چاول سے متعلقہ روزانہ کی علاقائی عالمی
اورقومی خبریں
Karimnagar
lives up to its ‘rice bowl of Telangana’ reputation
SPECIAL
CORRESPONDENT KARIMNAGAR APRIL 26, 2017
02:02 IST
UPDATED:
APRIL 26, 2017 00:03 IST
District
produces a record 11 lakh tonnes paddy this rabi season
The
erstwhile Karimnagar district — comprising Karimnagar, Jagtial, Peddapalli and
Rajanna-Sircilla districts — has once emerged as the rice bowl of Telangana
State with a record paddy production of over 11 lakh tonnes during this rabi
season.Disclosing this to newsmen here on Tuesday, Minister for Finance and
Civil Supplies Eatala Rajender said that Telangana was expecting paddy
production of 60 lakh tonnes.
Out
of that, 11 lakh tonnes of paddy would be from the erstwhile Karimnagar
district only, he maintained.The Minister said that the Civil Supplies
Department was taking all measures to ensure that about 40 lakh tonnes of paddy
was procured by them and the remaining by rice millers, traders and seed
companies etc.
Informing
that the civil supplies authorities and other departments were entrusted to
open as many paddy procurement centres as possible in various parts of the
district, he said that the government was committed for the procurement of
paddy by providing minimum support price of ₹ 1,510 per quintal for A grade variety and ₹ 1,470 per quintal for B grade variety of paddy.
He
also asked the seed companies to provide MSP to the farmers while procuring the
seed variety of paddy.With regard to the mobilisation of people for the TRS
formation day celebrations public meeting in Warangal town on April 27, the
Civil Supplies Minister said that erstwhile Karimnagar district would be in
forefront in the mobilisation of the public in the state. He said that they
would mobilise more than two lakh people, including 1.3 lakh from bifurcated
Karimnagar district, 50,000 from Jagtial and 40,000 each from Peddapalli and
Rajanna-Sircilla district.
Zilla
Parishad chairperson Tula Uma, Karimnagar legislator G Kamalakar, Irrigation
Development Corporation chairman Eda Shankar Reddy and others were also present.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/telangana/karimnagar-lives-up-to-its-rice-bowl-of-telangana-reputation/article18210491.ece
Carvajal:
Politics of rice
Tuesday, April 25, 2017 By ORLANDO P. CARVAJAL BREAK POINT NO
food crop is more political than rice. I’ve noticed this since the mid-eighties
when I worked in a congressman’s district field office. Politicians have always
found it politically expedient to keep self-sufficiency in rice as a regular
election promise. Hence, once elected they quickly forget it or merely pay
lip-service to it. Thus, we have never attained self sufficiency in rice.
Official 2015 figures put us at 96% self-sufficient. But because
it must remain a vote-getting promise of politicians around election time, and
for one other big reason, chances are slim that the remaining 4 % will ever be
attained. That other reason is “dirty” money from rice importations.
Self-sufficiency must be slow to be attained, if at all, so cuts, bribes, etc.
from rice importations can continue to help finance political careers.
President Duterte is right to go from some place political to economic when he
disallows rice importation during local harvest time. It helps farmers get
better price for their harvest and it stymies corrupt officials from getting
the usual free money from rice importations.
What he needs to do next is make rice comprehensively an
economic issue. It is sound economics to not view self-sufficiency in rice,
food for that matter, as an absolute priority. Priority should be on the
market-indicated means to grow the total economy in such a way that ordinary
workers and small farmers earn high enough incomes to easily afford their basic
necessities and more. Japan is not even 50% self-sufficient in rice while
Singapore has no farmland at all to grow rice in. Mid-East countries are not
even self-sufficient in water. Yet, this is no problem to these countries
because their people (farmers, workers, etc.) can afford to buy their basic
food staples with their high incomes growing other crops or manufacturing other
products.
Agricultural policies should not be forced to home in on
self-sufficiency. These can much better be wrapped around programs that drastically
improve farmer incomes. One way is to give them skills and incentives to grow
high value crops. Another is to minimize or even eliminate the role of
middlemen-traders who ever since have been making more money than
farmer-producers. But if and when we need to import rice, it is imperative to
factor corruption out of the equation. One way to do this is abolish NFA’s
monopoly on rice imports. Monopolies are never efficient. Besides, they are
very vulnerable to corruption. In any case, self-sufficient or not, the main
worry should be how to give farmers higher incomes. It is a sad commentary on
the politics of rice that we are 96% self-sufficient in it yet farmers remain
the poorest of our poor.
