Fred
Zaunbrecher looking at a busy harvest schedule
Louisiana Planting Report: Deciding Weather It's Spring or Not
By Kane Webb
April 27, 2018
LAKE CHARLES, LA -- I haven't seen it all, but I think I have now
heard it all: A grower mentioned this
week that the weather in South Louisiana was too nice, it needs to warm up!
Another issue Dr. Harrell described was the tillering of rice
planted in late February/early March, while the plants are still at a very
short stature. It seems to be prevalent
throughout the area and is due to the cooler conditions. The good news is, some growers are
remembering past seasons of comparable conditions and the correlation of higher
yields.
The forecast is calling for a return to normal weather conditions
into next week. With that, the crop
should begin to take off, but most of the crop will be taking off at the same time.
Fred Zaunbrecher, a grower in Acadia parish, said, "We spaced
planting over a two month period, but we may be harvesting over a two week
period!"
USA RICE DAILY
PH-Vietnam bilateral talks tackle rice
imports, Abu Sayyaf
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 10:00 PM April 27,
2018
SINGAPORE — Vietnam promised to supply
quality rice for the Philippines and Manila reciprocated by assuring Hanoi that
its forces will go after the Abu Sayyaf which to this day holds captive
Vietnamese sailors.
These were among the issues discussed
during the bilateral meeting between President Duterte and Vietnamese Prime
Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc at the sidelines of the 32nd Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (Asean) leaders’ summit here.
Presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said
the two leaders talked about the purchase of rice and that Vietnam reiterated
its “willingness to supply quality rice to the Philippines.”
The two leaders also talked about the
Vietnamese fishermen caught illegally fishing in Philippine waters. Roque said
President Duterte told his Vietnamese counterpart that the issue of illegal
fishing was a small matter as he noted that the ocean can provide many fish for
harvesting.
“The Vietnamese prime minister thanked (the
President), especially when he learned that the President himself sent home the
last freed Vietnamese fishermen,” Roque said at a news briefing.
For his part, the Chief Executive thanked
Vietnam for treating well 3,800 Filipinos working there.
Roque also said the President appealed for
humanitarian assistance for Capt. Romel Aleria who has been detained in Vietnam
since 2016 for alleged illegal cross-border transfer of goods.
“The President also said he will not stop
running after the Abu Sayyaf who kidnapped and continues to hold Vietnamese sailors.
He promised he won’t stop until the Abu Sayyaf is wiped out,” Roque also said.
Niger rice cuts imports, says FADAMA
27.04.2018
Niger State has contributed to the reduction of rice imports,
the National Fadama Co-ordination Office has said.Nigeria has been listed among
the 16 top producers of rice with its local production valued at N684 billion
($1.9 billion).Niger State produced 545,700 metric tonnes (MT) of rice to top
the national production output for last year’s wet season.The leader of the
Technical Assistance Mission to the state, Dr. Samuel Alabi, who spoke
during a visit to the Commissioner of Agriculture and Rural Development, Haruna
Nuhu Dukku, in Minna, said the quantity of rice produced in the state with the
contribution of the state Fadama Co-ordination Office during the wet and dry
seasons had greatly increased.
Alabi praised the state Fadama
Co-ordination Office, saying the state added value to what Fadama is
achieving nationally as the office have become a focus laboratory where
experience meet with result delivery.Niger State Coordination Office has become
a learning centre where opportunity meets experience and experience meets with
result delivery. The state has become Fadama learning centre. We are
indebted to Niger State for adding colour to the performance of the national
office,’’Alabi said.Dukku assured Fadama of the state support of its programme
as it has proved to be of immense benefit to the people, especially in the
rural areas.
Challenges
of embedded water
By exporting tons of agricultural produce,
India is sacrificing its fresh water reserve. Dipankar
Dey | 27 April 2018 7:11 PM The requirement of water to produce
few selected food items like rice (husked), beef, wheat and tea in India is
3702, 16482,1654 and 7002 cubic metres per ton respectively. However, it varies
depending on the country and the varieties cultivated. India is the largest
exporter of rice and the third largest exporter of beef in the world. In
2016-17, India exported 10.3 million MT of rice (China was the largest importer
with five million MT of rice).
Thus,
along with rice, India also exported 381.30 billion cubic metres of embedded
water. In 2016, India exported 1.56 million tons of beef. In turn, exporting
25.71 billion cubic meters of embedded water along with the beef! Water economy
The energy and water intensive agriculture practices, followed since the 1950s,
have already caused severe damage to the ecology through an indiscriminate use
of fossil fuel based chemical fertilisers and underground water. Thus, both air
and water have been contaminated. Eventually, these two common properties,
available for free since the advent of human civilisation, have been turned
into economic goods. Water scarcity has emerged as one of the prime economic
and environmental issues of this century. The Stockholm International Water
Institute has calculated that more than 1.4 billion people live in closed
basins where existing water cannot meet the society's agricultural, industrial,
municipal and environmental needs. The World Bank and the Government of China
have estimated, for instance, that more than 54 per cent of water in the seven prime
rivers of China has become unusable because of pollution. A team of
hydrologists of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt has found that
northern India's underground water supply was being pumped and consumed by
human activities, such as irrigating cropland. According to them, between 2002
and 2008, more than 108 cubic km of groundwater has disappeared from aquifers
in Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan and Delhi. Rapid urbanisation, especially after
the green revolution, has also increased domestic and industrial demand for
water. In 2008, the global water market was estimated at $316 billion and
transactions in the Asian market, the fastest growing water market in the
world, were around $120 billion in a year. In 2016, the global water and wastewater
treatment market size was valued at USD 478.15 billion and, it is expected to
reach USD 674.72 billion by 2025.
Expecting a high return from this
fast-growing market, huge private investments are being made by large
corporations across the world in various water projects. The industry was
propelled by the enactment of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)
in 1995, which seeks to enhance the power of transnational corporations over
governments (national, state and local) and reduce their scope in providing
basic human services such as health, education and water. In as early as 2002,
the European Union had first opened the discussion on foreign participation for
water distribution in developing countries. Then, in 2005, during negotiations
on GATS under the WTO Doha Development Round, they proposed that, in exchange
for access to the water markets, developing and least developed countries
(LDCs) would receive access to the desired western markets. Simply, it means
that the developing countries would get market access of their agricultural
products in the EU on the condition that they (developing countries) open their
water sector to the water TNCs.
In 1999, the privatisation of municipal water
and sanitation company SEMAPA, in Cochabamba—Bolivia's third-largest city, was
a glaring example of corporate dominance over the governments on the supply of
vital necessitates like water. Considering the huge growth potential of the
water market, several energy utilities have diversified into water utilities.
Few major transnational water utilities dominating the market are GE Water
& Process Technologies, 3M Purification, Calgon Carbon, Aqua Tech
International, Danaher, GDF SUEZ, Degremont, Veolia Water Solutions &
Technologies, and Siemens. The virtual water trade In addition to the 'real'
water market, there exists, though somewhat dormant at present, a large market
of 'virtual water'. Virtual/embedded water is the amount of water used in the
production of food, energy and other products. If a country decides to rely
more on imported food, it can save an enormous amount of its own water which
would have otherwise been used for cultivation.
For example, to produce one ton of wheat,
say, 1654 cubic meters of water is required. Thus, if India exports one ton of
wheat then there is a virtual flow of 1654 cubic meters of water from India to
the importing country and the importer saves nearly the same quantity of water.
Large parts of North and South America, Australia, South Asia, and Central
Africa are net exporters of virtual water. Most of Europe, Japan, North and
South Africa, the Middle East, Mexico, and Indonesia, in contrast, are net
importers of virtual water. It has been claimed that one solution to water
scarcity involves the accounting of virtual water while designing the global
trade policy.
Suggestions have been made to set-up a
'virtual water-trading council', under the World Trade Organisation (WTO), to
help 'manage both real and virtual water resources for the world's booming
population'. The EU has taken a conscious decision to save their scarce water
resources by shifting the burden of cultivation to developing countries. The
water import dependence (WID) data of few major economies of Europe will
corroborate this observation. WID is the ratio between the water footprint of a
country's import and its total water footprints (water footprint is the volume
of water used to produce goods and services, including imports that people
consume).
The higher the ratio, the more a country
depends on outside water sources. During 1997-2001, the WID of the Netherlands,
UK, Germany, Italy France and Spain were (in per cent) 82, 70, 53, 51, 37 and
36 respectively. The corresponding figures for India, Bangladesh, China, and
Brazil are (in per cent) 2, 3, 7 and 8. Thus, during 1997-2001, the Netherlands
could reduce, through imports, the country's total water footprints by 82 per
cent compared to India's 2 per cent! In simple language, this means that the
Netherlands had mostly imported water-intensive products and India imported
products which were generally not water intensive. Concerns Export of
agricultural products not only deprives India's malnourished population of
food, it also transfers huge quantities of embedded water from rural India to
the importing countries. India is already facing a serious burden of
under-nutrition.
The Global Nutrition Report 2017 shows that
more than half the women of reproductive age in the country suffer from
anaemia. The Global Hunger Index (GHI) 2017 ranked India 97th out of 118
countries with a serious hunger situation. In the future, importing northern
nations might ask for water labels to guarantee that only pure (and preferably
from renewable sources) water is used in the production of exported food items.
By discouraging the use of arsenic and lead contaminated underground water in
cultivation and animal husbandry, water labels will ensure the safety of their
imported food. In such a scenario, which is very likely, the organic food
exporters of India, targeting the developed country markets, will increasingly
rely on renewable natural water sources for cultivation. Funds will be diverted
to develop water bodies to serve that purpose. And, the food processing plants
will collaborate with the major water utilities of those importing developed
countries to guarantee that the water purification level, as specified in the
water standard, is maintained. While the citizens of the importing countries of
the north would
consume green products, a large
number of Indians would lose their basic rights on water. The state of the
already polluted water sources, which cater to the needs of the unprivileged
sections of the local population, will be further deteriorated. The existing
dualism in the production and consumption of food and water will widen further.
http://www.millenniumpost.in/opinion/challenges-of-embedded-water-296682
http://www.millenniumpost.in/opinion/challenges-of-embedded-water-296682
Global
Rice Starch Market Growth by 2023: Ingredion, AGRANA, Bangkok starch and Thai
Flour
Posted By: Socorro Barneron: April 27, 2018In: Food and Beverages
Print Email
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Global Rice Starch Market Growth by 2023: Ingredion, AGRANA,
Bangkok starch and Thai Flour
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Socorro Barner
Socorro writes about research techniques and has a lot of working
experience with international companies. She has extensive experience
developing marketing, corporate communications, and public relations materials
in a variety of fields including finance, business, human resources, chemical,
healthcare and consumer technology. http://journalismday.com/2018/04/global-rice-starch-market-growth-by-2023-ingredion/
Scientists
Find New Information on Rice-Killing Fungus
Fri, 04/27/2018 - 3:32pm
Researchers may have discovered
new information on rice blast, a disease that destroys enough rice to feed 60
million people annually.A team from Rutgers University-New Brunswick conducted
a genomic analysis of magnaporthales—an order of about 200 species of fungi
including rice blast—to better understand the mechanism behind the infection
process. The researchers generated genome sequence data from five new
Magnaporthales fungi, including non-pathogenic species, and performed
comparative genome analysis of a total of 13 fungal species in the class to
understand the evolutionary history of the Magnaporthales and of fungal
pathogenesis. Some of the new members were discovered in the New Jersey Pine
Barrens.
