Polder project: Coastal zone
of Bangladesh
March 12, 2019
© Arifur
Rahman Abir
Professor
Robert Aiken discusses work on food networks in this report, specifically the
Polder project
“Smallholders manage over 80% of the world’s
estimated 500 million small farms and provide over 80% of the food consumed in
a large part of the developing world, contributing significantly to poverty
reduction and food security.”(1)
As a public agricultural scientist, this is of
interest. Food security extends beyond the major food and feed grain crops
(rice, wheat, corn, soybean, sorghum), many of which I study. If a substantial
portion of humanity depends on food produced by smallholders, what risks do
climate changes pose for these community food networks?
The sustainable intensification of smallholder
food systems is the focal work of a colleague, Dr Vara Prasad. (2) His network
of international collaborators is devoted to understanding the function of
community food networks, and opportunities for sustainable intensification to
enhance food security. Vulnerability to climate change is an integral aspect of
this work.
To gain insight into food networks, I
discovered the Polder project, active in the Coastal Zone of Bangladesh. The
1.2 million hectares Coastal Zone is home to 8 million Bangladeshi people in
the delta of the Ganges river. (3) The region, typically within 10 m above sea
level, is subject to tidal flooding, saltwater intrusion, and seasonal drought.
Food insecurity diminishes the development of half the children in the region.
The 1.2
million hectares Coastal Zone is home to 8 million Bangladesh in the delta of
the Ganges river.
Water management is critical for crop growth
and food security in the Coastal Zone, utilizing dikes and gates established in
the 1960s and 1970s to manage large water catchments, known as ‘Polders.’
Another colleague, Dr Krishna Jagadish, directs
the Polder project for the K-State Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab.
Krishna’s project has established a team of young scientists (nutritionists,
water management, agronomy, social sciences, economics, climate-crop modelling)
and sociologists who are learning about food networks in one of the nearly 130 plus
polders in the Coastal Zone of Bangladesh. Learning hubs form a key component
of the adaptive research pursued by these teams.
Crop diversification and intensification
affects gender dynamics in the crop-livelihood-food systems of the Bangladesh
Coastal Zone. A simplified pathway toward better nutrition, livelihoods, and
women’s empowerment in rural households. Image courtesy SIIL Polder Team.
Some of their findings
Adoption of climate-resilient high-yielding rice varieties can
boost grain yields by up to 50%. Incorporating fish production into the
flooding phase of paddy rice supports household nutrition.
Successive cropping of hybrid corn and nutritious
pulse crops can double annual food productivity. Corn grain can support
emerging poultry production enterprises, while stalks provide fodder for
livestock.
Impact of the SIIL Polder project on cropping
patterns of the Coastal Zone of Banglasesh, CREDIT: Image: © SIIL Polder Team
The burden of more intensive cropping can fall,
disproportionately, on women in the household, often responsible for crop
harvest. Mechanical harvest using small reapers can reduce labour requirements
by 80%.
Seed storage enterprises – in rat-proof
containers, provide income opportunities for women lacking access to land
resources. Coordinated water management in the polders is critical for all of
these developments. Learning hubs provide critical means of sharing information
about new practices, successes and challenges. The students contribute insights
into the polder food network while developing professional credentials and
experience. Together, the project fosters learning communities where adaptive
land intensification help families adapt to changing conditions.
References
1) Walpole, M. et al. 2013. Smallholders, food
security, and the environment. Report prepared for the International Fund for
Agricultural Development and United Nations Environment Programme.
2) Director, K-State Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL), supported by US AID.
3) Polder Tidings, a newsletter published by the International Rice Research Institute with support from the K-State Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL), funded by US AID. Contact Dr. Krishna Jagadish (KJagadish@ksu.edu) or Dr. Sudhir Yadav (S.Yadav@irri.org) for more information.
4) The rabi season (November – March) is typically cool and dry, winter.
