Thrust
Laid on Fulfilling Prime Minister’s Dream of Doubling Farmers’ Income:
International Rice Research Institute Expert
August 29, 2018
2 Min Read
A Correspondent
JORHAT: The Department of Agriculture, Government of
Assam, Assam Agricultural University (AAU) and International
Rice Research Institute (IRRI) arranged an exposure visit and technology
showcasing at a glittering function held at the Regional Agricultural Research Station (RARS) at Titabor. The
function was attended by Binod Seshan, Secretary, Department of Agriculture,
Government of Assam, Sudanshu Singh, co-coordinator of IRRI Team-India, Dr
Ashok Bhattacharjee, Director Research, AAU, and Dr Tomiuddin Ahmed, chief
scientist of RARS-Titabor. Scientists and farmers gathered at the day-long
Implements and Instruments demonstration programme held at RARS experimental
field on Tuesday.
“The thrust is on doubling the income of farmers by 2040, which
is a dream plan of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The World Bank has come forward
to assist the department, especially in the paddy-growing areas of the
country,” said Sudhangshu Singh, the team leader of IRRI, India. “In this
project, we are trying to bring a number of rice varieties like Swarna-56, Bahaduur-56
and Ranjit-56 which are tolerant to flash floods. Even if a flood occurs for
two weeks, they either survive or regenerate and almost give equal yield in
comparison to the normal variety. IRRI is also introducing drought-tolerant
varieties in collaboration with Assam Agricultural University as well as a
multi-tolerant variety which will survive both in flood as well as drought,” he
added.
Earlier, Dipak Sarma, the District Agriculture Officer (DAO),
Dr. Ashok Bhattacharyya, Director of Research (AAU), Dr. Tomiuddin Ahmed, chief
scientist of RARS-Titabor, discussed about doubling farmers’ income by reducing
the cost of production of farmers in the field by utilizing instruments which
need less manpower for agricultural sorting.
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Rice production saved Nigeria $800m in 2 years – BoA
The Bank of Agriculture (BoA)
yesterday disclosed that the federal government has saved about $800 million by
encouraging local production of rice in the country.
Executive Director, Finance and Risk Management, BoA, Niyi Akenzua, disclosed this at a media briefing in Lagos ahead of the “Meet the Farmers Conference 2018 scheduled for October 10 in the nation’s commercial hub. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the conference, which is organised by Crenov8 Consulting, is aimed at exposing African farmers to the opportunities in agro-export, especially to Dubai and other Middle-East countries.
Akenzua commended the initiative of the government to diversify the economy with special focus on agriculture, urging Nigerians to key into the programmes because of their allround benefits.
He said the government restructured the BoA in 2016 to enable it render critical assistance to the agricultural sector in terms of food security and increased export of agro-products to boost the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“The Central Bank of Nigeria facilitated a N250 billion intervention fund for the BoA which is being disbursed through the Anchor Borrower’s Programme.
“In 2017, we disbursed about N100 billion to farmers and we have also disbursed about N50 billion so far in 2018,” Akenzua said.
He said rice production had increased to a level that people could ever imagined and that the government was targeting early 2019 to fully stop importation of rice.
Akenzua said emphasis was being placed on standardising and packaging of agricultural products from Nigeria to make them acceptable to the export market.
A representative of Crenov8 Consulting, Mrs Bola Oyedele had said Dubai imported over $100 billion worth of food in 2017 from Africa, which was expected to rise to about $400 billion in the next eight years.
Oyedele urged Nigeria and other African countries to tap into the huge opportunities that exist to export various agricultural products such as cocoa, rice, gum arabic, palm oil, wheat, maize among others to Dubai particularly and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
She said participants at the conference will be exposed to a wide range of topics such as agro commodity trading in Dubai and GCC, import and exports requirements, laws and policies, financing, shipping and insurance among others.
Executive Director, Finance and Risk Management, BoA, Niyi Akenzua, disclosed this at a media briefing in Lagos ahead of the “Meet the Farmers Conference 2018 scheduled for October 10 in the nation’s commercial hub. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the conference, which is organised by Crenov8 Consulting, is aimed at exposing African farmers to the opportunities in agro-export, especially to Dubai and other Middle-East countries.
Akenzua commended the initiative of the government to diversify the economy with special focus on agriculture, urging Nigerians to key into the programmes because of their allround benefits.
He said the government restructured the BoA in 2016 to enable it render critical assistance to the agricultural sector in terms of food security and increased export of agro-products to boost the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“The Central Bank of Nigeria facilitated a N250 billion intervention fund for the BoA which is being disbursed through the Anchor Borrower’s Programme.
“In 2017, we disbursed about N100 billion to farmers and we have also disbursed about N50 billion so far in 2018,” Akenzua said.
He said rice production had increased to a level that people could ever imagined and that the government was targeting early 2019 to fully stop importation of rice.
Akenzua said emphasis was being placed on standardising and packaging of agricultural products from Nigeria to make them acceptable to the export market.
A representative of Crenov8 Consulting, Mrs Bola Oyedele had said Dubai imported over $100 billion worth of food in 2017 from Africa, which was expected to rise to about $400 billion in the next eight years.
Oyedele urged Nigeria and other African countries to tap into the huge opportunities that exist to export various agricultural products such as cocoa, rice, gum arabic, palm oil, wheat, maize among others to Dubai particularly and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
She said participants at the conference will be exposed to a wide range of topics such as agro commodity trading in Dubai and GCC, import and exports requirements, laws and policies, financing, shipping and insurance among others.
Nigeria
saves $800m from rice production
Our
ReporterOn: August 30, 2018 In: Money
The Bank of Agriculture (BoA) on
Wednesday disclosed that the Federal Government has saved about 800 million
dollars by encouraging local production of rice in the country.Prince
NiyiAkenzua, the Executive Director, Finance and Risk Management, BoA, said at
a media briefing in Lagos ahead of the “Meet the Farmers Conference” (MTFC)
2018 scheduled for Oct. 10 in the nation’s commercial hub.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
reports that the conference, which is organised by Crenov8 Consulting, is aimed
at exposing African farmers to the opportunities in agro-export,
especially to Dubai and other Middle-East countries.
Akenzua commended the initiative
of the government to diversify the economy with special focus on agriculture,
urging Nigerians to key into the programmes because of their all-round
benefits.
He said the government
restructured the BoA in 2016 to enable it render critical assistance to the
agricultural sector in terms of food security and increased export of
agro-products to boost the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“The Central Bank of Nigeria
facilitated a N250 billion intervention fund for the BoA which is being
disbursed through the Anchor Borrower’s Programme.
“In 2017, we disbursed about N100
billion to farmers and we have also disbursed about N50 billion so far in
2018,” Akenzua said.
He said rice production had
increased to a level that people could ever imagined and that the government
was targeting early 2019 to fully stop importation of rice.
Akenzua said emphasis was being
placed on standardising and packaging of agricultural products from Nigeria to
make them acceptable to the export market.
Earlier, Mrs Bola Oyedele , a
representative of Crenov8 Consulting, said Dubai imported over 100
billion dollars worth of food in 2017 from Africa and it is expected to rise to
about 400 billion dollars in the next eight years.
Kheer, khichdi and the
like spice up Indian politics Sachidananda Murthy AUGUST 29, 2018 07:22 AM I...
https://english.manoramaonline.com/news/columns/national-scrutiny/2018/08/28/upendra-kushwaha-bihar-bjp-alliance.html
https://english.manoramaonline.com/news/columns/national-scrutiny/2018/08/28/upendra-kushwaha-bihar-bjp-alliance.html
Texas rice farmers experiencing
bumper 2018
Texas Crop and Weather Report – Aug. 28, 2018
Rice maturing near Beaumont.
Texas rice farmers are seeing
near-record yields of good quality grain and many are considering a second
harvest, according to Texas A&M AgriLife Research experts.Dr. Lee Tarpley,
AgriLife Research crop physiologist, Beaumont, said despite a few problems for
some growers, a near-record yield is expected for producers who planted their
fields early in spring.
Producers in the state’s
rice-growing coastal region who were able to take advantage of planting windows
before late March avoided heavy spring rains that caused delays for other
growers. Delays into April exposed late-planted rice to hot spells that may
have hurt yields.
“Folks that planted late got hit
by hot periods in July,” Tarpley said. “Daytime temperatures were in the
upper-90s to over 100 degrees with nights above 77 degrees, which decrease
yield when they coincide with flowering.”
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture reported Texas green yields were 9,000-11,000 pounds per acre with
good quality. There were also reports of market uncertainty and falling
prices related to ongoing trade disputes with China and negotiations with
Mexico and Canada regarding the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Dr. M.O. Way, AgriLife Research
entomologist, Beaumont, said about 190,000 acres of rice were planted this
season and half the acreage was planted in hybrid varieties. Way said good
growing conditions have many farmers considering growing a ratoon crop, that is
to allow another crop to grow from the stubble left after harvest.
Ratoon cropping could produce an
additional 35-50 percent of the main harvest, he said, with little input costs
beyond fertilization and water. Around 60 percent of Texas rice acres are
ratoon cropped typically.
“Main crop yields and quality are
excellent in general,” he said. “I estimate early harvested fields, which are
usually the highest yielding, averaged about 8,000 pounds per acre wet with
some fields over 10,000 pounds per acre wet.”
Way said there was plenty of
water for rice fields in 2018, but there were a few problems, including rice
water weevil, stink bugs and injury to some fields from a new herbicide.
Damages from birds and wild pigs were a problem, and producers noted increased
wild pig activity.
Producers controlled pests for
the most part, and other crop damage was limited, Way said. But heat damage to
later-maturing fields was reported as high nighttime temperatures caused some
panicle blanking.
Way also said increased rice
acreage and good yields have caused problems with storage of rice post-harvest
because there are not enough facilities to accommodate the crop.
Tarpley said ratoon cropping
early planted fields might improve net profits. Later-planted fields could be
ratoon cropped if temperatures remain above 50 degrees into early November.
“I don’t have a good feel for
what percentage of producers will ratoon this year,” he said. “But if it stays
warm they could see another harvest with less input costs, and that could mean
a better bottom line.”
AgriLife Extension district
reporters compiled the following summaries:
The 12 Texas A&M AgriLife
Extension Districts
CENTRAL: Some rainfall helped green up pastures and meadows, but
moisture was still very short. Recent rains allowed some hay fields to recover
enough to get a partial hay cutting. Supplemental feeding was needed for
livestock on pastures. Cotton harvest was underway. Nearly all counties
reported short soil moisture. Overall rangeland and pasture conditions were
poor in nearly all counties. Overall crop and pasture conditions were fair in
most counties.
ROLLING PLAINS: Topsoil moisture from recent rains allowed some farmers to
work the ground and apply fertilizer on early wheat acreage. In some areas,
pastures improved slightly and were in fair condition, while other areas were
still very dry. Pastures, rangeland and cotton fields were showing signs of
moisture stress. Cotton fields were reaching cut out stage with limited yield
potential. Irrigated fields were average to above average condition. Livestock
were in fair condition as supplemental feeding increased over recent weeks.
Ranchers were still searching for hay as supplies dwindled. Without much
rainfall it doesn’t look like there will be much hay produced this year.
COASTAL BEND: Hot and dry weather continued. Cotton harvest was in full
swing with yield reports ranging from 1.5-3 bales per acre. Hay, soybean and
rice harvests continued, with corn harvest nearing completion. Rangeland and
pasture conditions continued to deteriorate at a rapid rate from lack of
rainfall and extreme heat. Producers were worried about tank water getting low.
Supplemental feeding increased significantly over recent reporting periods. Hay
producers reported issues with managing armyworms and were trying to hold onto
any growth for the next hay harvest. Some ranchers were beginning to look for
hay but having difficulty finding bales in this part of the state. Cattle
remained in good condition.
EAST: Summer forages continued to decline in quality and volume
as dry conditions linger on without consistent measurable rainfalls. Many area
pastures showed signs of drought stress and high temperatures, which caused
great concern for producers. Cherokee and Marion counties received scattered
rainfall that provided slight short-term relief. Marion County rain caused
grass to grow, and some producers were able to get another cutting of hay.
Producers in Anderson, Houston and Smith counties reported such short hay
production that producers searched outside Texas for hay. Anderson, Gregg and
Wood counties reported drought conditions continued to slow and, in some cases,
stop hay and crop production. Pasture and rangeland conditions overall were
poor to very poor except in Henderson, Polk, San Augustine, Gregg and Tyler
counties, which reported fair conditions. Anderson County cotton looked good
with no disease and about 15 percent of bolls open. Anderson County’s pecan
crop was so heavy limb breakage occurred. Topsoil and subsoil conditions were
adequate in San Augustine county, with all other counties reporting short
conditions. Producers in Gregg County continued to cull cattle due to dry
conditions. Houston County reported cattle prices were up per hundredweight
while Shelby County reported a downward trend in prices. Light stink bug damage
was reported in Anderson County, as was pecan leaf scorch in some orchards.
Armyworms continued to cause damage in Anderson, Cherokee, Henderson, Houston,
Marion, Shelby and Smith counties. Grasshopper infestation was reported in
Cherokee County. Henderson County reported wild pig damage and high fly
numbers.
SOUTH PLAINS: Subsoil and topsoil moisture levels were adequate to
short. Some counties received 2-3 inches of rain. Irrigated cotton fields
benefitted from the rain, but it was not enough to help dryland cotton.
Producers were supplementing with irrigation to finish out the final stages of
cotton maturity. Area crops continued to mature. Producers continued to conduct
pest and weed management. Good numbers of beneficial insects were helping keep
pests at bay. Winter cover crops were planted. Pastures and rangelands remained
in fair condition. Cattle were in good condition.
PANHANDLE: Temperatures were near average. Some moisture was
received, but more moisture was needed throughout the district. Rain amounts in
some areas ranged from a trace to 2.5 inches. Soil moisture conditions were
excellent for all crops in some areas but was short for most areas. Grasses and
rangelands were finally starting to green up, and sorghum was all headed.
Producers continued to irrigate crops. Corn in Deaf Smith County was doing well
under irrigation, and most fields were close to dent stage. Silage harvest
began. Wheat planting started as producers were trying to create grazing
opportunities. Cotton under irrigation pivots was coming along. Dryland cotton
started to look better with irrigated acres looking very good. Sugarcane aphids
and headworms were being sprayed on grain sorghum. Wheat preplant activities
continued with the expectation of early wheat planting for fall pasture starting
soon. Dryland grain sorghum and cotton looked fantastic. Stocker cattle gains
were very good due to milder temperatures.
NORTH: Topsoil and subsoil moisture levels ranged from mostly
adequate to short across the district. Temperatures were hot with dry
conditions. Pastures were greening up from recent rains, but forage growth was
slow. Camp County continued under a burn ban. Rain was needed in all counties.
Corn harvest neared completion, and a few soybeans were being harvested. Cotton
didn’t look good, and most fields had bolls opening. Some producers were
harvesting hay. Armyworms were reported in Kaufman and Hopkins counties. Cattle
continued to look good.
FAR WEST: Temperatures were into the triple digits with lows in the
70s. Hot, windy and dry conditions persisted with scattered showers. Rainfall
averaged a trace to 2 inches. August has been hard on the little bit of cotton
that was maturing, and farm service agencies began to receive dryland crop
failure data. Producers continued to water cotton and pecans. Some wheat was
planted before the rain showers. Insect problems were still an issue in pecans.
Mosquitos and flies were becoming a problem. Preparation of soils for fall
forage planting started. Fire danger was becoming more prevalent as right of
ways and pastures were dry. Producers continued to feed livestock and wildlife.
Livestock will be culled if no rains arrive in the next 30 days.
WEST CENTRAL: Recent rains eased drought stress in rangelands and
pastures, but conditions were dry this reporting period. Forages looked better,
but drought conditions still persisted. Stock tanks were at critical levels.
Livestock remained in fair condition, and many producers were trying to figure
out what to do about depleted hay supplies. Not much hay was available for sale
and what little there was averaged $110-$120 per round bale. Cotton fields
improved slightly and were mostly in fair to good condition overall. Grain
sorghum harvest was underway, and some producers were preparing for early wheat
planting. Cattle demands were good with an active market and all classes
selling steady.
SOUTHEAST: Conditions were hot and dry. Some parts of the district
received late rains, but other areas had not received rain in over a month. The
rice crop was progressing. Late rice had all headed for the most part. High
temperatures and scattered rain showers were not good for flowering rice. Some
pastures were getting very dry, and grasses were not growing. Livestock still
looked good and healthy. Rangeland and pasture ratings varied from fair to very
poor with good ratings being most common. Soil moisture levels throughout the
district ranged from adequate to very short with short being most common.
SOUTHWEST: Hot, dry weather continued in all counties. Soil moisture,
pasture and rangeland conditions declined and were in desperate need of a good,
steady rain. Streams and rivers were drying. Fall shearing of sheep and goats
was underway. Some supplemental feeding of livestock began. Auctions reported
increased sale numbers due to drought and producers’ inability to feed
livestock. Corn and sorghum harvests were complete with below-average yields
reported. Very little hay was being made. Cotton was defoliated and awaiting
harvest.
SOUTH: Most parts of the district reported a continuation of hot,
dry weather conditions with short to very short soil moisture levels. Western
parts of the district reported adequate to short moisture levels. Triple-digit
temperatures were reported. Dryland cotton was being harvested and the harvest
in irrigated fields should begin soon. Irrigation pivots continued to run on
cotton, peanuts, Bermuda grass, watermelons, cantaloupes and other crops. Some
producers were reporting worse conditions than in 2011 — the worst
drought on record. Bermudagrass and sorghum hay were being cut and baled.
Pasture and range conditions were poor, and supplemental feeding of livestock
continued. Livestock producers in some parts reported increased supplemental
feeding and began to cull herds, selling older cows and young calves. Some
producers began to haul water or move cattle to other pastures as stock tanks
started to dry up. Surface water levels were declining. Body condition scores
on cattle were mostly fair. Pecan orchards were in good condition, and
producers expected a good harvest. No insect pressures were reported. Oat
planting and spinach seed bed preparation were expected to begin soon.
Controlling my life is hard. Controlling
my burrito bowl is easy.
It’s summer, it’s lunchtime, and I have a minor
problem: I don’t know whether to have portobello mushrooms or watermelon in my
salad. The meaty portobello’s strong taste can overwhelm, but the watermelon
must be ripe — but not overripe — or the whole meal is ruined. I stand on my
side of the clear shield, eyeing sweet and savory.I am definitely not alone in
my desire for this type of meal. From Chipotle to Sweetgreen, from Cava to
Buredo, you can join a line of fellow diners standing at the glass to watch as
your grain bowl, your salad or your burrito is constructed. You are both the
audience for, and the director of, this food play, which can be cast with
seemingly any ingredient under the sun. Non-GMO basmati rice and quinoa,
roasted chicken and simmered tofu, raisins and umami walnuts — it’s like
someone decided that Thanksgiving didn’t happen often enough and that we needed
a daily, not yearly, reminder of the American cornucopia.
I have
come to view this situation as lunch-assembly theater, and I have been
considering what I get out of it, because I have a hunch it’s more than food.
After all, eating, like seeing, is a primary way human beings take the outside
world in, and the outside world has lately presented me with more than I am
happy to swallow, thank you very much. It was only three months ago that
Americans were told to avoid romaine lettuce because of E. coli ,
and in late August, federal health officials determined that more than 500
people had been sickened by salad at
McDonald’s — an eatery, it must be noted, that has yet to adopt
the assembly-as-theater model.
How
comforting it is, then, to stand and watch as seemingly hyper-clean food is
handled by plastic-gloved workers who are merely adding ingredients together
using simple math — one cup of rice, half a cup of beans, more guacamole than
seems reasonable, but only if you pay extra — not combining them behind closed
doors via some complicated chemistry involving restaurant-grade Bunsen burners.
This kind of helicopter-y observation offers the solace of seeing with one’s
own eyes, and as such, it’s a surveillance that is more intimate than the one
made constantly and anonymously by our ubiquitous urban security cameras. The
control this offers is illusory, of course: We’re generally not privy to the
workings of the supply lines that feed these restaurants, as we learned last
summer when Chipotle was hit with a norovirus outbreak.
Nonetheless, the allure of this approach
beckons. At Sweetgreen, at least, more glass often reveals the workers who are
prepping the food that then will go to the assemblers. It’s as if the entire
place is a living portrait of food prep as styled by M.C. Escher.
There is a certain flagrant rejection of any
chef/diner trust here. To take flour, butter and sugar, for instance, and
transform them into a cupcake — how quaint the cupcake seems now, as a food fad
— is nothing less than a kind of alchemy, and to consume that magic involves a
faith not unlike that of an audience member who feasts her eyes on a magician’s
sleight of hand. Sure, you know that what you are seeing is a calculated feat
requiring hours of laborious practice, but allowing yourself to consume it is
still to be vulnerable, in a way — to be “tricked.” And many of us, given the
problems with food of late, let alone politics, don’t have much of an appetite
for that.
The problem with assuming control, however, is
that it’s easy to screw it up. There should be a hashtag for the failure I have
caused more than once: of ambitiously mixing too many things in my bowl, only
to end up with a muck of sauces, proteins, grains and greens. #failbowl?
#justtoomuchsalad? #crapucopia?
Ah, well, there are worse coping behaviors than
poorly micromanaging your lunch. After all, eating, as any therapist can tell
you, is a potent locus of human control, and for those like myself who are
watching this presidency unfold in horror, it is important to hold onto some
sense of stability in a world that seems to have truly gone insane. What better
way to subjugate feelings of helplessness than by never letting your lunch out
of your sight? And for those cheering on a leader who they see as at last
representing them and their interests, well, I am not sure what to say. Let’s
have lunch, maybe?
My
favorite lunch place this summer has been Sweetgreen, the wildly popular salad
and bowl emporium started by three Georgetown grads. I find one moment of
culinary choreography particularly instructive: when the assembler takes the
plastic bottle of dressing, squeezes your desired amount onto your gathered
ingredients, and then introduces the dressing to the ingredients by banging
tongs against the bowl while twirling it. This flourish — one that the chain
is, alas, abandoning —
is a bit like watching salad and dressing being forcibly introduced like two
families at a boozy shotgun wedding. The party, having been cacophonously
joined, is then poured calmly into your takeout bowl.
I see something of our current condition in
this routine, where separate foods are carefully mixed under clinical lighting.
