
http://www.journal.com.ph/news/nation/house-probe-on-state-of-ph-rice-inventory-sought
Proposed rice
storage facility to boost capacity
Mon, 3 July 2017
A proposal for a massive
warehouse and silo that has attracted two Chinese investors aims to fill the
Kingdom’s conspicuous gap in paddy rice storage capacity, which still falls 60
percent short of the level needed for the country to achieve its goal of 1
million tonnes of annual rice exports.
Private Chinese firms Jilin
Province Investment Group Co Ltd and Jilin Tianzhong Agriculture Development Co
Ltd signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday with local conglomerate
Soma Group to build a “huge” storage facility to serve Cambodia’s rice
producers.
According to Hun Lak, vice
president of the Cambodia Rice Federation, the companies will conduct a
feasibility study to determine the location and investment size of the initial
storage complex, with Battambang and Takeo provinces favoured. Additional
storage facilities could be developed in other areas, he said.Lak said the
Chinese investment would be substantial and would help fill the rice sector’s
gap in storage capacity.
“It will help to narrow down the
rice industry’s gap in storage facilities, which is necessary if it is to reach
the goal of 1 million tonnes of rice exports,” he said yesterday, estimating
that the country has just 40 percent of the storage capacity needed to realise
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s export target of 1 million tonnes of milled rice a
year.“Even now that we have some huge rice storage warehouses and silos we
still need more investment in these facilities to fill the gap,” he said.
Cambodia exported 530,000 tonnes
of milled rice last year, with mills running production for about six months of
the year before using up their stores.Phou Puy, CEO of Thaneakea Srov
(Kampuchea) Plc, which operates the country’s first large-scale “rice bank” storage
facility, said the new Chinese investment could allow local millers to operate
year-round.“We welcome any new investment in rice storage warehouses and silos
as our rice industry still need more capacity in order for mills to run full
production for the entire year,” he said.
Thaneakea Srov’s storage
warehouse in Battambang province has a storage capacity of around 40,000
tonnes, while the company is building a 200,000 tonne facility due for
completion next year. Yet, even this will still fall short of the country’s
needs.“Currently, our capacity can only handle the [paddy rice of] western
Cambodian producers,” he said.“We will need more warehouses and silos to handle
the rest of the country’s production. Farmers prepare to plant rice seedlings in
Kampot province in 2015. Pha Lina
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/proposed-rice-storage-facility-boost-capacity
China
remains Vietnam's top rice importer
China
is importing 46.5% of Vietnam's rice, a huge increase from the previous 35-36%
seen in previous years.
Worker looks over the rice
According to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam exported 2.8 million tonnes of rice
valued USD1.2bn in the first six months of 2017. Both the volume and value increased
by 6.3% and 4.9% respectively compared to last year. However, average
prices in the first five months decreased by 0.9% to USD445.5 per tonne
compared to last year.China continues to be Vietnam's top importer. In the
first five months, Vietnam exported 1.1 million tonnes of rice to China for
USD488m as demands from China is huge. Chinese traders often buy rice directly
from the firms' storage and then imported into China via border gates or
commissioned another importer. They also re-export the rice to other countries.
Pham Thai Binh, director of Trung
An Hi-tech Farming JSC, said requirements from Chinese traders were getting
tighter, similar to other markets like the US and Japan. Not only the rice must
be safe but their origin could also be tracked. Currently, only 22 out of 150
Vietnamese firms were able to export to China. Despite exporting huge
volumes of rice to China, Vietnam is still unable to build a recognisable brand
name there as most of the rice is repackaged by Chinese traders.Loc Troi Group
is the only firm that have a contract with Hunan Leading Science and Technology
Development Co Ltd to officially distribute rice and other agriculture products
in an attempt to build a Vietnamese rice brand in China.
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/181306/china-remains-vietnam-s-top-rice-importer.html
Nagpur
Foodgrain Prices Open- JUL 04, 2017
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open Market-July 4
Nagpur, July 4 (Reuters) – Gram and Tuar prices reported higher in
Nagpur Agriculture Produce
and Marketing Committee (APMC) auction on good buying support from
local millers amid thin
supply from producing region because of rains in parts of Vidarbha.
Notable rise in Madhya
Pradesh pulses and repeated enquireis from South-based millers also
boosted prices. About 1,100 of gram and 700 bags of tuar were available for
auctions, according to sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Gram yellow firmed up in
open market on renewed demand from local traders amid weak
supply from producing
regions.