They also found that the fungus
that causes the devastating disease in rice first became harmful around 21
million years ago. These findings could lead to more ways to fight or prevent
crop and plant diseases, including new fungicides and quarantines that are more
effective.
“With climate change, I think the
rice blast problem can only get worse because this is a summer disease in warm
climates where rice is grown,” Ning Zhang, study lead author and associate
professor in the Department of Plant Biology and the Department of Biochemistry
and Microbiology in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, said
in a statement.
The scientists then genetically
sequenced 21 related species that are less harmful or nonpathogenic than the
rice blast fungus. The team found that proteins called secretomes that fungi
secrete are particularly abundant in important pathogens like the rice blast
fungus.
Based on previous research, the
researchers discovered that the proteins may became more abundant over time,
allowing the fungi to infect crops. The researchers then identified a list of
genes that are abundant in pathogens, but less so in nonpathogens, so the
abundant genes might promote pathogens that can infect crops. This will enable
researchers to examine the mechanisms behind the infection process.
The researchers also found that
related fungal pathogens also infect turfgrasses, causing summer patch and gray
leaf spot that damage lawns and golf courses, as well as a new fungal disease
found in wheat in Brazil that has spread to other nearby countries.
“The rice blast fungus has gotten
a lot of attention in the past several decades but related species of fungi
draw little attention, largely because they’re not as severe or not harmful,”
Zhang said. “But they’re all genetically related and the relatives of severe
pathogens have been little-studied. You have to know your relatives to have a
holistic understanding of how the rice blast pathogen became strong and others
did not.”
ITERAL ROOTS OF YOUR 4 HOURS AGO
New research suggests our ancestors'
agricultural practices may have shaped our beliefs and assumptions.
The Longji terrace in Guangxi, China. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)
People of all ideological stripes have one
thing in common: Their beliefs feel instinctively right. Of
course we're all dependent on one another; that's why we need
a social safety net. Or, we're obviouslyindependent beings; the
best thing government can do is get off our backs.
Where do these deep-seated beliefs come
from? Genetics, family, and even birth order have been cited, but learned
cultural norms may play the biggest role of all. And new research from China
suggests these can emerge from the farming practices of our ancient ancestors.
In a newly published study, a research team led
by Thomas Talhlem of the University of Chicago
provides evidence supporting this idea. It finds that, Western stereotypes
aside, China is far from monolithic.
The researchers report the culture of southern
China—essentially, the area south of the Yangtze River—is based on
interdependence and holistic thinking, while that of northern China emphasizes
independence and individualism, much like the United States. They argue this
reflects a difference in the predominant agricultural crop: wheat in the north,
rice in the south.
"Rice paddy farming often requires
irrigation systems that multiple families have to coordinate," they write
in the journal Science Advances. The
labor-intensive nature of such farming created "customs of exchanging
labor," they add. "Over time, this may have pushed rice cultures to develop
a more interdependent culture."
In 2014, Talhelm and his colleagues
conducted laboratory experimentswith Chinese students that
suggest that this mindset—as well as its opposite, which is embodied by
northerners—still lingers today. This new research provides evidence that it
impacts adults' everyday behaviors.
In the first of two studies, they surveyed
cafĆ©s in six cities—two in traditional wheat-growing regions, and four in
traditional rice-growing regions—and noted the percentage of people who were
there by themselves. "Doing things alone is more common in individualistic
cultures," they note.
They observed nearly 9,000 people in 256
establishments, being careful to stay away from tourist-heavy areas.
"People in rice regions were less likely to be alone," they report.
"On weekdays, roughly 10 percent more people were alone in the wheat
region than the rice region."
For the second study, "we pushed chairs
together in Starbucks and observed how many people moved the chairs out of
their way, and how many moved their body to squeeze through the chairs."
"If people in rice areas are more
collectivistic, with less importance placed on the self, they should be less
likely to move the chairs," the researchers reasoned.And, after observing
the actions of 678 people, that's just what they found. "In the rice
region, about 6 percent of people moved the chair," they report,
"whereas in the wheat region, 16 percent of people moved the chair."
It's particularly interesting that one of the
"rice cities" is Hong Kong, which was ruled by Great Britain for many
decades, and modernized ahead of the rest of China. The fact the
interdependence-oriented culture persists there, in spite of prolonged Western
influence, suggests it is deep-rooted indeed.
While it's tempting to apply these ideas to the
U.S.—and specifically the "rugged individualism" of the
don't-tread-on-me Rocky Mountain West—caution is in order. These norms
presumably formed over centuries—perhaps millennia; the U.S. is obviously a
much younger society.Nevertheless, these findings are important in two ways.
They shatter some stereotypes about China, a nation we need to understand better
as it rises as a rival superpower.
And they remind us that, however self-evident
they may appear, our basic assumptions and habits—from which our political
ideologies emerge—may have been shaped long before we were born. If we want to
critically examine the roots of our thinking, it might help to consider the
roots of our ancestors' farms.
Cardi B Fans Having 90% Higher
Chance Of Acquiring An STD Says Research Is Satirical News
0
Cardi B fans having a 90 percent higher chance of acquiring a
sexually transmitted disease is satirical news. There is no truth to
a report that suggested their was new research confirming that fans of the
female rapper had an increased likelihood of getting an STD. Rather, the story
came from a site that a days earlier published another story about the baby
daddy for Cardi B’s unborn child.
Where did this satirical news originate? Huzlers published
the satirical news article on
April 27, 2018, humorously reporting that new resarch just proved that Cardi B
fans had a 90 percent higher chance of being diagnosed with an STD. You can
read the satirical news below.
LOS ANGELES – New reports have shown that Cardi B fans have a 90%
higher chance of acquiring a sexually transmitted disease.
A team of researchers from UCLA recently conducted an experiment
with 200 female students, making sure that 100 of those students were big Cardi
B fans (Group A), while the other 100 were not (Group B). Researchers also made
sure that none of the 200 students already had a sexually transmitted disease.
The 200 students were then brought back after 6 months for STD testing,
however, the students were never explained the purpose of the experiment and
were never aware of the STD testing, the testing was simply described as a
“regular checkup”.
The results of the experiment were shocking. Of the 100 females
students in group A, 92 students tested positive for an STD, meanwhile only 4
students in group B tested positive. The results were clear enough for the
researchers to conclude that Cardi B fans had a 90% higher chance of acquiring
an STD in only 6 months time, and experts say a whole year time would 100%
guarantee an STD.
However, there is no truth to the above story. Of course, a simple
search at UCLA’s
website for their research projects comes up with no results to
suggest research is being done to connect the rise in STDs in Cardi B fans.
Additionally, there are no legitimate news coverage of this alleged study
despite the story saying so. Finally, and most importantly, Huzlers carries the
following disclaimer:
Huzlers.com is the most infamous fauxtire & satire
entertainment website in the world. If it’s trending on social media you’ll
find it here! Here are some examples of people sharing the satirical news on
social media.
Duterte removes
quota on rice importation
By: Allan Nawal - Correspondent / @inqmindanao
Inquirer Mindanao / 11:23 PM April 27, 2018
DAVAO CITY – President Rodrigo Duterte said
he had told traders he had foregone the quota system in rice importation and
they can now import the commodity as long as they pay the correct taxes.
“I have done away with the quota-quota. You
can import rice, all of you. No more paperwork. And if there is somebody from
(National Food Authority), (Bureau of Internal Revenue), Customs who would ask,
asking money from you, slap him. Try to slap him,” he said in a speech before
members of the Grand Masonry here on Thursday.
The event was off-limits to media but
MalacaƱang released a transcript of the President’s speech on Friday.
President Duterte said “(t)here was really
no (rice) shortage” but he wanted the rice inventory to go up.
The President said he made that clear to
government officials.
“I said, ‘guys, I want to see rice up
there. Touching the ceiling of this warehouse. Now,’” the President said.
President Duterte said he was mad when the
government’s inventory went so low NFA warehouses were either “half-full or
half-empty.”
“So the best way, I said, to address this
problem is I will fill my inventory,” Duterte added.
He said those importing rice to beef up
supply should “(j)ust pay the taxes, the correct taxes.”
“That’s the end,” he said as he asked
businessmen to shy away from shady deals with government officials.
“So somebody mess up with you? (Tell them)
‘Duterte said I should slap you. Yeah, that would be extortion,’” he said,
addressing rice importers. /jpv
https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/986013/duterte-removes-quota-on-rice-importation-duterte-palace-taxes-importation
Cordillera remains rice sufficient
DEPARTMENT of Agriculture (DA)-Cordillera Planning and
Management Chief Susan Balanza said the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR)
remains rice sufficient.
During Thursday’s media conference on the region’s Gross Regional Domestic Product, Balanza said the region remain sufficient wherein it can provide what the region’s need in terms of rice commodity.
Balanza, however, noted the provinces of Benguet and Mountain Province remain to have challenges with its distribution prior to the road network system of the said provinces.
“The region remains rice sufficient but there are provinces that are not sufficient that includes Benguet and Mountain Province because of the road network system,” said Balanza.
When it comes to highland vegetables, the region is much more sufficient, added Balanza with the province of Benguet known as the salad bowl of the country producing highland vegetables across the nation.
In the succeeding years, the Department of Agriculture (DA)-Cordillera aims to identify, prioritized and avoid duplication of classifying farm-to-market roads (FMR).
This year, the agency has allotted P336-million budget for FMRs.Meanwhile, Philippine Statistics Authority noted a slight increase of the region’s economic performance in the agriculture sector.