Ours is not the moment to sit and wait while someone blends ingredients
together sight unseen, presenting them to us only after they have undergone
their transformation. We want to know how it all happens, and we want to see it
all ourselves. That is the secret ingredient, I think, that makes the theater
of the assembled lunch so appealing. What we are hungry for most, in 2018, is
transparency.
Twitter:
@AmyFusselman
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Louisiana Legislator Gets
Rice Farm Welcome
By Kane Webb
Rep. Johnson along for the ride
KINDER, LA -- Last
Friday, Representative Mike Johnson (R-LA), who represents Louisiana's 4th
District, traveled here to hold a town hall meeting, the last of several he
participated in at his home base last week.
Kinder City Hall was standing room only for the event where citizens and
public servants talked with Johnson about local, state, and federal
issues.Following the meeting, Johnson was hosted on the Unkel Farm, a fourth
generation family rice farm, by brothers Eric and Hine, and their nephew
Aaron. Others gathered at the farm to
meet with Johnson were David Unkel, Philip Bertrand of Farmers Rice Mill, Zach
Hamilton of First South Farm Credit, and Mary Jemison and Kane Webb, both with
USA Rice. The group spent time
discussing issues affecting the U.S. rice industry including trade and market
uncertainty, the 2018 Farm Bill and its positive provisions for rice,
immigration reform for agricultural labor, and conservation.
"We are appreciative
of the time that Congressman Johnson spent on our farm and the opportunity to
showcase what it takes to produce the highest quality rice in the world,"
said Eric Unkel, Louisiana rice farmer and vice chair of the USA Rice Council. "He was very receptive to our asks and
concerns when it comes to the issues we face as rice growers and millers, and
his level of knowledge and shared concern for the rice industry in not only his
district, but the entire country, makes him a great advocate we're proud to
have in Washington."
While most tours of this
nature tend to be limited to time available on a busy schedule, Johnson made
the most of the afternoon by walking the field with the group, learning more
about best management practices, farm input costs, and the conservation
benefits involved in rice production, as well as riding the combine through a
full round, complete with unloading on the go to save time and keep the harvest
moving.
"America's farmers not only provide a safe,
sustainable food supply for the people of our nation, they also provide a boost
to our local and state economies," said Johnson. "Rice farming has played a particularly
important role in Louisiana for generations.
It is among the top commodities grown here and exported around the
world, making Louisiana one of the top rice producing states in the
nation. I look forward to continuing to
work with our farmers here at home and across our country to ensure the rice
industry can continue to thrive and expand to new markets."
From left: Eric Unkel,
Mary Jemison, and Rep. Mike Johnson
Chef Competition Gets Creative with Calrose
TOKYO, JAPAN -- Last week, USA Rice Vice
President for International Sarah Moran attended the sixth annual chef
competition here sponsored by USA Rice. The theme of this year's
competition, "new style sushi with U.S. medium grain rice," required
competitors to use Calrose when crafting their creative sushi dishes.
Of the nearly 600 contest applicants, 11 finalists were chosen to compete. Each contestant created a unique sushi style dish for either a restaurant or a deli store, keeping in mind criteria such as a reasonable price point and whether the dish could be replicated in an appropriate amount of time.
Five judges evaluated each entry, determining whether the dish enhanced Calrose's features and if it was a tasty and desirable sushi dish. Judges included Mr. Makoto Fukue, CEO of the Tokyo Sushi Academy; CEO of Recipe & Market Mr. Daisuke Kaneko; well-known chef Mr. Kuniaki Aoshima; Mr. Takehiro Nagasaka from the Mizkan Company which makes rice vinegar; and Ms. Yuko Asai, the editor-in-chief of Shibata Publishing Company.
"These types of competitions encourage chefs and even the media to become more comfortable with Calrose and how it can be used in creative, modern applications," said Moran. "All of the dishes were quite tasty, although my personal favorite was a sushi mosaic which combined numerous flavors and colors to create a beautiful dish."
Of the nearly 600 contest applicants, 11 finalists were chosen to compete. Each contestant created a unique sushi style dish for either a restaurant or a deli store, keeping in mind criteria such as a reasonable price point and whether the dish could be replicated in an appropriate amount of time.
Five judges evaluated each entry, determining whether the dish enhanced Calrose's features and if it was a tasty and desirable sushi dish. Judges included Mr. Makoto Fukue, CEO of the Tokyo Sushi Academy; CEO of Recipe & Market Mr. Daisuke Kaneko; well-known chef Mr. Kuniaki Aoshima; Mr. Takehiro Nagasaka from the Mizkan Company which makes rice vinegar; and Ms. Yuko Asai, the editor-in-chief of Shibata Publishing Company.
"These types of competitions encourage chefs and even the media to become more comfortable with Calrose and how it can be used in creative, modern applications," said Moran. "All of the dishes were quite tasty, although my personal favorite was a sushi mosaic which combined numerous flavors and colors to create a beautiful dish."
Asimakis Chaniotis’s recipe for stuffed
tomatoes
A perfect dish for late summer evenings, filled with
flavour and quick to make
Asimakis
Chaniotis
Thu 30 Aug 2018 06.00 BST
Asimakis Chaniotis’s stuffed tomato. Photograph: PR Company Handout
This is one of my favourite recipes to cook on a weekday when I’m
working and need something fast and tasty. It is a dish that my mum used to
make in summer, when tomatoes in Greece are of top quality. Tomatoes are one of
the ingredients with the most umami, and so this dish brings me a lot of
memories, as well as loads of flavour.
Serves: 1
Prep time: 10 mins
Cooking time: 30 mins
Prep time: 10 mins
Cooking time: 30 mins
100ml vegetable stock
3 tomatoes
100g aromatic basmati rice
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
½ red onion, finely chopped
1 tsp caster sugar
½ bunch of dill, finely chopped
½ bunch of mint, finely chopped
½ green pepper, finely diced
2 maris piper potatoes
½ tsp salt
3 tomatoes
100g aromatic basmati rice
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
½ red onion, finely chopped
1 tsp caster sugar
½ bunch of dill, finely chopped
½ bunch of mint, finely chopped
½ green pepper, finely diced
2 maris piper potatoes
½ tsp salt
Method
Slice the tops off the tomatoes
and hollow out with a spoon. Add the flesh to the vegetable stock and set
aside.
Mix the rice, garlic, onion,
sugar, dill, mint, green pepper and salt and boil using the stock (adding
little by little until the rice is cooked). Then, stuff the tomatoes with the
rice until full, and replace the tops.
Peel the potatoes and cut in
wedges. Place the stuffed tomatoes and potato wedges on a baking tray. Pour any
leftover stock on to the tray so the steam will cook the potatoes. Cover with
aluminium foil and place in the oven at 180C/gas mark 4 for around 15 minutes.
Then take the foil off and roast for another 15 minutes.
Take the tray out of the oven and
let it cool. Transfer to a plate, drizzle with olive oil, and serve.
• Asimakis Chaniotis is the chef de cuisine of Pied Ă Terre,
London
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Climate change projected to boost insect activity and crop loss,
researchers say
Date:
August 30, 2018
Source:
University of Washington
Summary:
Scientists report that insect
activity in today's temperate, crop-growing regions will rise along with
temperatures. Researchers project that this activity, in turn, will boost
worldwide losses of rice, corn and wheat by 10-25 percent for each degree
Celsius that global mean surface temperatures rise.
Share:
Symptom
of stem borer on corn cause by Ostrinia furnacalis.
Credit:
© patiparn46 / Fotolia
Scientists
have already warned that climate change likely will impact the food we grow.
From rising global temperatures to more frequent "extreme" weather
events like droughts and floods, climate change is expected to negatively
affect our ability to produce food for a growing human population.
But
new research is showing that climate change is expected to accelerate rates of
crop loss due to the activity of another group of hungry creatures -- insects.
In a paper published Aug. 31 in the journal Science, a team led by
scientists at the University of Washington reports that insect activity in
today's temperate, crop-growing regions will rise along with temperatures.
Researchers project that this activity, in turn, will boost worldwide losses of
rice, corn and wheat by 10-25 percent for each degree Celsius that global mean
surface temperatures rise. Just a 2-degree Celsius rise in surface temperatures
will push the total losses of these three crops each year to approximately 213
million tons.
"We
expect to see increasing crop losses due to insect activity for two basic
reasons," said co-lead and corresponding author Curtis Deutsch, a UW
associate professor of oceanography. "First, warmer temperatures increase
insect metabolic rates exponentially. Second, with the exception of the
tropics, warmer temperatures will increase the reproductive rates of insects.
You have more insects, and they're eating more."
In
2016, the United Nations estimated that at least 815 million people worldwide
don't get enough to eat. Corn, rice and wheat are staple crops for about 4
billion people, and account for about two-thirds of the food energy intake,
according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.
"Global
warming impacts on pest infestations will aggravate the problems of food
insecurity and environmental damages from agriculture worldwide," said co-author
Rosamond Naylor, a professor in the Department of Earth System Science at
Stanford University and founding director of the Center on Food Security and
the Environment. "Increased pesticide applications, the use of GMOs, and
agronomic practices such as crop rotations will help control losses from
insects. But it still appears that under virtually all climate change
scenarios, pest populations will be the winners, particularly in highly
productive temperate regions, causing real food prices to rise and
food-insecure families to suffer."
To
investigate how insect herbivory on crops might affect our future, the team
looked at decades of laboratory experiments of insect metabolic and
reproductive rates, as well as ecological studies of insects in the wild.
Unlike mammals, insects are ectothermic, which means that their body
temperature tracks the temperature of their environment. Thus, the air
temperature affects oxygen consumption, caloric requirements and other
metabolic rates.
The
past experiments that the team studied show conclusively that increases in
temperature will accelerate insect metabolism, which boosts their appetites, at
a predictable rate. In addition, increasing temperatures boost reproductive
rates up to a point, and then those rates level off at temperature levels akin
to what exist today in the tropics.
Deutsch
and his colleagues found that the effects of temperature on insect metabolism
and demographics were fairly consistent across insect species, including pest
species such as aphids and corn borers. They folded these metabolic and
reproductive effects into a model of insect population dynamics, and looked at
how that model changed based on different climate change scenarios. Those
scenarios incorporated information based on where corn, rice and wheat -- the
three largest staple crops in the world -- are currently grown.
For
a 2-degree Celsius rise in global mean surface temperatures, their model
predicts that median losses in yield due to insect activity would be 31 percent
for corn, 19 percent for rice and 46 percent for wheat. Under those conditions,
total annual crop losses would reach 62, 92 and 59 million tons, respectively.
The
researchers observed different loss rates due to the crops' different growing
regions, Deutsch said. For example, much of the world's rice is grown in the
tropics. Temperatures there are already at optimal conditions to maximize
insect reproductive and metabolic rates. So, additional increases in
temperature in the tropics would not boost insect activity to the same extent
that they would in temperate regions -- such as the United States' "corn
belt."
The
team notes that farmers and governments could try to lessen the impact of
increased insect metabolism, such as shifting where crops are grown or trying
to breed insect-resistant crops. But these alterations will take time and come
with their own costs.
"I
hope our results demonstrate the importance of collecting more data on how
pests will impact crop losses in a warming world -- because collectively, our
choice now is not whether or not we will allow warming to occur, but how much
warming we're willing to tolerate," said Deutsch.
Story
Source:
Journal
Reference:
1.
Curtis A. Deutsch, Joshua J.
Tewksbury, Michelle Tigchelaar, David S. Battisti, Scott C. Merrill, Raymond B.
Huey, Rosamond L. Naylor. Insect metabolic and population growth rates
predict increasing crop losses in a warming climate. Science,
2018 DOI: 10.1126/science.aat3466
Hundreds of millions at risk of malnutrition, here's why
The visual
dramatic spike in CO2 is quite scary, makes you think
Wednesday, August 29, 2018, 3:23
PM - Climate change is making food
less nutritious, an environmental win for the Arctic, how air pollution harms
your kidneys, and the counterintuitive results of conservation announcements.
It's What's Up in Climate Change.
CLIMATE CHANGE
WILL PUT HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS AT RISK OF MALNUTRITION
Rising carbon emissions are making rice and wheat less
nutritious, and a new study reports that
by 2050 over 175 million people will become zinc deficient, 122 million people
will be protein deficient, and more than 1 billion women and children could
lose a large proportion of dietary iron intake.
These deficiencies can cause serious health implications such as
increased risk of anemia, impaired cognitive function, autoimmune diseases, and
psychological disorders. The current level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere
is around 410 parts per million (ppm), and current climate projections show
that the carbon concentration could increase to 550 ppm in the next few
decades, which means serious changes in the atmosphere that crops are used to
growing in.
The different atmospheric composition will alter the nutrient
contents of the crops that grow in them and have outcomes such as higher
carbohydrate content, lower protein content, and decreased zinc and iron levels
between 3-17 per cent compared to current conditions. Plants provide the
majority of nutrients for most people's diets globally - vegetable sources provide
63 per cent of dietary protein, 81 per cent of iron, and 68 per cent of zinc,
and are critical for optimal health.
Rising carbon emissions reduce the nutrition of staple foods and increase drought conditions, which will make it challenging to feed Earth's growing population. Credit: Wikimedia Commons
The regions most at risk include India, China, the Middle East,
Africa, and Southeast Asia, whereas many countries in North America, South
America, and Western Europe are at a lower risk due to diets that are heavy in
animal-sourced foods. Majority of the countries most at risk for increasing
rates of malnutrition already have high proportions of the population suffering
from one or more deficiency, and increasing carbon levels could exacerbate the
existing health burdens related to nutritional deficiencies.
The study notes that the world has made considerable
improvements in improving global nutrition over the past couple decades, but
the gains have been uneven and some of the highest-risk areas have seen minimal
progress. India has made significant progress in reducing the rate of
underweight children since 1990, but nearly 35 per cent of Indian children are
still underweight, whereas the developing country average is approximately 20
per cent.
The researchers state that projections were made assuming
dietary patterns stayed more or less the same, even though projecting future
diets is subject to large uncertainty. Demographic, economic trends, and
climate change all play large roles in the global production, availability, and
distribution of food, and unfortunately the countries that are currently
struggling the most with malnutrition are likely to be hit the hardest by
lowered crop quality due to climate change.
SUCCESS IN
PREVENTING POLLUTANTS FROM ENDING UP IN THE ARCTIC
Some Arctic regions are void of humans for hundreds of
kilometres, but traces of human-made pollutants appear in snow and animals.
This is because atmospheric circulation patterns transport pollution across the
globe towards the Arctic where they settle and contaminate wildlife and the
environment. Polar bears are one species that suffer from transported
pollutants, as they have been shown
to cause brain damage and hormonal disruption, which affects their population's
livelihood. Governments and other organizations have implemented various
efforts and studies to prevent the Arctic from transported pollution and the
subsequent human health consequences when the contaminants enter the food
chain, and a new studyshows that market removal and increased regulation have
proven to be effective strategies.
Credit: Wikimedia Commons
The data shows that legacy persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
in the Arctic, pollutants that remain in the environment for a long time after
they are emitted and do not easily degrade, have declined over the past 20-30 years,
and the only increases of POPs occurred from local sources. This is likely due
to the recent introduction of national and international regulations that
control the emitted amounts of certain pollutants and the voluntary phasing out
of producing perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) in the United States. The data
linked the decrease in contaminants with the United Nations Stockholm
Convention in 2001, an international treaty signed by 152 countries to
restrict, minimize, or eliminate the production of the 12 most common POPs.
Despite successful regulations and market removals, banned
pollutants are still found in the environment in levels that could cause
adverse effects to human, animal and environmental health. Recently, a
mysterious source of a banned greenhouse gas, CFC-11, had been tracked downto 18 factories in China that had been secretly emitting
the pollutant since 2012. Even though international regulations are effective
at controlling pollution, small companies still continue to find loopholes and
hidden methods to conduct dangerous production.
AIR POLLUTION
FOUND TO HARM KIDNEYS
A new study is adding to the long list of negative health
impacts we experience from air pollution. While it has been known for some time
that inhaling polluted air can cause infections and disease, new researchshows that fine particulate matter, specifically air
particles that are less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter (PM2.5), is connected
to chronic kidney disease (CKD), a common condition that typically causes loss
of kidney function over time and carries an increased risk of death,
cardiovascular disease, and end-stage renal disease (ESRD).
The extremely small size of PM2.5 allows these particles to
deeply penetrate the lungs and enter the bloodstream, which causes inflammation
and interferes with regular functioning. Combustion activities, like car
emissions and wood burning, are a source of PM2.5, which has a relatively large
surface area that can carry other toxins on it, such as heavy metals. The study
analyzed over 1 million adults above the age of 65 years in the United States
to investigate the link between their health and PM2.5 concentrations in
regions that the individuals lived.
A blanket of smog sits over Mexico City in 2010. Credit: Wikimedia Commons
The results indicate a clear pattern of higher CKD prevalence in
large central metropolitan areas. Overall the analysis found that 17.2 per cent
of the individuals had CKD, 18.4 per cent prevalence in large central metropolitan
areas, and a decreasing trend of 16 per cent and 15.1 per cent in micropolitan
and non-core counties, respectively. In areas with polluting combustion
activities, such as the Ohio Valley that is populated with coal mining plants,
men had a 19 per cent higher relative risk of developing CKD and a 13 per cent
higher relative risk for women compared to non-mining counties. In light of
the US EPA’s proposal to
revitalize the domestic coal industry,
the risks for developing CKD could dramatically increase.
Kidneys are sensitive to both climate change and increasing
amounts of air pollution - previous research has noted that the warming
temperatures can increase the chance of kidney stones by causing higher rates
of dehydration. As more air pollution research is produced, it will likely
reveal that air pollution has harmful effects for the entire body, not just one
group of organs and will add to the urgency for increasing air pollution
regulation and mitigation efforts to prevent a public health crisis.
ANNOUNCING
PLANS TO SOLVE ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUE MAY INITIALLY WORSEN IT
Before a large-scale effort to deal with an environmental
problem is announced, there is typically mounting evidence for why the issue
must be addressed and attention from those that both support and oppose action.
The trending plastic straw bans are raising awareness of how climate change and
pollution are harming oceans, and a new studyhas discovered that
discussing these issues in advance could lead to a preemptive resource
extraction before the conservation initiative is implemented.
Overfishing harms marine ecosystems and careless waste disposal
practices contribute to a significant amount of ocean pollution. The
researchers studied the Phoenix Islands Protected Area (PIPA) located in the
central Pacific and found that as soon as the area announced it would
eventually receive a protected status, fishers more than doubled their fishing
efforts. If other marine areas announced similar intentions to restrict fishing
activities to improve the environmental conditions, it is expected that the
share of over-extracted fisheries would temporarily increase from 65 to 72 per
cent.
A U.S. Coast Guard law enforcement detachment member and a Ghanaian navy sailor inspect a fishing vessel suspected of illegal fishing during the Africa Maritime Law Enforcement Partnership in 2014. Credit: Wikimedia Commons
It is reasoned that humans are highly inclined to form
expectations in response to new information and can perform preemptive
behaviours that undermines intended policy goals. The researchers provide a
comparative example of the gun control debate in the US - a mass shooting can
spike firearms sales because some Americans fear gun control legislation will
prevent these purchases.
Regulating resource extraction from marine areas are proven to
be effective in increasing biodiversity and improving marine health. The
recommendations from this study include increased monitoring of fishing
activities globally and reducing policy design periods so there is a shorter
transition into the new regulation and less opportunity to spike harmful
fishing practices.
Global Rice Flour Market Forecast to 2025
Insights Shared in Detailed Report
This press release was
orginally distributed by SBWire
Maharashtra, India -- (SBWIRE) -- 08/30/2018 -- Rice Flour Market
Global Rice Flour Market, which is backed by extensive primary and detailed secondary research,
involving numerous static databases, national government documentation, latest
news articles, press releases, company annual reports, financial reports,
pertinent patent and administrative databases, as well as a range of internal
and external proprietary databases.
Request for a free sample
report @ https://www.reportsmonitor.com/request_sample/87069
Rice flour (also rice
powder) is a form of flour made from rice. It is distinct from rice starch,
which is usually produced by steeping rice in lye. Rice flour is a particularly
good substitute for wheat flour, which causes irritation in the digestive
systems of those who are gluten-intolerant. Rice flour is also used as a
thickening agent in recipes that are refrigerated or frozen since it inhibits
liquid separation.
This report focuses on
the Rice Flour in global market, especially in North America, Europe and
Asia-Pacific, South America, Middle East and Africa. This report categorizes
the market based on manufacturers, regions, type and application.
Scope of the Report
Key players in the market
include :
Burapa Prosper, Thai
Flour Industry, Rose Brand, CHO HENG, Koda Farms, BIF, Lieng Tong, Bob's Red
Mill Natural Foods, Pornkamon Rice Flour Mills, HUANGGUO and Others.
Key Regions of Rice Flour
is:
United States, Europe,
China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India, Central & South America.
Get Discount On this
Report @ https://www.reportsmonitor.com/check_discount/87069
Additionally, this report
covers the manufacturers' data, including business distribution,
shipment, gross profit, cost, price, revenue, interview
record etc., which allows the consumers in better
understanding about the leading competitors operating in the
market.
Key Types Of Rice Flour
are :
Rice Flour, Brown Rice
Flour, Glutinous Rice Flour and Others.
Key Applications Of Rice
Flour are:
Rice Noodle and Rice
Pasta, Sweets and Desserts, Snacks, Bread, Thickening Agent Others.
The Rice Flour Market
consists of data accumulated from numerous primary and secondary sources. This
information has been verified and validated by the industry analysts, thus
providing significant insights to the researchers, analysts, managers, and
other industry professionals.
Research objectives
To study and analyze the
Global Rice Flour market size by key regions/countries, product type and
application, history data from 2017 to 2018, and forecast to 2025.
To understand the
structure of Rice Flour market by identifying its various sub-segment.
Focuses on the key
Global Rice Flour players, to define, describe and analyze the value,
market share, market competition landscape, SWOT analysis and development plans
in next few years.
There are Major Chapters
to display the Rice Flour research report:
Chapter 1, to describe
Rice Flour Introduction, product scope, market overview, market opportunities,
market risk, market driving force;
Chapter 2, to analyze the
top manufacturers of Rice Flour , with sales, revenue, and price of Rice Flour
, in 2016 and 2017.