TUAR
* Tuar varieties ruled
steady in open market here but demand was poor.
* Moong Chamki recovered
in open market on good marriage season demand from local
traders.
* In Akola, Tuar New –
3,900-4,100, Tuar dal (clean) – 5,700-5,800, Udid Mogar (clean)
– 8,200-9,200, Moong
Mogar (clean) 6,800-7,200, Gram – 5,600-5,800, Gram Super best
– 7,800-8,500
* Wheat, rice and other
commodities moved in a narrow range in
scattered deals and
settled at last levels in thin trading activity.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC
auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100 kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 4,400-5,082 4,400-4,900
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 3,500-3,770 3,470-3,700
Moong Auction n.a. 3,900-4,200
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,600-2,800
Wheat Mill quality
Auction 1,550-1,644 1,550-1,661
Gram Super Best Bold 7,500-8,000 7,500-8,000
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 6,600-7,000 6,600-7,000
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 5,100-5,200 5,100-5,200
Desi gram Raw 5,400-5,500 5,400-5,500
Gram Yellow 7,100-8,100 7,000-8,000
Gram Kabuli 12,300-13,400 12,300-13,400
Tuar Fataka
Best-New 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Tuar Fataka
Medium-New 5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Tuar Dal Best
Phod-New 5,200-5,400 5,200-5,400
Tuar Dal Medium
phod-New 4,800-5,000 4,800-5,000
Tuar Gavarani New 3,500-3,700 3,500-3,700
Tuar Karnataka 3,900-4,100 3,900-4,100
Masoor dal best 5,000-5,200 5,000-5,200
Masoor dal medium 4,600-4,900 4,700-4,900
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold
(New) 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,500
Moong Mogar Medium 6,300-6,600 6,300-6,600
Moong dal Chilka 5,200-6,000 5,200-6,000
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 6,600-7,600 6,500-7,500
Udid Mogar best (100
INR/KG) (New) 8,000-9,000
8,000-9,000
Udid Mogar Medium (100
INR/KG) 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,500
Udid Dal Black (100
INR/KG) 4,900-5,200 4,900-5,200
Batri dal (100
INR/KG) 5,100-5,500 5,100-5,500
Lakhodi dal (100
INR/kg) 2,950-3,150 2,950-3,150
Watana Dal (100
INR/KG) 2,900-3,000 2,900-3,000
Watana White (100
INR/KG) 3,500-3,700 3,500-3,700
Watana Green Best (100
INR/KG) 4,100-4,600 4,100-4,600
Wheat 308 (100
INR/KG) 1,950-2,050 1,950-2,050
Wheat Mill quality (100
INR/KG) 1,850-1,950 1,850-1,950
Wheat Filter (100
INR/KG) 2,150-2,350 2,150-2,350
Wheat Lokwan new (100
INR/KG) 1,800-2,000 1,800-2,000
Wheat Lokwan best (100
INR/KG) 2,100-2,300 2,100-2,300
Wheat Lokwan medium (100
INR/KG) 1,800-2,000 1,800-2,000
Lokwan Hath Binar (100
INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100
INR/KG) 3,000-3,500 3,100-3,500
MP Sharbati Medium (100
INR/KG) 2,200-2,800 2,300-2,800
Rice BPT new (100
INR/KG) 2,800-3,200 2,800-3,200
Rice BPT best (100
INR/KG) 3,500-4,000 3,500-4,000
Rice BPT medium (100
INR/KG) 3,000-3,200 3,000-3,200
Rice Luchai (100
INR/KG) 2,500-2,800 2,500-2,800
Rice Swarna new (100
INR/KG) 2,200-2,400 2,200-2,400
Rice Swarna best (100
INR/KG) 2,600-2,800 2,600-2,800
Rice Swarna medium (100
INR/KG) 2,400-2,500 2,400-2,500
Rice HMT New (100
INR/KG) 3,600-4,000 3,600-4,000
Rice HMT best (100
INR/KG) 4,500-5,000 4,500-5,000
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG) 4,100-4,300 4,100-4,300
Rice Shriram New(100
INR/KG) 4,800-5,200 4,800-5,200
Rice Shriram best 100
INR/KG) 6,500-6,800 6,500-6,800
Rice Shriram med (100
INR/KG) 5,800-6,200 5,800-6,200
Rice Basmati best (100
INR/KG) 10,000-14,000 10,000-14,000
Rice Basmati Medium (100
INR/KG) 6,000-8,000 6,000-8,000
Rice Chinnor New(100
INR/KG) 4,600-4,800 4,600-4,800
Rice Chinnor best 100
INR/KG) 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Rice Chinnor medium (100
INR/KG) 5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Jowar Gavarani (100
INR/KG) 1,900-2,200 1,900-2,200
Jowar CH-5 (100
INR/KG) 1,800-1,900 1,800-1,900
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 31.0 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 25.7 degree
Celsius
Rainfall : Nil
FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with One or two spells of rains or
thunder-showers likely.