5) Yadav, S., M. Mondal and K. Jagadish. 2017. “Foregoing fallow: Improving productivity of polders in Bangladesh. Polder Tidings Vol. 2 No. 1: pp 4-5. International Rice Research Institute.
2) Director, K-State Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL), supported by US AID.
3) Polder Tidings, a newsletter published by the International Rice Research Institute with support from the K-State Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL), funded by US AID. Contact Dr. Krishna Jagadish (KJagadish@ksu.edu) or Dr. Sudhir Yadav (S.Yadav@irri.org) for more information.
4) The rabi season (November – March) is typically cool and dry, winter.
5) Yadav, S., M. Mondal and K. Jagadish. 2017. “Foregoing fallow: Improving productivity of polders in Bangladesh. Polder Tidings Vol. 2 No. 1: pp 4-5. International Rice Research Institute.
Professor Robert Aiken
Research Crop Scientist
Northwest Research – Extension Center
Tel: +1 785 462 6281
raiken@ksu.edu
https://www.northwest.k-state.edu/
Tel: +1 785 462 6281
raiken@ksu.edu
https://www.northwest.k-state.edu/
*Please note: This is a commercial profile
Agriculture department rules out
palay imports
March 12, 2019 | 10:30 pm
A worker looks up at the latest batch of
imported Vietnamese rice being unloaded at a port in Manila -- REUTERS
THE Department of Agriculture (DA) rejected
proposals to import unmilled rice, or palay, noting that rice in that form
poses a greater risk for the entry of pests and disease.
The announcement follows plans by San Miguel
Corp. (SMC) to import palay once rice imports are liberalized under the Rice
Tariffication Act.
Domestically-grown rice is typically milled
near its growing area, while the international rice trade typically deals in
the milled form of the staple.
“We will not allow the importation of palay.
Rice, yes, but unhusked rice, we will not allow it because it will pose danger
to our rice industry,” Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said at a
briefing in Quezon City Tuesday.
“We will not allow it because it could bring in
pests and disease,” he said, noting that rice husks are likely to contain such
elements.
Mr. Piñol said the DA has the authority to
impose such restrictions via the sanitary and phytosanitary permit process
administered by the Bureau of Plant Industry.
“We still hold the power to determine whether
it is safe for Philippine agriculture or not. Nobody can assure that unhusked
rice entering the country poses no such danger,” Mr. Piñol added.
Rice import liberalization came into force on
March 5 but the law is awaiting the approval of its Implementing Rules and
Regulations. — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio
Why
green tea, carrots could help reverse Alzheimer's disease, according to study
By: Najja Parker, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Updated: Mar 12, 2019 - 1:42 PM
Why green tea, carrots could help reverse
Alzheimer's disease, according to study
While
scientists have not found a cure for
Alzheimer’s disease, they may be able to reverse the symptoms with
some key compounds, according to a new report.
Researchers
from the University of Southern California recently conducted a study, published
in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, to determine how
diet can impact the brain disorder. They specifically examined two compounds:
epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), a key ingredient in green tea, and ferulic
acid (FA), which is found in carrots, tomatoes, rice, wheat and oats.
For
their assessment, they observed mice in good health and with Alzheimer’s-like
symptoms. They ran them through tests that assessed their memory and thinking
skills.
One was a
Y-shaped maze that tested the rodents’ spatial working
memory — “a skill that humans use to find their way out of a
building,” the team explained in a statement.
While healthy mice were able to enter and exit the maze several times, impaired
mice could not.
The
analysts then randomly grouped the mice into four different categories. The
first group consumed a combination of EGCG and FA, the second had only EGCG,
the third ate only FA and the fourth had a placebo.
“After
three months, combination treatment completely restored spatial working memory
and the Alzheimer’s mice performed just as well as the healthy comparison
mice,” senior author Terrence Town said.
Despite
the results, the researchers noted “many mouse discoveries never translate into
human treatments.”
However,
they believe their findings are promising, because they think their data proves
certain plant-based supplements may help protect against Alzheimer’s
disease.
