Despite
floods, Thai rice output unchanged
Bangkok Post /
Khmer Times Share:
BANGKOK (Bangkok
Post) – Around 1 million rai (160,000 hectares) of rice plantation in the
Northeast was destroyed by the recent floods, but it is unlikely to have any
severe effect on Thai rice production and export, with shippers and industry
officials keeping rice export forecasts unchanged at 10 million tonnes.
Unexpectedly,
flooding is expected to support the rise in Thai rice prices as global demand
remains strong.
Thailand’s
Agriculture Ministry said that although areas cultivated with rice were
affected by the floods, the annual production forecast remained unchanged at 28
to 30 million tonnes of paddy, or around 18 million tonnes of milled rice. This
amount is sufficient for domestic consumption and abundant exports, the
ministry said.
Tropical depression Sonca has lashed
the province of Sakon Nakhon over the past few weeks, bringing the worst floods
that the region has seen for two decades and briefly halting operations at
Sakon Nakhon airport, inundating the city as well as agricultural areas.
Chookiat Ophaswongse,
honorary president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said the floods
would cause a slight delay in the harvesting period of the major crop, which
normally starts in late October, but it was unlikely to have any major impact
on production, price or export outlook.
“The flooding
would affect the production of glutinous rice, grown mostly in northeastern
areas, but it would not hurt rice exports,” Mr Chookiat said. Glutinous rice
makes up 10 to 20 percent of total Thai rice production.
He said the
major negative factor hurting rice exports was the strengthening baht, making
Thai rice prices uncompetitive in the eyes of some buyers paying with US
dollars.
But Mr Chookiat
and the Thai Rice Exporters Association are keeping the Thai rice export forecast
unchanged at 10 million tonnes in 2017.
In addition to
the stronger baht, the slight dip in supply caused by flooding in the Northeast
at a time when global demand remains strong is expected to keep Thai rice
prices rising, said an industry official.
The
psychological effect of the recent floods has pushed paddy price up by 5
percent to 7,600 baht ($228.50) per tonne, up from 7,200 baht ($216.47)
previously. That has pushed the offer price of Thai common grade white rice to
$390 a tonne, free on board, higher than the $340 a tonne offered by other
major exporting countries such as India, Vietnam and Pakistan.
Wichai Phochanakij, deputy permanent
secretary in the Commerce Ministry, said he expected the price of glutinous
rice to be slightly higher because of falling supply caused by the recent
floods, and that would help reduce pressure on prices during the harvesting
period, when prices are typically weighed down by increasing supply
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/5079415/despite-floods-thai-rice-output-unchanged/ Food group exports from Pakistan up by 34.74%
By
-
August 23,
2017
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: Food group exports
from the Country during first month of current financial year increased by
34.74 percent as compared to the corresponding month of last year.
During the month of July 2017, different
food commodities including rice, fish, meat, fruits, vegetables and spices
worth US$ 250.860 million exported as compared the exports of US$ 188.180
million of same month of last year, according the latest data released by the
Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
Meanwhile, rice exports from the Country
grew by 28.49 percent and 200,995 metric tons of rice worth US$ 107.896 million
exported as compared the exports of US$ 83.974 million of same period last
year.
During the first month of current
financial year Country earned US$ 32.990 million by exporting 30,951 metric
tons of basmati rice as the basmati rice exports increased by 18.96 percent
when it was compared with the exports of same month of last year.
Basmati rice exports from the Country
during month of July 2016 was recorded at 28,725 metric tons valuing US$ 27.731
million, the data reveled.
Besides, 170,044 metric tons of rice
other than basmati worth US$ 74.906 million exported as compared the exports of
135,367 metric tons valuing US$ 56.243 million of same period last year.
During first month of current financial
year exports of fish and fish preparations grew by 12.19 percent where as
exports of meat and meat products increased by 15.80 percent.
In month of July 2017 about 4,821 metric
tons of fish and fish preparations worth US$ 12.473 million exported as
compared the exports of 3,693 metric tons valuing US$ 11.118 million of same
month last year.
During the period under review, about
4,167 metric tons of meat and meat products worth US$ 16.286 million exported
as compared the exports of 4,138 metric tons valuing US$ 14.64 million of same
period last year.
The food commodities including wheat and
sugar witnessed tremendous increase in their respective exports during first
month of the current financial year by showing 100 percent increase.
On the other hand food group imports
into the Country during first month of current financial year swelled by 43.15
percent as compared the imports of same month last year.
The imports of food commodities into the
Country was recorded at US$ 534.693 million as compared the imports of US$
373.512 million of same month last year.
The major food items which had
registered increasing trend in their respective imports included dry fruits,
nuts tea, spices, soya bean and palm oil.
The food commodities with negative
growth in their respective imports including tea and leguminous vegetables
(pluses) and milk cream and milk food for infants.
https://dnd.com.pk/food-group-exports-from-pakistan-up-by-34-74/133213
India
revives traditional grains
Thomson Reuters Foundation / Khmer Times Share:
THIRUTHURAIPOONDI,
India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – For Nel Jayaraman, the realisation that
hybrid seeds, chemical fertilisers and pesticides were making farmers more
vulnerable to extreme weather came slowly.
In fields near the town of
Thiruthuraipoondi in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, Mr Jayaraman saw yields
falling and farmers’ debt rising as their reliance on modern seeds and
pesticides grew, even as the rains became increasingly fickle.
Fifteen years
ago, Mr Jayaraman gave up both, returning to traditional varieties and organic
farming methods that had become nearly extinct in the Cauvery river delta
region where his family had lived for generations.
Since then, he
has revived about 150 indigenous varieties of rice, and become an evangelist
for traditional seeds and organic farming, which he sees as key to combating
the impacts of climate change and protecting harvests and farmers’ incomes.
“Hybrid
varieties need more water, fertilisers and pesticides. They are just not
sustainable in this region,” he argued in his small office as a steady stream
of farmers walked in and out to talk to him or buy seeds.
“We should go
back to traditional varieties that are suited to this soil that can withstand
these conditions. It is the only way farmers can make a decent living.”
That is particularly crucial as Tamil
Nadu faces its worst drought in more than a century, after the monsoon rains
failed last year, he said.
As India’s
population expanded quickly after its independence from colonial rule in 1947,
the government backed a programme to increase food production to meet rising
demand.
The Green
Revolution, launched in the 1960s, increased harvests with improved technology,
including high-yielding varieties of wheat and rice developed by scientists,
and greater use of chemical fertilisers.
While
productivity rose, there has been criticism that the benefits were overstated,
that the cultivation methods damaged the land and drained groundwater, and that
the gene pool for staple crops narrowed, leaving farmers fewer options when
faced with disease and drought.
Several
organisations in southern India have since launched efforts to revive
traditional cultivation and rice varieties.