Chapter 3, to display the
competitive situation among the top manufacturers, with sales, revenue and
market share in 2016 and 2017;
Chapter 4, to show the
Global market by regions, with sales, revenue and market share of Rice
Flour , for each region, from 2013 to 2018;
Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9,
to analyze the market by countries, by type, by application and by
manufacturers, with sales, revenue and market share by key countries in these
regions;
Continued…
Browse Complete Report
with TOC of Rice Flour Report, Visit: https://www.reportsmonitor.com/report/87069/Global-Rice-Flour-Market
In the end, Rice Flour
Industry report specifics the major regions, market scenarios with the product
price, volume, supply, revenue, production, market growth rate, demand,
forecast and so on. This report also presents SWOT analysis, investment
feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.
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article, you can also get individual chapter wise section or region wise report
version like Asia, Global, Europe.
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House leader prods Senate: Pass rice tariffs measure
August 31, 2018
This
April 12, 2017 file photo shows different varieties of rice being sold at a
local market in Manila.
A LEADER of the House of
Representatives on Thursday urged the Senate to pass the
proposed Revised Agricultural Tariffication Act to address the
country’s problems on rice supply and high prices.
In pushing the passage of the
proposed Revised Agricultural Tariffication Act, Majority
Leader Rolando Andaya Jr. said: “The sooner we institutionalize a rule-based
system of importing rice, the better. That’s the only way of
legally bringing in rice; all other methods are smuggling. The
House has passed the rice tariffication bill, the Senate should do the same,”
said Andaya.
The bill is currently pending
before the Senate Committee on Agriculture and Food.
Andaya, however, also admitted
that replacing quantitative import restrictions on rice with duties is only one
of the ways to make rice affordable and abundant.
“We must also look into the
budget of the DA [Department of Agriculture] and overall public spending for
food security. [In areas where there is] scarcity [or the rice supply is not
enough], the government can rush stocks to beef up the buffer,” he added.
“The long-term view is to
stick to the existing road map for food security. Let us fund and
implement it so there will be no repeat of the turbulence rocking the
rice sector,” he said.
The lawmaker added price
speculators and hoarders should also be “fumigated and flushed out of the
system.”
The House of Representatives
approved on third and final reading earlier this month House Bill 7735,
which seeks to liberalize rice imports by replacing the quantitative
import restrictions on rice with tariffs, and create the Rice Competitiveness
Enhancement Fund.
The bill aims to protect
producers of agricultural products, ensure food security and make the
agricultural sector viable and globally competitive.
Earlier, House Committee on
Agriculture and Food Chairman Jose Panganiban Jr. of ANAC-IP party-list said
the P20-billion projected annual tariff to be collected from imported rice is a
big help to the country’s rice farmers.
Panganiban said the country will
have about P29 billion to P30 billion that will directly benefit the rice
sector.
The P20 billion will come from
the annual rice tariff, and the additional P9 billion from the Department of
Agriculture.
With the advent of the rice
tariffication regime, Panganiban said the country must improve the local rice
production to reduce the production cost of rice farmers.
Also, Camarines Sur Rep. Luis
Raymund Villafuerte, an author of the tariffication bill, said it is a
“win-win” situation for consumers and farmers at this time when Filipinos
are reeling from higher-than-target inflation.
Villafuerte said the measure
liberalizes the entry of cheaper rice and consumers will benefit from this
because the lifting of the QR on rice imports is expected to slash the retail
cost of the staple by as much as P7 per kilo.
ASIA RICE-INDIA RATES DIP AS RUPEE FLOUNDERS; MARKETS EYE PHILIPPINE
BOOST
8/30/2018
* India prices fall by $3 per tonne
* Philippines to import additional 132,000 tonnes
* Bangladesh imports could dip to 600,000 tonnes in 2018-19: USDA
By Vijaykumar Vedala
BENGALURU, Aug 30 (Reuters) - A dip in rice export prices as the
rupee plunged failed to stoke fresh demand for the Indian variety this week,
but potential orders from the Philippines and elsewhere could provide fresh
impetus to markets in Thailand and Vietnam.
In top exporter India, rates for 5 percent broken parboiled rice
<RI-INBKN5-P1> fell by $3 to $386-$390 per tonne this week.
The Indian rupee has fallen over 10 percent in 2018, hitting a
record low on Thursday, increasing exporters margin from overseas sales.
"Right now, demand is weak. Even after the recent price fall,
African buyers are not active in the market," said an exporter based at Kakinada
in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.
India's rice exports in April-July edged up 1 percent from a year
ago to 4.15 million tonnes on upbeat demand from Senegal, Benin and Iran, a
government body said.
In Thailand, a stronger domestic currency saw benchmark 5 percent
broken rice <RI-THBKN5-P1> quoted at $393-$395, free on board (FOB)
Bangkok, narrowing slightly from last week's $390-$395, traders said.
"We heard nothing about any new deals but some exporters are
expecting things to pick up next month from markets in this region like the
Philippines and China," a Bangkok-based trader said.
The Philippines will import an additional 132,000 tonnes of rice
to boost stocks in southern provinces, where prices have surged in recent weeks
due to limited supply, its agriculture minister said on Wednesday.
The Philippines, one of the world's biggest rice importers,
usually buys from top producers Thailand and Vietnam.
In Vietnam, rates for 5 percent broken rice <RI-VNBKN5-P1>
remained unchanged at $395-$400 a tonne, but prices are expected to pick up
over the coming weeks.
"The summer-autumn harvest has come to an end and we have
heard about new orders from regional customers," a Ho Chi Minh City-based
trader said.
The government's General Statistics Office on Wednesday said
farmers in the Mekong Delta provinces have started growing rice for the
autumn-winter crop, but prolonged rains are slowing down sowing.
Meanwhile, rice imports from Bangladesh are expected to fall to
600,000 tonnes in the 2018-19 marketing year, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) said in a report this month.
"The high rate of import duty may deter imports and increase
paddy prices indirectly, but it also may affect prices in the retail market and
transfer the burden to consumers," the report said.
Bangladesh, which had emerged as a major rice importer since 2017
after floods damaged its crops, imposed a 28 percent tax on rice imports to
support its farmers after local production revived.
Bangladesh imported a record 3.9 million tonnes in 2017-18, food
ministry data showed. (Reporting by Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok, Khanh Vu in
Hanoi, Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka; Editing by Kirsten
Donovan)
https://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/asia-rice-india-rates-dip-as-rupee-flounders-markets-eye-philippine-boost
‘Let
smugglers import rice’
Agri chief stirs uproar with his plan; senators cry sabotage
'Fumigate
the bigger pests' in rice crisis: hoarders, price speculators
Mara Cepeda
We deserve better! Jojo Binay slams lazy,
inefficient presidential appointees amid rice crisis, NAIA runway mess
Gov’t sets 3-month price freeze, other
anti-inflation measures
FMARD
sheds light on why Nigerian rice is expensive and scarce
SMC’s parallel NFA
https://www.concisenews.global/2018/08/29/blame-rice-millers-for-scarcity-of-local-rice-in-market-ministry/
CIBIL score mandatory for milling govt
paddy in Punjab
https://www.theweek.in/wire-updates/business/2018/08/30/nrg41-cibil-paddy-millers.htmls
Why Nigerian rice is expensive, scarce – Govt
https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/281773-why-nigerian-rice-are-expensive-scarce-govt.html
Poisonous Rice: Ebonyi
Reopens Abakaliki Rice Mill After Sanitation
https://theeagleonline.com.ng/poisonous-rice-ebonyi-reopens-abakaliki-rice-mill-after-sanitation/
Why local
rice is scarce in markets, by ministry
http://thenationonlineng.net/why-local-rice-is-scarce-in-markets-by-ministry/
Katy Rice
Festival
Friday, October 12 – Sunday, October 14, 2018
901 Avenue C.
The City of Katy will be hosting the 2018 Katy Rice Festival the 2nd weekend in October in Downtown Historic Katy. The event will be a first-class, family-friendly event featuring quality art & craft vendors, excellent live music and food options, beer garden and carnival. They are also bringing back some great aspects of the festival – the rice cooking competition and student arts competition – and implementing new aspects to the event; it will be fun for the whole family and promises to bring big crowds! But the best part is that ALL proceeds will be given back to the community in student scholarships and local charities through the Rotary Club of Katy.
The weekend starts on Friday, October 12 as the event kicks off with an “Octoberfest” style evening – live music, food trucks, beer garden and carnival (no art & craft vendors) – from 6-11 PM and is free to the public. Saturday, October 13 will begin with a parade at 9 AM and then gates to the festival will be open from 10 AM-10 PM (admission is $5/adult and kids 12 & under are free). On Sunday, October 14 the festival will be open from 12-6 PM (admission is $5/adult and kids 12 & under are free).
Come visit us and enjoy of this iconic festival in Downtown Historic Katy!
http://www.katymagazine.com/katy-rice-festival/
Rice bran
oil: exports on the rise
https://www.thedailystar.net/news/business/rice-bran-oil-exports-the-rise-1626550
https://in.reuters.com/article/us-indonesia-markets-cenbank/indonesia-rupiah-nears-1998-crisis-levels-central-bank-intervenes-in-fx-bonds-markets-idINKCN1LG0ZG
Rice
paddies down in 2018: data
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2018/08/30/0200000000AEN20180830003300320.htm
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/207752/no-notable-changes-in-new-rice-export-regulations.html
Production and Trade
Flow Map: Tanzania Rice (August 2018)
https://reliefweb.int/map/united-republic-tanzania/production-and-trade-flow-map-tanzania-rice-august-2018
Egypt agrees to import 1 million tons of rice from Vietnam over 3-4
months
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/310552.aspx
Rice Export Price Dips As Rupee Fall Fails To Boost Demand
India's rice exports in April-July edged up 1 per cent from a year ago
to 4.15 million tonnes on upbeat demand from Senegal, Benin and Iran.
https://www.ndtv.com/business/rice-export-price-dips-as-rupee-fall-fails-to-boost-demand-1908832
Vietnam Jan-Aug coffee exports seen up 14.8
pct y/y; rice to rise 8.2 pct y/y
https://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/vietnam-jan-aug-coffee-exports-seen-up-14-8-pct-y-y-rice-to-rise-8-2-pct-y-y/
Global Warming Means More Insects
Threatening Food Crops — A Lot More, Study Warns
Wheat, corn
and rice are staple foods for 4 billion people. A new study suggests crop
damage from climate change may be far worse than projected as pest risks rise.
BY BOB BERWYN, INSIDECLIMATE NEWS
'This Sets Off
Alarm Bells'
What Can Farmers
and Governments Do?
https://insideclimatenews.org/news/30082018/insect-damage-agriculture-food-crops-climate-change-wheat-corn-rice-study
New, ‘improved' Rice Krispies make consumers snap
https://www.ecr.co.za/east-coast-breakfast-darren-maule/new-improved-rice-krispies-make-consumers-snap/
2018-2023
Global Rice Syrup Market Research: Market Overview, Market Size, Industry
Growth Analysis,Status,Trend, & Forecast
https://businessanalyst24.com/270872/2018-2023-global-rice-syrup-market-research-market-overview-market-size-industry-growth-analysisstatustrend-forecast/
Rice
Milling Machinery Market Report Presents an Overall Analysis, Development
Trends, Driving Forces, Opportunities and Future Potential 2023
https://thetacticalbusiness.com/224987/rice-milling-machinery-market-report-presents-an-overall-analysis-development-trends-driving-forces-opportunities-and-future-potential-2023/
Country’s rice situation expected to
normalize next month, says Malacañang
https://news.mb.com.ph/2018/08/30/countrys-rice-situation-expected-to-normalize-next-month-says-malacanang/
No to more rice importation
ABS-CBN News
http://news.abs-cbn.com/news/multimedia/photo/08/31/18/no-to-more-rice-importation
NFA rice available in more outlets nationwide
https://www.ptvnews.ph/nfa-rice-available-outlets-nationwide/
Poisonous Rice: Ebonyi Reopens Abakaliki
Rice Mill After Sanitation
https://theeagleonline.com.ng/poisonous-rice-ebonyi-reopens-abakaliki-rice-mill-after-sanitation/
New,
‘improved' Rice Krispies make consumers snap
https://www.ecr.co.za/east-coast-breakfast-darren-maule/new-improved-rice-krispies-make-consumers-snap/
Rice Transplanter Market Research
2018-2023: Growth Factors, Key players ,Product Types and Application by
Regional Analysis & Forecast
https://thetradereporter.com/rice-transplanter-market-research-2018-2023-growth-factors-key-players-product-types-and-application-by-regional-analysis-forecast/150833/.
Global
Rice Flour Market Forecast to 2025 Insights Shared in Detailed Report
This press release was orginally distributed by SBWire
Maharashtra, India -- (SBWIRE) -- 08/30/2018 -- Rice Flour Market
Global Rice Flour Market, which is backed by extensive primary and detailed secondary research, involving numerous static databases, national government documentation, latest news articles, press releases, company annual reports, financial reports, pertinent patent and administrative databases, as well as a range of internal and external proprietary databases.
Request for a free sample report @ https://www.reportsmonitor.com/request_sample/87069
Rice flour (also rice powder) is a form of flour made from rice. It is distinct from rice starch, which is usually produced by steeping rice in lye. Rice flour is a particularly good substitute for wheat flour, which causes irritation in the digestive systems of those who are gluten-intolerant. Rice flour is also used as a thickening agent in recipes that are refrigerated or frozen since it inhibits liquid separation.
This report focuses on the Rice Flour in global market, especially in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific, South America, Middle East and Africa. This report categorizes the market based on manufacturers, regions, type and application.
Scope of the Report
Key players in the market include :
Burapa Prosper, Thai Flour Industry, Rose Brand, CHO HENG, Koda Farms, BIF, Lieng Tong, Bob's Red Mill Natural Foods, Pornkamon Rice Flour Mills, HUANGGUO and Others.
Key Regions of Rice Flour is:
United States, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India, Central & South America.
Get Discount On this Report @ https://www.reportsmonitor.com/check_discount/87069
Additionally, this report covers the manufacturers' data, including business distribution, shipment, gross profit, cost, price, revenue, interview record etc., which allows the consumers in better understanding about the leading competitors operating in the market.
Key Types Of Rice Flour are :
Rice Flour, Brown Rice Flour, Glutinous Rice Flour and Others.
Key Applications Of Rice Flour are:
Rice Noodle and Rice Pasta, Sweets and Desserts, Snacks, Bread, Thickening Agent Others.
The Rice Flour Market consists of data accumulated from numerous primary and secondary sources. This information has been verified and validated by the industry analysts, thus providing significant insights to the researchers, analysts, managers, and other industry professionals.
Research objectives
To study and analyze the Global Rice Flour market size by key regions/countries, product type and application, history data from 2017 to 2018, and forecast to 2025.
To understand the structure of Rice Flour market by identifying its various sub-segment.
Focuses on the key Global Rice Flour players, to define, describe and analyze the value, market share, market competition landscape, SWOT analysis and development plans in next few years.
There are Major Chapters to display the Rice Flour research report:
Chapter 1, to describe Rice Flour Introduction, product scope, market overview, market opportunities, market risk, market driving force;
Chapter 2, to analyze the top manufacturers of Rice Flour , with sales, revenue, and price of Rice Flour , in 2016 and 2017.
Chapter 3, to display the competitive situation among the top manufacturers, with sales, revenue and market share in 2016 and 2017;
Chapter 4, to show the Global market by regions, with sales, revenue and market share of Rice Flour , for each region, from 2013 to 2018;
Chapter 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, to analyze the market by countries, by type, by application and by manufacturers, with sales, revenue and market share by key countries in these regions;
Continued…
Browse Complete Report with TOC of Rice Flour Report, Visit: https://www.reportsmonitor.com/report/87069/Global-Rice-Flour-Market
In the end, Rice Flour Industry report specifics the major regions, market scenarios with the product price, volume, supply, revenue, production, market growth rate, demand, forecast and so on. This report also presents SWOT analysis, investment feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.
Thanks for reading this article, you can also get individual chapter wise section or region wise report version like Asia, Global, Europe.
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Rice
millers warn state-wide strike if demands not met
It should be noted that rice from all regions do not have the equal amount of moisture. While crop from a region that receives relatively more amount of rain is likely to have 23-24% moisture, rice from a dry region is likely to have around 17% moisture. Earlier, there have been demands of fixing the amount of moisture the rice is allowed to have based on the region it comes from, but it didn’t come to anything. “Millers have to bribe FCI officials so that they pass off their rice as having no more than the designated amount of moisture and get fleeced by them in return,” alleged both Shukla and Gupta.
Area manager of the FCI in Bareilly, Akhileshwar Ojha, denied the allegations, saying no case of the kind had been brought to his notice by any rice miller so far.
Meanwhile, Shukla said that he had met the chief minister twice, along with an UPRMA delegation in a month’s time to seek solutions to the millers’ problems, but nothing substantial had come of those meetings. “Even though the chief minister accepted that our situation was extremely grim, the government has done nothing practical to resolve it.”
Times of India
Wholesale
prices of Oils, Sugar, Commodities in APMC
United News of India
http://thenationonlineng.net/why-local-rice-is-scarce-in-markets-by-ministry/
Punjab
Cabinet's nod to custom milling of paddy policy for kharif marketing season
2018-19
Punjab
plans to cut pesticides use in basmati rice
Philippine rice crisis escalates as shortages push prices to a
three-year high
Rice costs continued on an upward trend despite imported supplies arriving in June. Philippines’ National Food Authority (NFA) has admitted the lack of effect the imports have had on the predicted lowering of prices, especially in Manila, the nation’s capital city.
“As of now, no effect. There are areas that have minimal reduction but here in Metro Manila, where we do not have rice production, there is none,” it said in a statement.
The imports of 500,000 metric tons (MT) worth of rice were commissioned earlier in the year by NFA. This was in an effort to deal with the NFA’s shortage of rice reserves, which at one point had dwindled down to two days’ worth, as reported by the state-run agency.
The NFA is a government agency responsible for safeguarding the stability of rice supply and prices in the country. Rice is the nation’s main staple food.
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that the average wholesale price of well-milled rice had risen to USD 0.81 (P43.18) per kilogramme this month, a rise of 10% from a year ago. Its average retail price saw a 9% year-on-year increase to USD 0.86 (P45.71).
Regular-milled rice was hit even harder, rising 13% year-on-year to USD 0.75 (P40.08) in wholesale prices, and 11% to USD 0.79 (P42.26). Palay (unhusked rice) also rose 13% year-on-year, to USD 0.41 (P22.11).
PSA previously only predicted a ‘slight increase’ in rice prices as of late last year.
Inflation
woes in the Philippines
The rising cost of rice is only one of
Philippines’ concerns, as food inflation rates are also the highest they have
been in five years.
Since the implementation of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law in January this year, the inflation rate has also been on an upward trend, and hit 5.7% in July. This is the fastest rate of increase registered in the Philippines since 2012 was set as the base to determine inflation.
Despite this, the government remains confident that this is a temporary situation, and will stabilise by the end of the year. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said: “The current surge in inflation is partly an initial reaction to the implementation of TRAIN and is expected to be short-lived and should taper off over the coming months.
“For 2019, inflation is assessed to go back to target,” he added. “We expect inflation to peak in the third quarter and taper off by October.”
What is TRAIN?
TRAIN forms the first part of the
Philippine government’s Comprehensive Tax Reform Program (CTRP). Its aim is to “create
a more just, simple, and more effective system of tax collection, as
per the constitution, where the rich will have a bigger contribution and the
poor will benefit more from the government’s programs and services,”
as per the Philippine Department of Finance website.
Implementation of the TRAIN law served to raise or enforce new taxes on products like sugary drinks, vehicles, petroleum and others.
The Philippine Department of Finance has been adamant that TRAIN has played no part on inflation. Pernia disagrees, saying of the situation: "Oil prices are really going up […] Also, the depreciation of the peso and the TRAIN [law] is also a culprit."
Trouble within the NFA
Others have pointed to organisational
and management issues within the NFA as a contributor to rising rice prices as
well as food inflation rates.
"There is [a] shortage of NFA rice in the market. You implement TRAIN and you are not ready with the price of rice," said University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman School of Statistics dean Dennis Mapa.
After NFA administrator Jason Aquino announced the shortage of rice buffer stock earlier this year, he was questioned in a Senate inquiry. Queries surrounded Aquino’s reasoning for not procuring lower-priced local grains during these months to maintain supply.
“You should have buffer to make sure traders would not take advantage of the farmers. You'll say there's no NFA rice but it's your job. Why are you announcing that you could not do your job?” asked Senator Cynthia Villar, chair of the Senate committee on agriculture and food.
Upcoming rice tariffication bill
In an effort to ease the effects of
inflation, the government is all set to pass its rice tariffication bill into
law within the year.
This would amend the existing 22-year-old Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996, which gives rice import monopoly to the NFA. Passing this bill is expected to directly reduce the inflation rate by 0.4%
"The private sector will start importing. The more private sector imports, the supply of rice enlarges and therefore the price of rice goes down," said Pernia.
Liberia: Commerce Ministry
Refutes Claims of UCI Plastic Rice
Monrovia – The Ministry of Commerce
and Industry has refuted reports of that a very rice is currently being sold on
the Liberian Market.
Report
by Willie N. Tokpah, willie.tokpah@frontpageafricaonline.com
The Ministry’s disproval comes in
the wake of recent allegations of plastic rice being imported into the country
by the United Commodities Incorporated (UCI).
UCI is one of five importers,
granted the rights to import rice in Liberia by the Ministry of Commerce and
Industry.
The rice being talked about is
said to be labeled in a pink bag with an inscription written on it as ‘United
Grain’, and at the same time bearing an ID NSL/RS/792.’
But the Deputy Minister for
Administration at Commerce and Industry, Mr. Wilfred Bangura, told newsmen
Wednesday, August 29, that since news pop out about the rice being unsafe for
consumption, the particular consignment was quarantined for testing.
Dep. Min Bangura, however, noted
that recent scientific tests conducted by the National Standard Laboratory
disproved allegations that the rice has plastic characteristic.
“The Ministry of Commerce is
therefore pleased to announce to the public that the tests revealed that the
sample of rice submitted is identical, organic and has a characteristic of
normal rice and not plastic rice,” Bangura said.
Minister Bangura noted that all
the necessary experiments were conducted on the rice and results prove that the
‘pink-bagged’ rice under consideration is safe for consumption.