“You
don’t have to wait 10 to 12 years for
a designer drug to make it to market; you can make these
dietary changes today,” Town said. “I find that very encouraging.”
Rice Quota
Still On Drawing Board
March 12, 2019
BY MATTHEW VARI
As the National Government pushes in its drive
to ensure domestic production takes precedence over importation, policy options
like a rice quota system will still come to the fold as local rice production
lifts momentum in the near future.
With major projects being rolled out from major rice manufactures venturing in local projects and inked partnerships with countries such as the Philippines on the borders of last year’s APEC meeting, the drive to reign in rice importation and bolster local production will be brought to the fore.
Also with plans already in discussion for the introduction of the grains board for the country, will see the vital staple commodity take equal focus to other major cash crops that fuel the country’s growing population.
While Minister Allan was quick to note it would not come in the form of the controversial 2015 proposed national rice policy that attracted much criticism from both industry, the Australian government, institutions, and a regulator in the country.
He, however, said the country agenda to improve domestic production was in the best interest of the country that continues to pay for almost all its rice needs to the tune of K500-K600m annually.
Mr Allan said while there is no rice quota and that the market is open, current producers are importing according to their current demand in the marketplace.
He said, however, when domestic production levels pick up, focus will be on locally produced rice and the companies producing.
“As we go into production we will be looking at the rice quota now, which is to reduce imports and increasing exports and domestic production.
“When we go into full production we will look at volume and how we can strategise to increase our production and decrease the imports.
He said the previous submission in 2015 indicated an investor requiring 80 per cent of the market as a condition, with 20 per cent for the existing importers and producers.
“It, however, was only a discussion, but really nothing happened and the submission is there.
“We haven’t progressed it and we asked the investor to come and we revisit the arrangement that they had.
“But they haven’t come back,” Mr Allan said.
“We also have a rice policy but we want to have a board that will manage the industry. It is a big industry and we need have a board to manage the affairs of rice industry.”
With major projects being rolled out from major rice manufactures venturing in local projects and inked partnerships with countries such as the Philippines on the borders of last year’s APEC meeting, the drive to reign in rice importation and bolster local production will be brought to the fore.
Also with plans already in discussion for the introduction of the grains board for the country, will see the vital staple commodity take equal focus to other major cash crops that fuel the country’s growing population.
While Minister Allan was quick to note it would not come in the form of the controversial 2015 proposed national rice policy that attracted much criticism from both industry, the Australian government, institutions, and a regulator in the country.
He, however, said the country agenda to improve domestic production was in the best interest of the country that continues to pay for almost all its rice needs to the tune of K500-K600m annually.
Mr Allan said while there is no rice quota and that the market is open, current producers are importing according to their current demand in the marketplace.
He said, however, when domestic production levels pick up, focus will be on locally produced rice and the companies producing.
“As we go into production we will be looking at the rice quota now, which is to reduce imports and increasing exports and domestic production.
“When we go into full production we will look at volume and how we can strategise to increase our production and decrease the imports.
He said the previous submission in 2015 indicated an investor requiring 80 per cent of the market as a condition, with 20 per cent for the existing importers and producers.
“It, however, was only a discussion, but really nothing happened and the submission is there.
“We haven’t progressed it and we asked the investor to come and we revisit the arrangement that they had.
“But they haven’t come back,” Mr Allan said.
“We also have a rice policy but we want to have a board that will manage the industry. It is a big industry and we need have a board to manage the affairs of rice industry.”
Piñol junks proposal to import unhusked rice
By Lilybeth Ison March 12, 2019,
7:46 pm
MANILA -- Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel
"Manny" Piñol has junked the planned importation of palay or unhusked
rice as it may pose danger to Philippine agriculture.
"We
will not allow the importation of palay (unhusked rice) because it could pose
danger to our rice industry. It could also bring in pests and diseases,"
said Piñol, in a press briefing on Tuesday.
The Food
and Beverage unit of diversified conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC) earlier
said it plans to import unmilled rice should the government pass a law lifting
quantitative restrictions (QR) on the volume of rice imports annually.