The Centre for
Indian Knowledge Systems (CIKS), for example, has revived dozens of traditional
rice varieties that are resistant to pests and disease, capable of dealing with
floods and drought, and that have valuable medicinal properties.
“Particularly
for coastal regions such as this, you need varieties that can handle the higher
salinity of the soil and groundwater, and are resistant to drought,” said
Subhashini Sridhar at CIKS in neighbouring Nagapattinam district.
“You need a
large and diverse genetic pool to preserve these qualities,” she said, citing
the example of the aftermath of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which hit
Nagapattinam hard.
Afterward, only
some traditional varieties could be successfully grown because salinity in the
soil and groundwater was higher than normal.
About 60
percent of India’s population depends on land to make a living.
But while agriculture made up more
than two-thirds of a farm family’s income in the 1980s, its share is less than
a third today as commodity prices fall but the costs of seed, fertiliser and
pesticides rise.
Rising debt –
in part from harvests slashed by drought and uneven rainfall – has triggered
tens of thousands of farmer suicides, including in Tamil Nadu.
Mr Jayaraman
and Mr Sridhar see traditional seeds as a solution.
Farmers do not
need to buy seed every year as they have to with hybrids – instead they simply
save part of their harvest to replant – and the older varieties often need less
water and do not need chemical fertilisers and pesticides, Mr Jayaraman said.
A move to
healthy eating in India’s cities has also sparked demand for traditional grains
and organic fruits and vegetables, for which consumers are willing to pay more,
he said.
About 37,000
farmers in the delta region are now cultivating traditional rice varieties,
said Mr Jayaraman.
Irregular
rainfall and extreme weather, including drought in the Cauvery delta over the
past decade, have convinced more farmers of their merits, he said.
“But it can be
hard to switch, as the government subsidises fertilisers and pesticides and
gives cheap loans to farmers, leading them deeper into debt when crops fail or
prices fall,” he said.
“Instead, they should subsidise
organic farming and promote it better.”
India was once home to about 100,000
varieties of indigenous rice, but the Green Revolution wiped out most of them,
and consumers began to prefer eating the fine-grained, polished white hybrid
varieties that were promoted by the government.
Government
support for reviving traditional grains and for organic farming has been
uneven.
The
northeastern state of Sikkim became the first organic state in January 2016.
Nine other states, including Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka, have an organic
farming policy.
Separately,
organic farming is also drawing an unlikely enthusiast – city dwelling
professionals.
They include
Senthil Kumar, a former software engineer who quit his job a year ago to focus
on his 3-hectare organic farm, a two-hour drive from the southern city of
Chennai where he lives.
“When I realised
the impact of chemicals and pesticides on my health and the environment, I
started looking at the organic alternative,” said Mr Kumar, who then set up a
non-profit to train farmers and urban enthusiasts with some help from Mr
Jayaraman.
“We have such a
wealth of traditional grains, pulses and native cattle that benefited farmers
for centuries. They are too valuable to lose,” he said.
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/5079414/india-revives-traditional-grains/
Import of rice, wheat, diesel,
fertilizer gets nod
24 August, 2017 12:00 AM
The Cabinet Purchase Committee at a meeting here on Wednesday
approved a total of 21 proposals, including the import of 100,000 mt of wheat
and 50,000 mt of non-bashmoti rice, reports UNB.
The meeting, held with Finance Minister AMA Muhith in the chair, gave the approval amid the growing concern over the possible food grain shortage due to the loss of crops in countrywide flooding.
The government has already withdrawn duty on rice import and also declared some banking facilities to encourage the import of food grains in the private sector.
As per the cabinet body’s approval, the Food Ministry imports the food grains through international quotations.
Of these, Dubai-based Phoenix Global company won the contract to supply 50,000 mt non-bashmoti at a total cost of Tk 170.61 crore as per metric tonne of rice was quoted at $ $411.11.
Of the wheat, Aston company will supply 50,000 mt of wheat at a cost of Tk 104.16 crore as per metric tonne was quoted at $258 while another foreign company Agro Crop will supply 50,000 mt wheat at a total cost of Tk 103.49 as pere metric tonne of what was quoted at $249.31.
The Cabinet body approved another import proposal of the Energy Division to import 165,120 mt of diesel import from Indian Shiliguri to Bangladesh’s Parbatipur through rail wagon. The premium for per metric tonne diesel was set at $5.50.
The other proposals which received approval include contract for Gazipur-Airport Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) project, procurement of six rail-gantry crane for Chittagong port, contract for cyclone shelter construction in Laxmipur, contract award for construction of dual-gauge railway line from Dohazari to Cox’s Bazar via Ramu, and Ramu to Gundum near Myanmar border.
The Cabinet purchase body also approved three separate proposals for the import of a total of 90,000 metric tonnes of fartiliser from three countries under government-to-government agreements.
Of these, Bangladesh Agriculture Development Corporation (BADC) will import 30,000 mt MOP fartiliser from Belarusian Potash Company while it will import 30,000 from Russia and the remaining 30,000 MOP fertiliser from Canadian commercial corporation
http://www.daily-sun.com/printversion/details/250076/Import-of-rice-wheat-diesel-fertilizer-gets-nod
Liberia: Rice Price to Drop?
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·
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Food and
Agriculture
·
Liberia
·
West Africa
With 48
days to the Presidential and Legislative Elections scheduled for October 10,
2017, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has issued an Executive Order suspending
tariff on Liberia's staple food, rice. Executive No. 87 is an extension of
Executive Order No. 80 - thus suspending tariff on rice.
A
release from the Executive Mansion said this Executive Order takes effect as of
August 22, 2017.
According
to Executive Order 87, the President is quoted as saying "whereas, the
Government of Liberia is committed to ensuring that the prices of certain basic
commodities on the Liberian market are affordable and do not impose unnecessary
burden on the people; that the government conducted an assessment and
evaluation on the causes of increases in the price of various strategic
commodities, and intends to initiate measures to ameliorate the
situation."
Although
the price of rice has been high and uncontrollable for years, Executive Order
noted that in furtherance of the findings of the assessment, government has
recognized the need to curb the continuous increase in the price of rice, the
country's staple, in order to make it affordable for purchase.
The Executive Order further disclosed "there exists a
need for exigent measures to achieve the desired objectives of easing the
economic burden on the citizens and residents to enable access to the staple
food and such measures cannot await long Legislative processes; and whereas in
the exercise of the Executive Power vested in the President by the
Constitution, the President issued Executive Orders No. 11, 19, 45, 61, 70, and
80 suspending import tariffs on rice in the interest of the public, and
circumstances again necessitate similar measures."
"Now therefore, the Government of Liberia in its desire
to continue bringing relief to the public hereby extends Executive Order No.
80, suspending the import tariff on rice as classified under Tariff No.
1006.30.00 (in packaging of more than 5kg or in bulk); 1006.30.00 (in packaging
of at least 5kg); and 1006.40.00 (broken rice) under the revenue Code of
Liberia Act 2000 as amended," Executive Order No. 87 concluded.