According to report from the
National Standard Laboratory, a copy of which is in the possession of
FrontPageAfrica, the United Grain Rice has a solid grain type, an ambient
condition along with a normal room temperature of 25C.
The scientific result shows that
during the test, sample of the rice was boiled and cooked as normal rice; it
was free of filth, foreign matters and unpleasant smell making it safe for
consumption.
He assured that the Ministry is
committed to ensuring that various commodities coming to Liberia, especially
food, are safe for consumption and will not do anything on the contrary.
At the same time, Bangura
disclosed that an investigation conducted by the Ministry has revealed, that
one of the five rice importers in Liberia is behind the scheme spreading
falsehood of the rice.
He refused to reveal the name of
the importer under question on grounds that discussions are still being held
with all importers, but assures that such name will be made public next week.
Minister Bangura then lauded all
stakeholders and the public for the patience and cooperation during the period
of investigation and experiment on the rice.
According to the Ministry, UCI is
so far the highest distributors of rice on the Liberian market.
The Deputy Commerce Minister
believes such allegation against one of Liberia’s highest rice importers does
not augur well for the improvement of the Liberian marketing sector.
The Ministry of Commerce is the
regulatory agency of government with the responsibility to regulate the market
and protect Liberians from unsafe commodities coming into the country.
‘Let
smugglers import rice’
Agri chief stirs uproar with his plan; senators cry sabotage
Senators on
Thursday slammed Agriculture Secretary Manny Piñol for suggesting that rice
smugglers be allowed to operate in Mindanao as legitimate importers so that the
price of the staple would go down.
In
an interview with radio dzMM, Piñol said the areas of Zamboanga, Basilan, Sulu,
and Tawi-Tawi have long relied on smuggled rice and consider it “traditional
trading.”
But
prices shot up when smuggling stopped as a result of talks between President
Rodrigo Duterte and Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.
“That’s
the reason they ran out of rice in the Zambasulta area,” he said in Filipino.
Piñol
suggested setting up a trading center in the south where smugglers can supply
rice as legitimate importers, a proposal senators were quick to lambast.
Senator
Cynthia Villar, chairperson of the Senate committee on food and agriculture,
slammed the idea as economic sabotage.
“We
cannot encourage rice smuggling. Even if it’s happening everywhere. It’s
against the law,” Villar said in a mix of Filipino and English, on the
sidelines of the Agriculture and Fisheries Technology Forum.
She
said the law views the smuggling of rice worth more than P10 million as
economic sabotage.
Senator
Joel Villanueva branded as “horrible” Piñol’s performance following his
proposal to legalize rice smuggling in some parts of Mindanao.
“With
the statements that he made... I think it’s terrible,” said Villanueva as he
expressed disbelief that Piñol suggested legalizing rice smuggling in the
Zambasulta area.
“I
don’t know if that’s his intention. I’m sure he doesn’t mean it. You have to be
more circumspect of what you say when you become the head of the agency. You
just have to be careful about it,” he said.
Senator
Nancy Binay on Thursday called on Malacañang to step in to end the apparent
standoff between two of its agencies in charge of food security.
Binay
urged Malacañang to mediate between the National Food Authority and the NFA
Council, saying disagreements between the two have hurt the supply of low-cost
NFA rice for more than a year now.
The
prolonged deadlock, she added, has resulted in bouts of food insecurity.
The
NFA is mandated to maintain a rice buffer stock for 15 days at any given time
and 30 days during lean months, based on the country’s daily consumption rice
requirement of 32,150 metric tons.
“It’s
been one year that we’ve had a shortage of NFA rice, but we still have not
fixed the problem,” Binay said in a mix of Filipino and English.
She
said the immediate concern is the availability of affordable
government-subsidized rice and to find solutions to the shortage by addressing
the 30-day NFA rice buffer stock.
Villar,
meanwhile, also questioned the Agriculture department’s policy to import rice
and fish, saying this puts the livelihood of farmers and fishers at risk.
Her
statement came after the department approved the importation of 17,000 metric
tons of galunggong from China, in a bid to lower prices for the fish.
“Importation
should not be our automatic reaction to problems besetting the agriculture
sector. We should work for long-term solutions that will make us
self-sufficient and competitive,” Villar said.
Villar
said importing galunggong will not solve the problem of the dwindling fish
stock.
“Why
is there a need to import galunggong? Can we not find another
replacement for galunggong?” Villar said, adding that protein can
also be obtained from consuming other local catch such as bangus,
hasa-hasa, ayungin and many others.
Villar
also proposed for the imposition of a price ceiling to stop the spike in the
prices of goods and to mount a no-nonsense campaign against cartels and
smuggling.
“We
all know there are cartels that control the prices of prime commodities. We
alrady passed a law against agriculture smuggling… but sadly, nobody has been
punished under this law,” she said.
Villar
also stressed the need to implement “measures that will make the produce of
Filipino farmers and fisherfolk competitive in this age of liberalization.”
“We
need intervention from government that will provide an alternative source of
income for fishermen when we close the fishing grounds and allow the catch to
recover. To encourage inland production of fish, we need to strengthen our
fingerlings distribution program,” she said.
In
the case of rice farmers, Villar said mechanization will substantially reduce
the cost of producing palay and farming with inbred seeds will improve the
yield from four to six metric tons per hectare.
Under
a rice tariff bill Villar will sponsor in the Senate, a P10-billion Rice
Competitive Enhancement Fund will be created to bankroll programs designed to
improve farmers’ productivity.
But
Piñol said the only way to curb rice smuggling in the south and to stabilize
prices was to let smugglers bring their shipments to a trading center.
“We
are left with two options: We either allow smuggling to continue and just close
our eyes, or we take full control of the situation. We set up a rice trading
center,” he said.
He
said this would let the government control the volume of rice entering the
southern part of the country, and can let in just enough for the needs of the
Zambasulta area, so that farmers on the mainland of Mindanao are not hurt by
the entry of cheap, smuggled rice.
'Fumigate
the bigger pests' in rice crisis: hoarders, price speculators
Mara Cepeda
Published 3:25 PM, August 30, 2018
Updated 3:25 PM, August 30, 2018
RICE CRISIS. House Majority
Leader Rolando Andaya says the government should go after rice hoarders and
price speculators. File photo by Angie de Silva/Rappler
MANILA, Philippines – House
Majority Leader Rolando Andaya urged the government to go after rice hoarders
and price speculators as parts of the country continue to face a rice crisis.
"Tirisin din ang mga mas
malaking bukbok – ang mga price speculators and hoarders (Crush the bigger pests – the price speculators and
hoarders). They should be fumigated and flushed out of the system," said
Andaya in a statement on Thursday, August 30.
The Camarines Sur 1st District
representative made the statement after Makabayan bloc lawmakers filed two
resolutions calling for separate congressional probes into the importation of rice
infested with weevils or bukbokfrom Thailand as well as the rice shortage in Zamboanga
City.
Zamboanga City was placed under
a state of calamitybecause of the rice shortage, which drove up commercial
rice prices to as much as P70 per kilo in remote villages.
Andaya also called on the Senate
to pass the bill seeking to replace quantitative restrictions on rice imports
with the imposition of tariffs or taxes. The House already approved the measure on 3rd and final reading.
But Andaya said the rice
tariffication bill is just one way to make rice affordable and abundant.
He suggested that the government
institutionalize a "rules-based system" of importing rice and
thoroughly assess the Department of Agriculture's overall public spending on
food security.
"The long-term view is to
stick to the existing road map for food security. Let us fund and implement it
so there will be no repeat of the turbulence rocking the rice sector,"
said Andaya. – Rappler.com
https://www.rappler.com/business/210740-fumigate-bigger-pests-rice-crisis-hoarders-price-speculators
Ex-technocrats join call for abolition of NFA
August 30, 2018 | 9:52 pm
WORKERS display the 10-kilo
repacked NFA rice which sells for P360 a sack at a stall inside the Pritil
Public Market
in Tondo, Manila. The 10-kilo sack offers P36 per kilo NFA rice to consumers is
part of the “Tulong sa Bayan” affordable rice program of the Department of
Agriculture. — PHILSTAR/MIGUEL DE GUZMAN
By Reicelene Joy N.
Ignacio
THE Foundation for Economic
Freedom said on Thursday that it is throwing its support behind Senators
Cynthia A. Villar and Sherwin T. Gatchalian, who have called for the abolition
of the National Food Authority.
In a statement, the FEF, whose
members include prominent former economic ministers, said that the “NFA has
caused and aggravated rice inflation and rice shortages in several regions,
compounded the debt and losses of the national government, and provided
opportunities for graft and corruption for its officers and employees, from the
purchase of imported rice to the distribution and transportation of subsidized
rice.”
According to the FEF, which tends
to support free-market economic policies, food security does not depend on the
existence of the NFA, and a smaller agency can be created to manage and
maintain buffer stocks of rice to prevent shortages that raise prices.
“[T]he NFA has been inefficient
and clueless on the right timing for importing rice and its distribution. The
private sector should be free to import rice from any source in whatever
quantities the market needs. This is the only solution to the current rice
shortage crisis and to the pervasive malnutrition caused by high food prices,”
the FEF said.
The FEF called for the immediate
passage of the rice tariffication bill by the House of Representatives and in
the Senate.
“We support a version of the bill
that will abolish the National Food Authority and its powers, including
imposing import quotas on the private sector in the importation of rice and
licensing traders and importers,” FEF said.
The NFA has said that it used its
funds to repay maturing loans and avoid paying higher interest rates, limiting
its ability to purchase rice from farmers.
“Our funds are committed to
paying off maturing loans,” NFA Spokesperson Rex C. Estoperez said in a phone
interview.
“The funds are all accounted
for,” Mr. Estoperez added, adding that heavier interest payments would affect
the financial capacity of the NFA if these are not paid.
Meanwhile, in a chance interview
on the sidelines of the 14th Agriculture and Fisheries
Technology Forum and Product Exhibition in Mandaluong, Ms. Villar said that the
NFA should not have used the funds to repay debt but to maintain buffer stocks
to prevent supply problems, particularly in the supply of low-cost rice, which
poor families depend on.
“The NFA was given a P7-billion
budget and they did not buy from farmers,” Ms. Villar said.
“Those funds were not intended
for paying down debt, they should have used it for buffer stock to enable the
agency to sell low-cost rice and keep traders from controlling the supply of
rice,” Ms. Villar added.
Ms. Villar, who chairs the
Senate’s committee on agriculture and food, apologized for the rising price of
rice.
“I think we have failed in our
job to serve our fellow Filipinos. I am apologizing on behalf of the Department
of Agriculture, the National Food Authority and the Department of Trade and
Industry for failing to control the spiraling price of rice,” Ms. Villar said
in her speech during the forum.
In a statement, the NFA said some
local shortages were beyond its control.
“The rice crisis in Zamboanga
happened not because of NFA’s inefficiency or incompetence. It was due to the
significant depletion of commercial rice stocks; the unavailability of
commercial rice sources due to the closure of the Malaysian border which led to
the sudden price surge; and the declaration of a State of Calamity in Zamboanga
City to allow the local government to control rice prices and purchase buffer
stocks using calamity funds,” NFA said.
“We are open for scrutiny
anytime. Those who want to verify what we have been doing can check our
records, go around the country and ask the people. For the first time in many
years, indigenous peoples, small farmers, fisherfolk, island dwellers, the
urban poor, those living in resettlement areas — the real marginalized sectors
of our society — are happy and thankful that they have access to quality,
low-priced NFA rice,” it added.
NFA also said it received P5.1
billion in subsidies from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) based
on a Notice of Cash Allocation issued on Feb. 24, 2017. Of the total, the
Bureau of Treasury (BTr) automatically deducted 10% or P510 million as payment
for previous years’ guarantee fees while P2.5-billion represented its annual
contribution to servicing the P8 billion worth of 10-year Treasury Bonds issued
to finance the NFA in February 2008.
The agency said that it received
on March 1, 2017 net proceeds of P2.09-billion.
“The 2.09 billion net subsidy was
used to pay for importation and palay procurement, which is in
accordance with the General Appropriations Act. In fact, the subsidy fell short
as NFA’s total cost of importation in 2017 amounted to P5.2 billion pesos,” NFA
added.
We deserve better! Jojo Binay slams lazy,
inefficient presidential appointees amid rice crisis, NAIA runway mess
On Aug 30, 2018
It’s time to appoint competent
managers and administrators instead of political allies to ensure efficient
operations of government offices, former Vice President Jojo Binay said
recently.
In his latest newspaper column,
Binay said many presidential appointees were clueless and inexperienced to lead
government departments and agencies.
He made the statement after
authorities struggled to handle the “pandemonium” at the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport caused by an airplane runway mishap as well as the weevil
infestation of rice imports.
“The public deserves better
governance. As taxpayers, they require better service from public servants.
They should not be at the mercy of the lazy, the clueless, and the
inefficient,” the former veep said.
“Unless we make these changes in
governance, we will always be asking what’s happening and who’s in charge,” he
said.
Gov’t sets 3-month price freeze, other
anti-inflation measures
August 31, 2018, 12:06 AM
PUNCHLINE
By FRED M. LOBO
The government and manufacturers
of basic necessities and prime commodities (BNPC) have agreed to hold off price
increases in the next three months or up to the end of the year.
Price freeze will be warmly
welcomed by long-suffering consumers.
***
Malacanang likewise
approved the suspension of special safeguard duty on onion and chicken imports
and close monitoring of government rice importation and distribution.
No more supply-price choke. Time
to mitigate soaring inflation.
***
Senator Cynthia Villar said
she will sponsor for plenary deliberations the rice tariffication measure
which will boost rice supply, and even led to the eventual abolition of the
erratic National Food Authority (NFA).
More open rice importation could
bring prices down, she said.
***
DTI Undersecretary for Consumer
Protection Group Ruth Castelo said BNPC manufacturers, representing the 235
items listed in the expanded suggested retail price (SRP), agreed in principle
to stop increasing their prices in the next three months or until December 30
this year.
Yes to corporate social
responsibility. No to greed and dizzying price increases.
***
“We requested manufacturers of
basic necessities and prime commodities to hold off any price increase at least
for the next three months. Response in principle is very positive…” said
Castelo.
“Not a moratorium” in violation
of the Price Act but a heeded appeal from government and Laban Konsyumer, she
said.
***
Castelo added that some
manufacturers even agreed to hold off SRP price increases until the first
quarter of next year.
“Our appeal is preferably until
next year.(So) some manufacturers will not increase their BNPC prices until
next year,” she added.
***
Castelo said that so far,
a firm commitment on price freeze was given by manufacturers of coffee,
noodles, laundry and bath soap, soy sauce, patis (fish sauce), vinegar,
bread and candles though manufacturers of canned sardines and meat have
yet to commit.
Coffee and noodles cheers! Let
other goods follow later.
***
The DTI confirmed that 40 percent
of items under the SRP list have earlier increased their prices.
No more price violations or face
the ire of consumers.
***
Meanwhile, presidential spokesman
Harry Roque said that the President’s economic managers, other Cabinet members,
and tariff authorities met recently and “ they decided to pursue (five)
measures to lower prices firstly by approving the importation of round scad.”
The importation of galunggong
gets priority.
***
Roque added the
government would also temporarily suspend the special safeguard duty on
imported chicken and onions.
In reduced price of onions,
there is strength, men would naughtily say.
***
Roque said Agriculture Sec.
Manuel Pinol also gave pork importers one month to maximize their
importation and told vegetable importers to submit to “regular inspections” of
their warehouses.
Yes to needed importation
but no to hoarding.
***
Roque also assured the
public there will “close monitoring” of rice importation and
distribution by the NFA in the wake of complaints that most imports have not
yet reached the market.
Yes to more cheaper rice. No to
memo-rice!
FMARD
sheds light on why Nigerian rice is expensive and scarce
The
Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has revealed and given
reasons for the scarcity and high price of the locally made rice in the market.
The
Ministry, on Wednesday August 29th, 2018 gave reasons for the scarcity as being
a disconnect between integrated rice millers and the supply chain.
Deputy
Director , Rice Value Chain in the ministry, Fatimah Aliyu whilst speaking at
the 2nd National Congress, Policy Dialogue and Inauguration of the Board of
Trustees of Rice Assured Advocacy Forum (RAAF), facilitated by John A. Kufuor
Foundation (JAKF).made this known in Abuja
She said
though there was a huge market for local rice, integrated millers were
reluctant to push out their products for fear of price competition with
imported rice.
Mrs
Aliyu was responding to complaints by representatives of some rice millers who
claimed that most Nigerians preferred imported rice to local rice because of
its cheap price.
The
millers blamed the high price of local rice on production cost, resulting from
poor power supply, high transport fare and smuggling of foreign rice.
Mrs.
Aliyu said;
“There
is market for Nigerian rice. There are people willing to pay the high price for
it because of its high nutritional value, but they cannot get it to buy. There
is that market disconnect that has to be looked into’’
She
urged stakeholders in the rice value chain under the RAAF’s platform to
brainstorm on the issue and come out with suggestions on how to tackle the
problem.
“We are
open to all those suggestions because it is part of policy advocacy.
“Once
you, the stakeholders, give us those suggestions, the government is going to
look at them because the situation is also a problem to the government.
“Integrated
millers have invested so much in the business, and even government has also
invested so much in it. So, it is of importance that integrated millers
succeed’’ she said.
The
first National Deputy President of RAAF, Rafau Lawal, called for a policy to
encourage consumption of Nigerian rice as is done in Tanzania and other
countries.
Mr Lawal
said that one of the policy measures being looked at was the branding of
Nigerian shops for local rice.
SMC’s parallel NFA
PERHAPS it’s about time we allow the private sector to take over
the rice business, which has been the source of grief for many millions while
making only a few cartelized traders, smugglers and crooked government
officials rich. And if tariffication, which allows anyone to import the staple,
becomes possible, the delicate balance of keeping both consumers and rice
farmers happy may just happen.By now, you’ve probably heard of San Miguel head
honcho’s proposal to build a spanking new P750-billion airport in Bulakan,
Bulacan. But the high-flying chieftain of the country’s biggest conglomerate
has also set his sights on the rice trading and distribution market, which he
promises to shake up by dramatically increasing the buying price of palay for
farmers while making significant imports from our rice-producing neighbors in
order to drive down the price of rice for consumers.
As Ang sees it, the mandate of the government as far as rice is
concerned is simple: keep enough farmers planting more and more rice to improve
production while sparing consumers the spikes caused by reduced supply and
cartelization that causes price manipulation.
Ang’s SMC knows all about purchasing, storing and contracting
staples, through the supply chain built by its B-Meg feeds outfit and the
contracting of poultry and other meat growers in order to supply its Purefoods
unit.
San Miguel’s network of storage silos and buying stations is very
much like a parallel National Food Authority (only with a lot more money), with
facilities from the farthest points north of the country in Luzon to its
southernmost tip in Mindanao.
SMC also processes 5 million tons annually of corn, sorghum and
other imported grains to create its food products and animal feeds in a
Batangas facility. In the coming years, according to Ang, San Miguel intends to
double the capacity of its feed mills and silos in order to expand importation
of such commodities for its food and feed business.
In other words, San Miguel, an acknowledged leader in the food and
feed businesses, knows all about telling farmers to grow stuff for profit and
about importing and storing grains. And with impending tariffication of rice
which will allow anyone to import the staple — the proposed enabling law for
this scheme has just passed the House of Representatives on third and final
reading — SMC, more than any other business, seems ready to capitalize.
But going into the rice business is not strictly a for-profit move
for Ang and his diversified conglomerate. Because of his knowledge and
experience in contract growing and grains trading, he is surprised that the
government cannot simply hike the buying price of palay to benefit farmers and
import more cheap rice from Vietnam and Cambodia to flood the market and keep
prices stable.
According to Ang, the government could easily expand its budget
for the purchase of rice if it was really serious about attracting more farmers
to plant the staple, instead of spending for things like the expanded
Unconditional Cash Transfer dole-out program. By his estimate, if San Miguel
more than doubled the NFA’s palay buying price of P17 a kilo and bought the
unmilled harvest at P40, it would ensure that farmers would keep planting in
the years to come.
If the farmers are given a 10-percent yearly increase in their
target harvest every year for 10 years, that would mean that SMC-contacted rice
farmers would double their production in a decade. And the country’s food
security would be assured, besides.
As far as importing rice is concerned, Ang has an even better
idea: By importing rice in bulk (without sacks), he says that milled rice can
be purchased from Vietnam and Cambodia at half the price of retail in places
like Metro Manila. Because he checks regularly on grains prices, the SMC boss
knows exactly what the price of rice is in big producers like Indochina — and
that the cause of the markup for imported varieties is the sacks used in
packaging.
Imagine that: the sacks that imported rice comes in immediately
double the price. If people were encouraged to bring their own containers or if
retail outlets used cheaper packaging, the price of rice would go down very
significantly, Ang believes.
“The idea is to keep prices low and stable for consumers by buying
cheaper in bulk from abroad, while ensuring food security and happy farmers by
purchasing their produce at significantly higher prices, if they increase
production consistently,” said Ang. “With tariffication, we can enter the
market and do exactly that.”
The government has, for many decades since the postwar period,
thrown immense resources at the rice problem, with so little to show for it by
way of stable prices or increased food security. Maybe, just like San Miguel’s
Bulacan airport proposal, this is an idea whose time has finally come.
* * *
Yesterday was the 84th birth anniversary of the greatest media
owner I have ever had the pleasure of working with – the late Antonio L.
Cabangon Chua. Ambassador Cabangon Chua was the owner of Aliw Broadcasting
Corp., which is probably more known to most people as AM radio station dwIZ
882, where I have been hosting the popular “Karambola” program with Conrad
Banal, Jonathan de la Cruz, RJ “Thinking Pinoy” Nieto and Trixie Cruz Angeles
since the beginning of 2015.
As someone who’s been toiling for more than 30 years in media,
I’ve seen all sorts of owners of media enterprises. Without disrespecting these
fine, committed people, I think Tony Cabangon Chua is still ahead as far as
supporting his workers by giving them everything they need to get the job done
and standing by them when terrible political and other forces are brought to
bear in order to shut them up.
It’s people like Ambassador Cabangon Chua (and The Manila Times
Chairman Emeritus Dante A. Ang) who keep enterprising journalism alive. And one
day, if I’m up to it, I shall reveal specific incidents of how great media
owners helped nurture my own career as a lifelong journalist.