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http://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/opinion/2017/04/25/carvajal-politics-rice-538524
Poe bats for food research in visit to
father’s rice paddy art in Ecija
Inquirer Central Luzon / 07:03 PM April 25, 2017
SCIENCE CITY
OF MUNOZ – Senator Grace Poe pressed for more support for rice research and
technology, when she visited the rice paddy art that features the likeness of
her father, the late actor Fernando Poe, Jr. in Barangay (village) Maligaya
here on Tuesday (April 25).
Poe said she
just witnessed the effect of drought in Pangasinan when she joined the annual
Mango-Bamboo Festival that opened in San Carlos City.The government, she said,
needs to raise the productivity of the country’s best rice lands to match the
production of rice exporting countries.
“I trust that this [palay art] would inspire
the youth about agriculture. It displays our creativity at drawing attention to
the agricultural sector,” she said, after meeting officials and researchers of
the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice). Philrice undertook the rice
art project.
Earlier on
the same day in San Carlos City, Poe urged government researcher and scientists
to formulate organic and safe pesticides to combat the pests that have been
ailing the mango industry, in the face of global warming.Mayor Joseres Resuello
said mango – for which the city is known – has been infested with cecid
flies. The cecid larvae burrows into the fruits and damages the flesh and
the rind.
“Because of
global warming, the weather conditions change. In January it was already hot so
the mango trees thought it was already summer and bear fruits. Then it suddenly
gets colder, and then it rains. So the life cycle of these pests may also have
gone haywire,” she said in Filipino.
City
Agriculture Officer Estrellita Jacaban said mango production this year was down
by 30 percent as compared to last year, and prices of the fruits soared to
P1,800 per kaing (20 kilos) or P90 a kilo. Last year, it sold for P1,200-P1,500
per kaing. Pangasinan is the country’s top mango producer, with this city
contributing the highest volume of production.
Jacaban said
743 hectares in the city are devoted to mango orchard. Each hectare is planted
to 44 trees.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/891940/poe-bats-for-food-research-in-visit-to-fathers-rice-paddy-art-in-ecija
USDA FAS: USA Rice Programs in Jordan a Success
AMMAN, JORDAN -- According to the most recent
Global Agricultural Information Network (GAIN) Report on the Hashemite Kingdom
of Jordan, consumer programs aimed at promoting U.S.-grown rice here are
successful based on the market dominance and price of the U.S. commodity.
"Rice is a staple of the Jordanian diet...[and] in marketing year 2017/18 imports are expected to reach 210,000 metric tons [with] U.S. market share expected to remain steady at nearly 50 percent supplying 100,000 metric tons," reads the March 22 report. "Although the price is relatively higher, the U.S. industry's market development efforts have paid off, generating loyalty among Jordanian consumers who have developed a strong preference for U.S. origin rice."
USA Rice-sponsored promotion programs in Jordan include print and online advertising in advance of the Ramadan holiday when great feasts with rice are often prepared, outdoor advertising in 30 high-profile, high-traffic locations, and the distribution of branded aprons and other cooking apparel to tens of thousands of families in the capital.
"We are working to improve our already excellent relationship with Jordanian consumers and see this market, number one in the Arab region for U.S. medium grain, as one we can continue to grow," explained Hartwig Schmidt, USA Rice's representative for the region. "Medium grain is the local favorite, constituting about half of imports, with long grain, basmati, and jasmine making up the rest."
Schmidt said that extreme water scarcity here means Jordan must import a great many crops - especially one as water-dependent as rice. He said India, the next largest origin, accounts for about 23 percent of imports, but that no country pays a tariff to import rice to Jordan.
"Jordan is a young country with a growing population thanks in part to refugees from Palestine, Iraq, and Syria," Schmidt added. "Rice is an important part of all their cultures, and we'll do all we can to ensure they appreciate the quality and dependability of U.S. rice."