It remains unclear whether the price of rice will reduce in
line with the presidential order as the government through the Ministry of
Commerce and Industry has always said it has no control over prices.
http://allafrica.com/stories/201708231035.html
AUGUST 23,
2017 / 3:01 PM / A DAY AGO
Bangladesh to import 250,000 tonnes rice
from Cambodia at $453/T
Reuters Staff
3 MIN READ
·
·
DHAKA, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Bangladesh will
import 250,000 tonnes of white rice at $453.00 a tonne from Cambodia in a
government-to-government deal, two food ministry officials said on Wednesday,
more expensive than a previous deal.
Rice is a staple food for Bangladesh's 160
million people and high prices pose a problem for the government which faces a
national election next year.
The country produces around 34 million tonnes
of rice annually but uses almost all its production to feed its population, and
often requires imports to cope with shortages caused by floods or droughts.
The government is building buffer stocks to
combat high domestic prices after flash floods in April wiped away around 1
million tonnes of rice output, with ongoing floods, more severe, set to destroy
more.
"The proposal to import rice from
Cambodia is currently awaiting approval," one of the officials said.
Bangladesh, the world's fourth-biggest rice
producer, has emerged as a major importer of the staple grain, with the
government seeking to import as much as 1.5 million tonnes in the year to June.
Early this month, the government agreed to buy
1 million tonnes of rice from Cambodia, its first-ever deal with the country,
over the next five years.
It has so far imported 200,000 tonnes of white
rice at $430 a tonne and 50,000 tonnes of parboiled rice at $470 a tonne from
Vietnam in a state-to-state deal at rates much higher than in tenders.
Growing demand from Bangladesh could help stoke
Asian rice prices that hit multi-year highs in June.
The state grains buyer is issuing a series of
tenders after its initial talks with Thailand and India suffered a setback over
high prices.
The government is also in talks with Myanmar
to import rice, while it is engaged in a second round of discussions with
Thailand and India.
Although it slashed the duty on rice imports
last week to 2 percent from 10 percent, the second cut in less than two months,
rice prices have dropped only slightly.
Bangladesh also needs to import sizeable
quantities of wheat after floods damaged its crops, but tough state purchasing
conditions and slow ship unloading in ports mean trading houses are unwilling
to sell the grain. (Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Biju Dwarakanath
https://in.reuters.com/article/bangladesh-rice-cambodia-idINL4N1L93EP
·
ent
·
More∨
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Bangladesh's trade deficit poised to rise as rice imports skyrocket
Source: Xinhua| 2017-08-23
21:18:31|Editor: Yurou
DHAKA,
Aug. 23 (Xinhua) -- Bangladesh's imports surged over 37 percent to 4.50 billion
U.S. dollars in the first month of the current 2017-18 fiscal year (July
2017-June 2018) as imports of rice skyrocketed amid flesh floods in parts of
the country, officials said Wednesday.
"Increased
importation of rice in the last month pushed up the over all import
bills," said a central bank official who did not like to be named.
He said
imports also quickened last month, outpacing exports as domestic demand or
ready-made garment items and capital machinery propelled the overall economic
growth.
Driven
by ready-made garments, Bangladesh's exports in July surged over 26 percent to
3.21 billion U.S. dollars.
According
to the official, rice imports climbed over 200 percent to a record 69.63
million U.S. dollars in the last last month against 21.17 million U.S. dollars
in the previous month.
Quoting
the Bangladesh Bank (BB) data, the official said the settlement of letters of
credit (LCs), generally known as actual imports, stood at 4.50 billion U.S.
dollars in the July compared to 3.64 billion dollars in the same period a year
earlier.
Overall
import orders also surged by 26 percent in the July, showed the BB data.
The
overall import orders, officially known as fresh opening of import letters of
credit (LCs), increased to 5.06 billion dollars in July against 3.89 billion
dollars in the same period of the last 2016-17 fiscal year, it showed.
Officials
say rice imports jumped as after the second round of flooding the Bangladeshi
government in June eased import duty on rice to 10 percent from 28 percent in a
bid to stabilize the domestic market.
Bangladesh
last week again announced to cut import duty on rice further to 2 percent amid
flash floods.
Bangladeshi
Food Minister Qamrul Islam said the government decided to import 1.5 million
tons of rice in the current 2017-2018 fiscal year in an effort to replenish
reserves and rein in prices of the staple in the wake of the flooding.
Apart
from this, he said Bangladesh will import 500,000 tons of wheat in the current
fiscal year.
Flash
floods struck Bangladesh in March, causing huge loss of boro (winter) rice.
Apart from this, rice blast disease has also affected boro rice production
elsewhere in the country.
Against
such circumstances, prices are seen rising in the short term on a supply
shortage.
The
situation seems to have worsened in Bangladesh in the last couple of week as
fresh floods have reportedly hit 20 districts, mostly in the country's north,
leaving dozens of people dead.
As rice
imports skyrocket, officials said, Bangladesh trade deficit may widen further
in the coming months, if the existing trend of export earnings and import
payments continues
Rice import
trapped in plastic bags
·
Published at 01:58 PM August
23, 2017
·
Last updated at 12:27 AM
August 24, 2017
A trader says a ton of rice would cost Tk1,000 more if exporters
supplied rice in jute sacks.
At least 50,000 tons of rice are stuck at ports, a trader says
Thousands of tons of imported rice are stuck at the ports as
businessmen are yet to get clearance from customs authorities.
The problem lies in the plastic sacks since the government has
made it mandatory to use jute sacks for transportation, preservation, stocking
and marketing of rice and 12 other products.
Bangladesh, the world’s fourth-biggest rice producer, was hit by
floods in recent months which hit the domestic output and pushed up rice
prices. There is little sign that the situation will improve soon.
Amid dwindling state reserves, the government slashed taxes on
rice imports to 2% from 28% to replenish supplies and cool the soaring prices.
Sources say the Textiles and Jute Ministry has ignored a request
from the Commerce Ministry to allow the rice importers to unload their
consignments, and is instead advising the importers to approach the prime
minister directly to resolve the issue.
However, traders said only the Textiles and Jute Ministry can break
the stalemate since it issued the order on using jute sacks. Sources say the
ministry is yet to comply with a directive from the Prime Minister’s Office to
solve the problem.
Disgruntled businessmen pointed out that customs had given
clearance to rice imported in plastic sacks from Vietnam and Thailand under the
government-to-government agreement, but was unwilling to give approval when it
came to private importers.
“At least 50,000 tons of rice are stuck at various ports and we
fear that rain will damage the rice,” one importer said on condition of
anonymity. “It will negatively impact the rice market and the economy.”
Several traders said exporters had packed the rice in plastic as
they were not bound to use jute sacks for the transportation or preservation of
the commodity.