To further trigger the increasing growth rate agriculture, the DA allotted P1.7B budget for the sector for 2018 in the whole region.DA is set to focus on programs empowering and enhancing the capabilities of the farmers in financial literacy, business management and continue the FMR programs of the agency.Moreover, Balanza said on her point of view the effect of autonomy in the region remains acceptable with the uniqueness of the region when it comes to its agro-ecozone, terrain and slope that help the region to establish its own policies.
“The autonomy to develop policies unique to us kumpara sa other regions,” she added.
During Thursday’s media conference on the region’s Gross Regional Domestic Product, Balanza said the region remain sufficient wherein it can provide what the region’s need in terms of rice commodity.
Balanza, however, noted the provinces of Benguet and Mountain Province remain to have challenges with its distribution prior to the road network system of the said provinces.
“The region remains rice sufficient but there are provinces that are not sufficient that includes Benguet and Mountain Province because of the road network system,” said Balanza.
When it comes to highland vegetables, the region is much more sufficient, added Balanza with the province of Benguet known as the salad bowl of the country producing highland vegetables across the nation.
In the succeeding years, the Department of Agriculture (DA)-Cordillera aims to identify, prioritized and avoid duplication of classifying farm-to-market roads (FMR).
This year, the agency has allotted P336-million budget for FMRs.Meanwhile, Philippine Statistics Authority noted a slight increase of the region’s economic performance in the agriculture sector.
To further trigger the increasing growth rate agriculture, the DA allotted P1.7B budget for the sector for 2018 in the whole region.DA is set to focus on programs empowering and enhancing the capabilities of the farmers in financial literacy, business management and continue the FMR programs of the agency.Moreover, Balanza said on her point of view the effect of autonomy in the region remains acceptable with the uniqueness of the region when it comes to its agro-ecozone, terrain and slope that help the region to establish its own policies.
“The autonomy to develop policies unique to us kumpara sa other regions,” she added.
Global
Clarified Rice Syrup Market By Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends
and Forecast, 2018-2025 by Global QYResearch
The new research from Global
QYResearch on Global Clarified Rice Syrup Market Report
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Geographically, this report is
segmented into several key Regions, with production, consumption, revenue
(million USD), market share and growth rate of Clarified Rice Syrup in these
regions, from 2013 to 2025 (forecast), covering
North America
Europe
China
Japan
Southeast Asia
India
Global Clarified Rice Syrup market competition by top manufacturers, with production, price, revenue (value) and market share for each manufacturer; the top players including
BioPharma Industries
Malt Products Corporation
Marigold Inc.
Khatoon Industries
Sweet Nature Inc.
AG Commodities Inc.
Shafi Gluco Chem Limited
Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd
North America
Europe
China
Japan
Southeast Asia
India
Global Clarified Rice Syrup market competition by top manufacturers, with production, price, revenue (value) and market share for each manufacturer; the top players including
BioPharma Industries
Malt Products Corporation
Marigold Inc.
Khatoon Industries
Sweet Nature Inc.
AG Commodities Inc.
Shafi Gluco Chem Limited
Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd
On the basis of product, this
report displays the production, revenue, price, market share and growth rate of
each type, primarily split into
White rice
Brown rice
White rice
Brown rice
On the basis of the end
users/applications, this report focuses on the status and outlook for major
applications/end users, consumption (sales), market share and growth rate for
each application, including
Food and beverage industry
Nutritional supplements
Energy drinks
Food and beverage industry
Nutritional supplements
Energy drinks
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requirements, please let us know and we will offer you the report as you want.
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Table of Contents
Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Market Research Report 2018
1 Clarified Rice Syrup Market
Overview
1.1 Product Overview and Scope of Clarified Rice Syrup
1.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Segment by Type (Product Category)
1.2.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and CAGR (%) Comparison by Type (Product Category)(2013-2025)
1.2.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production Market Share by Type (Product Category) in 2017
1.2.3 White rice
1.2.4 Brown rice
1.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Segment by Application
1.3.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption (Sales) Comparison by Application (2013-2025)
1.3.2 Food and beverage industry
1.3.3 Nutritional supplements
1.3.4 Energy drinks
1.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Market by Region (2013-2025)
1.4.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Market Size (Value) and CAGR (%) Comparison by Region (2013-2025)
1.4.2 North America Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.3 Europe Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.4 China Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.5 Japan Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.6 Southeast Asia Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.7 India Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.5 Global Market Size (Value) of Clarified Rice Syrup (2013-2025)
1.5.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue Status and Outlook (2013-2025)
1.5.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production Status and Outlook (2013-2025)
1.1 Product Overview and Scope of Clarified Rice Syrup
1.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Segment by Type (Product Category)
1.2.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and CAGR (%) Comparison by Type (Product Category)(2013-2025)
1.2.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production Market Share by Type (Product Category) in 2017
1.2.3 White rice
1.2.4 Brown rice
1.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Segment by Application
1.3.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption (Sales) Comparison by Application (2013-2025)
1.3.2 Food and beverage industry
1.3.3 Nutritional supplements
1.3.4 Energy drinks
1.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Market by Region (2013-2025)
1.4.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Market Size (Value) and CAGR (%) Comparison by Region (2013-2025)
1.4.2 North America Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.3 Europe Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.4 China Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.5 Japan Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.6 Southeast Asia Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.4.7 India Status and Prospect (2013-2025)
1.5 Global Market Size (Value) of Clarified Rice Syrup (2013-2025)
1.5.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue Status and Outlook (2013-2025)
1.5.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production Status and Outlook (2013-2025)
2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Market Competition by Manufacturers
2.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.1.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.1.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Average Price by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.4 Manufacturers Clarified Rice Syrup Manufacturing Base Distribution, Sales Area and Product Type
2.5 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Competitive Situation and Trends
2.5.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Concentration Rate
2.5.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Share of Top 3 and Top 5 Manufacturers
2.5.3 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion
2.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.1.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.1.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Share by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Average Price by Manufacturers (2013-2018)
2.4 Manufacturers Clarified Rice Syrup Manufacturing Base Distribution, Sales Area and Product Type
2.5 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Competitive Situation and Trends
2.5.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Concentration Rate
2.5.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Market Share of Top 3 and Top 5 Manufacturers
2.5.3 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion
3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Capacity, Production, Revenue (Value) by Region (2013-2018)
3.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue (Value) and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.5 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.6 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.7 China Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.8 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.9 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.10 India Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue (Value) and Market Share by Region (2013-2018)
3.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.5 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.6 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.7 China Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.8 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.9 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
3.10 India Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Region (2013-2018)
4.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption by Region (2013-2018)
4.2 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.3 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.4 China Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.5 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.6 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.7 India Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption by Region (2013-2018)
4.2 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.3 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.4 China Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.5 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.6 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
4.7 India Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption, Export, Import (2013-2018)
5 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type
5.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Market Share by Type (2013-2018)
5.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Market Share by Type (2013-2018)
5.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Price by Type (2013-2018)
5.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production Growth by Type (2013-2018)
5.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production and Market Share by Type (2013-2018)
5.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Market Share by Type (2013-2018)
5.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Price by Type (2013-2018)
5.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production Growth by Type (2013-2018)
6 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Market Analysis by Application
6.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption and Market Share by Application (2013-2018)
6.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption Growth Rate by Application (2013-2018)
6.3 Market Drivers and Opportunities
6.3.1 Potential Applications
6.3.2 Emerging Markets/Countries
6.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption and Market Share by Application (2013-2018)
6.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption Growth Rate by Application (2013-2018)
6.3 Market Drivers and Opportunities
6.3.1 Potential Applications
6.3.2 Emerging Markets/Countries
7 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Manufacturers Profiles/Analysis
7.1 BioPharma Industries
7.1.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.1.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.1.2.1 Product A
7.1.2.2 Product B
7.1.3 BioPharma Industries Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.1.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.2 Malt Products Corporation
7.2.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.2.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.2.2.1 Product A
7.2.2.2 Product B
7.2.3 Malt Products Corporation Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.2.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.3 Marigold Inc.
7.3.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.3.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.3.2.1 Product A
7.3.2.2 Product B
7.3.3 Marigold Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.3.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.4 Khatoon Industries
7.4.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.4.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.4.2.1 Product A
7.4.2.2 Product B
7.4.3 Khatoon Industries Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.4.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.5 Sweet Nature Inc.
7.5.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.5.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.5.2.1 Product A
7.5.2.2 Product B
7.5.3 Sweet Nature Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.5.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.6 AG Commodities Inc.
7.6.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.6.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.6.2.1 Product A
7.6.2.2 Product B
7.6.3 AG Commodities Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.6.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.7 Shafi Gluco Chem Limited
7.7.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.7.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.7.2.1 Product A
7.7.2.2 Product B
7.7.3 Shafi Gluco Chem Limited Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.7.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.8 Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd
7.8.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.8.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.8.2.1 Product A
7.8.2.2 Product B
7.8.3 Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.8.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.1 BioPharma Industries
7.1.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.1.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.1.2.1 Product A
7.1.2.2 Product B
7.1.3 BioPharma Industries Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.1.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.2 Malt Products Corporation
7.2.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.2.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.2.2.1 Product A
7.2.2.2 Product B
7.2.3 Malt Products Corporation Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.2.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.3 Marigold Inc.
7.3.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.3.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.3.2.1 Product A
7.3.2.2 Product B
7.3.3 Marigold Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.3.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.4 Khatoon Industries
7.4.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.4.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.4.2.1 Product A
7.4.2.2 Product B
7.4.3 Khatoon Industries Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.4.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.5 Sweet Nature Inc.
7.5.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.5.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.5.2.1 Product A
7.5.2.2 Product B
7.5.3 Sweet Nature Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.5.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.6 AG Commodities Inc.