"Rice is a staple of the Jordanian diet...[and] in marketing year 2017/18 imports are expected to reach 210,000 metric tons [with] U.S. market share expected to remain steady at nearly 50 percent supplying 100,000 metric tons," reads the March 22 report. "Although the price is relatively higher, the U.S. industry's market development efforts have paid off, generating loyalty among Jordanian consumers who have developed a strong preference for U.S. origin rice."
USA Rice-sponsored promotion programs in Jordan include print and online advertising in advance of the Ramadan holiday when great feasts with rice are often prepared, outdoor advertising in 30 high-profile, high-traffic locations, and the distribution of branded aprons and other cooking apparel to tens of thousands of families in the capital.
"We are working to improve our already excellent relationship with Jordanian consumers and see this market, number one in the Arab region for U.S. medium grain, as one we can continue to grow," explained Hartwig Schmidt, USA Rice's representative for the region. "Medium grain is the local favorite, constituting about half of imports, with long grain, basmati, and jasmine making up the rest."
Schmidt said that extreme water scarcity here means Jordan must import a great many crops - especially one as water-dependent as rice. He said India, the next largest origin, accounts for about 23 percent of imports, but that no country pays a tariff to import rice to Jordan.
"Jordan is a young country with a growing population thanks in part to refugees from Palestine, Iraq, and Syria," Schmidt added. "Rice is an important part of all their cultures, and we'll do all we can to ensure they appreciate the quality and dependability of U.S. rice."
Odisha to
procure 60 lakh MT of paddy this year
Press Trust of India |
Bhubaneswar April 25, 2017 Last Updated at 20:07 IST
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Optimistic to set a record
procurement of about 60 lakh metric tonne of paddy this year, Odisha government
today said the rabi exercise would start from May 1.
Food Supplies and Consumer Welfare
secretary P K Mohapatra said the state civil supplies corporation would go for
the second phase of Rabi paddy procurement from May 1 till June 30. He said
Rabi paddy would be procured from farmers of 19 districts.
"Odisha is going to procure
record quantity of paddy this year. While total 42 lakh metric tonne (MT) paddy
were collected during the Kharif season so far, an additional two lakh metric
tonne paddy would be procured by the end of this month. It is targeted to
procure total 60 lakh MT paddy, both kharif and rabi, this year,"
Mohapatra stated.
Mohapatra said the officials have
been instructed to procure 26 quintals paddy per acre from three districts of
Bargarh, Sambalpur and Subarnapur, while 24 quintals paddy per acre, would be
collected from rest of districts.
At least two lakh MT paddy would be
exported to four states every month, the Food Supplies Secretary said adding
that 91,000 farmers have so far registered for the rabi paddy procurement.
Asked about the benefit given to the
farmers, Chief Secretary A P Padhi said about Rs 6200 crore have been deposited
in the bank account of farmers. "By end of the paddy procurement session (both
kharif and rabi), farmers will get Rs 9,000 crore," Padhi said.(This story
has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a
syndicated feed.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/odisha-to-procure-60-lakh-mt-of-paddy-this-year-117042501206_1.html
Pakistan Basmati rice exports rise
by 154.28% in March
ISLAMABAD: The exports of basmati rice from the country during the
month of March, 2017 increased by 154.28 percent as compared the exports of the
corresponding month of last year.During month of March, about 45,745 metric
tons of basmati rice worth US$ 43.976 million were exported as compared the
exports of 17,412 metric tons valuing of US$ 17.294 million of same month last
year.According the data of Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) during the month
of March sugar exports from the country grew by 1.60 percent and about 107,558
metric tons of sugar worth US$ 57.742 million were exported as compared the
exports of 127,009 metric tons valuing of US$ 56.883 million of same month last
year.
During last month, exports of oil seed nuts and kernals increased
by 281.92 percent as 4,588 metric tons of oil seeds and nuts worth US$ 5.576
million exported against the exports of 1,099 metric tons valuing US$ 1.460
million of same month last year.
In month of March tobacco export increased by 422.73 percent as
about 723 metric tons of tobacco exported and earned US$ 2.415 million as
against the exports of 114 metric tons valuing US$ 0.462 million of same period
last year.
Meanwhile, country also earned US$ 36.471 million by exporting
about 15,280 metric tons of fish and fish products against the exports of
11,706 metric tons of fish and fish preparations worth US$ 27.817 million of
same month of last year.