“The price of each ton of rice would have gone up by Tk1,000 if
we supplied rice in jute sacks. In that case, the government’s purpose would
not have been fulfilled and the rice price would not go down,” the importer
said.
Food Minister Qamrul Islam said the problem will be solved
eventually. “Even if the imported rice hits the market late, it will have a
positive impact,” he added.
Commerce Minister Tofail Ahmed said he could do nothing about
the situation as it was not under his ministry but added that he had requested
the textiles and jute secretary to relax the order on sacks for the sake of the
businessmen.
“I hope it will be resolved soon,” he said
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/08/23/rice-import-trapped-plastic-bags/
GoL suspends tariff on rice
23
August 2017
President Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf has issued Executive Order No. 87; extending Executive Order No. 80 -
thus suspending tariff on rice. This Executive Order went into immediate effect
on August 22, 2017.
An Executive Mansion release said, whereas, the
Government of Liberia is committed to ensuring that the prices of certain basic
commodities on the Liberian market are affordable and do not impose unnecessary
burden on the people; that the government conducted an assessment and
evaluation on the causes of increases in the price of various strategic
commodities, and intends to initiate measures to ameliorate the situation;
Executive Order No. 87 notes that in furtherance
of the findings of the assessment, Government has recognized the need to curb
the continuous increase in the price of rice, the country’s staple, in order to
make it affordable for purchase.
The Executive Order furthered: “There exists a
need for exigent measures to achieve the desired objectives of easing the
economic burden on the citizens and residents to enable access to the staple
food and such measures cannot await long Legislative processes; and whereas in
the exercise of the Executive Power vested in the President by the
Constitution, the President issued Executive Orders No. 11, 19, 45, 61, 70, and
80 suspending import tariffs on rice in the interest of the public, and
circumstances again necessitate similar measures;
Executive Order No. 87 is concluded as saying:
“Now therefore, the Government of Liberia in its desire to continue bringing
relief to the public hereby extends Executive Order No. 80, suspending the
import tariff on rice as classified under Tariff No. 1006.30.00 (in packaging
of more than 5kg or in bulk); 1006.30.00 (in packaging of at least 5kg); and
1006.40.00 (broken rice) under the revenue Code of Liberia Act 2000 as
amended.”-Press release
http://www.thenewdawnliberia.com/politics/14595-gol-suspends-tariff-on-rice
Flood situation improves further
STAFF REPORTER
STAFF REPORTER
A girl dries her textbooks in flood-hit Botahdoi in Dhemaji, on Saturday. – UB Photos
GUWAHATI, Aug 19 - The prevailing flood
situation in the State has showed further signs of improvement with floodwaters
receding in nine districts today, even as the cumulative figure concerning
flood-related death during the current wave has shot up to 63.
However, 22,11,265 people are still reeling under
flood in 1,791 villages under 50 revenue circles of 16 districts of the State.
Of them, 68,014 people are still taking shelter in 191 relief camps in 13
districts.
During the current wave of flood, 4,33,918
flood-hit people had to take shelter in 923 relief camps, said the official
flood bulletin issued by the Assam State Disaster Management Authority (ASDMA)
here this evening.
Between August 10 and the afternoon of August 18,
the NDRF, SDRF, CRPF, Army, police, frest and revenue authorities personnel and
the local community rescued 51,197 marooned people in 26 districts.
As of today, a total crop area of 1,18,362
hectares have still remained affected by the floodwaters.
The districts still reeling under floodwaters are
Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, Biswanath, Sonitpur, Barpeta, Bongaigaon, Chirang,
Kokrajhar, Dhubri, South Salmara, Goalpara, Morigaon, Nagaon, Golaghat, Jorhat
and Majuli.
Today, the Brahmaputra was flowing above danger
level at Neamatighat and Dhubri, while its tributaries Dhansiri (South), Jia
Bharali, Kopili and Beki are also flowing above their respective danger levels
at Numaligarh, NT Road Crossing, Dharamtul and Road Bridge points respectively,
the flood bulletin stated.
http://www.assamtribune.com/scripts/detailsnew.asp?id=aug2017/at059
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices Open- August 4, 2017
Nagpur
Foodgrain Prices - APMC/Open Market-August 4 Nagpur, August 4 (Reuters) - Gram
and tuar prices recovered further in Nagpur Agriculture Produce and Marketing
Committee (APMC) here on good festival season buying support from local millers
amid thin supply from producing regions. Healthy rise in Madhya Pradesh gram
prices and reported demand from South-based millers also pushed up prices.
About 1,100 of gram and 900 bags of tuar were available for auctions, according
to sources.
FOODGRAINS
& PULSES
GRAM
*
Desi gram reported higher in open market on good demand from local traders amid
weak
supply
from producing regions.
TUAR
*
Tuar gavarani and tuar Karnataka reported down in open market on lack of demand
from
local
traders.
*
New rice arrival reported strong in open market on increased demand from local
traders
amid weak supply from producing regions.
*
In Akola, Tuar New - 3,400-3,6500, Tuar dal (clean) - 5,100-5,400, Udid Mogar
(clean)
-
7,200-7,900, Moong Mogar (clean) 6,500-7,200, Gram - 4,500-4,700, Gram Super
best
-
7,400-7,700
*
Wheat, other varieties of 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
4,400-5,174
4,400-5,010
Gram
Pink Auction
n.a.
2,100-2,600
Tuar
Auction
3,500-3,865
3,400-3,800
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
1,600-1,717
1,550-1,708
Gram
Super Best Bold
7,500-8,000
7,500-8,000
Gram
Super Best
n.a.
n.a.
Gram
Medium Best
6,700-7,000
6,700-7,000
Gram
Dal Medium
n.a.
n.a
Gram
Mill Quality
5,000-5,100
5,000-5,100
Desi
gram Raw
4,750-4,950
4,700-4,900
Gram
Yellow
7,100-8,100
7,100-8,100
Gram
Kabuli
12,300-13,400
12,300-13,400
Tuar
Fataka Best-New
5,400-5,700
5,400-5,700
Tuar
Fataka Medium-New
5,200-5,300
5,200-5,300
Tuar
Dal Best Phod-New
5,000-5,200
5,000-5,200
Tuar
Dal Medium phod-New
4,700-5,000
4,700-5,000
Tuar
Gavarani New
3,500-3,600
3,600-3,700
Tuar
Karnataka
3,600-3,800
3,700-3,900
Masoor
dal best
4,700-4,900
4,700-4,900
Masoor
dal medium
4,400-4,600
4,400-4,600
Masoor
n.a.
n.a.
Moong
Mogar bold (New)
6,700-7,000
6,700-7,000
Moong
Mogar Medium
6,000-6,500
6,000-6,500
Moong
dal Chilka
5,200-5,800
5,200-5,800
Moong
Mill quality
n.a.
n.a.