7.6.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.6.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.6.2.1 Product A
7.6.2.2 Product B
7.6.3 AG Commodities Inc. Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.6.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.7 Shafi Gluco Chem Limited
7.7.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.7.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.7.2.1 Product A
7.7.2.2 Product B
7.7.3 Shafi Gluco Chem Limited Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.7.4 Main Business/Business Overview
7.8 Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd
7.8.1 Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base, Sales Area and Its Competitors
7.8.2 Clarified Rice Syrup Product Category, Application and Specification
7.8.2.1 Product A
7.8.2.2 Product B
7.8.3 Wuhu Deli Foods Co Ltd Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin (2013-2018)
7.8.4 Main Business/Business Overview
8 Clarified Rice Syrup
Manufacturing Cost Analysis
8.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Key Raw Materials Analysis
8.1.1 Key Raw Materials
8.1.2 Price Trend of Key Raw Materials
8.1.3 Key Suppliers of Raw Materials
8.1.4 Market Concentration Rate of Raw Materials
8.2 Proportion of Manufacturing Cost Structure
8.2.1 Raw Materials
8.2.2 Labor Cost
8.2.3 Manufacturing Expenses
8.3 Manufacturing Process Analysis of Clarified Rice Syrup
8.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Key Raw Materials Analysis
8.1.1 Key Raw Materials
8.1.2 Price Trend of Key Raw Materials
8.1.3 Key Suppliers of Raw Materials
8.1.4 Market Concentration Rate of Raw Materials
8.2 Proportion of Manufacturing Cost Structure
8.2.1 Raw Materials
8.2.2 Labor Cost
8.2.3 Manufacturing Expenses
8.3 Manufacturing Process Analysis of Clarified Rice Syrup
9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing
Strategy and Downstream Buyers
9.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Industrial Chain Analysis
9.2 Upstream Raw Materials Sourcing
9.3 Raw Materials Sources of Clarified Rice Syrup Major Manufacturers in 2017
9.4 Downstream Buyers
9.1 Clarified Rice Syrup Industrial Chain Analysis
9.2 Upstream Raw Materials Sourcing
9.3 Raw Materials Sources of Clarified Rice Syrup Major Manufacturers in 2017
9.4 Downstream Buyers
10 Marketing Strategy Analysis,
Distributors/Traders
10.1 Marketing Channel
10.1.1 Direct Marketing
10.1.2 Indirect Marketing
10.1.3 Marketing Channel Development Trend
10.2 Market Positioning
10.2.1 Pricing Strategy
10.2.2 Brand Strategy
10.2.3 Target Client
10.3 Distributors/Traders List
10.1 Marketing Channel
10.1.1 Direct Marketing
10.1.2 Indirect Marketing
10.1.3 Marketing Channel Development Trend
10.2 Market Positioning
10.2.1 Pricing Strategy
10.2.2 Brand Strategy
10.2.3 Target Client
10.3 Distributors/Traders List
11 Market Effect Factors Analysis
11.1 Technology Progress/Risk
11.1.1 Substitutes Threat
11.1.2 Technology Progress in Related Industry
11.2 Consumer Needs/Customer Preference Change
11.3 Economic/Political Environmental Change
11.1 Technology Progress/Risk
11.1.1 Substitutes Threat
11.1.2 Technology Progress in Related Industry
11.2 Consumer Needs/Customer Preference Change
11.3 Economic/Political Environmental Change
12 Global Clarified Rice Syrup
Market Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production and Growth Rate Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Growth Rate Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Price and Trend Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption , Import and Export Forecast by Region (2018-2025)
12.2.1 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.2 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.3 China Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.4 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.5 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.6 India Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue and Price Forecast by Type (2018-2025)
12.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption Forecast by Application (2018-2025)
12.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production, Revenue Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.1 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Capacity, Production and Growth Rate Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Revenue and Growth Rate Forecast (2018-2025)
12.1.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Price and Trend Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Consumption , Import and Export Forecast by Region (2018-2025)
12.2.1 North America Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.2 Europe Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.3 China Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.4 Japan Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.5 Southeast Asia Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.2.6 India Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue, Consumption, Export and Import Forecast (2018-2025)
12.3 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Production, Revenue and Price Forecast by Type (2018-2025)
12.4 Global Clarified Rice Syrup Consumption Forecast by Application (2018-2025)
13 Research Findings and
Conclusion
14 Appendix
14.1 Methodology/Research Approach
14.1.1 Research Programs/Design
14.1.2 Market Size Estimation
14.1.3 Market Breakdown and Data Triangulation
14.2 Data Source
14.2.1 Secondary Sources
14.2.2 Primary Sources
14.3 Disclaimer
14.1 Methodology/Research Approach
14.1.1 Research Programs/Design
14.1.2 Market Size Estimation
14.1.3 Market Breakdown and Data Triangulation
14.2 Data Source
14.2.1 Secondary Sources
14.2.2 Primary Sources
14.3 Disclaimer
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Study could spawn
better ways to combat crop-killing fungus
About 21 million years ago, a fungus that causes a devastating
disease in rice first became harmful to the food that nourishes roughly half
the world’s population, according to an international study led by Rutgers
University-New Brunswick scientists.The findings may help lead to different
ways to fight or prevent crop and plant diseases, such as new fungicides and
more effective quarantines.
Rice blast, the staple’s most damaging fungal disease, destroys
enough rice to feed 60 million people annually. Related fungal pathogens
(disease-causing microorganisms) also infect turfgrasses, causing summer patch
and gray leaf spot that damage lawns and golf courses in New Jersey and
elsewhere every summer. And now a new fungal disease found in wheat in Brazil
has spread to other South American countries.
Results from the study published
online in Scientific Reports may lead
to better plant protection and enhanced national quarantine policies, said Ning
Zhang, study lead author and associate professor in the Department of Plant
Biology and the Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology in the School of
Environmental and Biological Sciences.
“The rice blast fungus has gotten a lot of attention in the past
several decades but related species of fungi draw little attention, largely
because they’re not as severe or not harmful,” Zhang said. “But they’re all
genetically related and the relatives of severe pathogens have been
little-studied. You have to know your relatives to have a holistic
understanding of how the rice blast pathogen became strong and others did not.”
The study is the outcome of a 2016 international symposium at
Rutgers-New Brunswick hosted by Zhang and Debashish Bhattacharya, study senior
author and distinguished professor in the Department of Biochemistry and
Microbiology. The National Science Foundation, Rutgers Center for Turfgrass
Science, and School of Environmental and Biological Sciences funded the
symposium by researchers from the U.S., France and South Korea.
The scientists studied Magnaporthales, an order of about 200
species of fungi, and some of the new members were discovered in the New Jersey
Pine Barrens. About half of them are important plant pathogens like the rice
blast fungus – ranked the top fungal pathogen out of hundreds of thousands.
After the first sign of infection, a rice field may be destroyed within days,
Zhang said.
To get a holistic understanding of how the rice blast fungus evolved,
scientists genetically sequenced 21 related species that are less harmful or
nonpathogenic. They found that proteins (called secretomes) that fungi secrete
are especially abundant in important pathogens like the rice blast fungus.
Based on previous research, the proteins perhaps became more
abundant over time, allowing the fungi to infect crops, Zhang said. The
researchers identified a list of genes that are abundant in pathogens but less
so in nonpathogens, so the abundant genes might promote pathogens that can
infect crops. The results will allow scientists to look into the mechanism
behind the infection process.
“With climate change, I think the rice blast problem can only
get worse because this is a summer disease in warm climates where rice is grown,”
Zhang said, adding that wheat, turfgrass and other important plants may also be
affected.
Pakistan tightens regulatory
checks on cargoes to curb GM rice trade
Federal government, early this month, issued
instructions to Department of Plant Protection, Ministry of Food Security &
Research (MFS&R) for strict regulation of inbound and exporting rice consignments.
This move was initiated following serious concerns raised by Rice Exporters
Association of Pakistan (REAP) about incidence of detecting GM rice from some
shipments, resulting in rejection of exporting consignments from European
Union. Echoing similar concerns, Punjab government on April 10, 2018 wrote a
letter to express strong reservations about tainted trade of GM rice.
We do not produce GM rice nor do we
import it. Hence, there is no possibility of any involvement of local companies
in the processing of GM rice,” a government official said. “If at all it is
detected from some consignments, it could have sourced from outside country,
which needs to be checked thoroughly.” As a result of the tight regulation,
Pakistan blocked entry of a Chinese rice seed shipment last week. Chinese
Embassy in Islamabad raised the issue with the Minister Food Security &
Research. The Chinese diplomat wrote in the letter dated April 19, 2018 that a
shipment of more than 2,000 tons of hybrid rice seed is being stuck in the
Karachi port and prohibited from entering into Pakistan due to the negative
results of GMO testing. It further stated that Chinese government does not
allow any Chinese company to produce or export GMO hybrid rice seeds home and
abroad as well.
“The GMO testing conducted by
Chinese quarantine authorities shows these hybrid rice seeds are non-GMO. The
Chinese exporters of these seeds are regular business partners of Pakistani
importers and all of the exporters pledged these seeds are non-GMO,” the letter
said. Considering the discrepancies of the testing results from both sides, the
Chinese diplomat said, it is requested to perform again the testing procedure
with the participation of experts from both sides to ensure justice and
transparency. Syed Waseem-ul-Hassan, Director General, Plant Protection
Department confirmed that a consignment of about 1,800 tons of hybrid rice seed
was stopped from entering into Pakistan due to presence of GM rice.
Following tests conducted recently, about
1,500 tons of hybrid rice is being released while 300 tons has been held due to
positive lab reports about presence of GM rice. Shahzad Ali Malik, leading rice
exporter, welcomed steps being taken to check mixing of GM rice in domestic
value chain. “We need to be vigilant on this front in order to make our rice
trade fair.
I am always firm believer of
conducting regular lab tests of all importing and exporting shipments of rice,”
Malik said. “Chinese government has also taken strict measures in this regard
and there should be zero tolerance on this issue here in Pakistan also.” The
ban on GM rice trade was strictly enforced further early this month following a
letter written by secretary agriculture Punjab to federal secretary MFS&R
having subject of “Ban on import of GMP rice and rice seed”.
It is stated in the letter that
‘strict quarantine measures be enforced to stop any import/export of GMO rice
and rice seed through regulatory arm of the MNFS&R, especially through
monitoring and scrutinizing the lots of imported rice seed. It is noted in the
letter that ‘rice is second most important food crop of Pakistan and is famous
export commodity in European countries.
These countries have some serious
human health concerns about genetically modified organism (GMO) rice and have
zero tolerance policy for GMO rice entry into EU countries. Because of
strategic importance of this crop, provincial Secretary Agriculture stated,
Pakistan too has zero tolerance policy for R&D and import / export of GMO
rice. Despite that, some GMO rice consignments are reported now and then. REAP
has reported that a rice consignment from Pakistan to Europe was detected in
the past with GMO and was rejected, which damaged the country's image as a
major Basmati exporter, he observed.
PHL asks Thailand and Vietnam
to resubmit rice supply offers
Thailand and
Vietnam failed to comply with the National Food Authority’s (NFA) reference
price in the importation of 250,000 metric tons of rice, prompting the NFA to
ask for a resubmission of offers. The NFA conducted a bidding Friday morning
for a government-to-government procurement of rice to replenish its buffer
stock. Thailand and Vietnam were the only two countries in the bidding that was
conducted openly, with representatives from various government offices present.
The media was allowed to cover the event.