Maraming salamat po, Amba.
Blame Rice Millers For Scarcity Of Local Rice In Market – Ministry
August 29, 2018
Ministry
of Agriculture
The Federal Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development said the scarcity of local rice in Nigerian
markets should be tied to disconnect between integrated rice millers and the
supply chain.
Deputy Director, Rice Value Chain
in the ministry, Fatimah Aliyu, stated this in Abuja.
Aliyu spoke at the 2nd National
Congress, Policy Dialogue and Inauguration of the Board of Trustees of Rice
Assured Advocacy Forum (RAAF), facilitated by John A. Kufuor Foundation (JAKF).
She said though there was huge
market for the local rice, integrated millers were reluctant to push out their
products for fear of price competition with imported rice.
Aliyu was responding to
complaints by representatives of some rice millers who claimed that most
Nigerians preferred imported rice to local rice because of its cheap price.
“There is market for Nigerian
rice. There are people willing to pay the high price for it because of its high
nutritional value, but they cannot get it to buy.
“There is that market disconnect
that has to be looked into,’’ Aliyu said.
She urged stakeholders in the
rice value chain under the RAAF’s platform to brainstorm on the issue and come
out with suggestions on how to tackle the problem.
“We are open to all those
suggestions because it is part of policy advocacy.
“Once you, the stakeholders, give
us those suggestions, government is going to look at them because the situation
is also a problem to government.
“Integrated millers have invested
so much in the business, and even government has also invested so much in it.
So, it is of importance that integrated millers succeed,’’ she said.
However, the millers blamed the
high price of local rice on production cost, resulting from poor power supply,
high transport fare and smuggling of foreign rice.
https://www.concisenews.global/2018/08/29/blame-rice-millers-for-scarcity-of-local-rice-in-market-ministry/
CIBIL score mandatory for milling govt
paddy in Punjab
PTI August
30, 2018 22:52 IST
Chandigarh, Aug 30 (PTI) Rice millers, desirous of milling government paddy in
Punjab, should have a CIBIL score not less than 600 and should also submit
credit report, according to a new custom milling paddy policy.
The decision is aimed to check allotment of government paddy to non-eligible rice millers.
Punjab cabinet led by Chief Minister Amarinder Singh today gave nod to the new policy, with the aim of ensuring seamless procurement of paddy from farmers and delivery of rice into the Central Pool from more than 3,710 mills operating in the state.
"To strictly check allotment of government paddy to non-eligible parties for the first time ever, the millers would be mandatorily required to submit a certified credit report, along with complete Credit Information Bureau India Limited (CIBIL) report for all their financial transactions from their bankers for this purpose.
The miller desirous of doing milling of government paddy should have a CIBIL score not below 600 and CIBIL Micro, Medium and Small Enterprises Rank (CMR) should be 6 or lower," according to an official spokesperson.
In addition, the miller would have to submit a bank guarantee equal to the value of five per cent of acquisition cost of total paddy to be stored in mill premises, he said.
The scheme for Custom Milling of Kharif 2018-19 paddy would be followed by all the procuring agencies -- PUNGRAIN, MARKFED, PUNSUP, Punjab State Warehousing Corporation (PSWC), Punjab Agro Foodgrains Corporation (PAFC), including Food Corporation of India and the rice millers with the Department of Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Punjab acting as the nodal department.
A spokesperson said the sole criterion for allotment of free paddy to mills during Kharif marketing season 2018-19 would be the miller's performance in the previous year and an additional percentage-wise incentive would be provided to mills as per their date of delivery of rice against milling of custom milled paddy.
Mills which had completed their milling by January31, 2018 would be eligible for additional 15 per cent of free paddy, the spokesperson said, adding that those who had completed delivery of rice by February 28, 2018 would get an additional 10 per cent of free paddy.
For the first time, mills with dryers and sortexes already installed in the premises would be eligible for five per cent additional allocation of paddy on account of each separately, the spokesperson added.
The newly established rice mills shall be allocated 2,500 MTs of paddy for one tonne capacity with subsequent allocation of additional 500 MTs of paddy for every additional tonne of capacity, subject to maximum allocation of 4,000 MTs.
The state was expected to procure 190 Lakh metric tonne of paddy and the target was to complete the Custom Milling of Paddy, thereby delivering all due rice to Food Corporation of India, by March 31, 2019.
Under the milling schedule prescribed, millers would have to deliver 35 per cent of their total rice due by December 31, 2018 and 60 per cent of total rice due by January 1, 2019; 80 per cent of total rice due by February 29, 2019 and total rice due by 31st March, 2019.
For time-bound redressal of any dispute, a first-time provision of an Arbitral panel of three arbitrators has been made in the policy. PTI CHS MKJ
The decision is aimed to check allotment of government paddy to non-eligible rice millers.
Punjab cabinet led by Chief Minister Amarinder Singh today gave nod to the new policy, with the aim of ensuring seamless procurement of paddy from farmers and delivery of rice into the Central Pool from more than 3,710 mills operating in the state.
"To strictly check allotment of government paddy to non-eligible parties for the first time ever, the millers would be mandatorily required to submit a certified credit report, along with complete Credit Information Bureau India Limited (CIBIL) report for all their financial transactions from their bankers for this purpose.
The miller desirous of doing milling of government paddy should have a CIBIL score not below 600 and CIBIL Micro, Medium and Small Enterprises Rank (CMR) should be 6 or lower," according to an official spokesperson.
In addition, the miller would have to submit a bank guarantee equal to the value of five per cent of acquisition cost of total paddy to be stored in mill premises, he said.
The scheme for Custom Milling of Kharif 2018-19 paddy would be followed by all the procuring agencies -- PUNGRAIN, MARKFED, PUNSUP, Punjab State Warehousing Corporation (PSWC), Punjab Agro Foodgrains Corporation (PAFC), including Food Corporation of India and the rice millers with the Department of Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Punjab acting as the nodal department.
A spokesperson said the sole criterion for allotment of free paddy to mills during Kharif marketing season 2018-19 would be the miller's performance in the previous year and an additional percentage-wise incentive would be provided to mills as per their date of delivery of rice against milling of custom milled paddy.
Mills which had completed their milling by January31, 2018 would be eligible for additional 15 per cent of free paddy, the spokesperson said, adding that those who had completed delivery of rice by February 28, 2018 would get an additional 10 per cent of free paddy.
For the first time, mills with dryers and sortexes already installed in the premises would be eligible for five per cent additional allocation of paddy on account of each separately, the spokesperson added.
The newly established rice mills shall be allocated 2,500 MTs of paddy for one tonne capacity with subsequent allocation of additional 500 MTs of paddy for every additional tonne of capacity, subject to maximum allocation of 4,000 MTs.
The state was expected to procure 190 Lakh metric tonne of paddy and the target was to complete the Custom Milling of Paddy, thereby delivering all due rice to Food Corporation of India, by March 31, 2019.
Under the milling schedule prescribed, millers would have to deliver 35 per cent of their total rice due by December 31, 2018 and 60 per cent of total rice due by January 1, 2019; 80 per cent of total rice due by February 29, 2019 and total rice due by 31st March, 2019.
For time-bound redressal of any dispute, a first-time provision of an Arbitral panel of three arbitrators has been made in the policy. PTI CHS MKJ
https://www.theweek.in/wire-updates/business/2018/08/30/nrg41-cibil-paddy-millers.htmls
Why Nigerian rice is expensive, scarce – Govt
The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development on
Wednesday blamed the scarcity of local rice in Nigerian markets to disconnect
between integrated rice millers and the supply chain.
Fatimah Aliyu, a Deputy Director, Rice Value Chain in the ministry,
stated this in Abuja.
Mrs Aliyu spoke at the 2nd National Congress, Policy Dialogue
and Inauguration of the Board of Trustees of Rice Assured Advocacy Forum
(RAAF), facilitated by John A. Kufuor Foundation (JAKF).
She said though there was a huge market for local rice,
integrated millers were reluctant to push out their products for fear of price
competition with imported rice.
Mrs Aliyu was responding to complaints by representatives of
some rice millers who claimed that most Nigerians preferred imported rice to
local rice because of its cheap price.
The millers blamed the high price of local rice on production
cost, resulting from poor power supply, high transport fare and smuggling of
foreign rice.
“There is market for Nigerian rice. There are people willing to
pay the high price for it because of its high nutritional value, but they
cannot get it to buy. There is that market disconnect that has to be looked
into,’’ Mrs Aliyu said.
She urged stakeholders in the rice value chain under the RAAF’s
platform to brainstorm on the issue and come out with suggestions on how to
tackle the problem.
“We are open to all those suggestions because it is part of
policy advocacy.
“Once you, the stakeholders, give us those suggestions, the
government is going to look at them because the situation is also a problem to
the government.
“Integrated millers have invested so much in the business, and
even government has also invested so much in it. So, it is of importance that
integrated millers succeed,’’ she said.
The first National Deputy President of RAAF, Rafau Lawal, called
for a policy to encourage consumption of Nigerian rice as is done in Tanzania
and other countries.
Mr Lawal said that one of the policy measures being looked at
was the branding of Nigerian shops for local rice.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that RAAF is a national
dialogue platform, aimed at harmonising rice value chain actors in Nigeria to
advocate for better policies in the sector.
It was set up during the first phase of the Competitive African
Rice Initiative (CARI), between June 2014 and June 2018.
The platforms are currently operating in 17 states in the
country. (NAN)
https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/281773-why-nigerian-rice-are-expensive-scarce-govt.html
Poisonous Rice: Ebonyi
Reopens Abakaliki Rice Mill After Sanitation
The Ebonyi government on Thursday ordered the re-opening of the
Abakaliki Rice Mill Limited two days after it was sealed following alleged
poisonous bags of rice that were discovered in the mill.
The Ebonyi government on Thursday
ordered the re-opening of the Abakaliki Rice Mill Limited two days after it was
sealed following alleged poisonous bags of rice that were discovered in the
mill.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Governor David Umahi ordered the sealing of the mill on Tuesday, after the state ministry of environment received reports and subsequently discovered bags of rice allegedly labeled ‘not fit for human consumption’ inside the mill.
Dr Kenneth Ugbala, Leader of the inter-ministerial committee, set up by the government to investigate the matter, told newsmen at a news conference in Abakaliki on Thursday that the mill will re-open immediately.
Ugbala, who is also Governor David Umahi’s Senior Special Assistant on Internal Security, said that the mill was reopened because it had been sanitised, the poisonous products confiscated and culpable shops sealed.
He said: “The committee alongside experts and security agencies evacuated the adulterated products from the affected shops and generally sanitised the mill with security agencies making some arrests.
“The state governor reopened the mill to save innocent millers and buyers from untold economic losses and also due to the mill’s importance to the state’s economic survival.
“Ebonyi citizens and buyers from across the country are hereby assured that the suspected products have been identified and evacuated, so they could freely process and purchase rice from the mill.”
The committee leader said that the shops where the poisonous products were confiscated would remain shut till all investigations are concluded.
Ugbala said: “Citizens who purchased rice from the mill within the period under scrutiny should present such products to the concerned ministries of health, agriculture, environment among others, for thorough screening.
“The government expresses serious disappointment with the mill’s leadership and subsequently suspends it for failing to be an effective liaison between the mill and the government.
“The disappointment is more profound because some of the shops where the poisonous products were discovered allegedly belonged to some leaders of the mill.
“We will consult adequately to appoint a caretaker leadership for it.”
He debunked the notion that the matter was aimed at witch-hunting the Mill’s Chairman, Joseph Ununu for winning a mock-delegate election.
Ununu is contesting the Abakaliki state constituency seat at the state House of Assembly under the Peoples Democratic Party.
He said: “No member of the committee is from Ununu’s state constituency or even local government area as issues of delegates’ election are entirely the party’s affairs.
“We have also not received any formal notification that he is presently declared missing by his relatives as the entire mill’s leadership was suspended and not only one person.”
Chief Donatus Njoku, the State Commissioner for Environment, disclosed that a total of 317 bags were confiscated from 10 shops at the mill during the committee’s screening exercise.
Njoku said: “Two shops identified to be using substandard weight measurements were also sealed alongside those where the poisonous products were found until all investigations are concluded.”
Prof. Fidelis Okpata, Deputy Chief of Staff to the Governor, assured the public that any government official found culpable in the matter would be punished no matter how highly placed.
Okpata said: “This is a responsible government which will not mortgage the lives of its citizens for the unwholesome commercial dealings of few individuals or groups.”
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Governor David Umahi ordered the sealing of the mill on Tuesday, after the state ministry of environment received reports and subsequently discovered bags of rice allegedly labeled ‘not fit for human consumption’ inside the mill.
Dr Kenneth Ugbala, Leader of the inter-ministerial committee, set up by the government to investigate the matter, told newsmen at a news conference in Abakaliki on Thursday that the mill will re-open immediately.
Ugbala, who is also Governor David Umahi’s Senior Special Assistant on Internal Security, said that the mill was reopened because it had been sanitised, the poisonous products confiscated and culpable shops sealed.
He said: “The committee alongside experts and security agencies evacuated the adulterated products from the affected shops and generally sanitised the mill with security agencies making some arrests.
“The state governor reopened the mill to save innocent millers and buyers from untold economic losses and also due to the mill’s importance to the state’s economic survival.
“Ebonyi citizens and buyers from across the country are hereby assured that the suspected products have been identified and evacuated, so they could freely process and purchase rice from the mill.”
The committee leader said that the shops where the poisonous products were confiscated would remain shut till all investigations are concluded.
Ugbala said: “Citizens who purchased rice from the mill within the period under scrutiny should present such products to the concerned ministries of health, agriculture, environment among others, for thorough screening.
“The government expresses serious disappointment with the mill’s leadership and subsequently suspends it for failing to be an effective liaison between the mill and the government.
“The disappointment is more profound because some of the shops where the poisonous products were discovered allegedly belonged to some leaders of the mill.
“We will consult adequately to appoint a caretaker leadership for it.”
He debunked the notion that the matter was aimed at witch-hunting the Mill’s Chairman, Joseph Ununu for winning a mock-delegate election.
Ununu is contesting the Abakaliki state constituency seat at the state House of Assembly under the Peoples Democratic Party.
He said: “No member of the committee is from Ununu’s state constituency or even local government area as issues of delegates’ election are entirely the party’s affairs.
“We have also not received any formal notification that he is presently declared missing by his relatives as the entire mill’s leadership was suspended and not only one person.”
Chief Donatus Njoku, the State Commissioner for Environment, disclosed that a total of 317 bags were confiscated from 10 shops at the mill during the committee’s screening exercise.
Njoku said: “Two shops identified to be using substandard weight measurements were also sealed alongside those where the poisonous products were found until all investigations are concluded.”
Prof. Fidelis Okpata, Deputy Chief of Staff to the Governor, assured the public that any government official found culpable in the matter would be punished no matter how highly placed.
Okpata said: “This is a responsible government which will not mortgage the lives of its citizens for the unwholesome commercial dealings of few individuals or groups.”
https://theeagleonline.com.ng/poisonous-rice-ebonyi-reopens-abakaliki-rice-mill-after-sanitation/
Why local
rice is scarce in markets, by ministry
Our ReporterOn: August 30, 2018 In: News, News Update
The Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development yesterday blamed the scarcity of local rice in the markets to
disconnect between integrated rice millers and the supply chain.
The ministry’s Deputy Director,
Rice Value Chain, Mrs Fatimah Aliyu spoke at the 2nd National Congress, Policy
Dialogue and Inauguration of the Board of Trustees of Rice Assured Advocacy
Forum (RAAF), facilitated by John A. Kufuor Foundation (JAKF).
She said though there was huge
market for the local rice, integrated millers were reluctant to push out their
products for fear of price competition with imported rice.
Aliyu was responding to
complaints by representatives of some rice millers, who claimed that most
Nigerians preferred imported rice to local rice because of its cheap price.
The millers blamed the high price
of local rice on production cost, resulting from poor power supply, high
transport fare and smuggling of foreign rice.
“There is market for Nigerian
rice. There are people willing to pay the high price for it because of its high
nutritional value, but they cannot get it to buy. There is that market
disconnect that has to be looked into,’’ Aliyu said.
She urged stakeholders in the
rice value chain under the RAAF’s platform to brainstorm on the issue and come
out with suggestions on how to tackle the problem.
“We are open to all those
suggestions because it is part of policy advocacy. Once you, the stakeholders,
give us those suggestions, government is going to look at them because the
situation is also a problem to government.
“Integrated millers have invested
so much in the business, and even government has also invested so much in it.
So, it is of importance that integrated millers succeed,’’ she said.
RAAF National Deputy President
Alhaji Rafau Lawal, called for a policy to encourage consumption of local rice
as is done in Tanzania and other countries.
Lawal said one of the policy
measures being looked at was the branding of Nigerian shops for local rice.
http://thenationonlineng.net/why-local-rice-is-scarce-in-markets-by-ministry/
|
Katy Rice
Festival
Friday, October 12 – Sunday, October 14, 2018901 Avenue C.
The City of Katy will be hosting the 2018 Katy Rice Festival the 2nd weekend in October in Downtown Historic Katy. The event will be a first-class, family-friendly event featuring quality art & craft vendors, excellent live music and food options, beer garden and carnival. They are also bringing back some great aspects of the festival – the rice cooking competition and student arts competition – and implementing new aspects to the event; it will be fun for the whole family and promises to bring big crowds! But the best part is that ALL proceeds will be given back to the community in student scholarships and local charities through the Rotary Club of Katy.
The weekend starts on Friday, October 12 as the event kicks off with an “Octoberfest” style evening – live music, food trucks, beer garden and carnival (no art & craft vendors) – from 6-11 PM and is free to the public. Saturday, October 13 will begin with a parade at 9 AM and then gates to the festival will be open from 10 AM-10 PM (admission is $5/adult and kids 12 & under are free). On Sunday, October 14 the festival will be open from 12-6 PM (admission is $5/adult and kids 12 & under are free).
Come visit us and enjoy of this iconic festival in Downtown Historic Katy!
October 12th 2018 Posted
to City
of Katy Events,Community
Events,Events in Katy
Texas,Family
Events,Holiday
Events,Pet
Events,Visual
& Performing Arts Events | Comments
Off on Katy Rice Festival |
http://www.katymagazine.com/katy-rice-festival/
Rice bran
oil: exports on the rise
12:00
AM, August 30, 2018 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:33 AM, August 30, 2018
Bangladesh's rice bran oil is
gradually making headway in the international market thanks to manufactures'
efforts to sell the antioxidant-rich edible oil abroad.
The country shipped more than
20,000 tonnes of rice bran oil for the second consecutive fiscal year in
2017-18.
They exported the item to more than
a dozen countries, including India, the US, the UK, Australia and Japan in
2017-18, fetching $21 million, according to the Export Promotion Bureau.
Some manufacturers said the
prospect of edible oil exports is bright provided a smooth supply chain of rice
bran is developed, and logistics, ports and other infrastructures are improved.
“We are mainly exporting to India
as demand is higher there compared to our domestic market,” said Chitta
Majumder, managing director of Majumder Group of industries that runs two rice
bran oil plants.
Majumder, one of the leading rice
millers and importers, has been exporting rice bran oil in crude form since
2014.
Some other firms such as Agrotech
International Ltd (AIL) and traders export the oil, which is popular in Asian
countries such as Japan, India, Korea and China.
The export volume of rice bran oil
was 17,515 tonnes in 2015-16, according to data from the plant quarantine wing
under the Department of Agricultural Extension.
The export volume reached that
level in less than a decade after some local rice millers joined the foray to
extract oil from rice bran, banking on Bangladesh's strides in rice yield.
Today the sector, which began its
journey in 2009, has 14 firms with an annual production capacity of more than
2.50 lakh tonnes of rice brain oil. Yet, the active mills cannot use the full
capacity because of the dearth of supply of raw materials.
A study by the Bangladesh Tariff
Commission (BTC) in 2015 found that the industry needs about 13 lakh tonnes of
rice bran to make the most of the capacity.
But it does not get the required
amount due to the export of rice bran or the demand of the feed industry.
The study said conversion of manual
rice mills to auto- and semi-auto rice mills will increase the production of
rice bran, meeting the requirement of extraction plants serving domestic and
overseas markets.
If 100 percent of the paddy is
processed by auto- and semi-auto rice mills, 7.16 lakh tonnes of refined rice
bran oil might be obtained, according to a paper published in the Bangladesh
Journal of Tariff and Trade by the BTC.
“Availability of rice bran is not
an issue; the main problem is supply chain of rice bran is not well-established
in our country,” said Moinul Hasan, controller of finance of AIL, which has
been exporting rice bran oil since 2015. It takes three to five days to load a
truck with 15 tonnes of rice bran. Besides, not all rice bran is suitable for
extracting oil, he said, adding that the production of milled rice and rice
bran will increase through the modernisation of rice mills.
Hasan said the domestic demand for
the edible oil is growing thanks to the expanding middle- and upper
middle-income groups.“Export potential is bright if we can ensure quality. But
the main challenge is the country's image,” he said.
“Building capacity to deliver the item
in large quantities and improving the country's image are key to tapping the
export market.”
Hasan said some buyers are doubtful
about local millers' capacity to deliver a higher volume at a time.
“Our logistics and infrastructure
is weak, which affects buyers' confidence,” said Hasan, citing that the company
could not send a consignment to South Korea on time last month because of the
congestion at the Chittagong Port.
Osman Ali of Mim International said
his firm exports both rice bran and crude rice bran oil through Benapole land
port when it finds higer prices in India.
Refined rice bran oil faces higher
tax in India compared to that of crude oil, added Ali. Mim International
exported 500 tonnes of crude rice bran oil in 2017.
Majumder called for cash incentives
to increase the export of rice bran oil.
https://www.thedailystar.net/news/business/rice-bran-oil-exports-the-rise-1626550
Asia Rice: India rates dip as rupee flounders; markets eye Philippine
boost
AUGUST
30, 2018 / 6:15 PM /
BENGALURU
(Reuters) - A dip in rice export prices as the rupee plunged failed to stoke
fresh demand for the Indian variety this week, but potential orders from the
Philippines and elsewhere could provide fresh impetus to markets in Thailand
and Vietnam.