Moong
Chamki best
6,400-6,800
6,400-6,800
Udid
Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,500-8,000
7,500-8,000
Udid
Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG)
6,500-7,000
6,500-7,000
Udid
Dal Black (100 INR/KG)
4,000-4,500
4,000-4,500
Batri
dal (100 INR/KG)
4,500-5,000
4,500-5,000
Lakhodi
dal (100 INR/kg)
2,800-3,000
2,800-3,000
Watana
Dal (100 INR/KG)
2,850-3,000
2,850-2,950
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)
1,900-2,000
1,900-2,000
Wheat
Mill quality (100 INR/KG)
1,750-1,850
1,750-1,850
Wheat
Filter (100 INR/KG)
2,100-2,300
2,100-2,300
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)
3,000-3,600
3,000-3,600
MP
Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG)
2,200-2,700
2,200-2,700
Rice
BPT new (100 INR/KG)
2,800-3,300
2,800-3,400
Rice
BPT best (100 INR/KG)
3,300-3,500
3,300-3,500
Rice
BPT medium (100 INR/KG)
3,000-3,100
3,000-3,100
Rice
Luchai (100 INR/KG)
2,500-2,800
2,500-2,800
Rice
Swarna new (100 INR/KG)
2,350-2,450
2,300-2,400
Rice
Swarna best (100 INR/KG)
2,500-2,600
2,500-2,650
Rice
Swarna medium (100 INR/KG)
2,300-2,400
2,300-2,400
Rice
HMT New (100 INR/KG)
3,800-4,100
3,700-4,000
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)
4,500-4,800
4,400-4,800
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)
10,000-13,500
10,000-13,500
Rice
Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG)
5,000-7,500
5,000-7,500
Rice
Chinnor New(100 INR/KG)
4,600-4,800
4,500-4,700
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. 34.0 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 24.5 degree
Celsius Rainfall : 0.6 mm FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with one or two spells
of rains or thunder-showers. Maximum and minimum temperature would be around
and 34 and 25 degree Celsius respectively. Note: n.a.--not available (For oils,
transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices, but included in market
prices)
https://in.investing.com/news/commodities-news/nagpur-foodgrain-prices-open-august-4-2017-502678
Rice production in Assam set to go down as
floods wreak havoc
By
-
Aug 22, 2017
65
SHARES
With two
spell of floods hitting Assam
back to back, the production of rice will go down this year than the
expectation. Assam
agriculture minister Atul Bora said that the loss could be to the tune of 6
lakh metric tonnes.
“The target for rice production this year was
62 lakh metric tonnes, but as the floods have severely hit the Sali paddy, the
state is likely to suffer a loss of around 6 lakh metric tonnes,” Bora told
reporters addressing a press conference on Monday.
In 2015-16,
rice production of Assam was 53 lakh metric tonnes.
More than
1.73 lakh hectares of Sali paddy have been destroyed in the flood, besides vegetables
in 10,692 hectares and jute in over 7,000 hectares. A total of 3.08 lakh
hectares of crop land have been affected so far in the floods and 5,055 hectres
of agriculture land with paddy saplings were also damaged.
“Around 6.29
lakh farmer families in 4,717 villages have been hit in the flood this year so
far. Besides, we have included 45,000 farmers under crop insurance. The
department has also decided to distribute around 1 lakh shallow tube well,”
added Bora.
Bora said
that more than 6000 hectors agriculture lands have been affected by severe
siltation in Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, Jorhat, Darrang, Golaghat, Majuli and Barpeta
districts.
The
department will distribute the seeds among the farmers to overcome the loss in
the flood. “Farmers cultivating sali paddy are unlikely to make any gains this
year. So we are laying stress on the rabi crops. We are giving more thrust on
crops like mustard, potato, onion and pumpkin gourd among others,” said Bora.
Bora has
asked all the districts officers to compile the losses of the farmers in flood
for further compensation works.
“The
government will pay compensation through direct benefit transfer system to the
farmers and the money will be deposited in the accounts of the farmers,” he
said.
Urgent
funds needed to support people devastated by flooding in India and Bangladesh
REPORT
Published on 23 Aug 2017
Farmers
hugely indebt as crops destroyed and unable to farm on land for next 5 years
“So many
people are traumatised at losing their loved ones and millions of people are
now living under open skies on the highway, with nothing!”
Urgent
funds are needed to deal with the worst flooding in India and Bangladesh for
decades, says Islamic Relief staff in both countries.
Flash
flooding in India has claimed more than 500 lives in Assam, Bihar and Uttar
Pradesh and this figure is likely to be much higher as many areas are
inaccessible and thousands of people are still missing, presumed dead. Whole
districts have been submerged, directly affecting up to 15 million people and
millions of people have been forced to evacuate their homes.
The
situation in Bihar is particularly bad because of the existing poverty and
sudden rapid onset of the floods, which caught whole communities unaware.
“It’s
absolutely heart-wrenching,” says Islamic Relief’s Head of Mission in India,
Akmal Shareef. “So many people are traumatised at losing their loved ones and
millions of people are now living under open skies on the highway, with
nothing!
“Our staff
on the ground have heard about whole families being swept away by the floods
and the landslides. It’s so painful.”
Mr Shareef
is from Bihar, one of the worst-affected regions. He added: “In Kishanganj in
Bihar, the water rose from 3-10 feet in only four hours and people were fleeing
for their lives. I have not known this to happen in more than 40 years. My
brother-in law’s house was under water for five days.”
More than
500,000 hectares of crops are known to have been destroyed in Assam and Bihar
and this number is likely to increase as many areas are currently inaccessible.
Farmers are under extreme stress as they took out loans for cultivating paddy
rice following forecasts for a good monsoon this year and now have no hope for
a good yield. Farmers have also told Islamic Relief staff that it will be
impossible to farm on their flooded land for the next five years.
Thousands
of families have lost all of their food stocks and are now facing chronic food
shortages.
“Bihar is
already an acutely poor and marginalised area, where people migrate up north
and further afield to make a living. But now that the agricultural sector has
collapsed, this is happening on a massive scale,” Mr Shareef explains. “There
has always been child trafficking and prostitution because of the poverty. But
this is now increasing. And there are children who have been orphaned by the
floods who are particularly vulnerable.”
There has
been a cholera outbreak in Assam and Islamic Relief fears this will also happen
in Bihar, if urgent support for clean water and sanitation is not provided.
Islamic
Relief is concentrating its efforts in Katihar and Kishanganj - the two-most
affected districts in Bihar, where thousands of water sources have been
contaminated.
We have
set up two high capacity water treatment plants in Assam and Bihar, providing
clean water for 7,500 people.
And we are
providing food, temporary shelter and hygiene items such as buckets and soap
for 5,000 households. This will increase when more funds are available.
Third of
the country submerged in Bangladesh; water levels continue to rise
More than
100 people have died in Bangladesh where floods have submerged more than a
third of the country.