SMC
President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon S. Ang said the company can
undertake rice importation to help ensure food security and to assist local
farmers.
“We will
help by importing. We have grain terminals where we can build extra silos… We
will be able to help in the food security,” said Ang on the sidelines of the
SMC stockholders’ meeting.
He said
these silos would allow for the proper storage of grains so that SMC can import
rice by bulk and not just by sacks, after which the commodity can be stored for
as long as two years.
Piñol,
however, noted that the Rice Tariffication Law does not allow the importation
of palay.
"It
is only rice in milled form," he stressed, effectively bucking the
tycoon's ambitious plans.
Piñol
said that the DA still reserves the right to revoke importation of unmilled
rice, particularly if it concerns the safety of the country's agriculture
sector.
"We
still reserve the right, we still hold the power to determine whether it is
safe for Philippine agriculture or not, because nobody can assure us na yung
mga unhulled rice na papasok dito ay walang nakakabit na sakit," he
said. (PNA)
CSIR bats
for green ‘biocoal’
Wednesday, 13 March 2019 | Archana
Jyoti | New Delhi
Against the backdrop of Prime Minister Narendra
Modi’s clarion call to the scientists to find a ‘concrete solution’ to deal
with the problem of stubble burning, the country’s premier research agency,
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) has pitched in for
conversion of paddy biomass into green ‘biocoal’ to be used in thermal power
plants as one of the possible environment-friendly steps to check the menace
which chokes Delhi and NCR region, particularly during winters.
Scientists from one of the CSIR’s labs,
National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in a study published in the latest edition
of The Current Science, said this conversion of paddy stubble into green
product biocoal through torrefaction process would also help farmers to earn
money using the agriculture residue.
They maintained that the biocoal which has the
calorific value equivalent to that of bituminous coal can be used as an
alternative fuel in thermal power plants. By optimizing the processing
parameters of torrefaction process, desired calorific value of torrefied
product has been archived, as per the study conducted in Haryana. It also
pointed out that 10 per cent use of torrefied product with coal can consume 140
million tonnes of rice straw and as a consequence, it reduces the consumption
of fossil fuels.
If adopted, the technology which is already in
vogue in the western countries can help reduce not only consumption of fossil
fuels, but also cut down the environmental pollution and greenhouse gas (GHG)
emission. Similarly, residue of other crops like wheat, sugarcane, oilseed,
maize and cotton which is estimated to be around 500 million tonnes in the
country, can be used as biocoal in thermal plants after torrefaction.
The suggestion holds importance given that
presently, to dispose the rice straw for making field ready for next
crop, farmers are burning it in the fields itself particularly in States like
Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu Kashmir and Uttarakhand
posing lot of environmental, health and economic issues.. This despite State
Governments’ offers such as subsidy, machines as well as warning to impose
penalty in case of violation.
However, the team of scientists comprising of
SR Dhakate, Abhishek K Pathak, Prateek Jain, Mandeep Singh, B P Singh, KM
Subhedar, SS Sharda and RK Seth, said that “once farmers get monetary
incentive for the waste, burning can be stopped in the fields and it can be
used as a source of renewable energy and the country can become self-reliant
for energy generation.”
Modi had last December while addressing
the farmers’ conclave “Krishi Kumbha” in Lucknow through video conferencing too
raised his concerns on increasing smog caused by stubble burning as he urged
scientists to find concrete solution to stubble burning.
Being agriculture-based country, India
generates more than 600 million tonnes of biomass waste from different crops
and produces 140 million tonnes of rice straw alone annually.
Most of the stubble burning takes place over
three weeks in October-November, releasing particulates and smog-forming carbon
monoxide and nitrogen oxide, which drift from the fields over almost the entire
Indo-Gangetic plain. This pollution contributes around 12-60 per cent of
particulate concentrations depending on the generation of other pollutants in
different locations, winds, temperature and other local factors, according to
reports.