“We want to show to the public that all
aspects of this bidding are transparent and in accordance with the law,” Deputy
Administrator Judy Carol Dansal, chairperson of the Special Bids and Awards Committee
said. Dansal said government-to-government procurement is the fastest way to
import rice. The bids of Thailand and Vietnam were opened in public. Although
the two countries were able to comply with the documentary requirements, both
failed to meet the NFA’s reference price. For the 15 percent brokens category,
in which up to 15 percent of the rice has been broken into two or more pieces
during the milling process, the reference price was set at $483.63 per metric
ton (MT) while the 25 percent brokens was set at $474.18 per MT.
The NFA said
the prices were based on world market rates. Thailand did not make an offer for
15 percent brokens, but its offer of $530 per MT for 25 percent brokens was
above the reference price. Vietnam offered to supply 58,000 MT of 15 percent
brokens at $540 per metric ton. For the 25 percent brokens, its offer was $532.
Both offers also exceeded the reference price. The NFA gave Thailand and
Vietnam until 3:00 p.m. Friday to come up with their revised offers. As of
11:48 a.m, Thailand submitted a new offer which not yet been opened. No new
offer has yet been received from Vietnam as of this posting. —VDS, GMA News
India's rice exports surge to record high
in 2017/18
1 MIN READ
·
·
MUMBAI (Reuters) - India’s rice exports surged 18 percent from a
year ago to a record 12.7 million tonnes in 2017/18 on good demand for non
basmati rice from Bangladesh, Benin and Sri Lanka, a government body said in a
statement.
The country’s buffalo meat exports in the year ended
March 31 rose nearly 2 percent to 1.35 million tonnes on upbeat demand from
Vietnam, Malaysia and Egypt, the Agricultural and Processed Food Products
Export Development Authority said.
Guar gum exports during the period rose nearly 18 percent to
494,126 tonnes as U.S. shale oil producers raised buying, the data showed.India
is the world’s biggest exporter of rice, buffalo meat and guar gum.
Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav;
Editing by Biju Dwarakanath
Our Standards:
India's
rice exports surge to record high in 2017/18
MUMBAI
(Reuters) - India’s rice exports surged 18 percent from a year ago to a record
12.7 million tonnes in 2017/18 on good demand for non basmati rice from
Bangladesh, Benin and Sri Lanka, a government body said in a statement.
A
woman spreads paddy crop for drying at a rice mill on the occasion of
International Women's Day, on the outskirts of Agartala, India March 8, 2018.
REUTERS/Jayanta Dey/Files
The
country’s buffalo meat exports in the year ended March 31 rose nearly
2 percent to 1.35 million tonnes on upbeat demand from Vietnam, Malaysia and
Egypt, the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development
Authority said. Guar gum exports during the period rose nearly 18 percent to
494,126 tonnes as U.S. shale oil producers raised buying, the data showed. India
is the world’s biggest exporter of rice, buffalo meat and guar gum.
Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav;
Editing by Biju Dwarakanath
NFA dumps Thailand, Vietnam rice bids over
price
The National
Food Authority (NFA) will schedule a second bidding for 250,000 metric tons
(MT) of rice imports next week after Thailand and Vietnam on Friday went beyond
reference prices.The state-run grains agency rejected Thailand’s initial offer
to sell 120,000 MT of the staple with 25 percent broken rice grains, or
“brokens,” at $530 (P27,541.45)/MT and Vietnam’s bid to sell 50,000 MT with 15
percent brokens at $532 (P27,645.38)/MT.
Bangkok
then lowered its bidding price to $520 (P27,021.80)/MT, while Hanoi cut its own
to $530 and offered 100,000 MT with 25 percent brokens for $521
(P27,073.77)/MT, which NFA also nixed.
The
prices set by the agency were $483.63 (P25,131.83)/MT with 15 percent brokens
and $474.18 (P24,640.76)/MT with 25 percent brokens.The failed bidding was the
third in NFA history and the first under the government-to-government (G2G)
scheme.
The
agency is now turning to local traders in supplying its retail outlets with
cheaper rice, said NFA Deputy Administrator Judy Carol Dansal, who leads the
special bids and awards committee, in a press conference.She insisted that the
NFA is not desperate in securing rice from other nations, saying “consumers are
happy with the P39-per-kilo rice supplied by traders, who have committed to
supply rice until the arrival of our buffer stock.”
Current
NFA stock of the staple is still fewer than 100,000 bags. The agency had
alloted P6.1 billion to buy 250,000 MT of rice.Of the total volume that NFA
will import, about 75,000 MT will be discharged in the Port of Manila; 25,000
MT each in Subic and Cebu; 20,000 MT in Tabaco; 19,000 MT in Batangas; 16,000
MT in Cagayan de Oro City; 15,000 MT in Davao City; 14,000 MT at Poro Point in
La Union; 12,000 MT in Tacloban; 10,000 MT in General Santos City; 6,000 MT in
Cagayan De Oro; 5,000 MT in Surigao City; and 4,000MT each in Iloilo and
Bacolod.
The
initial shipments are expected to arrive by end of May through Cebu, Davao, and
Manila.
NFA declares failure of bidding for 250,000 MT rice import
Published April 27, 2018, 10:01 PM
By Madelaine B. Miraflor
The country’s importation of
250,000 metric tons (MT) of rice is facing another delay as the National Food
Authority (NFA) declared a failure of bidding on Friday, which came at a
crucial time when the Philippines is scrambling to purchase cheaper imported
rice. Now, NFA turns to local traders’ commitment to continue supplying retail
outlets with cheaper rice after Vietnam and Thailand — the only countries with
existing rice trade agreement with the Philippines — refused to sell their rice
stocks at a loss.
With no emergency supply of rice
coming from abroad any time soon, NFA Deputy Administrator Judy Carol Dansal
said that traders will have to shoulder what the grains agency lacks, a buffer
stock of cheap subsidized rice.
The NFA, as food security
watchdog of government, needs to maintain a rice buffer stock good to last for
15 days at any given time and for 30 days at the onset of the lean months,
based on the daily consumption requirement of 32,150 MT or 643,000 bags.
In reality, however, it has
always been difficult for the NFA to maintain such high level of buffer
stocking, with daily disposal pegged only at 64,000 bags.
As the state-run grains agency
eventually ran out of buffer stocks a few weeks ago, President Rodrigo Duterte
then ordered the immediate importation of 250,000 MT of rice.
However, the Philippine
government rejected twice on Friday the bid offers from Vietnam and Thailand
since it was significantly higher than the NFA’s set reference price of $483.63
per metric ton for 15 percent brokens and $474.18 per metric ton 25 percent brokens.
“We are not [in desperation
mode]… consumers are happy with the R39 per kilo rice supplied by traders, who
have committed to supply rice until the arrival of our buffer stocks,” Dansal,
who serves as the chairperson for the NFA Committee on Government-to-Government
Procurement (CGGP), said in a press conference after a failed
government-to-government tender. During the initial bidding, Thailand offered
to sell 120,000 MT of rice at 25 percent brokens at $530 per MT. Vietnam, on
the other hand, offered to supply Manila with 50,000 MT of rice with 15 percent
brokens at $540 per MT and 100,000 MT with 25 percent brokens at $532 per
MT.The NFA special bids and awards committee declared a failed bidding since
both offers did not meet the reference prices, and asked both Vietnam and
Thailand to resubmit offers.
The second round of bidding saw
the same outcome as two countries, despite it’s “close” ties with Manila,
refused to lower their bid offers to allign with NFA’s asking price.
Thailand reoffered $520 per MT
for 120,000 MT with 25 percent brokens; while Vietnam offered $530 per MT for
50,000 MT with 15 percent brokens and $521 per MT for 100,000 MT with 25
percent brokens.
UPDATE
1-Philippines to retender for 250,000 T rice after high bids
(Adds
quotes from official, possible tender next week)
MANILA,
April 27 (Reuters) - The Philippines’ National Food Authority (NFA) on Friday
declared an import tender for 250,000 tonnes of rice a failure after bids from
suppliers Thailand and Vietnam exceeded the state agency’s budget, but an
official said a fresh tender is being planned.
NFA
has allocated $483.63 per tonne for a plan to import 50,000 tonnes of 15
percent broken rice and $474.18 a tonne for 200,000 tonnes of 25 percent broken
rice. Initial and revised bids from both countries topped $500 a tonne, said Judy
Carol Dansal, deputy NFA administrator and head of the panel that held the
tender.The Philippines, a frequent rice importer, had sought offers from its
two top rice-producing neighbours under a government-to-government mode of
procurement, as it seeks to replenish its depleted buffer stock.“We will send
new invitations to the governments of Vietnam and Thailand to participate in
another bidding possibly within the day,” Dansal told reporters, adding another
tender could be held as soon as next week.
“We
still want the imported rice to arrive not later than the end of June,” she
said, ahead of the lean domestic harvest season.President Rodrigo Duterte last
week directed the NFA to build up its rice buffer stock to the equivalent of 60
days of national consumption, or as much as 1.92 million tonnes.The NFA, in
charge of ensuring stable rice supply and prices, had an inventory of only
43,500 tonnes, or less than 2 days of national consumption, as of March.
(Reporting by Enrico dela Cruz; writing by Manolo Serapio Jr.; editing by
Richard Pullin and Gopakumar Warrier)
NFA dumps Thailand, Vietnam rice bids over price
The National Food Authority (NFA) will schedule a second bidding
for 250,000 metric tons (MT) of rice imports next week after Thailand and
Vietnam on Friday went beyond reference prices.The state-run grains agency
rejected Thailand’s initial offer to sell 120,000 MT of the staple with 25
percent broken rice grains, or “brokens,” at $530 (P27,541.45)/MT and Vietnam’s
bid to sell 50,000 MT with 15 percent brokens at $532 (P27,645.38)/MT.
Bangkok then lowered its bidding price to $520 (P27,021.80)/MT,
while Hanoi cut its own to $530 and offered 100,000 MT with 25 percent brokens
for $521 (P27,073.77)/MT, which NFA also nixed.
The prices set by the agency were $483.63 (P25,131.83)/MT with 15
percent brokens and $474.18 (P24,640.76)/MT with 25 percent brokens.The failed
bidding was the third in NFA history and the first under the
government-to-government (G2G) scheme. The agency is now turning to local
traders in supplying its retail outlets with cheaper rice, said NFA Deputy
Administrator Judy Carol Dansal, who leads the special bids and awards
committee, in a press conference.