Iqbal
Hossain, Head of Humanitarian Department for Islamic Relief in Bangladesh said:
“People’s homes are completely submerged under the water, roads have become
rivers and the railways are down.”
Almost
50,000 wells have been contaminated with flood water and water levels are
continuing to rise in the lower and central parts of the country.
Islamic
Relief has established two water treatment plants in Jamalpur district which
are providing 20 litres of clean water a day for 3,000 people. We have also
supplied 250 buckets.
Almost
five million hectares of cultivated land have been damaged and there are
chronic food shortages.
Iqbal
Hossain, said: “There are no crops in the fields and people are now only eating
one meal a day. Food for both people and animals is now urgently needed.”
We are
providing rice, sugar and energy biscuits and packets of saline solution to
12,000 people in the three worst-affected districts - Jamalpur, Kurigram and
Gaibhanda.
And we
will be providing 550 cows to flood-affected families for Qurbani (animals to
be sacrificed and eaten during Eid celebrations).
Iqbal
Hossain added: “The need for food, shelter and clean water is absolutely
essential and we are desperately in need of funds to be able to provide these
as soon as possible for all those in urgent need.
http://reliefweb.int/report/india/urgent-funds-needed-support-people-devastated-flooding-india-and-bangladesh
Published :
23 Aug 2017, 01:08:53
July imports
rise 37pc
Rice imports
up by 229pc
Siddique
Islam
An 229 per
cent rise in rice imports enhanced country's overall import growth by over 37
per cent or US$1.22 billion in July, officials said.
They said
the country had to count such higher trade bills at the outset (first month) of
the current fiscal year on account of substantial amount of rice import for
crop losses caused by flood onslaughts.
Higher
back-to-back imports for readymade garment (RMG) products and capital machinery
also contributed to the rise in national imports.
Settlement
of letters of credit (LCs), generally known as actual imports, rose to US$4.50
billion in July from $3.27 billion a month before. It was $3.64 billion in July
2016.
The opening
of fresh LCs, generally known as import orders, increased by over 26 per cent
or $1.05 billion to $5.06 billion in July from more than $ 4.00 billion last
June. It was $3.89 billion in July last year.
"The
overall imports increased significantly during the period under review mainly
due to higher import of rice, back-to-back imports for readymade garment (RMG)
products and capital machinery," a senior official of the Bangladesh Bank
(BB) told the FE Monday.
The rising
trend in import of food-grains, practically rice imports, may continue in the
coming months to keep the prices of the staple stable in the local markets
through boosting its supply, the central banker explained.
Both the
government and the central bank have already taken different measures to
encourage the importers to import more rice to meet the growing demand for the
essential item amid a slowing local supply.
Earlier on
July 20 last, the BB relaxed its foreign-exchange-transaction rules for opening
LCs against rice import to ensure sufficient supply of the staple food on the
domestic market.
Under the
relaxed rules, the banks have been allowed till December 31, 2017 to open LCs
against deferred or usance bills or under buyer's credit up to a 90-day term.
The central
bank had also allowed the banks to open LCs for importing rice with zero-margin
on the basis of bank-client relationship.
Besides, the
National Board of Revenue (NBR) brought import duty on rice down further to 2.0
per cent on August 17 from the previously pared-down rate of 10 per cent.
Earlier on
June 20 this year, the government slashed the import duty on rice to 10 per
cent from 28 per cent in the wake of price spirals.
The
government as well as the central bank had taken the latest moves against the
backdrop of damage to the output of the single-biggest crop, Boro, in May due
to flashfloods particularly in haor areas (marshlands) of Bangladesh.
"We're
encouraging importers to import rice for ensuring country's food security
despite flashfloods," a senior executive of a leading state-owned
commercial bank told the FE.
Echoing the
BB official's view, he also said the upward trend in rice import may continue
until the next Aman harvest.
The overall
rice imports in terms of value surged by nearly 229 per cent to $69.63 million
in last July against $ 21.17 million in the previous month.
Of the
total, rice imports through private sector stood at $39.47 million while the
bill was $30.16 million for import through public sector in July, the BB data
showed.
However, the
back-to-back import of RMG accessories rose by more than 100 per cent to
$924.70 million in the month of July from $461.55 million in June last
following an increased demand for the largest export-oriented industry.
Export
earnings from garments, covering both knitwear and woven apparel, jumped by
more than 17 per cent to $2.48 billion in July from $2.12 billion in the same
period of last year.
On the other
hand, import of capital machinery-industrial equipment used for production-was
up by 50.13 per cent to $347.93 million during the period under review as
against $231.75 million in June 2017.
siddique.islam@gmail.com
http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2017/08/23/80482/July-imports-rise-37pc
Rice crop faces further
setback
Aus and Aman rice crops, as well as vegetables, have suffered a
severe blow like the Boro crop in the recent floods in 40 districts of the
country.
The Boro rice crop was affected by
the floods only in the haor regions whereas the recent floods inundated 652,654
hectares of Aus and Aman croplands in the 40 districts, revealed agovernment
estimation.
The agricultural extension
department (DAE) expected that rice production from each hectare of land will
be around 3.5 tonnes. According to that estimation, the production of rice was
expected to be at least 2.3 million tonnes from the land that went under water.
The rice production may fall by as
much as one million tonnes if half of the expected amount of production is
destroyed due to the floods this season.
An estimate of the agricultural
affairs ministry revealed that the production of rice in the Boro season fell
by one million tonnes in the haor regions.
Contrary to this estimate, the
food ministry says the production diminished by two million tonnes whereas the
rice mill owners claimed that the production shortage was four million tonnes.
Agricultural ministry secretary,
Mohammad Moinuddin Abdullah, said to Prothom Alo, “We are making a list of
affected farmers. We shall provide them with seeds and other agricultural equipment
as soon as the floodwater recedes.”
“We have already prepared a list
of 600,000 affected farmers of the haor regions. They will receive agricultural
rehabilitation assistance very soon,” he hoped.
According to economists, the
country will suffer from a serious shortage of rice this year. The government
has already signed memorandum of understanding (MoU) and rice import agreements
with four countries to tackle the situation. But the amount of rice imported so
far is inadequate.
According to food ministry’s daily
food grain situation report, prepared on Monday, the government has imported
46,000 tonnes of rice while private entrepreneurs have imported 262,000 tonnes
from July till now.
The report also said the stock of
rice in the government warehouses at present is 295,000 tonnes. The stock was
about 700,000 tonnes in the same period last year.
Bangladesh Institute of
Development Studies (BIDS) researcher M Asaduzzamn told Prothom Alo that the
production of Boro and Aman rice could be 10 per cent less [than the previous
year].
“As a result the price hike might
put poor people’s food security at risk. This is why the government should buy
imported rice from the businessmen and increase the stock on an emergency
basis.”