It may be recalled that food group exports from the country during
the month of March decreased by 10.20 percent and it was stood at US$ 346.12
million as against the exports of US$385.313 million of same month last year.
In last 3 quarters (July-March) of current financial year food
group exports decreased by 11.58 percent and recorded at US$ 2.885 billion as
against the exports of US$ 3.037 billion of corresponding period of last year.
(APP)https://timesofislamabad.com/pakistan-basmati-rice-exports-rise-154-28-march/2017/04/25/
Submitted by Eleven on
Tue, 04/25/2017 - 20:56
Writer:
Nilar
Export earnings from the rice
sector are expected to earn US$700 million in 2017-2018 fiscal year, according
to the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF).The country exported 1.4 million tonnes of
rice in 2012-2013 FY, 1.2 million tonnes 2013-2014 FY and 1.8 million tonnes in
2014-2015 FY, 1.4 million tonnes in 2015-2016 FY and 1.7 million tonnes in
2016-2017 FY, according to the figures released by the commerce ministry.Ye Min
Aung, general secretary of the MRF, said: “The sure point for increased rice
export volume is that the country has sufficiency and excess supply. Another
crucial point is currency exchange rate. Exporters are striving to increase
rice export volume as the value of a dollar is over Ks1,300.
Especially, the country receives more orders
from Sri Lanka and China. Export earnings are expected to reach US$ one billion
in 2022, according to the MRF.”The commerce ministry will stage “TRT Myanmar
Rice Network 2017”, the first-ever discussion arranged by the Rice Trader, at
Sule Shangri-La Hotel in Yangon on Thursday and Friday, in cooperation with the
MRF, the IFC (World Bank Group), the TRT and sponsors.In an attempt to achieve
its goal, the MRF is working on marketing and export promotion by inviting
international rice buyers.
Translated by Myo Than
http://www.elevenmyanmar.com/business/9006
More rice exporters given access to China
Beijing has agreed to increase
the number of Cambodian rice exporters allowed to sell to the Chinese mainland.The
Ministry of Agriculture has been advised that eight more companies will be
granted licenses, taking the total to 34.The ministry had appealed directly to
Beijing to widen Cambodia access to the lucrative Chinese market and will now
be able to issue the necessary export certificates to the eight new traders.
They do not have their own mills and will need to strike deals with the 26 who
do in order to qualify to export their rice.
Hean Vanhan, director-general of
the ministry’s general directorate of agriculture, said the eight companies had
to fulfil two conditions before they could proceed.“They must attach to their application
forms either their own sale receipts or the relevant export document from the
26 rice mills already approved by Beijing,” said Mr. Vanhan. “These must show
that the quantity and packaging of the consignment complies with details on the
export application.“All traders must also stock their rice in warehouses or
rice mills in advance of approval being given for the rice to be exported.”
China is Cambodia’s biggest
market for milled rice and imported 67,000 metric tons in the first quarter.Last
December, Beijing asked Cambodia to evaluate its rice exporters to ensure they
adhered to China’s hygiene laws because officials in the world’s second largest
economy did not trust all of the 71 rice exporters registered with the Ministry
of Commerce.A delegation of Chinese experts then visited Cambodia and inspected
the quality and safety standards at 28 of the 71 rice mills approved by the
Ministry of Commerce. China ruled that 26 of the 28 passed the rigorous
inspections and they started exporting in January.
http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/37715/more-rice-exporters-given-access-to-china/
Thailand
exports 3.4 million tonnes of rice in four months 2017
Bangkok (VNA) – Thailand exported 3.4
million tonnes of rice in January-April, representing a year-on-year rise of
6.4 percent, the Department of Foreign Trade said on April 24.
Director-General of the department Duangporn Rodphaya said rice export value stood at 51 billion THB (1.48 billion USD) in value as of mid-April 2017.She was confident that rice exports will hit the target of 10 million tonnes by the end of this year.Additionally, the Thai government aims to sell 17.7 million tonnes of rice from its stockpiles as quickly as possible to rake in 150 billion THB (4.36 billion USD).In early March, the government approved the sale of one million tonnes out of the 2.87 million tonnes of rice offered at the first auction held in February.