She insisted that the NFA is not desperate in securing rice from
other nations, saying “consumers are happy with the P39-per-kilo rice supplied
by traders, who have committed to supply rice until the arrival of our buffer
stock.”Current NFA stock of the staple is still fewer than 100,000 bags. The agency
had alloted P6.1 billion to buy 250,000 MT of rice.
Of the total volume that NFA will import, about 75,000 MT will be
discharged in the Port of Manila; 25,000 MT each in Subic and Cebu; 20,000 MT
in Tabaco; 19,000 MT in Batangas; 16,000 MT in Cagayan de Oro City; 15,000 MT
in Davao City; 14,000 MT at Poro Point in La Union; 12,000 MT in Tacloban;
10,000 MT in General Santos City; 6,000 MT in Cagayan De Oro; 5,000 MT in
Surigao City; and 4,000MT each in Iloilo and Bacolod.
The initial shipments are expected to arrive by end of May through
Cebu, Davao, and Manila.
UPDATE 1-Philippines
to retender for 250,000 T rice after high bids
(Adds quotes from official, possible tender next week)
MANILA, April 27 (Reuters) - The Philippines’ National Food
Authority (NFA) on Friday declared an import tender for 250,000 tonnes of rice
a failure after bids from suppliers Thailand and Vietnam exceeded the state
agency’s budget, but an official said a fresh tender is being planned.NFA has
allocated $483.63 per tonne for a plan to import 50,000 tonnes of 15 percent
broken rice and $474.18 a tonne for 200,000 tonnes of 25 percent broken
rice.Initial and revised bids from both countries topped $500 a tonne, said
Judy Carol Dansal, deputy NFA administrator and head of the panel that held the
tender.The Philippines, a frequent rice importer, had sought offers from its
two top rice-producing neighbours under a government-to-government mode of
procurement, as it seeks to replenish its depleted buffer stock.“We will send
new invitations to the governments of Vietnam and Thailand to participate in
another bidding possibly within the day,” Dansal told reporters, adding another
tender could be held as soon as next week.“We still want the imported rice to
arrive not later than the end of June,” she said, ahead of the lean domestic
harvest season.President Rodrigo Duterte last week directed the NFA to build up
its rice buffer stock to the equivalent of 60 days of national consumption, or
as much as 1.92 million tonnes.The NFA, in charge of ensuring stable rice
supply and prices, had an inventory of only 43,500 tonnes, or less than 2 days
of national consumption, as of March. (Reporting by Enrico dela Cruz; writing
by Manolo Serapio Jr.; editing by Richard Pullin and Gopakumar Warrier)
Duterte removes quotas for rice imports, allows
traders to import
"To
the traders and the businesses, I have done away with the quota quota. You can
import rice, all of you."
MANILA, Philippines — President
Rodrigo Duterte has removed the quota for rice imports, allowing private
traders to buy more rice from other countries to ensure that the country has
enough supply of the staple.
Duterte said a rice shortage
could be avoided if the country has enough supply of the staple in the
inventory.
"I was mad because the
inventory was either half full or half empty...I said guys, I want to see rice
up there, touching the ceiling of this warehouse," the president said
during a gathering of Masons in Davao City last Thursday.
"To the traders and the
businesses, I have done away with the quota quota. You can import rice, all of
you. No more paper work and if there is somebody from NFA (National Food
Authority), BIR (Bureau of Internal Revenue), Customs who would be asking money
from you slap him," he added.
The NFA is required to maintain a
rice reserve good for at least 15 days during harvest season and at least 30
days during the lean months of July to September. The buffer stock is
maintained so that the country would have rice in the event of an emergency or
a natural disaster.
Earlier this month, the NFA
Council admitted that the grains agency's rice stock has been depleted to less
than a day or about 0.35 days but maintained that the country is not facing a
rice shortage. The supply was equivalent to about 200,000 bags, the lowest in
four decades.
Duterte has allowed the NFA to
import 500,000 metric tons of rice to replenish its inventory.
He has also defended NFA
administrator Jason Aquino, who has been accused of creating panic by issuing
statements about a looming rice shortage.
“During the meeting with rice
traders, I talked to Jason Aquino. Actually there was already indications of a
shortage. I placed Aquino there because I trust him,” the president said in a
speech last August 6.
“When you start to see something
which is also true, it cannot be rumor mongering because what is at stake is
the stomach of the people. I told him ‘Ignore the (NFA) Council which is
mandated by law, go ahead and make the importations,’” he added.
The Finance department previously
said doing away with the quota on rice imports and instead imposing a 35
percent tariff rate on the staple would cut domestic prices by up to P7 a kilo.
Rice price hike
influenced by reports of low NFA stocks, officials say
Michelle Ong, ABS-CBN News
MANILA – Government officials on
Friday agreed that the rice price hike, reportedly felt by most Filipinos
according to a Pulse Asia survey, was influenced by reports of low National
Food Authority (NFA) rice stocks.The recent Pulse Asia “Ulat ng Bayan” survey revealed
that 86 percent of Filipinos are “strongly affected” by the rise in prices of
basic goods.
"Rise in food prices,
[including rice], was caused by [an] artificial shortage due to NFA low stocks
resulting in alarmist statements," Socioeconomic Planning Secretary
Ernesto Pernia told ABS-CBN News.
World oil prices and the newly
implemented tax reform law also influenced the price hikes, Pernia said. “Inflation
typically rises with sharp increases in economic growth and household income,”
he said. He allayed fears of consumers saying the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
(BSP) is good at inflation management.Meanwhile, BSP Deputy Governor Diwa
Guinigundo said price hikes of basic commodities are a reflection of
significant increases in global petroleum prices raising prices of diesel,
kerosene and LPG.
“These supply side pressures are
pushing prices and inflation of these key commodities including rice, which was
affected by reports of lower NFA stocks even as fruits and vegetables prices
declined for the month of April,” Guinigundo told ABS-CBN News.Electricity
rates have also gone up due to higher generation and transmission charges, he
said.
Vietnam PM
tells Duterte they can supply PH with rice
Paterno Esmaquel II
Published 8:30 PM, April 27, 2018
Updated 12:09 AM, April 28, 2018
VIETNAM PM. President Rodrigo Duterte is welcomed by
Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc during a courtesy call in September
2016. MalacaƱang file photo
MANILA, Philippines – Vietnamese
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc promised President Rodrigo Duterte on Friday,
April 27, that Vietnam can supply the Philippines with affordable rice if needed.Phuc
made this commitment in a bilateral meeting with Duterte on the sidelines of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summit held in Singapore.
"Nanindigan po ang Vietnam na susuplayan nila
tayo ng bigas 'pag tayo'y nangangailangan, at susuplayan nila tayo sa mababang
halaga at sa mabuting kalidad ng bigas(Vietnam asserted that they
can supply us with rice if we need it, and they will supply us at an affordable
price and with a good quality)," said Presidential Spokesperson Harry
Roque in a press briefing in Singapore at around 7:20 pm on Friday.
Duterte earlier granted the wish of
the National Food Authority (NFA) management for government-to-government
importation of 250,000 metric tons rice. On Friday, Duterte and Phuc also
discussed the West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).
Roque said Phuc praised the
Philippines' position on the West Philippine Sea, as Duterte stressed that he
will not set aside the 2016 arbitral ruling that upheld the Philippines' rights
over these waters.
Duterte's statement to Phuc sends
a message to critics like Acting Chief Justice
Antonio Carpio, according to Roque."Well I hope Justice
[Antonio] Carpio and all the critics of President Duterte will now keep quiet
because this is now a statement of the Philippine President made to another
head of state that he has not abandoned, he is not reneging, he is not
relinquishing, he is not in any way ignoring the arbitration, and he considers
it as a binding arbitral decision in favor of the Philippines," Roque
said.
Carpio has been asserting that the issue of the West Philippine
Sea is no longer a question of ownership but of China's compliance with the
decision of the arbitral tribunal."The tribunal has already
ruled with finality. There's no appeal. We are the owners of the resources there.
There is no legal dispute as to the ownership of the oil, fish, and gas. It
belongs exclusively to the Philippines," the acting chief justice had
previously said.
During his meeting with Phuc,
Duterte also "appealed for humanitarian assistance" in favor of a
Filipino captain "who has been detained in Vietnam since 2016 for alleged
illegal cross-border transport of goods." – Rappler.com
Duterte
offers ’60-40’ deal to China in West PH Sea joint exploration
Mara Cepeda
Published 6:19 PM, April 28, 2018
Updated 6:24 PM, April 28, 2018
COOPERATING WITH CHINA. President Rodrigo Duterte shakes hands
with President Xi Jinping during his state visit in October 2016. File photo by
Toto Lozano/PPD
MANILA, Philippines – President
Rodrigo Duterte proposed to forge a “60-40” sharing deal with China on the two
countries’ planned joint exploration of the West Philippine
Sea.
The Philippine President made the
proposal in a speechdelivered
on Thursday, April 26, at the 102nd Annual Communication of the Most Worshipful
Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines in Davao City.
“Precisely I said, with the issue
of the China Sea, leave it at that, it‟s geopolitics. Anyway, China has offered
joint exploration and joint operation. And I said, maybe, we give you a better
deal, 60-40,” said Duterte, earning him applause from the crowd.He also called
Chinese President Xi Jinping a “friend.” (READ: Duterte: 'I need China’)
“You cannot go against anybody.
You cannot fight there. But President Xi is a friend. We‟ll share with you,”
said Duterte.Earlier this month, both Duterte and Xi gave the "go signal” for
their countries to craft a framework for joint exploration in the West
Philippine Sea, the part of the South China Sea that belongs to the Philippines
but is claimed by China.Duterte agreed to joint exploration even if the
Philippines won a Hague ruling in 2016 over
China, affirming the Philippines' rights over the West Philippine Sea.
Duterte, however, has since
downplayed this victory in exchange for economic benefits from
China.The Philippine President had said “it's important that our people see the
benefit" of the relationship between Manila and Beijing.Critics of the
move have said that entering into a joint exploration with China would negate
the Philippines' historic, hard-won victory in the Permanent Court of
Arbitration.
Senior Associate Justice Antonio
Carpio earlier said said the Philippine Constitution bans "joint
development" within the country's exclusive economic zone
(EEZ). (READ:[OPINION] Duterte's China
itch) – Rappler.com
Rice and cotton side by side, not head to head
JOHN GRAY
AFTER several seasons of an
either-or scenario, more producers in the MIA have come around to the idea of
growing two high-return crops crops in their rotation.Advances in landforming
techniques have made it possible for farmers to feature both rice and cotton as
a way to boost productive returns.