Source: Prothom Alo
http://bangladeshchronicle.net/2017/08/rice-crop-faces-further-setback/
Asia Rice
-Prices fall in major exporters; Bangladesh to buy from Cambodia
HANOI, Aug
24 (Reuters) - Rice prices fell in India, Vietnam and Thailand on weak demand,
traders said on Thursday, while Bangladesh is likely to spend more on importing
rice as part of the government's plan to cope with shortages.
India's 5
percent broken parboiled rice prices RI-INBKN5-P1 eased by $4 per tonne to $403
to $406 per tonne.
"There
wasn't any improvement in demand this week. Buyers are delaying purchases
expecting further drop in prices," said an exporter in Andhra Pradesh.
India's
non-basmati rice exports could slow in the coming months as shipments have
become too expensive on strong rupee and higher local paddy prices..
Prices also
dropped in Vietnam as market was quiet, traders said. The benchmark 5 percent
broken rice RI-VNBKN5-P1 fell to $385-$395 a tonne this week, FOB Saigon, down
from $395-$405 last week.
Rice output
in Vietnam's Mekong Delta was affected as crop was submerged in flooding.
Traders were however unable to estimate the loss.
Thailand's
rice prices dipped as demand has been flat in both domestic and international
markets, Thai traders said.
Thai
benchmark 5 percent broken rice RI-THBKN5-P1 was quoted at $375-$377 a tonne,
FOB Bangkok, down from $376-$382 a tonne last week.
"The
weakening of the baht against the US dollar is also attributed to the drop in
prices," a trader in Bangkok said.
Rice
production in Thailand's north and northeast have been delayed due to flood in
July, leading to more supply towards the end of the year, which could affect
prices.
Rice
exporters in Thailand are looking to meet fresh demand from markets like
Bangladesh, while Dhaka is likely to buy from Cambodia.
Bangladesh's
food ministry said it would import 250,000 tonnes of white rice at $453 a tonne
from Cambodia in a state-to-state deal, more expensive than a previous deal
with Vietnam.
The country
is building buffer stocks to combat high domestic prices after flash floods in
April wiped away around 1 million tonnes of rice.
Prices have
dropped only slightly in Bangladesh after it slashed the duty on imports last
week to 2 percent from 10 percent, the second cut in less than two months.
"More
rice from India is being imported by private traders after the second cut. This
will have a good impact on the domestic market," a food ministry official
said. (Reporting by Mi Nguyen in Hanoi, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Panu Wongcha-um in
Bangkok and Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai; Editing by Vyas Mohan)
Author Name:
https://in.reuters.com/article/asia-rice-idINL4N1LA3O5
Asia Rice
-Prices fall in major exporters; Bangladesh to buy from Cambodia
HANOI, Aug
24 (Reuters) - Rice prices fell in India, Vietnam and Thailand on weak demand,
traders said on Thursday, while Bangladesh is likely to spend more on importing
rice as part of the government's plan to cope with shortages.
India's 5
percent broken parboiled rice prices RI-INBKN5-P1 eased by $4 per tonne to $403
to $406 per tonne.
"There
wasn't any improvement in demand this week. Buyers are delaying purchases
expecting further drop in prices," said an exporter in Andhra Pradesh.
India's
non-basmati rice exports could slow in the coming months as shipments have
become too expensive on strong rupee and higher local paddy prices..
Prices also
dropped in Vietnam as market was quiet, traders said. The benchmark 5 percent
broken rice RI-VNBKN5-P1 fell to $385-$395 a tonne this week, FOB Saigon, down
from $395-$405 last week.
Rice output
in Vietnam's Mekong Delta was affected as crop was submerged in flooding.
Traders were however unable to estimate the loss.
Thailand's
rice prices dipped as demand has been flat in both domestic and international
markets, Thai traders said.
Thai benchmark
5 percent broken rice RI-THBKN5-P1 was quoted at $375-$377 a tonne, FOB
Bangkok, down from $376-$382 a tonne last week.
"The
weakening of the baht against the US dollar is also attributed to the drop in
prices," a trader in Bangkok said.
Rice production
in Thailand's north and northeast have been delayed due to flood in July,
leading to more supply towards the end of the year, which could affect prices.
Rice
exporters in Thailand are looking to meet fresh demand from markets like
Bangladesh, while Dhaka is likely to buy from Cambodia.
Bangladesh's
food ministry said it would import 250,000 tonnes of white rice at $453 a tonne
from Cambodia in a state-to-state deal, more expensive than a previous deal
with Vietnam.
The country
is building buffer stocks to combat high domestic prices after flash floods in
April wiped away around 1 million tonnes of rice.
Prices have
dropped only slightly in Bangladesh after it slashed the duty on imports last
week to 2 percent from 10 percent, the second cut in less than two months.
"More
rice from India is being imported by private traders after the second cut. This
will have a good impact on the domestic market," a food ministry official
said. (Reporting by Mi Nguyen in Hanoi, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Panu Wongcha-um in
Bangkok and Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai; Editing by Vyas Mohan)
Rice production likely to be hit in
Mysuru district
Paddy cultivated on only 2,922 hectares as
against the targeted 1,02,650 hectares
As most of the farmers have
desisted from growing paddy in Mysuru district owing to the State government’s
decision to not provide water for paddy crop in the command area during the
kharif season, production of rice may come down considerably in the district.
Farmers have cultivated paddy on only 2,922 hectares as against the target of
1,02,650 hectares during the kharif season. The Agriculture Department has
stopped distributing seeds in order to prevent farmers from growing paddy this
season. Hence, rice production in the district may be adversely affected this
year. Somasundra, Joint Director of Agriculture, told The Hindu that
paddy was grown in over 88,740 hectares during 2015-16 and there was a rice
production of over 3,00,709tonnes during the year. He said that over 35.67
quintal rice was produced per hectare last year and he said farmers had grown
paddy in many taluks despite drought.The Agriculture Department, at the behest
of the State government, is prevailing upon farmers not to cultivate paddy this
year owing to failure of rain. The department, through Raitha Samparka Kendras
(farmer contact centres), and through other various other platforms had
insisted the farmers not to grow paddy this season and it also made it clear
that government was not responsible if farmers grew paddy and the crop got
damaged for want of water. Apart from instructing the farmers not to grow any
water intensive crop such as paddy, and sugarcane, the department had also
called upon the farmers to grow ragi, hybrid maize, jowar, pulses, cotton, and
oil seeds, which require less water. Many farmers had cultivated the above
crops in most parts of the district. Hence, most of the farmers did not take up
paddy this season and only a small number of farmers in the rain-fed area and
are dependent on their borewells have cultivated paddy this season, Mr.
Somasundra said. He said that water being let into the canals would be used to
fill the tanks for drinking purposes. In K.R. Nagar taluk, paddy cultivation is
down to 2,384 hectares as against the target of 26,500 hectares, in Mysuru it
is 160 hectares as against the target of 8,000 hectares, while in Nanjangud
only 53 hectares has been brought under paddy cultivation this year as against
the target of 17,000 hectares. In Periyapatana 325 hectares has been brought
under paddy cultivation as against the targeted 8,400 hectares and paddy has
not been cultivated in H.D. Kote, Hunsur, and T. Narsipur.