Maximum and minimum temperature would be around and 33 and 25
degree Celsius respectively.
Note: n.a.--not available
(For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices,
butincluded in market prices)
ATTN : Soyabean mandi, wholesale foodgrain market of Nagpur APMC
and oil market in Vidarbha will
be closed tomorrow, Wednesday, on the occasion of Ashadi Ekadash
http://in.reuters.com/article/badminton-india-gopichand-idINKBN19Q0Z6
Grains: Prices of rice basmati
and wheat fell at the
Sat,
1 Jul 2017-01:31pm , PTI
wholesale
grains market during the week due to reduced offtake against adequate stocks
position.
A
few other bold grains also eased amid subdued demand from consuming industries.
Traders
said ample stocks position against fall in demand from stockists and retailers
mainly pulled down rice basmati prices.
Reduced
offtake by flour mills put pressure on wheat prices, they said.In the national
capital, rice basmati common and Pusa- 1121 variety eased to Rs 6,400-6,700 and
R 5,400-5,500 against last close of Rs 6,700-7,000 and Rs 5,700-5,800 per
quintal respectively.
Wheat
dara (for mills) also slipped by Rs 15 to Rs 1,725-1,730 per quintal. Atta
chakki delivery followed suit and traded lower by similar margin to Rs
1,730-1,735 per 90 kg.
Other
bold grains, bajra fell by Rs 100 to Rs 1,100- 1,110 per quintal. Barley and
maize also declined by Rs 50 and Rs 15 to Rs 1,400-1,420 and Rs 1,275-1,285 per
quintal respectively.(MORE)
(This article has not been edited
by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
http://www.dnaindia.com/business/report-grains-prices-of-rice-basmati-and-wheat-fell-at-the-2489417
Climate change
to significantly hurt wheat, rice crop yields
Islamabad
Steady growing temperatures pose
a serious risk to Pakistan’s efforts for achieving sustainable food security
and meet food consumption needs of the spiking population, according to studies
based on various projections of climate change impacts on the country’s
agriculture and water resources. “The global warming-induced by rising global
temperatures can badly affect the country’s food production system in shape
of crop yield losses and reduced growing cycles in the various
climatic zones of the country,” said Mohammad Saleem, the climate change
ministry media spokesperson and climate change communication specialist.
In a special talk with a group of media persons he said that like the most
developing countries, Pakistan is staring at the radar of food insecurity, with
its food production out of sync with population growth. The food availability scenario
is further aggravated by shifting weather patterns with recurring severe
droughts and floods that affect the country’s
overall crop production, the media spokesperson added.
He explained that studies carried out
by the Global Change Impact Study Centre (GCISC), a Ministry’s research wing,
pointed out that average
temperature over Pakistan would increase in the coming
decades at a pace faster than that of the average global temperature increase.
“The temperature rise in Pakistan may exceed by about one degree Celsius by the
end of this century,” Mr. Saleem cautioned quoting the GCISC studies.
He said that based on crop simulation models
of the GCISC show that
wheat crop yield will be reduced by 3.4 to 12.5 percent in semi-arid
irrigated areas including Faisalabad, Sheikhupura and 3.8 to 14.5 percent in
arid areas including Hyderabad, Badin, Bahawalpur and Multan. Around 16 percent decline in
overall wheat producity in rain-dependent areas has been forecast in various
areas of the Potohar region including Chakwal district under different climate
change senarios towards the end of ongoing century. Graver impacts of the
global warming on the country’s rice crop have also been predicted.