Leeton producers Peter and Erin
Draper have been long-time rice growers, but decided now is the time to make
the most of their property and dip a toe into cotton production.This story was published in the 2018 edition of MIA Farming. Click hereto read the magazine
online.
Mr Draper is not the first to
start working with both crops in a rotation, with some of those who got into
cotton early now returning in part to rice.
Mr Draper planted 55-hectares of
cotton in a paddock that had previously grown rice and then seed oats, followed
by a short break.
The cotton crop was sown on
October 1 and will be harvested at the beginning of May.
“The first (rice) crop I planted
was in 1974 and I missed only one during the drought,” Mr Draper said. “It has
always been a big part of our farming.“We were looking at a price reduction for
rice, while the price of cotton has been quite buoyant.
“We have spent a lot of money on
landforming and we now have a system suitable for the irrigation of cotton.”Mr
Draper’s rollover bankless layout and that particular paddock’s soil profile
made it an ideal spot for the new crop.“Rollover bankless bays with beds are
exactly the same for both,” he said. “There’s five bays in this paddock, it’s
very efficient. Our tractors have autosteer and in this instance its a 1.3km
straight line. It’s far more efficient than turning in little bays.
“The paddock has a terrace
system, one level is 150mm lower than the next. It’s good for drainage and
quick watering.
“It’s another reason to have
flexible irrigation layouts, so you can go into different cropping options.”
There is a push for the
industries to work closer, with joint research projects looking into ways the
crops can benefit each other.Despite years of farming experience, Mr Draper has
had to approach this first cotton crop with a set of new eyes, but is already
thinking ahead. “I have learnt a lot by doing it; I’m looking forward to next
year to do it all again,” he said.“It is a year-on year thing. The
profitability of both crops changes based on world markets.
“I am hoping to grow equal
amounts of cotton and rice, I just need to work out what to do, based on water
allocation and pricing.“It is good risk management, not putting all your eggs
in one basket.”
Adding value is
key to keeping busy
PETER Draper’s decades of
dedication to rice shows in his pride when talking about the effect the
industry has on the wider Leeton community.“It’s a good community crop,” he
said.“We do a lot of value-adding here in Leeton. It is here we put the rice in
packets for people to eat.”However, it is not just rice that keeps the economy
ticking in Leeton.Industries in the shire produce value-added commodities as
diverse as fruit juice, beef, rice products, nuts and free-from ranges, through
businesses such as Lion, JBS, SunRice, Websters and Freedom Foods.“There’s a
lot of pride in town, with the diversity of what we grow and all getting value added,”
Mr Draper said.“Anything we grow, we are turning it into the next valuable
thing.”
https://www.irrigator.com.au/story/5358217/rice-and-cotton-side-by-side-not-head-to-head/
Veggie ice cream
anyone?
To beat the heat, cooperative offers vegetables
By: Anselmo Roque - @inquirerdotnet
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:11 AM April 28,
2018
SCIENCE CITY OF MUĆOZ—To beat the summer
heat, Nueva Ecija residents have been splurging on ice cream bars made of
carabao milk and with a full range of flavors from “malunggay” (moringa),
“kalabasa” (squash) to “ampalaya” (bitter melon).The newly introduced “veggie
ice cream bar” was designed for people who wanted to be refreshed and at the
same time get a nutritious treat, said Margerie Villoso, plant manager of
Catalanacan Multi-Purpose Cooperative (CAMPC) here.
It was developed in 2016 and was submitted
for evaluation by the Philippine Carabao Center (PCC) here. CAMPC began
producing the ice cream bars in 2017.
CAMPC is one of 53 dairy cooperatives in
the province entrusted to take care of purebred dairy carabaos.Based at
Barangay Catalanacan, the cooperatives buy the milk produced by their members
that are processed into different milk-based products.
The food chemistry division of the
Philippine Rice Research Institute helped determine the right mix of the ice
cream bars, said Arturo de Gracia, CAMPC chair.
The P20 bars are available at Dairy Box,
CAMPC’s products outlet near Milka Krem processing plant of the PCC on
Maharlika Highway.The concept of vegetable ice cream bars was developed by De
Gracia’s predecessor, Leoncio Callo.In March, the outlet grossed P14,835 from
the bars. Demand was expected to increase in May, the hottest month of the year
in the province, Villoso said, adding that the malunggay bar was the best
seller.
Global Parboiled Rice Market 2018 Top Players :Parboiled Rice
Thailand, National Rice Company, Udon Rice Co., Ltd
The research also covers the current market size of the
Parboiled Rice along with the growth rate over the years. In addition to this,
the research includes historical data of 5 previous years pertaining to company
profiles of key players/manufacturers in the industry such as Buhler AG, Induss
Group, Parboiled Rice Thailand, National Rice Company, Udon Rice Co., Ltd,
Riceland International Limited, Sandstone International Co., Ltd., Riceland,
Spekko, Alesie . The in-depth information by various segments of Parboiled Rice
market enables managers to monitor future profitability and make vital
decisions for sustainable growth. The statistics in the research focuses on the
technological advancement, available capaciies,CAPEX cycle and the changing
structure of the Parboiled Rice market.
The study also provides you with profiles of the companies,
product pictures, their specifications, overall revenue, market share, size and
contact details of the key manufacturers of Parboiled Rice , some of them
listed here are Buhler AG, Induss Group, Parboiled Rice Thailand, National Rice
Company, Udon Rice Co., Ltd, Riceland International Limited, Sandstone
International Co., Ltd., Riceland, Spekko, Alesie . The market is growing at a
very rapid pace and has witnessed entrance of many local and regional vendors
offering specific application products for multiple end-users. But this new
entrants are faced with cut throat competition due to innovative technology,
quality services and diligence of international vendors.
Parboiled Rice (Thousands Units) and Revenue (Million USD)
Market Split by Product Type such as Flat Plate Collector , Evacuated Tube
Collector , Other . Furthermore, the research study is segmented by Application
such as Frozen food, Instant dry mixes of soup, Others & Other with
historical and projected market share and compounded annual growth rate.
Geographically, this report is subdivuded into several key
regions,with data concerned to the production and consumption patterns, revenue
(million USD), market share and growth rate of Parboiled Rice market in these
regions, for 10 years from 2012 to 2022 (forecast), covering and its Share (%)
and CAGR for the forecasted period 2018 to 2022.
View Full Research Report@ www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-parboiled-rice-market-research-report-2018-245157
There are 15 Chapters to
display the Global Parboiled Rice market
Chapter 1: Definition, Specifications and Classification of Parboiled
Rice , Applications of Parboiled Rice , Market Segment by Regions;
Chapter 2: The Manufacturing Cost Structure, Raw Material and
Suppliers, Manufacturing Process, Industry Chain Structure;
Chapter 3: The Technical Data and Manufacturing Plants Analysis of
Parboiled Rice , Capacity and Commercial Production Date, Manufacturing Plants
Distribution, R&D Status and Technology Source, Raw Materials Sources
Analysis;
Chapter 4: The Overall Market Analysis, Capacity Analysis (Company
Segment), Sales Analysis (Company Segment), Sales Price Analysis (Company
Segment);
Chapter 5 and 6: Regional Market Analysis that includes North America,
Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia & India, Parboiled Rice Segment Market
Analysis (by Type);
Chapter 7 and 8: the Parboiled Rice Segment Market Analysis (by
Application) Major Manufacturers Analysis of Parboiled Rice ;
Chapter 9: Market Trend Analysis, Regional Market Trend, Market Trend by
Product Type
Chapter 10: Regional Marketing Type Analysis, International Trade Type
Analysis, Supply Chain Analysis;
Chapter 11: The Consumers Analysis of Global Parboiled Rice ;
Chapter 12: Parboiled Rice Research Findings and Conclusion, Appendix,
methodology and data source;
Chapter 13, 14 and 15: Parboiled Rice sales channel, distributors, traders,
dealers, Research Findings and Conclusion, appendix and data source.
Customize Report & check
discount@ www.marketresearchstore.com/report/global-parboiled-rice-market-research-report-2018-245157InquiryForBuying
Thank You for looking in to
this article; you can also get Customization of the Report
chapter wise or Geographic Region wise.
Promise to turn food & civil supplies
into industry friendly : Bharat Bhushan Ashu
April 27, 2018 05:59 PM
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Punjab News Express
CHANDIGARH: The Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Minister, Punjab,Bharat Bhushan Ashu today assured that the department would be transformed into an industry friendly one and would act as the propeller for the industrial growth of Punjab. The minister expressed these views here today at the Punjab Bhawan where the Rice Millers Association, Punjab and the Arhtiya Association called on him to felicitate him on taking over the ministerial assignment.
CHANDIGARH: The Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Minister, Punjab,Bharat Bhushan Ashu today assured that the department would be transformed into an industry friendly one and would act as the propeller for the industrial growth of Punjab. The minister expressed these views here today at the Punjab Bhawan where the Rice Millers Association, Punjab and the Arhtiya Association called on him to felicitate him on taking over the ministerial assignment.
The minister on the occasion also
said that complete transparency would be observed in the functioning of the
department which would also see the decentralization to avoid inconvenience to
the people.
On the occasion, President Rice
Millers Association Punjab Mr. Gian Chand Bhardawaj, Secretary Mr. Ashwani
Sangrur and the President of Arhtiya Association Mr. Ravinder Singh Cheema and
others were also present.
Promise To
Turn Food & Civil Supplies Into Industry Friendly Department: Bharat
Bhushan Ashu
RICE MILLERS ASSOCIATION PUNJAB &
ARHTIYA ASSOCIATION FELICITATE FOOD, CIVIL SUPPLIES & CONSUMER AFFAIRS
MINISTER
Web Admin
5
Dariya News
Chandigarh
, 27 Apr 2018
The Food, Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs Minister, Punjab,
Mr. Bharat Bhushan Ashu today assured that the department would be transformed
into an industry friendly one and would act as the propeller for the industrial
growth of Punjab.
The minister expressed these views here today at the Punjab Bhawan
where the Rice Millers Association, Punjab and the Arhtiya Association called
on him to felicitate him on taking over the ministerial assignment.The minister
on the occasion also said that complete transparency would be observed in the
functioning of the department which would also see the decentralization to
avoid inconvenience to the people.On the occasion, President Rice Millers
Association Punjab Mr. Gian Chand Bhardawaj, Secretary Mr. Ashwani Sangrur and
the President of Arhtiya Association Mr. Ravinder Singh Cheema and others were
also present.