Rice farmers
, others to access Bill Gates’ $30bn agric grant
Abuja—The
Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria, RIFAN, has said it was working to access
the $30 billion agricultural grant contributed by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
and other donor agencies for rice production in Africa. Alhaji Aminu Goronyo,
the National President of the association, told the News Agency of Nigeria,
NAN, in Abuja yesterday that the association had submitted a template that
would qualify it for the grant. According to him, a team of experts from Geneva
has met with the association on the grant, which Nigerian farmers can access as
much as $600 million. He said the visit was a fallout of the Green Revolution
Forum, tagged ‘New Push for Africa’s Agricultural Transformation,’ held in September 2016 in Abidjan, Cote
d’Ivoire, where the fund was pledged by various agencies. He said the grant
would cover various rice value chains, including production, processing,
packaging and marketing, and would
assist the country attain self-sufficiency in rice production. Goronyo listed
other partners that contributed to the fund to include Grow Africa and John Kufor
Foundation. Read more at:
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/08/rice-farmers-others-access-bill-gates-30bn-agric-grant/
Govt to import 500,000 tons of rice
and wheat
'As a ton of wheat costs $251, the entire
purchase will cost of the government Tk104 crore
` As a ton of wheat costs $251, the entire purchase will cost of
the government Tk104 crore'
The government has offered international tenders to import half a million tons
of rice and wheat. They are set to buy 1,00,000 tons of wheat and 50,000 tons
non-basmati rice. The Cabinet Committee meeting on the Public Procurement
Procurement Committee was chaired by Finance Minister AMA Muhith which approved
three separate proposals for this. After the meeting, Additional Secretary of
the Cabinet Division Mustafizur Rahman said the rice and wheat will be imported
with three different proposals under the package-2 in the budget for the Fiscal
Year 2017-18. “As a ton of wheat costs $251, the entire purchase will cost of
the government Tk104 crore. “The proposal to make separate purchases of 50,000
tons of non-basmati rice through international tenders has also been approved.
Each ton cost $411.11, and the total cost to the government will be Tk170.89
crore. A Dubai based company had already won the tender bid,” said the
additional secretary. He also said that the proposal to import another 50,000
tons of wheat has been approved by the Ministry of Food. The cost of each ton
of wheat is Tk2449.38, which totals to Tk103.49 crore.
Warong Dechgitvigrom
Politician’s
risky detective work uncovered irregularities
politics August 23, 2017 01:00
By JAKRAWAN SALAYTOO
THE NATION
THE NATION
DEMOCRAT
Party key figure Warong Dechgitvigrom realised just days after the 2011
election that a full-scale implementation of a rice mortgage scheme by Yingluck
Shinawatra’s government would open up many problems.
As the party’s so-called “Shadow Cabinet”
member for commerce, Warong already knew from talking to people involved in the
rice trading that the then-government’s rice-pledging scheme had flaws, not
least of which was that it opened doors for corruption both large and small.
Warong was convinced that every rice grain
mortgaged under the scheme would be plagued by potential corruption.
“Generally, it was widely perceived that a
rice mortgage is corrupt in principle,” he told The Nation. “As the government
introduced the scheme to take every grain of rice, it was a sure bet that it
[corruption] would happen,” said Warong. “My view was that it’s not farmers who
would benefit from the scheme as claimed by Pheu Thai Party, but traders and
distributors of rice who would instead.”
And he assumed that there would be flaws in the programme that would inevitably
lead to corruption.
Warong decided he had to closely watch how
the scheme was rolled out and run. And thus began his “detective” work into the
Yingluck government’s rice mortgage scheme as he began to seriously investigate
the government-to-government deal with a Chinese firm claiming to represent the
government of China.
For months, Warong travelled extensively
to meet farmers, rice traders, millers, exporters and many others to study the
rice cycle in detail, and organise and test his ideas. He came to understand
the rice cycle, dividing it into three stages: rice production, rice stocking
and rice distribution, the most problematic part.
Warong focused on monitoring activities
involving the second and third stages of the cycle, and eventually stumbled
upon irregularities, some due to his team’s efforts, others by luck.
“One day I received a call from some
millers who informed me that there would be rice moved from one province to
another. So I sent my team to accompany a truck driver for a few days so that
they would not be suspected, and they were able to collect evidence for me,”
said Warong.
What his team discovered was that some
degrading rice was being transported from one silo to another to allegedly
benefit from the prices guaranteed under the scheme. One team member was
discovered, but he narrowly escaped the scene by telling silo owners that he
was with them and had come to check their silos to ensure they would take
degra-ding rice from his boss. Recognising the danger of the undercover work,
Warong chose men that he could trust who were close to him as they had to be
able to keep the secret, he said.
Along the border, irregularities involving
the transport of rice from neighbouring countries also took place as poor
quality rice was transported across the border in order |to claim benefits from
the scheme.
Warong did not hesitate to look into the
details after being tipped off by some Thai-Khmer residents who had called him.
They also helped film the activities, which showed many trucks transporting
rice across the border before ending up at silos inside Thailand.
Warong personally went to Prachin Buri to
observe the cross-border transport and confirmed the truth of claims. Along
with that evidence on the ground, Warong by chance received related documents
and contracts from people he calls “citizens with good faith”. To get the
documents without putting informers at risk, Warong drove past the sources
without stopping while they threw the papers into his car.
“It was just like a detective movie,”
recalled Warong, who later got help from friends to decode the documents. He
then used that information to kick-start a motion in Parliament to expose
irregularities in the scheme.
After he and his team put together the
jigsaw puzzle of evidence, Warong says he found corroborating details about
alleged irregularities in the scheme. In particular, he said the documents gave
him insights into rice distribution and trade that he saw as allegedly linking irregularities
to government ministers and to their boss, the then-prime minister Yingluck
Shinawatra.
To this day, Warong does not talk about
many of the details around his detective work.
“I must say it was a dangerous task,” he
said. “Everything had to be kept in secret and done in a secret manner. Even
today, I have not yet disclosed all of my informants as they would definitely
be targeted if exposed.”
And now? It is up to the court to rule
after seeing all the documentary evidence, and hearing all the witnesses that
have appeared before the judges, he concluded.
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30324603
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‘Non-delivery
of rice by millers caused Rs 30-cr loss to exchequer’
‘Non-delivery of rice by millers
caused Rs 30-cr loss to exchequer’
As per PSWC, the non-delivery of rice by the
millers during the said period caused a loss of nearly Rs 30 crore to the state
exchequer.
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Written by Navjeevan Gopal |
Chandigarh | Published:August 23, 2017
1:18 am
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