“The rice crop yields are likely to register fall by 12 to 22
percent in almost all rice growing areas of the country by end of this century
because of the rising global temperatures,” he estimated quoting findings of
the GCISC’s crop simulation models. The ministry’s media
spokesperson said that these simulationmodels further indicate that length
of cultivation periods
of these important crops would shorten, which would lead to pronounced plunges
in yields of not only rice and wheat but also other crops such as maize and
vegetables.—APP
https://pakobserver.net/climate-change-significantly-hurt-wheat-rice-crop-yields/
Ministry of
Commerce Tests Perceived Plastic Rice on Liberian Market
Monrovia
– A brand of rice on the Liberian market – Butter Brand – perceived by the
public to be artificial (made of plastic) and imported from China has been
proven to real rice by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. The Ministry
conducted the quality test on the rice at its National Standard Laboratory
located on the premises of the Ministry of Public Works in the presence of
FrontPageAfrica staff.
This
was after this paper had confronted the ministry with complaints from consumers
of the rice. The Butter Brand rice is imported in the country by Supplying West
Africa Trading Inc. located in Sayon Town. It has very high carbohydrate
content (very starchy) and often gets very hard after it becomes cold. It is
mostly preferred by low-income families because of its ability to swell. Over
the weekend, two aggrieved consumers of the rice walked into the offices of
FrontPageAfrica with sample of the rice complaining, “We’ve come here to report
this case. It is a very serious issue.
We
bought this rice from the Fula store, but my brother this is plastic rice,” he
alleged. He continued, “As soon as this rice gets cold, it becomes hard. We
mold it in your hands and bounce it; it will bounce back like ‘ganger ball’. We
threw it on the wall, it bounce back to us. “We came here to complain because
government cannot allow such rice on the market. This is not good for the
citizens. These are some of the foods we eat then we start getting sick, we go
to the hospital, they can’t see anything in our system.
”
According to him, he went back to the store from which he bought the rice in
Larkpazee and fortunately met the supplier of the rice offloading supplies so
he immediately called some police officers from Salem Police Depot in Airfield
Community to the store in Larkpazee. However, to his dismay, after some tussle
with the supplier, a Lebanese national, the police received a call after which
they informed him that they had been asked to back off. This, according to him,
prompted him to report the incident to FrontPageAfrica. Upon being confronted
by this paper, the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MOCI) dispatched a team
to SWAT – the supplier on Tuesday morning to collect a sample of the rice for
testing.
Three
quality tests were conducted in the presence of FrontPageAfrica to ascertain
the whether the product was indeed rice or another substance. The rice passed
the combustion, floating in hot oil and sinking in water tests. With the
combustion test, sample of the butter brand rice was placed in a special
microwave at a temperature of 550 degrees Celsius. Rice, would burn and turn to
ashes during this test while plastic would melt and become compact. During the
oil floating method, sample of the butter brand rice was placed in oil heated
at a temperature of 200 degree Celsius with the expectation that it would sink
and float on the oil which it did to show it is actual rice. Plastic would have
melted on top of the oil without sinking.
The
rice is made in China and has a validity period of five years of five years.
Rice is the staple food in Liberia with an annual import of 1.3 metric tons.
Speaking to FrontPageAfrica, MOCI Minister said, “China is the largest producer
of white rice or sticky rice, but we don’t eat it in Liberia much because it’s
perfect when it’s hot but gets hard when it’s cold.” In 2016, Nigerian Police
impounded a consignment of 102 bags of 50kg of fake rice believed to be plastic
rice. They are suspected to have been smuggled or illegally shipped in from China
through Lagos port, a senior customs official in Nigeria’s commercial hub told
AFP. The rice was branded “Best Tomato Rice”.
The
poor quality of facilities like warehouses in which the rice and other food
products are stored is a major contributing factor to making some food stuffs
unwholesome for consumption, a food analyst at the laboratory told FPA. “Some
of these warehouses don’t have good ventilation and even the method through
which they transport some of these food stuffs cause the food to drop in quality.
For example, rice is not supposed to be transported in an open air truck. Even
tarpaulin is not adequate enough to cover the rice. Worst of all, you see some
people lying on the rice or water while transporting. This alone can spoil the
rice. Their sweat can diffuse into the rice,” the analyst said.
http://frontpageafricaonline.com/index.php/business/4664-ministry-of-commerce-tests-perceived-plastic-rice-on-liberian-market
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