Nigerian
Newspapers: 10 things you need to know this Friday morning
April 27, 2018
By
Good morning! Here is today’s summary from Nigerian Newspapers
1. No fewer than seven persons were
in the early hours of Thursday killed after suspected herdsmen entered a church
in Logo Local Government Area of Benue State.It was gathered that the herdsmen
stormed Mbamondo clan around 12.20am and attacked some displaced persons who
had taken refuge at an African Church in the area and killed seven of them.2.
President Muhammadu Buhari has been summoned by the House of Representatives
over incessant killings in the country.
The lawmakers asked the president
to appear before them to give reasons for the killings and to brief them on the
security situation in the country.3. Embattled leader of Nigeria’s Shiite
group, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky, has been charged with murder.The Kaduna State
Government slammed a fresh eight-count charge on the Shiite leader, his lawyer,
Femi Falana told Premium Times on Thursday.
4. There was tension and confusion
in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital as the Nigerian troops battled members of
the Boko Haram sect in a gun duel.Residents of Giwa Barracks said Boko Haram
terrorists were trying to take over the state capital but were repelled by the
troops.
5. The Defence Headquarters, Abuja,
on Thursday said that the fresh incessant killings in Benue State were being
sponsored.Director, Defence Information, Brig. Gen. John Agim, noted that the
military would soon apprehend both the killer herdsmen and their sponsors, as
the army will not rest on its oars till they are caught.
6. President Muhammadu Buhari has
approved the appointment of five new executives for National Human Rights
Commission (NHRC), Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and Nigerian
Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).Mr. Olusegun Adekunle, Permanent
Secretary, General Services Office, Office of the Secretary to the Government
of the Federation (OSGF) said the president made the appointments following
their confirmation by the senate.
7. Thirty-four State Chairmen under
the defunct Ali Modu Sheriff-led caretaker committee of the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP), on Thursday formally defected to the All Progressives Congress
(APC).Among those, who defected included: Sen. Hope Uzodinma, Sen. Gbemisola
Saraki and Sen. Teslim Folarin. They were received by the National Chairman of
APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.8. Two high profile Boko Haram Commanders from
Ibrahim Shekau and Mammam Nur camps have surrendered to troops of the Operation
LAFIYA DOLE in BornoState.
Kyari Goni, who was a commandeer in
the Shekau camp surrendered with sixteen others, while Ibrahim Dale and sixteen
others from the Nur-led faction also surrendered to the troops.
9. The Federal Executive Council (FEC)
has approved N10.7billion for the establishment of 10 new rice mills.The
Ministers of State for Agriculture, Heineken Lokpobiri said that the Council
approved the 10 rice mills with the capacity to produce 100 tonnes per day, and
the mills would be managed by private rice millers.10. The Catholic Bishops
Conference of Nigeria has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to resign.The
CBCN made the call in a communique signed by its President, Most Rev. Augustine
Akubeze, and Secretary, Most Rev. Camillus Umoh on Thursday.
How You
Act at Starbucks Might Reflect Your Ancestors' Farming Style
APRIL 27, 2018
GREG BAKER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
What you do
in Starbucks may be linked to more than just your personal coffee preferences.
As Science reports,
a new study on coffee-shop behavior in different parts of China indicates that
farming practices that date back generations still influence how people behave
in public. It found that in regions where agriculture traditionally focused on
wheat, people were much more likely to be sitting alone at coffee shops
compared to people in areas where rice was the dominant crop.
The study,
in Science Advances, sounds kind of crazy at
first: What my great-grandfather farmed has nothing to do with how I drink my
latte, surely. But the design of the study, which involved observing almost
9000 people at 256 coffee shops in six different Chinese cities, is a
surprisingly clever way for scientists to observe cultural differences in the
real world, researchers who weren't involved in the study told Science.
HISTORY
When The Queen Altered The
Changing Of The Guard
The study's
authors, from the University of Chicago’s business school, Beijing Normal
University, and the University of Virginia, wanted to know if the cultural
differences of farming wheat and rice persisted through non-farming
generations. Rice paddies require twice as much labor as a crop like wheat, as
well as massive irrigation systems that would require cooperation between
multiple farmers to build and operate. Thomas Talhelm, the study’s lead author,
has previously proposed what
he calls the "rice theory of culture." That is, the cooperation between
neighbors necessary to grow rice led to an interdependent culture that is more
collectivist and community-oriented, compared to cultures that grow wheat (like
the U.S.), which have developed to be more focused on the individual.
What does
this have to do with coffee? The researchers examined how people behave in
public in northern China, a wheat-growing region, compared with southern China,
a rice-growing region, as a way to examine how cultural differences that arose
from agricultural practices still persist in urban life. Across local coffee
shops and big chains like Starbucks, they observed that on weekdays, an average
10 percent more people in northern Chinese coffee shops were drinking their
coffee alone compared to southern Chinese coffee shops. That number varied by
day of the week and time of day, though the researchers didn’t explore why.
(Possibly, people just don’t hang out with their friends much in the middle of
a Monday morning.) On weekends, the difference was slightly smaller—5 percent—but
still significant.
The
difference held even when controlling for the type of coffee shop
(international chain or local shop), age demographics of the area, and the
percentage of workers in the city who are self-employed (and thus, more likely
to do their work in a coffee shop).
To further
study how regional differences affect behavior, the researchers decided to
rearrange some chairs. They went to Starbucks and pushed chairs together in a
way that would inconvenience people trying to walk through the cafe, then
waited to see how many people would push the chairs out of their way. They
found that in a sample of 700 Starbucks customers that were subjected to what
they call “the chair trap,” people in wheat-growing areas were more likely to
move the chairs out of their way (an individualistic move) while those in
rice-growing areas were more likely to adapt themselves to the situation,
squeezing their bodies through the tight space without disturbing the chair
setup (a collectivist move).
"The
fact that these differences appeared among mostly middle-class city people
suggests that rice-wheat differences are still alive and well in modern
China," the researchers write. This included in Hong Kong, which is
located in a rice-growing region but is both wealthier and,
due to its time as a British colony, has more Western influence than mainland
Chinese cities. In general, the southern cities studied were denser and more
developed than Beijing and Shenyang in the north, according to the researchers,
and yet economic growth and urbanization didn't seem to make the culture more
individualistic.
The
researchers have proposed doing a similar study in India, a country that also
features a split in wheat- and rice-growing regions. Since China's north-south
split means that rice-growing and wheat-growing cities feature significantly
different climates, it may be useful to see whether the difference holds in
cities in India that share the same climate but have different crops.
NFA’s first bidding on rice importation fails
by UNTV News and Rescue | Posted on Friday, April 27th, 2018
QUEZON CITY, Philippines – Representatives from Vietnam and Thailand joined the
bidding process Friday, April 27, on the National Food Authority’s (NFA)
importation of 250,000 metric tons of rice as replenishment to its buffer
stocks.However, NFA declared the bidding process a failure after two attempts
as Thai and Vietnamese bidders refused to lower their bid.The agency’s
reference price is at USD$483.63 for each metric ton with 15 percent broken
rice and USD$474.18 for each metric ton with 25 percent broken rice. These are
NFA’s reference price for cheaper rice sold in markets at P32 and P27 pesos per
kilogram.Thailand offered USD$530 per metric ton while Vietnam offered USD$540
per metric ton. This means the bidders’ price is at P28 pesos per kilogram
which is way higher than NFA’s reference price of P24 pesos per kilogram.
NFA explained that if the bidding
process failed after three attempts, the Philippines would resort to
negotiating directly with rice exporters.
Nevertheless, NFA vowed to
fast-track the process though it admitted that without a winning bidder, it
will constitute delays in delivery.
“We are happy that we already
starting to be able to buy palay,” Judy Carol Dansal, NFA’s Deputy
Administrator said in an ambush interview Friday. Also, rice millers promised
to continue the delivery of cheaper well-milled rice to public markets while
waiting for NFA’s imported rice.Grain Retailers’ Confederation of the
Philippines President James Magbanua said they see no movement in the price of
rice in local markets as of this time.
“Pananaw namin is mag stabilized
lang ito ng ganito na lang. Hindi ito sabihin nating may drastic taas o may
bababa,” Magbanua explained.NFA has set another round of bidding next
week under the government-to-government (G2G) scheme. The agency has
allocated P6.2 billion for the five million sacks of imported rice; enough for
the country’s 7 to 8 days worth of consumption and as replenishment of NFA’s
rice buffer stock. — Rey Pelayo | UNTV News & Rescue
Isabela traders to deliver 17 trucks of rice to Manila tomorrow
by UNTV News and Rescue | Posted on Monday, April 23rd, 2018
A total of 17 trucks loaded with
almost 12,000 sacks of rice from Isabela province will arrive in Metro Manila
markets tomorrow, April 24.
GRECON-NCR president Orly
Manuntag said the delivery is part of the rice millers and traders’ commitment
to President Rodrigo Duterte under the program “Tulong sa Bayan Caravan.”Meanwhile,
the National Food Authority (NFA) has scheduled on Friday, April 27, the
bidding process for the 250,000 metric tons or 5 million sacks of rice to be
imported under the government-to-government or G2G importation scheme.Rebecca
Olarte of the NFA Public Affairs Division explained that under the program, the
Philippine government will directly transact with the governments of Vietnam
and Thailand about the importation.It is expected that the imported rice will
reach the country by May. — Rey Pelayo | UNTV News & Rescue
NFA assures sufficient supply of rice until the end of 2017
by UNTV News | Posted on Friday, September 8th, 2017
MANILA, Philippines — The latest inventory of the National Food Authority (NFA) assured that the country’s stock of rice will last up to 72 days.
The agency added that the period
of lean months is about to end, as farmers will begin harvesting their crops in
October.
This means the country has
sufficient supply.
The agency also reported that
shipment of 250,000 metric tons of imported rice will be completed this month.
NFA added that the persisting
weather condition has become favorable to farmers.
“We are so lucky this year
because no major tropical cyclone has hit [the country] and so there are no
displaced residents to feed,” said NFA Spokesperson Rebecca Olarte.
The agency also reported that the
Filipinos’ per capita consumption of rice this year went down to 108.87
kilograms, lower than the previous year that was at 114.27 kilograms.
In 2007, the annual per capita
consumption was 140 kilograms.
NFA said more Filipinos are
taking rice substitute such as noodles which minimizes the consumption of rice.
The agency raised its target on
local rice procurement from 4.6m bags this year to 24 million bags in 2018.
According to the agency, the problem now is whether farmers will
sell their produce at the NFA’s buying price of 17 pesos per kilogram. — Rey
Pelayo | UNTV News & Rescue
https://www.untvweb.com/news/nfas-first-bidding-on-rice-importation-fails/