FILE
PHOTO: Farmers plant saplings in a rice field in Srinagar June 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Danish Ismail/File Photo
In
top exporter India, rates for 5 percent broken parboiled rice fell by $3 to
$386-$390 per tonne this week.The Indian rupee has fallen over 10 percent in
2018, hitting a record low on Thursday, increasing exporters margin from
overseas sales.“Right now, demand is weak. Even after the recent price fall,
African buyers are not active in the market,” said an exporter based at
Kakinada in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.India’s rice exports in
April-July edged up 1 percent from a year ago to 4.15 million tonnes on upbeat
demand from Senegal, Benin and Iran, a government body said.
In
Thailand, a stronger domestic currency saw benchmark 5 percent broken rice
quoted at $393-$395, free on board (FOB) Bangkok, narrowing slightly from last
week’s $390-$395, traders said.“We heard nothing about any new deals but some
exporters are expecting things to pick up next month from markets in this
region like the Philippines and China,” a Bangkok-based trader said.The
Philippines will import an additional 132,000 tonnes of rice to boost stocks in
southern provinces, where prices have surged in recent weeks due to limited
supply, its agriculture minister said on Wednesday.The Philippines, one of the
world’s biggest rice importers, usually buys from top producers Thailand and
Vietnam.
In
Vietnam, rates for 5 percent broken rice remained unchanged at $395-$400 a
tonne, but prices are expected to pick up over the coming weeks.“The
summer-autumn harvest has come to an end and we have heard about new orders
from regional customers,” a Ho Chi Minh City-based trader said.The government’s
General Statistics Office on Wednesday said farmers in the Mekong Delta
provinces have started growing rice for the autumn-winter crop, but prolonged
rains are slowing down sowing.Meanwhile, rice imports from Bangladesh are
expected to fall to 600,000 tonnes in the 2018-19 marketing year, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) said in a report this month.
“The
high rate of import duty may deter imports and increase paddy prices
indirectly, but it also may affect prices in the retail market and transfer the
burden to consumers,” the report said.Bangladesh, which had emerged as a major
rice importer since 2017 after floods damaged its crops, imposed a 28 percent
tax on rice imports to support its farmers after local production revived.Bangladesh
imported a record 3.9 million tonnes in 2017-18, food ministry data showed.
https://in.reuters.com/article/us-indonesia-markets-cenbank/indonesia-rupiah-nears-1998-crisis-levels-central-bank-intervenes-in-fx-bonds-markets-idINKCN1LG0ZG
Rice
paddies down in 2018: data
2018/08/30 12:00
SEJONG, Aug. 30 (Yonhap) -- Rice
paddies in South Korea declined 2.2 percent this year from last year as farmers
opted to grow other crops instead of the staple grain, data showed on Thursday.
According to the data compiled by
Statistics Korea, nationwide rice cultivation area stood at 737,000 hectares
this year, compared to 754,000 hectares in 2017.
The government has been prodding
farmers to convert their rice paddies into fields for the cultivation of other
crops as part of a greater effort to deal with a chronic supply glut.
South Korea has been suffering from
an oversupply of rice for years. The annual rice consumption of the South
Korean population has been on a sharp decline due mainly to changes in diet and
eating habits.
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2018/08/30/0200000000AEN20180830003300320.htm
No notable changes in new rice export regulations
The
new Decree 107/2018/ND-CP on rice export operations, which will take effect on
October 1, has yet to remove all barriers hindering local rice traders from
exporting rice. The new rules are more relaxed, but they do not introduce
significant changes.
Commenting
on the new rules, Dau Anh Tuan, head of the Legal Department at the Vietnam
Chamber of Commerce and Industry, remarked that the latest decree has relaxed
some stringent regulations, enabling rice exporters to operate more easily.
The
new decree allows rice exporters to hire at least one warehouse and one milling
facility in accordance with national standards and reduces the volume of stored
rice, creating more favorable conditions for medium and small-sized enterprises
(SMEs) as they need not invest a large sum of money in building processing facilities
to set up their businesses.
The
rental contracts must be signed for a minimum of five years and must have legal
documents in line with prevailing regulations. Traders receiving rice export
certificates must not sublease their facilities and warehouses to other
traders.
The
new decree also stipulates that the General Department of Vietnam Customs will
take over from the Vietnam Food and Foodstuff Association the responsibility of
sending periodically updated reports to the Ministry of Industry and Trade on
the quantity, value and types of rice sold as well as the target markets for
rice exports.
However,
Decree No.107 does not bring about significant changes to the methods of
managing rice processors and traders, Tuan noted. For instance, rice traders
will still need to seek approvals, prepare multiple reports and meet many other
requirements to start their businesses.
The
decree is partially beneficial to SMEs and firms exporting organic rice,
parboiled rice or nutritionally enhanced rice as they need not follow the new
rules and do not require rice export certificates.
According
to Vo Hung Dung, an agricultural expert, the new decree relaxes many rules but
is incomplete in its scope. He pointed out that it took eight years to issue
Decree No.109, which was unsatisfactory to several rice exporters and
associations for years, as they called for amendments to it. While the decree
was in effect, many rice traders missed the opportunity to export rice as they
had failed to meet the requirements of the old decree.
Data
from the Central Institute for Economic Management issued last year revealed
that after Decree No.109 took effect, the number of rice exporters plummeted
from more than 200 units to 145 firms, while the actual number could be lower.
Saigon
Times
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/207752/no-notable-changes-in-new-rice-export-regulations.html
Production and Trade
Flow Map: Tanzania Rice (August 2018)
MAP
About Production and Trade Flow
Maps
Production and Trade Flow Maps capture the market networks for a
product in a given country or region, including their catchments and trade flow
patterns. These maps are available for key products in most FEWS NET countries.
https://reliefweb.int/map/united-republic-tanzania/production-and-trade-flow-map-tanzania-rice-august-2018
Egypt agrees to import 1 million tons of rice from Vietnam over 3-4
months
Reuters , Thursday 30 Aug 2018
A farmer in a rice field in Vietnam (photo: Reuters)
Egypt has agreed with Vietnam to import 1 million tons of white
rice in three to four months after curtailing cultivation earlier this year,
the head of the rice division of the Egyptian Federation of Industries said on
Thursday.
"The visit of the President of Vietnam to Egypt resulted in
a trade cooperation agreement involving the supply of 1 million tons of white
rice, with the agreement coming into force next week," Rajab Shehata told
Reuters by telephone.
"These quantities are in batches of three to four months,
which will strengthen the strategic reserve of rice for the next year and the
presence of domestic rice stocks in the markets."
In an attempt to rationalize the use of water resources, Egypt
this year reduced the area allowed for rice cultivation and imposed tough new
penalties on farmers who cultivate it illegally.
Traders said the policies would most likely push Egypt to import
up to 1 million tons of rice next year after decades of surplus domestic
production.
"Importation will be the responsibility of the government,
not the private sector," Shehata said.
He did not mention the price of Vietnamese rice but said it
would be cheaper than the rice imported from China.
Egypt consumes about 3.3 million tons of rice annually, and
still expects to cover most of that amount through local harvest, which is
usually done in August and September.
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/310552.aspx
Rice Export Price Dips As Rupee Fall Fails To Boost Demand
India's rice exports in April-July edged up 1 per cent from a year ago
to 4.15 million tonnes on upbeat demand from Senegal, Benin and Iran.
Economy | Thomson
Reuters | Updated: August 30,
2018 20:16 IST
Bengaluru: A dip in rice export prices
as the rupee plunged failed to stoke fresh demand for the Indian variety this
week, but potential orders from the Philippines and elsewhere could provide
fresh impetus to markets in Thailand and Vietnam. In top exporter India, rates
for 5 per cent broken parboiled rice fell by $3 to $386-$390 per tonne this
week. The Indian rupee has fallen
over 10 per cent in 2018, hitting a
record low on Thursday, increasing exporters margin from overseas sales.
"Right now, demand is weak.
Even after the recent price fall, African buyers are not active in the
market," said an exporter based at Kakinada in the southern state of
Andhra Pradesh.
India's rice exports in
April-July edged up 1 per cent from a year ago to 4.15 million tonnes on upbeat
demand from Senegal, Benin and Iran, a government body said.
In Thailand, a stronger domestic
currency saw benchmark 5 per cent broken rice quoted at $393-$395, free on
board (FOB) Bangkok, narrowing slightly from last week's $390-$395, traders
said.
"We heard nothing about any
new deals but some exporters are expecting things to pick up next month from
markets in this region like the Philippines and China," a Bangkok-based
trader said.
The Philippines will import an
additional 132,000 tonnes of rice to boost stocks in southern provinces, where
prices have surged in recent weeks due to limited supply, its agriculture
minister said on Wednesday.
The Philippines, one of the
world's biggest rice importers, usually buys from top producers Thailand and
Vietnam.
In Vietnam, rates for 5 per cent
broken rice remained unchanged at $395-$400 a tonne, but prices are expected to
pick up over the coming weeks.
"The summer-autumn harvest
has come to an end and we have heard about new orders from regional
customers," a Ho Chi Minh City-based trader said.
The government's General
Statistics Office on Wednesday said farmers in the Mekong Delta provinces have
started growing rice for the autumn-winter crop, but prolonged rains are
slowing down sowing.
Meanwhile, rice imports from
Bangladesh are expected to fall to 600,000 tonnes in the 2018-19 marketing
year, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) said in a report this month.
"The high rate of import
duty may deter imports and increase paddy prices indirectly, but it also may
affect prices in the retail market and transfer the burden to consumers,"
the report said.
Bangladesh, which had emerged as
a major rice importer since 2017 after floods damaged its crops, imposed a 28
per cent tax on rice imports to support its farmers after local production
revived.
1 COMMENT
Bangladesh imported a record 3.9
million tonnes in 2017-18, food ministry data showed
https://www.ndtv.com/business/rice-export-price-dips-as-rupee-fall-fails-to-boost-demand-1908832
Vietnam Jan-Aug coffee exports seen up 14.8
pct y/y; rice to rise 8.2 pct y/y
Vietnam’s coffee exports for the January to
August period rose an estimated 14.8 percent from the same period a year ago,
while rice exports increased an estimated 8.2 percent during the same period,
government data showed on Wednesday.
COFFEE
Coffee exports from Vietnam will rise an estimated 14.8 percent between January and August from a year ago to 1.3 million tonnes, equal to 21.78 million 60-kg bags, the General Statistics Office said in a report on Wednesday.
Coffee exports from Vietnam will rise an estimated 14.8 percent between January and August from a year ago to 1.3 million tonnes, equal to 21.78 million 60-kg bags, the General Statistics Office said in a report on Wednesday.
Coffee export revenue for Vietnam, the world’s
second-biggest coffee producer, fell 3.1 percent annually to $2.5 billion in
the eight-month period, the report said.
August coffee exports were estimated at 135,000
tonnes, worth $246 million.
RICE
Rice exports in January-August from Vietnam were forecast to rise 8.2 percent from a year ago to 4.43 million tonnes. Revenue from rice exports in the period was forecast to rise 23.6 percent year-on-year to $2.23 billion.
Rice exports in January-August from Vietnam were forecast to rise 8.2 percent from a year ago to 4.43 million tonnes. Revenue from rice exports in the period was forecast to rise 23.6 percent year-on-year to $2.23 billion.
August rice exports from Vietnam, the world’s
third-largest shipper of the grain, were recorded at 500,000 tonnes, worth $236
million.
ENERGY
Vietnam’s January-to-August crude oil exports plunged 46.6 percent year-on-year to an estimated 2.64 million tonnes.
Vietnam’s January-to-August crude oil exports plunged 46.6 percent year-on-year to an estimated 2.64 million tonnes.
Crude oil export revenue in the first eight
months of 2018 fell 24.6 percent to $1.51 billion.
Oil product imports in the eight-month period
were estimated at 8.6 million tonnes, while the value of product imports rose
26.4 percent to $5.7 billion.
Vietnam’s January-to-August liquefied petroleum
gas imports increased 2.9 percent from a year earlier to 972,000 tonnes.
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Mai Nguyen; editing by Richard Pullin)
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Mai Nguyen; editing by Richard Pullin)
https://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/vietnam-jan-aug-coffee-exports-seen-up-14-8-pct-y-y-rice-to-rise-8-2-pct-y-y/
Global Warming Means More Insects
Threatening Food Crops — A Lot More, Study Warns
Wheat, corn
and rice are staple foods for 4 billion people. A new study suggests crop
damage from climate change may be far worse than projected as pest risks rise.
BY BOB BERWYN, INSIDECLIMATE NEWS
AUG 30, 2018
New research suggests the risk climate change poses to agriculture
is higher than scientists realized because of the way insects respond to warmer
temperatures. Credit: Paul J. Richards/Getty Images
Growing swarms of hungrier and
hyperactive insects may wipe out big percentages of the world's three most
important grain crops—wheat, corn and rice—even if the world manages to cap
global warming at 2 degrees Celsius, the upper-end target of the Paris climate
agreement, scientists warn.
The biggest crop losses are expected
in temperate areas where global warming will increase both insects' population
growth and their metabolic rates. That includes the major breadbaskets of North
America and Europe.
Altogether, the potential scale of
the damage is so high, it could threaten global food security, according to
research published today in the journal Science.
"We're turning the dial up in
the temperate zones, and insects, for the most part, thrive in a warmer
climate," said co-author and sustainability researcher Josh Tewksbury,
director of Future Earth at
the University of Colorado. "It gets better and better for them."
For people accustomed to the pace
at which today's crop-destroying insects migrate, the rapid and widespread
changes fueled by global warming may come as a shock. Farmers will need to adapt,
Tewksbury said. That could mean overhauling crop rotations, more genetic
research and rethinking pesticide use to avoid severe damage.
"Get ready, because the fight
is coming to you," he said.
The researchers project that,
globally, crop yield losses for wheat, corn and rice will increase 10 to 25
percent for every degree of global warming. If global temperatures rise 2
degrees Celsius over the 1971-2000 average, they project that the rise in
insect pest activity would increase wheat yield losses by a median of 46
percent, corn by 31 percent, and rice by 19 percent.
Those three food crops are staples
for about 4 billion people, and account for about 42 percent of direct calories
consumed by humans worldwide, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.
University of Washington climate
researcher and co-author Curtis Deutsch explained the impact this way:
"Insect pests currently
consume the equivalent of 1 out of every 12 loaves of bread (before it ever
gets made). By the end of this century, if climate change continues unabated,
insects will be eating more than 2 loaves of every 12 that could have been
made," he wrote.
'This Sets Off
Alarm Bells'
The researchers relied on
fundamental insect physiological data, based on decades of lab studies and field
research, that show how warmer temperatures accelerate the metabolism of insect
pests like aphids and corn borers at a predictable rate. That makes them
hungrier, and warmer temperatures also speed up their reproduction in most
regions.
By 2050, growing-season
temperatures will probably be warmer than anytime during the past century,
according to the study. The temperature increase alone is expected to reduce
crop yields as heat waves intensify and ground dries out more quickly. But most
previous projections for the impact of global warming on crops "rarely
considered impacts on insect pests," the study's authors say.
Currently, the world loses about 30
percent of its crops to pests, weeds and various pathogens, said Western Sydney
University environmental researcher Markus Riegler, who wasn't involved in the
research but wrote a related article on the
findings. The losses projected by the new study are staggering, he said.
"This sets off alarm
bells," Riegler said.
Clues to the amount of damage
insects can do in a warmer world are also contained in ancient fossils from an
era of abrupt climate change linked to rapidly climbing CO2 levels about 56
million years ago, he said. In a studylooking at about 5,000 fossils from that era, a separate
group of researchers found that plant damage from insects correlated with
rising and falling temperatures, reaching a maximum during the warmest periods.
The results suggest that insects
will cause a lot more damage to all plants as the climate warms, and they
highlight the need start protecting crops now. Farmers, industries,
policy-makers, and wider society must all be involved because the actions
needed include big changes to food systems, Riegler said.
"I'm concerned about the loss
of political progress toward stopping global warming, and this highlights one
of the big risks of no action." With 800 million people already suffering
daily hunger, now is the time to act to ensure future global food supplies, he
said.
What Can Farmers
and Governments Do?
There are steps that farmers and
policymakers can start taking, beyond reducing the greenhouse gas emissions
that are fueling climate change, Riegler said.
"We are going to have to
be smart about how we manage insect pests. We'll need integrated pest and crop
management and really think about what plants to plant when and where and in
what sequence," he said.
"We also have to improve quarantine
procedures. That will be an additional twist," he said, explaining that
insects pests traveling via growing international commerce will more easily
find footholds in new areas.
And there needs to be more emphasis
on protecting natural genetic diversity, because there are opportunities to
work with plants that have natural resistance to pests, he added.
That requires thinking in a
systematic, global way, Tewksbury added.
"The answer is not finding new
bugs that kill bugs, or just using more pesticides," Tewksbury said.
"We need a science-based approach that takes into account the natural
evolution of the plants and what insects co-evolved with them. Our lack of
attention to that knowledge is going to come back to bite us."
A global database of crop pathogens
would be a good place to start, said North Carolina State University ecologist
Rob Dunn, who was not involved in the study. Widely shared global information
would help identify changing pest problems early, giving time to find a
solution before it becomes a crisis.
https://insideclimatenews.org/news/30082018/insect-damage-agriculture-food-crops-climate-change-wheat-corn-rice-study
New, ‘improved' Rice Krispies make consumers snap
The Rice Krispies fans are cross
- very cross! Without warning, Kellogg’s totally changed the recipe for those
Krispies - and the Coco and Strawberry Pops, too - and consumers are so not
loving the so-called new, improved versions. For now, Kellogg’s is just smiling
and waving in response… So what was the cereal maker thinking?
Wendy Knowler
There’s an all-new Rice Krispies
product on supermarket shelves, and according to many, it’s far from nice.
Listen to the podcast below, or read the details under that.
As anyone who spends any time on
social media will know, there’s not much that unites South Africans across
racial, gender, and culture lines, but there appears to be one issue
Mzansi does agree on, and it’s that Kellogg’s really, really shouldn’t
have messed with its Rice Krispies recipe.
The cereal may have retained its iconic name, but its formula has shifted from Rice Krispies to multigrain Krispies - it still contains some rice flour, but now also corn and wheat flour. And most notably, the sugar content has gone from 9% to 21,7% - so even the children are complaining that it’s too sweet. A vanilla flavour has been added, and apparently the Snap, Crackle, Pop has gone.
Thus at a time when there’s a huge shift to lowering sugar content of processed food and drinks, as evidenced by South Africa’s recently introduced sugar tax on sugary beverages, this is rather strange.
Read: Whey Overstated
The cereal may have retained its iconic name, but its formula has shifted from Rice Krispies to multigrain Krispies - it still contains some rice flour, but now also corn and wheat flour. And most notably, the sugar content has gone from 9% to 21,7% - so even the children are complaining that it’s too sweet. A vanilla flavour has been added, and apparently the Snap, Crackle, Pop has gone.
Thus at a time when there’s a huge shift to lowering sugar content of processed food and drinks, as evidenced by South Africa’s recently introduced sugar tax on sugary beverages, this is rather strange.
Read: Whey Overstated
I asked Kellogg’s about the sugar
issue, and the response I got from the company’s director of research,
nutrition, and technology, Xolile Mbatha, was that the new vanilla Rice
Krispies did have “a thin coating of sugar” to enhance crispiness -
equivalent to 1.5 teaspoons per serving.
“But we acknowledge that there is more room for improvement by way of both consumer education as well as our ongoing commitments to make our products better and to meet consumers’ needs,” she said.
“But we acknowledge that there is more room for improvement by way of both consumer education as well as our ongoing commitments to make our products better and to meet consumers’ needs,” she said.
Classic corporate-speak.
Here’s a taste of what consumers are saying on Kellogg’s SA’s Facebook page - and it’s not too sweet:
“I bought two boxes and my son HAAAAATES them!” said Gugulethu Zungu.
Here’s a taste of what consumers are saying on Kellogg’s SA’s Facebook page - and it’s not too sweet:
“I bought two boxes and my son HAAAAATES them!” said Gugulethu Zungu.
"And it's shady how you guys
just put them there like they are the originals cos the vanilla flavour wording
is so small and unnoticeable. Please stop production and return the original
Rice Krispies.”
“What were you thinking?” asked
Mohammed Sader. “Epic fail. You are just destroying a strong household brand.
My four-year-old nephew refuses to have the new product…”
Andre Botha said: “Kellogg’s, please fire your research team as they clearly have no clue what they are doing. Secondly, count the complaints vs the compliments on your Facebook page and do the math. You don’t need a degree to understand that you messed up. Cut your losses, apologise and bring back the old recipe.”
I haven’t seen South African consumers this cross about a product change since Unilever messed with its Sunlight dishwashing liquid bottle - turning it upside down and putting a funny nozzle on it.
Apparently Kellogg’s did consumer research before making the radical change.
A tasting test group included “both existing Rice Krispies consumers and those who had lapsed or had never consumed it - all of them mothers and their children,” Mbatha said.
Andre Botha said: “Kellogg’s, please fire your research team as they clearly have no clue what they are doing. Secondly, count the complaints vs the compliments on your Facebook page and do the math. You don’t need a degree to understand that you messed up. Cut your losses, apologise and bring back the old recipe.”
I haven’t seen South African consumers this cross about a product change since Unilever messed with its Sunlight dishwashing liquid bottle - turning it upside down and putting a funny nozzle on it.
Apparently Kellogg’s did consumer research before making the radical change.
A tasting test group included “both existing Rice Krispies consumers and those who had lapsed or had never consumed it - all of them mothers and their children,” Mbatha said.
“While we understand there are
differences in everyone’s taste, the results from this market research
indicated that the Rice Krispies Vanilla concept and food was significantly
liked by all consumers,” she said.
Go figure.
The move from a single grain
(rice) formula to multi-grains allowed Kellogg’s to source all their major
ingredients locally, she said, “whereas previously we imported all main
ingredients”.
“The new recipe also contains
nine vitamins and iron, which deliver better nutritional benefits.”
At first Kellogg’s responded to every negative Facebook review with a cheery: 'Thanks for getting in touch. We appreciate your valuable feedback!’ and then later the stock response changed to: 'We’re are sorry to hear that! We are grateful and indebted to our customers that have supported our products and hope that our numerous other products will continue to bring joy to you and your family.'