Director-General of the department Duangporn Rodphaya said rice export value stood at 51 billion THB (1.48 billion USD) in value as of mid-April 2017.She was confident that rice exports will hit the target of 10 million tonnes by the end of this year.Additionally, the Thai government aims to sell 17.7 million tonnes of rice from its stockpiles as quickly as possible to rake in 150 billion THB (4.36 billion USD).In early March, the government approved the sale of one million tonnes out of the 2.87 million tonnes of rice offered at the first auction held in February.
The government and the national
rice policy and management commission decided to turn down low bids. They
plan to consider better prices for the remaining stock.-VNA
http://en.vietnamplus.vn/thailand-exports-34-million-tonnes-of-rice-in-four-months-2017/110772.vnp
Plan for a successful rice
harvest with modern irrigation technology
Monday
Chris Henry, an irrigation
engineer and assistant professor with the Division of Agriculture, said MIRI
technology has been around since the 1990′s, and has many benefits.
The
key to success is often rooted in a solid plan, and experts with the University
of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture are encouraging Arkansas rice
producers to start that plan with the technology known as Multiple Inlet Rice
Irrigation, or MIRI.
Chris Henry, an irrigation engineer and assistant professor with the Division
of Agriculture, said MIRI technology has been around since the 1990′s, and has
many benefits.
“MIRI reduces
the cold water effect on the first levee, reduces total water use by 25
percent, allows for the implementation of alternating wetting and drying, and a
faster flood time than the traditional cascade system,” he said. “Being able to
quickly flood up a field is beneficial for being able to get the flood
established for water management as well as weed control and ensuring
fertilizer efficiency.”
Henry
said both the Division of Agriculture and Delta Plastics have programs designed
to promote the implementation of MIRI, as well as support growers throughout
the process.
MIRI
is a required component of a Natural Resource Conservation Service, Irrigation
Water Management plan, which frequently provides financial assistance to
growers, including those participating in alternating wetting and drying or
carbon credit programs.
MIRI
has also been shown to increase yields by five to 10 bushels per acre over
cascade fields.
“All in all,
there’s more than $100 an acre available through incentive programs, yield
advantages and pumping cost savings,” Henry said.
Blue
gates — the 2.5-inch gates used in poly-pipe to control water flow — are an
essential element to the MIRI system that are sometimes ignored during the
installation process. Properly set levee gates are also key to optimum
performance of a MIRI system.
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“Two-and-a-half inch blue gates and a plan are
required to use MIRI successfully,” Henry said. “The blue gates allow for a
wide range of flow and for the irrigator to adjust and balance the flow to each
levee, so that the field floods up evenly.“Leave the
‘piranha puncher’ in the truck when you are in a flooded rice field,” he said,
referring to the commonly-used hand tool used for punching small holes in
poly-pipe. “It may be chewing through your profit. If holes are punched without
any way to adjust them, then some levees will cascade over the other.”
Effective
implementation of MIRI should only have water going over levee gates when more
than an inch of rainfall has occurred, and levee gates should be set higher
than they would be for cascade irrigation, because they are essentially
overflow devices when MIRI is used. Some MIRI irrigators no longer put in levee
gates, instead using a simple overflow, further reducing cost and labor. When
properly executed, MIRI eliminates the in-season chore of wading through rice
fields to adjust levee spills.
A
mobile app developed by the Division of Agriculture in 2015, Rice Irrigation,
helps takes the guesswork out of MIRI implementation. Levee files can quickly
be created from aerial maps, uploaded from survey programs, or uploaded from
the tractor GPS monitor to provide an effective MIRI plan on even the most
complicated contour levee fields.
Pipe
requirements and blue gate settings are provided and can be shared easily with
other mobile devices. Flow rate for the field is also needed, but portable flow
meters are available for checkout from your local Cooperative Extension Service
office, Conservation District offices, NRCS offices, and even some irrigation
dealers.
Funding
to develop the mobile app was provided by the Arkansas Rice Research and
Promotion Board. Assistance using the app is available through your local
Cooperative Extension Service office. Search for “Rice Irrigation” in the Apple
App Store or in the Google play store on android devices.
To learn more
about modern rice irrigation, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service
agent or visit www.uaex.edu.