At first Kellogg’s responded to every negative Facebook review with a cheery: 'Thanks for getting in touch. We appreciate your valuable feedback!’ and then later the stock response changed to: 'We’re are sorry to hear that! We are grateful and indebted to our customers that have supported our products and hope that our numerous other products will continue to bring joy to you and your family.'
To those who are pleading for the
return of the old Rice Krispies, Kellogg’s says: “Unfortunately at this
stage we have phased out the plane (sic) Rice Krispies. Over the years we
have received numerous indications that our customers in SA want
innovative, tasty new recipes and products and thus New Rice Krispies was
introduced."
In her response to me, Mbatha
said that in order to improve consumer awareness of this new Rice Krispies
Vanilla, the company would be “conducting sampling in stores and expanding the
sample base over the coming months."
Companies seldom admit they got it wrong with a change, and revert to the original product, but it’s not unheard of - Unilever dropped its upside down bottle fairly quickly in the face of a furious consumer backlash, and that was before the days of social media.
Companies seldom admit they got it wrong with a change, and revert to the original product, but it’s not unheard of - Unilever dropped its upside down bottle fairly quickly in the face of a furious consumer backlash, and that was before the days of social media.
And incidentally, that company
also insisted that its consumer research had revealed great acceptance of the
new bottle.
Maybe the problem lies with the
quality of market research.
https://www.ecr.co.za/east-coast-breakfast-darren-maule/new-improved-rice-krispies-make-consumers-snap/
2018-2023
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https://thetacticalbusiness.com/224987/rice-milling-machinery-market-report-presents-an-overall-analysis-development-trends-driving-forces-opportunities-and-future-potential-2023/
Country’s rice situation expected to
normalize next month, says Malacañang
August 30, 2018, 4:56 PM
By Genalyn Kabiling
The country’s rice situation is
expected to normalize with the onset of the harvest season next month,
Malacañang said Thursday.
Presidential Spokesman Harry
Roque tried to assure the public about the country’s rice supply following the
reported shortage of the commodity in some parts of the country.
“We foresee the rice situation
normalizing because the main harvest is beginning to come in by next month,”
Roque said in a statement.
Roque also defended Agriculture
Secretary Emmanuel Piñol from criticisms about his alleged proposal to legalize
rice smuggling in some areas in Mindanao, saying he was misquoted on the issue.
He said Piñol actually proposed
the establishment of a rice trading center that would help ensure a steady of
supply of rice in the region.
“The recommendation of the
Department of Agriculture (DA) is to establish a rice trading post where
government can collect customs duty on legally imported rice with import permit
from the National Food Authority (NFA),” he said.
Roque acknowledged that the
amount of imports to be allowed would be enough to cover the needs of the
ZAMBASULTA (Zamboanga, Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi) area.
Piñol earlier drew the ire of
some lawmakers for allegedly proposing to legalize smuggling of rice in
Zambasulta amid problems of commodity supply and price. Lawmakers urged the
government to support local farmers instead of vigorously promoting importation
of food staples such as fish and rice.
Rice prices in Zamboanga and
nearby areas have reportedly increased due to the shortage of the commodity
supply. Authorities later attributed the rice price hikes to the government’s
intensified campaign against smugglers.
https://news.mb.com.ph/2018/08/30/countrys-rice-situation-expected-to-normalize-next-month-says-malacanang/
No to more rice importation
ABS-CBN News
Members of a fisherfolk group
stage a 'boodle fight' in front of the Department of Agriculture on Friday to
protest the importation of food products. Agriculture Secretary Manny Piñol
proposed the importation of more commodities, such as rice and fish, to augment
the limited supply of these basic commodities and help curb inflation.
http://news.abs-cbn.com/news/multimedia/photo/08/31/18/no-to-more-rice-importation
NFA rice available in more outlets nationwide
August 30, 2018
MANILA — As prices of commercial rice continue to escalate, the
National Food Authority (NFA) has intensified its rice distribution to make its
low-priced rice more accessible and available to more consumers.
To date, a total of 15,892
accredited rice retail outlets are selling NFA rice nationwide, including the
1,873 in the National Capital Region, located in public markets and barangays
(villages).
Even the local government units,
local parishes and farmers’ cooperatives are tapped as NFA conduits in the
distribution of the low-priced but quality NFA rice at PHP27 and PHP32 per kg.
Aside from the regular accredited
outlets, the NFA is also deploying mobile stores through its “Tagpuan Day Rice
Response Delivery” (TRRD), in partnership with the accredited operator and
local government units in remote barangays and resettlement areas around the
country.
These mobile stores will serve
marginalized consumers, especially the indigenous peoples and those affected by
recent calamities and crises, such as Zamboanga City.
TRDD is a rice distribution
strategy where the PHP27 per kg. NFA rice is sold directly to poor and
marginalized beneficiaries in the area at an appointed time and place in close
coordination with the local barangay.
The NFA distributes an average of
58,000 bags of rice a day. Dedicated outlets, those selling only NFA rice,
mostly located in public markets get an average of 20 to 50 bags in weekly
allocation while ordinary accredited retailers are allocated with five to 20
bags weekly, depending on their capitalization.
With the improved weather
condition, NFA Administrator Jason Aquino said the unloading and delivery of
imported rice to the agency’s warehouses are being fast-tracked.
He added that NFA personnel in
the field are working double time to ensure the continuous supply of the
low-priced NFA rice in the market.
“We have also stepped up our
monitoring activities to protect our consumers against businessmen who may take
advantage of the situation. We are closely monitoring our accredited retail
outlets to ensure that NFA rice is being sold at the government-prescribed
price,” Aquino said.
Aquino also urged the public to
be more vigilant.“We need the cooperation of the public. This is not the sole
responsibility of the agency but everybody’s concern, especially at this time
when price spikes are noted in basic commodities. We should not let erring
businessmen take advantage of our poor kababayans,” he said. (NFA PR/PNA)
https://www.ptvnews.ph/nfa-rice-available-outlets-nationwide/
Poisonous Rice: Ebonyi Reopens Abakaliki
Rice Mill After Sanitation
The Ebonyi government on Thursday ordered the re-opening of the
Abakaliki Rice Mill Limited two days after it was sealed following alleged
poisonous bags of rice that were discovered in the mill.
The Ebonyi government on Thursday ordered the re-opening of the
Abakaliki Rice Mill Limited two days after it was sealed following alleged
poisonous bags of rice that were discovered in the mill.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Governor David Umahi ordered the sealing of the mill on Tuesday, after the state ministry of environment received reports and subsequently discovered bags of rice allegedly labeled ‘not fit for human consumption’ inside the mill.
Dr Kenneth Ugbala, Leader of the inter-ministerial committee, set up by the government to investigate the matter, told newsmen at a news conference in Abakaliki on Thursday that the mill will re-open immediately.
Ugbala, who is also Governor David Umahi’s Senior Special Assistant on Internal Security, said that the mill was reopened because it had been sanitised, the poisonous products confiscated and culpable shops sealed.
He said: “The committee alongside experts and security agencies evacuated the adulterated products from the affected shops and generally sanitised the mill with security agencies making some arrests.
“The state governor reopened the mill to save innocent millers and buyers from untold economic losses and also due to the mill’s importance to the state’s economic survival.
“Ebonyi citizens and buyers from across the country are hereby assured that the suspected products have been identified and evacuated, so they could freely process and purchase rice from the mill.”
The committee leader said that the shops where the poisonous products were confiscated would remain shut till all investigations are concluded.
Ugbala said: “Citizens who purchased rice from the mill within the period under scrutiny should present such products to the concerned ministries of health, agriculture, environment among others, for thorough screening.
“The government expresses serious disappointment with the mill’s leadership and subsequently suspends it for failing to be an effective liaison between the mill and the government.
“The disappointment is more profound because some of the shops where the poisonous products were discovered allegedly belonged to some leaders of the mill.
“We will consult adequately to appoint a caretaker leadership for it.”
He debunked the notion that the matter was aimed at witch-hunting the Mill’s Chairman, Joseph Ununu for winning a mock-delegate election.
Ununu is contesting the Abakaliki state constituency seat at the state House of Assembly under the Peoples Democratic Party.
He said: “No member of the committee is from Ununu’s state constituency or even local government area as issues of delegates’ election are entirely the party’s affairs.
“We have also not received any formal notification that he is presently declared missing by his relatives as the entire mill’s leadership was suspended and not only one person.”
Chief Donatus Njoku, the State Commissioner for Environment, disclosed that a total of 317 bags were confiscated from 10 shops at the mill during the committee’s screening exercise.
Njoku said: “Two shops identified to be using substandard weight measurements were also sealed alongside those where the poisonous products were found until all investigations are concluded.”
Prof. Fidelis Okpata, Deputy Chief of Staff to the Governor, assured the public that any government official found culpable in the matter would be punished no matter how highly placed.
Okpata said: “This is a responsible government which will not mortgage the lives of its citizens for the unwholesome commercial dealings of few individuals or groups.”
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Governor David Umahi ordered the sealing of the mill on Tuesday, after the state ministry of environment received reports and subsequently discovered bags of rice allegedly labeled ‘not fit for human consumption’ inside the mill.
Dr Kenneth Ugbala, Leader of the inter-ministerial committee, set up by the government to investigate the matter, told newsmen at a news conference in Abakaliki on Thursday that the mill will re-open immediately.
Ugbala, who is also Governor David Umahi’s Senior Special Assistant on Internal Security, said that the mill was reopened because it had been sanitised, the poisonous products confiscated and culpable shops sealed.
He said: “The committee alongside experts and security agencies evacuated the adulterated products from the affected shops and generally sanitised the mill with security agencies making some arrests.
“The state governor reopened the mill to save innocent millers and buyers from untold economic losses and also due to the mill’s importance to the state’s economic survival.
“Ebonyi citizens and buyers from across the country are hereby assured that the suspected products have been identified and evacuated, so they could freely process and purchase rice from the mill.”
The committee leader said that the shops where the poisonous products were confiscated would remain shut till all investigations are concluded.
Ugbala said: “Citizens who purchased rice from the mill within the period under scrutiny should present such products to the concerned ministries of health, agriculture, environment among others, for thorough screening.
“The government expresses serious disappointment with the mill’s leadership and subsequently suspends it for failing to be an effective liaison between the mill and the government.
“The disappointment is more profound because some of the shops where the poisonous products were discovered allegedly belonged to some leaders of the mill.
“We will consult adequately to appoint a caretaker leadership for it.”
He debunked the notion that the matter was aimed at witch-hunting the Mill’s Chairman, Joseph Ununu for winning a mock-delegate election.
Ununu is contesting the Abakaliki state constituency seat at the state House of Assembly under the Peoples Democratic Party.
He said: “No member of the committee is from Ununu’s state constituency or even local government area as issues of delegates’ election are entirely the party’s affairs.
“We have also not received any formal notification that he is presently declared missing by his relatives as the entire mill’s leadership was suspended and not only one person.”
Chief Donatus Njoku, the State Commissioner for Environment, disclosed that a total of 317 bags were confiscated from 10 shops at the mill during the committee’s screening exercise.
Njoku said: “Two shops identified to be using substandard weight measurements were also sealed alongside those where the poisonous products were found until all investigations are concluded.”
Prof. Fidelis Okpata, Deputy Chief of Staff to the Governor, assured the public that any government official found culpable in the matter would be punished no matter how highly placed.
Okpata said: “This is a responsible government which will not mortgage the lives of its citizens for the unwholesome commercial dealings of few individuals or groups.”
https://theeagleonline.com.ng/poisonous-rice-ebonyi-reopens-abakaliki-rice-mill-after-sanitation/
New,
‘improved' Rice Krispies make consumers snap
The Rice Krispies fans are cross
- very cross! Without warning, Kellogg’s totally changed the recipe for those
Krispies - and the Coco and Strawberry Pops, too - and consumers are so not
loving the so-called new, improved versions. For now, Kellogg’s is just smiling
and waving in response… So what was the cereal maker thinking?
Wendy Knowler
There’s an all-new Rice Krispies
product on supermarket shelves, and according to many, it’s far from nice.
Listen to the podcast below, or read the details under that.
As anyone who spends any time on social media will know, there’s
not much that unites South Africans across racial, gender, and culture lines,
but there appears to be one issue Mzansi does agree on, and it’s that
Kellogg’s really, really shouldn’t have messed with its Rice Krispies recipe.
The cereal may have retained its iconic name, but its formula has shifted from Rice Krispies to multigrain Krispies - it still contains some rice flour, but now also corn and wheat flour. And most notably, the sugar content has gone from 9% to 21,7% - so even the children are complaining that it’s too sweet. A vanilla flavour has been added, and apparently the Snap, Crackle, Pop has gone.
Thus at a time when there’s a huge shift to lowering sugar content of processed food and drinks, as evidenced by South Africa’s recently introduced sugar tax on sugary beverages, this is rather strange.
Read: Whey Overstated
The cereal may have retained its iconic name, but its formula has shifted from Rice Krispies to multigrain Krispies - it still contains some rice flour, but now also corn and wheat flour. And most notably, the sugar content has gone from 9% to 21,7% - so even the children are complaining that it’s too sweet. A vanilla flavour has been added, and apparently the Snap, Crackle, Pop has gone.
Thus at a time when there’s a huge shift to lowering sugar content of processed food and drinks, as evidenced by South Africa’s recently introduced sugar tax on sugary beverages, this is rather strange.
Read: Whey Overstated
I asked Kellogg’s about the sugar
issue, and the response I got from the company’s director of research,
nutrition, and technology, Xolile Mbatha, was that the new vanilla Rice
Krispies did have “a thin coating of sugar” to enhance crispiness -
equivalent to 1.5 teaspoons per serving.
“But we acknowledge that there is more room for improvement by way of both consumer education as well as our ongoing commitments to make our products better and to meet consumers’ needs,” she said.
“But we acknowledge that there is more room for improvement by way of both consumer education as well as our ongoing commitments to make our products better and to meet consumers’ needs,” she said.
Classic corporate-speak.
Here’s a taste of what consumers are saying on Kellogg’s SA’s Facebook page - and it’s not too sweet:
“I bought two boxes and my son HAAAAATES them!” said Gugulethu Zungu.
Here’s a taste of what consumers are saying on Kellogg’s SA’s Facebook page - and it’s not too sweet:
“I bought two boxes and my son HAAAAATES them!” said Gugulethu Zungu.
"And it's shady how you guys
just put them there like they are the originals cos the vanilla flavour wording
is so small and unnoticeable. Please stop production and return the original
Rice Krispies.”
“What were you thinking?” asked Mohammed
Sader. “Epic fail. You are just destroying a strong household brand. My
four-year-old nephew refuses to have the new product…”
Andre Botha said: “Kellogg’s, please fire your research team as they clearly have no clue what they are doing. Secondly, count the complaints vs the compliments on your Facebook page and do the math. You don’t need a degree to understand that you messed up. Cut your losses, apologise and bring back the old recipe.”
I haven’t seen South African consumers this cross about a product change since Unilever messed with its Sunlight dishwashing liquid bottle - turning it upside down and putting a funny nozzle on it.
Apparently Kellogg’s did consumer research before making the radical change.
A tasting test group included “both existing Rice Krispies consumers and those who had lapsed or had never consumed it - all of them mothers and their children,” Mbatha said.
Andre Botha said: “Kellogg’s, please fire your research team as they clearly have no clue what they are doing. Secondly, count the complaints vs the compliments on your Facebook page and do the math. You don’t need a degree to understand that you messed up. Cut your losses, apologise and bring back the old recipe.”
I haven’t seen South African consumers this cross about a product change since Unilever messed with its Sunlight dishwashing liquid bottle - turning it upside down and putting a funny nozzle on it.
Apparently Kellogg’s did consumer research before making the radical change.
A tasting test group included “both existing Rice Krispies consumers and those who had lapsed or had never consumed it - all of them mothers and their children,” Mbatha said.
“While we understand there are
differences in everyone’s taste, the results from this market research
indicated that the Rice Krispies Vanilla concept and food was significantly
liked by all consumers,” she said.
Go figure.
The move from a single grain
(rice) formula to multi-grains allowed Kellogg’s to source all their major
ingredients locally, she said, “whereas previously we imported all main
ingredients”.
“The new recipe also contains
nine vitamins and iron, which deliver better nutritional benefits.”
At first Kellogg’s responded to every negative Facebook review with a cheery: 'Thanks for getting in touch. We appreciate your valuable feedback!’ and then later the stock response changed to: 'We’re are sorry to hear that! We are grateful and indebted to our customers that have supported our products and hope that our numerous other products will continue to bring joy to you and your family.'
At first Kellogg’s responded to every negative Facebook review with a cheery: 'Thanks for getting in touch. We appreciate your valuable feedback!’ and then later the stock response changed to: 'We’re are sorry to hear that! We are grateful and indebted to our customers that have supported our products and hope that our numerous other products will continue to bring joy to you and your family.'
To those who are pleading for the
return of the old Rice Krispies, Kellogg’s says: “Unfortunately at this
stage we have phased out the plane (sic) Rice Krispies. Over the years we
have received numerous indications that our customers in SA want
innovative, tasty new recipes and products and thus New Rice Krispies was
introduced."
In her response to me, Mbatha
said that in order to improve consumer awareness of this new Rice Krispies
Vanilla, the company would be “conducting sampling in stores and expanding the
sample base over the coming months."
Companies seldom admit they got it wrong with a change, and revert to the original product, but it’s not unheard of - Unilever dropped its upside down bottle fairly quickly in the face of a furious consumer backlash, and that was before the days of social media.
Companies seldom admit they got it wrong with a change, and revert to the original product, but it’s not unheard of - Unilever dropped its upside down bottle fairly quickly in the face of a furious consumer backlash, and that was before the days of social media.
And incidentally, that company
also insisted that its consumer research had revealed great acceptance of the
new bottle. Maybe the problem lies with the quality of market research.
https://www.ecr.co.za/east-coast-breakfast-darren-maule/new-improved-rice-krispies-make-consumers-snap/
Rice Transplanter Market Research
2018-2023: Growth Factors, Key players ,Product Types and Application by
Regional Analysis & Forecast
August 30, 2018
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Global
Rice Flour Market Forecast to 2025 Insights Shared in Detailed Report
This press release was orginally distributed by SBWireMaharashtra, India -- (SBWIRE) -- 08/30/2018 -- Rice Flour Market
Global Rice Flour Market, which is backed by extensive primary and detailed secondary research, involving numerous static databases, national government documentation, latest news articles, press releases, company annual reports, financial reports, pertinent patent and administrative databases, as well as a range of internal and external proprietary databases.
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Rice flour (also rice powder) is a form of flour made from rice. It is distinct from rice starch, which is usually produced by steeping rice in lye. Rice flour is a particularly good substitute for wheat flour, which causes irritation in the digestive systems of those who are gluten-intolerant. Rice flour is also used as a thickening agent in recipes that are refrigerated or frozen since it inhibits liquid separation.
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Rice
millers warn state-wide strike if demands not met
TNN | Aug 29, 2018, 23:35 IST
Pilibhit:
As October 1, the day the government is scheduled to start paddy procurement in
UP, draws near, rice millers across the state have threatened to not procure
any paddy if their demands are not met. Leaders of the UP rice millers
association (UPRMA) have decided to counter the government’s policies, which
they believe are unreasonable and are resulting in their losses.
This decision was taken after the meetings between UPRMA leaders and chief minister Yogi Adityanath failed to yield a fruitful outcome. If rice millers do go on a strike, it would bring the paddy procurement process to a standstill across the state and affect the supply of rice, since the procured paddy is supplied to rice mills for custom hulling, said sources in the UPRMA.
Talking to TOI over the phone, Vinay Shukla, the state general secretary of UPRMA, said that the government takes back 67% of the paddy, which it procures from farmers and gives to rice millers. However, the actual rate of rice recovery from the paddy is below 60%, which always leaves rice millers owing the rest 7% to the government.
Shukla added, “For the last 30 years, the government had been paying rice millers a constant price of Rs 10 per quintal for processing and transporting rice to Food Corporation of India (FCI) depots. The actual cost of milling has increased to Rs 90 per quintal now, thanks to a galloping hike in plants’ maintenance, electricity, diesel, transport, labour charges etc.”
According to the secretary of a rice millers’ association in Pilibhit, Shailendra Gupta, the millers also face the problem of damage and breakage of rice during processing. The more moisture the rice has, the likelier it is to break. To sell off broken rice, or rice that has more moisture in it than the designated amount of 17%, millers need to pay bribes to officials at the FCI depots.
This decision was taken after the meetings between UPRMA leaders and chief minister Yogi Adityanath failed to yield a fruitful outcome. If rice millers do go on a strike, it would bring the paddy procurement process to a standstill across the state and affect the supply of rice, since the procured paddy is supplied to rice mills for custom hulling, said sources in the UPRMA.
Talking to TOI over the phone, Vinay Shukla, the state general secretary of UPRMA, said that the government takes back 67% of the paddy, which it procures from farmers and gives to rice millers. However, the actual rate of rice recovery from the paddy is below 60%, which always leaves rice millers owing the rest 7% to the government.
Shukla added, “For the last 30 years, the government had been paying rice millers a constant price of Rs 10 per quintal for processing and transporting rice to Food Corporation of India (FCI) depots. The actual cost of milling has increased to Rs 90 per quintal now, thanks to a galloping hike in plants’ maintenance, electricity, diesel, transport, labour charges etc.”
According to the secretary of a rice millers’ association in Pilibhit, Shailendra Gupta, the millers also face the problem of damage and breakage of rice during processing. The more moisture the rice has, the likelier it is to break. To sell off broken rice, or rice that has more moisture in it than the designated amount of 17%, millers need to pay bribes to officials at the FCI depots.
It should be noted that rice from all regions do not have the equal amount of moisture. While crop from a region that receives relatively more amount of rain is likely to have 23-24% moisture, rice from a dry region is likely to have around 17% moisture. Earlier, there have been demands of fixing the amount of moisture the rice is allowed to have based on the region it comes from, but it didn’t come to anything. “Millers have to bribe FCI officials so that they pass off their rice as having no more than the designated amount of moisture and get fleeced by them in return,” alleged both Shukla and Gupta.
Area manager of the FCI in Bareilly, Akhileshwar Ojha, denied the allegations, saying no case of the kind had been brought to his notice by any rice miller so far.
Meanwhile, Shukla said that he had met the chief minister twice, along with an UPRMA delegation in a month’s time to seek solutions to the millers’ problems, but nothing substantial had come of those meetings. “Even though the chief minister accepted that our situation was extremely grim, the government has done nothing practical to resolve it.”
The
rice millers had also proposed to the chief minister that the government take
over the rice mills and pay Rs 350 per quintal of rice to them as rent.
However, they haven’t received a proper reply.
Times of India
Wholesale
prices of Oils, Sugar, Commodities in APMC
Bengaluru, Aug 30 (UNI) Following were the
wholesale prices in the Bengaluru APMC here on Thursday.
OIL (per 10 kg) :
Groundnut 1250-1350
Coconut 1250-1600
Gingely 1500-1800
Castor 1000-1100
Sunflower 1250-1350
Butter 4500-5500
Ghee 4400-4600
SUGAR: (per quintal) Rs 3500-3800
COMMODITIES: (per quintal)
Rice Basumati 7600-14600
Sona Fine 5000-5600
Medium (Old) 4100-4500
(New) 3300-3400
Coarse 2400-2800
Ragi Fine 2800-3100
Medium 2300-2600
Jower 2200-2600
Wheat Bansi 2500-3000
Jower (Bijapur) 2900-3500
Wheat Atta 2100-2400
Maida 2250-2750
Soji (W) 2800-3000
Soji Bansi 2700-3000
Jaggery 4000-4300
Corriander 5500-12000
Chilly (Byadgi) 14000-19500
Guntur 9000-10200
Potato 2000-2200
Onion 1000-1200
Tamarind 9500-16000
Garlic 2000-3900
Coconut (1000) 10000-25000
Horse Gram 3500-4000
Green Gram 6500-7000
Green Peas 6900-7400
Wheat 2300-3100
Turmeric 7500-12600
Soyabeans 4200-4600
Jeera 18500-21500
Poppy Seeds 38000-40000
Maize (Popcorn) 3000-3800
Ginger 3500-5800
Bengal Gram 4800-5200
Avare 4800-5100
Tur Dhal 5900-6900
Green Gram Dhal 6600-7200
Black Gram Dhal 5000-8000
Avare Dhal 6000-6800
Bengal Gram Dhal 4900-5200
Mustard 5000-5900
Gingly (White) 10000-11800
Gingly (Black) 7500-8900
Groundnut 5100-5200
Maize 1600-1900
Bajra 2000-2500
Groundnut Seed 7500-8200
Copra 15500-17000
Cowpea 4600-4800
Soapnut 3300-4000
Paddy 2700-2900
Cashewnut 85000-89000
Pepper 36000-40000
Areknut 32000-35000
Black Gram 5200-5900.
OIL (per 10 kg) :
Groundnut 1250-1350
Coconut 1250-1600
Gingely 1500-1800
Castor 1000-1100
Sunflower 1250-1350
Butter 4500-5500
Ghee 4400-4600
SUGAR: (per quintal) Rs 3500-3800
COMMODITIES: (per quintal)
Rice Basumati 7600-14600
Sona Fine 5000-5600
Medium (Old) 4100-4500
(New) 3300-3400
Coarse 2400-2800
Ragi Fine 2800-3100
Medium 2300-2600
Jower 2200-2600
Wheat Bansi 2500-3000
Jower (Bijapur) 2900-3500
Wheat Atta 2100-2400
Maida 2250-2750
Soji (W) 2800-3000
Soji Bansi 2700-3000
Jaggery 4000-4300
Corriander 5500-12000
Chilly (Byadgi) 14000-19500
Guntur 9000-10200
Potato 2000-2200
Onion 1000-1200
Tamarind 9500-16000
Garlic 2000-3900
Coconut (1000) 10000-25000
Horse Gram 3500-4000
Green Gram 6500-7000
Green Peas 6900-7400
Wheat 2300-3100
Turmeric 7500-12600
Soyabeans 4200-4600
Jeera 18500-21500
Poppy Seeds 38000-40000
Maize (Popcorn) 3000-3800
Ginger 3500-5800
Bengal Gram 4800-5200
Avare 4800-5100
Tur Dhal 5900-6900
Green Gram Dhal 6600-7200
Black Gram Dhal 5000-8000
Avare Dhal 6000-6800
Bengal Gram Dhal 4900-5200
Mustard 5000-5900
Gingly (White) 10000-11800
Gingly (Black) 7500-8900
Groundnut 5100-5200
Maize 1600-1900
Bajra 2000-2500
Groundnut Seed 7500-8200
Copra 15500-17000
Cowpea 4600-4800
Soapnut 3300-4000
Paddy 2700-2900
Cashewnut 85000-89000
Pepper 36000-40000
Areknut 32000-35000
Black Gram 5200-5900.
United News of India
http://thenationonlineng.net/why-local-rice-is-scarce-in-markets-by-ministry/
Punjab
Cabinet's nod to custom milling of paddy policy for kharif marketing season
2018-19
Chandigarh, Aug 30 (UNI) Punjab Cabinet has
given the nod to the Punjab Custom Milling of Paddy Policy (Kharif 2018-19)
with the aim of ensuring seamless procurement of paddy from farmers and
delivery of rice into the central pool from more than 3710 mills operating in
the state.
The scheme for Custom Milling of Kharif 2018-19 paddy would be followed by procuring agencies PUNGRAIN, MARKFED, PUNSUP, Punjab State Warehousing Corporation (PSWC), Punjab Agro Foodgrains Corporation (PAFC), including Food Corporation of India and the rice millers/their legal heirs with the Punjab Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs department acting as the nodal department.
A spokesperson for the Chief Minister's Office said the sole criterion for allotment of free paddy to mills during KMS 2018-19 would be the miller's performance in the previous year i.
e.KMS 2017-18, and an additional percentage-wise incentive would be provided to mills as per their date of delivery of rice against milling of Custom milled paddy, including RO paddy in the previous year.
Mr
Dhindsa and Mr Bhundur said “we want to put on record that the Kotkapura dharna
was lifted peacefully but there was a most unfortunate incident later at Behbal
Kalan village in which two youth lost their precious lives.The scheme for Custom Milling of Kharif 2018-19 paddy would be followed by procuring agencies PUNGRAIN, MARKFED, PUNSUP, Punjab State Warehousing Corporation (PSWC), Punjab Agro Foodgrains Corporation (PAFC), including Food Corporation of India and the rice millers/their legal heirs with the Punjab Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs department acting as the nodal department.
A spokesperson for the Chief Minister's Office said the sole criterion for allotment of free paddy to mills during KMS 2018-19 would be the miller's performance in the previous year i.
e.KMS 2017-18, and an additional percentage-wise incentive would be provided to mills as per their date of delivery of rice against milling of Custom milled paddy, including RO paddy in the previous year.
Punjab
plans to cut pesticides use in basmati rice
Aug 30, 2018, 12.13 PM IST
Rice exporters
and millers have also recruited people to push the drive in rural areas.
CHANDIGARH:
Basmati grown in Punjab this year is likely to witness a major reduction in use
of pesticides and fungicides that lead to rejection of export consignments from
India. Alarmed by hurdles in export of rice
from India, the state government is reaching out to farmers through Gurugwaras,
public meetings and social media to dissuade use of Acephate, Cabandazim, Thiamethoxam,
Tricyclazole and Triazophos—chemicals responsible for higher residue level in
rice.
“There will be significant decline in use of hazardous chemicals in rice this year that cause hurdles in exports,” KS Pannu, Commissioner Food and Drug Administration Punjab told ET. “Any adverse effect on export of rice will have adverse effect on Rs 50,000 crore business in India and hit hard economy of the state,” he said. He maintained that an exhaustive awareness campaign is underway by joining hand with pesticide dealers, commission agents farmers and rice industry.
Punjab Agriculture University has already recommended alternatives to these five pesticides and fungicides. This season, Punjab, is expected to harvest a record output of rice. But stricter pesticide residue norms in global markets are posing hurdles to rice from the country.
As per study of Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), over 400 refusals have been recorded of exports from India owing to presence of higher than approved level of pesticides residue. “But banning these chemicals is beyond the purview of state government as they are registered with the Central Insecticides Board and Registration Committee, ” Pannu said.
In paddy, much of the pesticide and chemical is used in September and October. Dealers meetings are being held at district level as well as block level to dissuade them from selling these chemicals. “Posters are doting dealers markets across rice growing districts to aware farmers of harm caused by these chemicals,” an official of Punjab agriculture department said.
A nodal officer has been appointed for each district to monitor the awareness campaign. Rice exporters and millers have also recruited people to push the drive in rural areas.
“There will be significant decline in use of hazardous chemicals in rice this year that cause hurdles in exports,” KS Pannu, Commissioner Food and Drug Administration Punjab told ET. “Any adverse effect on export of rice will have adverse effect on Rs 50,000 crore business in India and hit hard economy of the state,” he said. He maintained that an exhaustive awareness campaign is underway by joining hand with pesticide dealers, commission agents farmers and rice industry.
Punjab Agriculture University has already recommended alternatives to these five pesticides and fungicides. This season, Punjab, is expected to harvest a record output of rice. But stricter pesticide residue norms in global markets are posing hurdles to rice from the country.
As per study of Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), over 400 refusals have been recorded of exports from India owing to presence of higher than approved level of pesticides residue. “But banning these chemicals is beyond the purview of state government as they are registered with the Central Insecticides Board and Registration Committee, ” Pannu said.
In paddy, much of the pesticide and chemical is used in September and October. Dealers meetings are being held at district level as well as block level to dissuade them from selling these chemicals. “Posters are doting dealers markets across rice growing districts to aware farmers of harm caused by these chemicals,” an official of Punjab agriculture department said.
A nodal officer has been appointed for each district to monitor the awareness campaign. Rice exporters and millers have also recruited people to push the drive in rural areas.
Philippine rice crisis escalates as shortages push prices to a
three-year high
30-Aug-2018 - Last
updated on 30-Aug-2018 at 01:38 GMT
uttons
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Rice
costs in the Philippines continued on an upward trend despite imported supplies
arriving in June. ©Getty Images
The price
of rice in the Philippines has increased for the eighth month straight and hit
a three-year peak, despite the injection of rice imports.
Inflation
in the country has also reached a five-year high.Rice costs continued on an upward trend despite imported supplies arriving in June. Philippines’ National Food Authority (NFA) has admitted the lack of effect the imports have had on the predicted lowering of prices, especially in Manila, the nation’s capital city.
“As of now, no effect. There are areas that have minimal reduction but here in Metro Manila, where we do not have rice production, there is none,” it said in a statement.
The imports of 500,000 metric tons (MT) worth of rice were commissioned earlier in the year by NFA. This was in an effort to deal with the NFA’s shortage of rice reserves, which at one point had dwindled down to two days’ worth, as reported by the state-run agency.
The NFA is a government agency responsible for safeguarding the stability of rice supply and prices in the country. Rice is the nation’s main staple food.
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported that the average wholesale price of well-milled rice had risen to USD 0.81 (P43.18) per kilogramme this month, a rise of 10% from a year ago. Its average retail price saw a 9% year-on-year increase to USD 0.86 (P45.71).
Regular-milled rice was hit even harder, rising 13% year-on-year to USD 0.75 (P40.08) in wholesale prices, and 11% to USD 0.79 (P42.26). Palay (unhusked rice) also rose 13% year-on-year, to USD 0.41 (P22.11).
PSA previously only predicted a ‘slight increase’ in rice prices as of late last year.
Inflation
woes in the Philippines
The rising cost of rice is only one of
Philippines’ concerns, as food inflation rates are also the highest they have
been in five years.Since the implementation of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law in January this year, the inflation rate has also been on an upward trend, and hit 5.7% in July. This is the fastest rate of increase registered in the Philippines since 2012 was set as the base to determine inflation.
Despite this, the government remains confident that this is a temporary situation, and will stabilise by the end of the year. Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said: “The current surge in inflation is partly an initial reaction to the implementation of TRAIN and is expected to be short-lived and should taper off over the coming months.
“For 2019, inflation is assessed to go back to target,” he added. “We expect inflation to peak in the third quarter and taper off by October.”
What is TRAIN?
TRAIN forms the first part of the
Philippine government’s Comprehensive Tax Reform Program (CTRP). Its aim is to “create
a more just, simple, and more effective system of tax collection, as
per the constitution, where the rich will have a bigger contribution and the
poor will benefit more from the government’s programs and services,”
as per the Philippine Department of Finance website.Implementation of the TRAIN law served to raise or enforce new taxes on products like sugary drinks, vehicles, petroleum and others.
The Philippine Department of Finance has been adamant that TRAIN has played no part on inflation. Pernia disagrees, saying of the situation: "Oil prices are really going up […] Also, the depreciation of the peso and the TRAIN [law] is also a culprit."
Trouble within the NFA
Others have pointed to organisational
and management issues within the NFA as a contributor to rising rice prices as
well as food inflation rates."There is [a] shortage of NFA rice in the market. You implement TRAIN and you are not ready with the price of rice," said University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman School of Statistics dean Dennis Mapa.
After NFA administrator Jason Aquino announced the shortage of rice buffer stock earlier this year, he was questioned in a Senate inquiry. Queries surrounded Aquino’s reasoning for not procuring lower-priced local grains during these months to maintain supply.
“You should have buffer to make sure traders would not take advantage of the farmers. You'll say there's no NFA rice but it's your job. Why are you announcing that you could not do your job?” asked Senator Cynthia Villar, chair of the Senate committee on agriculture and food.
Upcoming rice tariffication bill
In an effort to ease the effects of
inflation, the government is all set to pass its rice tariffication bill into
law within the year.This would amend the existing 22-year-old Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996, which gives rice import monopoly to the NFA. Passing this bill is expected to directly reduce the inflation rate by 0.4%
"The private sector will start importing. The more private sector imports, the supply of rice enlarges and therefore the price of rice goes down," said Pernia.
AUGUST
30, 2018 / 2:00 PM / A DAY AGO
Nagpur
Foodgrain Prices Open- AUG 30, 2018
6 MIN READ
·
·
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open
Market-August 30, 2018
Nagpur, Aug 30 (Reuters) – Gram
prices reported higher in Nagpur Agriculture Produce Marketing
Committee (APMC) on increased demand
from local millers amid weak supply from producing regions.
Fresh rise in Madhya Pradesh gram
prices and reported demand from South-based millers also
jacked up prices
About 100 bags of desi gram
reported for auction in Nagpur APMC, according to sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Gram varieties ruled steady in open market matching the demand and
supply position.
TUAR
* Tuar gavarani and tuar Karnataka recovered in open market on good
seasonal demand
from local traders.
* Major rice varieties moved down in open makret here on lack of buying
support
from local traders amid good supply from
producing belts.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 3,850-3,900, Tuar dal (clean) – 5,600-5,750, Udid
Mogar (clean)
– 6,900-7,600, Moong Mogar (clean) 7,300-8,100, Gram – 4,000-4,050, Gram
Super best
– 5,100-5,200
* Wheat and other foodgrain items 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 4,000-4,100 3,900-4,000
Gram Pink Auction
n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction
n.a. 3,500-4,035
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
1,950-2,030 1,850-1,975
Gram Super Best Bold
5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Gram Super Best
n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best
5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Gram Dal Medium
n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality
4,000-4,100 4,000-4,100
Desi gram Raw 4,000-4,100 4,000-4,100
Gram Kabuli
8,000-10,000 8,000-10,000
Tuar Fataka Best-New
6,100-6,200 6,100-6,200
Tuar Fataka Medium-New
5,700-6,000 5,700-6,000
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New
5,600-5,800 5,600-5,800
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New
5,200-5,500 5,200-5,500
Tuar Gavarani New
3,950-4,050 3,900-4,000
Tuar Karnataka
4,350-4,450 4,300-4,400
Masoor dal best
4,900-5,200 4,900-5,200
Masoor dal medium
4,600-4,800 4,600-4,800
Masoor
n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New)
7,500-8,500 7,500-8,200
Moong Mogar Medium
6,500-7,300 6,500-7,300
Moong dal Chilka New
5,800-6,800 5,800-6,800
Moong Mill quality
n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best
7,500-8,500 7,500-8,500
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,700
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG)
6,000-6,500
6,200-6,500
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG)
4,000-4,300
4,200-4,500
Batri dal (100 INR/KG)
5,500-6,000 5,500-6,000
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg)
3,800-3,900 3,800-3,900
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG)
4,900-5,000 4,800-5,000
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG)
5,300-5,600
5,300-5,600
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG)
2,000-2,100 2,000-2,100
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG)
2,100-2,150
2,100-2,150
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG)
2,250-2,400
2,250-2,400
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG)
2,400-2,500 2,350-2,450
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG)
2,150-2,350 2,100-2,300
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG)
n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG)
3,400-4,000
3,400-4,000
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,600-3,000 2,600-3,000
Rice Parmal (100 INR/KG)
2,100-2,200 2,100-2,200
Rice BPT best (100 INR/KG)
3,200-3,600
3,400-4,000
Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG)
2,600-3,000 2,800-3,200
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG)
2,900-3,000
2,900-3,000
Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG)
2,600-2,800
2,700-2,850
Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG)
2,500-2,600
2,500-2,650
Rice HMT best (100 INR/KG)
4,000-4,200
4,200-4,400
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG)
3,500-3,700
3,700-3,900
Rice Shriram best(100 INR/KG)
5,000-5,500 5,200-5,500
Rice Shriram med (100 INR/KG) 4,500-4,800 4,600-4,800
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG)
9,500-14,000
9,500-14,000
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG)
5,000-7,500
5,000-7,500
Rice Chinnor best 100 INR/KG)
6,500-7,000 6,500-7,000
Rice Chinnor medium (100 INR/KG)
6,200-6,400
6,300-6,500
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG)
2,000-2,200
2,000-2,100
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG)
1,800-2,000 1,700-2,000
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 28.8 degree Celsius,
minimum temp. 23.8 degree Celsius
Rainfall : 1.2 mm
FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with
one or two spells of rains or thunder-showers. Maximum and
minimum temperature would be around
and 28 and 24 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.reuters.com/article/nagpur-foodgrain/nagpur-foodgrain-prices-open-aug-30-2018-idINL3N1VL3U3
AUGUST
31, 2018 / 1:07 PM / UPDATED 5 HOURS AGO
Nagpur
Foodgrain Prices Open- AUG 31, 2018
6 MIN READ
·
·
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open
Market-August 31, 2018
Nagpur, Aug 31 (Reuters) – Gram and
tuar prices showed weak tendency in Nagpur Agriculture
Produce Marketing Committee (APMC)
on lack of demand from local millers amid high moisture
content arrival. Easy condition on
NCDEX and fresh fall in Madhya Pradesh gram prices also
affected sentiment in limited
deals.
About 200 bags of desi gram and 50
bags of tuar reported for auction in Nagpur APMC, according
to sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Desi gram raw reported down in open market here on lack of demand from
local
traders.
TUAR
* Tuar varieties ruled steady in open market here but demand was
poor.
* Lakhodi dal moved down in open makret here on poor buying support
from local traders amid good supply from
producing belts.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 3,850-3,900, Tuar dal (clean) – 5,600-5,750, Udid
Mogar (clean)
– 6,900-7,600, Moong Mogar (clean) 7,300-8,100, Gram – 4,000-4,050, Gram
Super best
– 5,100-5,200
* Wheat and other foodgrain items 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
3,350-3,905 3,500-4,050
Gram Pink Auction
n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction
3,300-3,700 3,500-3,800
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
1,900-2,040 1,950-2,030
Gram Super Best Bold
5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Gram Super Best
n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best
5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Gram Dal Medium
n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 4,000-4,100 4,000-4,100
Desi gram Raw
3,950-4,050 4,000-4,100
Gram Kabuli
8,000-10,000 8,000-10,000
Tuar Fataka Best-New
6,100-6,200 6,100-6,200
Tuar Fataka Medium-New
5,700-6,000 5,700-6,000
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New
5,600-5,800 5,600-5,800
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New
5,200-5,500 5,200-5,500
Tuar Gavarani New
3,950-4,050 3,950-4,050
Tuar Karnataka
4,350-4,450 4,350-4,450
Masoor dal best
4,900-5,200 4,900-5,200
Masoor dal medium
4,600-4,800 4,600-4,800
Masoor
n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New)
7,500-8,500 7,500-8,200
Moong Mogar Medium
6,500-7,300 6,500-7,300
Moong dal Chilka New
5,800-6,800 5,800-6,800
Moong Mill quality
n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best
7,500-8,500 7,500-8,500
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,700
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG)
6,000-6,500
6,200-6,500
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG)
4,000-4,300 4,200-4,500
Batri dal (100 INR/KG)
5,500-6,000 5,500-6,000
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg)
3,700-3,800 3,800-3,900
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG)
4,900-5,000 4,800-5,000
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG)
5,300-5,600
5,300-5,600
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG)
2,000-2,100 2,000-2,100
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG)
2,100-2,150
2,100-2,150
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG)
2,250-2,400 2,250-2,400
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG)
2,400-2,500
2,350-2,450
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG)
2,150-2,350 2,100-2,300
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG)
n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,400-4,000 3,400-4,000
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG)
2,600-3,000
2,600-3,000
Rice Parmal (100 INR/KG)
2,100-2,200 2,100-2,200
Rice BPT best (100 INR/KG)
3,200-3,600 3,200-3,600
Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG)
2,600-3,000
2,600-3,000
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG)
2,900-3,000
2,900-3,000
Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG)
2,600-2,800
2,600-2,800
Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG)
2,500-2,600
2,500-2,600
Rice HMT best (100 INR/KG)
4,000-4,200
4,000-4,200
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG)
3,500-3,700
3,500-3,700
Rice Shriram best(100 INR/KG)
5,000-5,500 5,000-5,500
Rice Shriram med (100 INR/KG)
4,500-4,800
4,500-4,800
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG)
9,500-14,000
9,500-14,000
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG)
5,000-7,500
5,000-7,500
Rice Chinnor best 100
INR/KG) 6,500-7,000 6,500-7,000
Rice Chinnor medium (100 INR/KG)
6,200-6,400
6,200-6,400
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG)
2,000-2,200
2,000-2,100
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 1,800-2,000 1,700-2,000
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 30.0 degree Celsius,
minimum temp. 23.5 degree Celsius
Rainfall : 0.1 mm
FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with
possibility of moderate rains. Maximum and minimum
temperature would be around and 30
and 24 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.reuters.com/article/nagpur-foodgrain/nagpur-foodgrain-prices-open-aug-31-2018-idINL3N1VM3RJ
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