Wheat and mustard crops to be damaged by heavy
rains
MARCH 13, 2019
Current
wheat and mustard crops are expected to be damaged due to heavy rains and the
growers are likely to suffer huge losses in Larkana & Sukkur Divisions.
At the
very outset, they faced acute irrigation water shortage and now rains during
spring season- sometimes, whole day or whole night along- will badly affect the
production of wheat and mustard crops in Sindh.
The
first rain brought relief and fulfilled the water scarcity for the tillers but
thereafter 5-time rains last month will bring losses to the poor peasants who
are extremely worried these days.
In this
connection leader of Sindh Abadgar Board Gada Hussain Mahesar and Mir Ishaque
Mugheri told newsmen that at the very outset growers were facing water shortage
but now after constant rains their standing wheat & mustard crops have been
damaged. They said that so far 20% of these standing crops have been damaged
due to rains. They said head of wheat grain is falling down when heavy rain
occur and it becomes useless as its grains burn. They said if rain continued
then damage will increase.
Traders and millers are also likely to undergo
huge losses
On the
other hand, due to rains, paddy lying at the rice mills has also been damaged
due to which rice traders & millers have suffered losses of millions of
rupees.
Rice
traders and millers in Sindh & Balochistan had procured paddy in large
amount when the harvesting season commenced.
They
kept paddy in the rice mills under open sky which the rains since last month
have been damaging.
Qamardin
Gopang, Central President Sindh-Balochistan Rice Millers Association, said that
60% of the paddy kept in various rice mills at open space is going to be
damaged.
He said,
the businessmen had procured wet paddy due to which it is kept under open sky
to become dry to get rice. But after rains, it will also become useless due to
which traders and millers are also likely to undergo huge losses.
Meanwhile,
more rains have been forecasted here during next 24 hours which will add to the
miseries of the peasants.
Published
in Daily Times, March 13th 2019.
In
Memory: Rex Morgan
USA Rice extends condolences to the family and
friends of Rex Allen Morgan, of Indianola, Mississippi, who passed away last
week, at the age of 80. Rex was the
first chair of the USA Rice Federation at its founding in 1994. He also served on the boards of The Rice
Foundation and Mississippi Rice Production.
"Rex was an early proponent of the value
of establishing the USA Rice Federation to enhance the effectiveness of the
three charter members, the U.S. Rice Producers' Group, the USA Rice Council,
and the U.S. Rice Millers' Association," said Carl Brothers, former
Riceland Foods COO who succeeded Rex as Federation chair. "His interest to leverage the collective
strengths of the U.S. rice industry and seek a stronger rice voice in
Washington, along with his gentleman leadership, made him the ideal first chair
of the USA Rice Federation."
A passionate farmer, Rex began his career with
his mother, and his brothers on family land in Sunflower County. An avid proponent of water management, he
served on The Yazoo Mississippi Delta Joint Water Management Board of
Commissioners from its inception, and was also instrumental in the founding of
Farmers Grain Terminal where he served as chairman of the board for the past 27
years.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to
First United Methodist Church, 205 Second Street, Indianola, Mississippi 38751,
or to a charity of choice.
USA Rice Daily
Rice
Water: DIY Secret to Glowing, Healthy Skin
By Lesley Dixon
ARLINGTON, VA -- Odds are you
cook rice like most of us do: bringing it to a boil and simmering it in a
pot or rice cooker until all the water is absorbed. But some recipes call
for soaking, washing, or rinsing your rice before cooking to reduce surface
starch. Afterwards you'll be left with a milky, opaque water that you
probably toss down the drain, or use to water your house plants if it's drought
season. But DIY beauty enthusiasts are obsessed with a new, yet ancient,
trend that puts that rice water to good use.
The roots of beautifying rice water go all the way back to the origins of rice cultivation itself, when women rice farmers in Asia noticed that the skin on their hands was soft and nourished after spending hours washing rice, and took to washing their faces and hair with it as well. The Yao women from Huangluo village in Southern China are infamous for their long, thick, and healthy hair, which averages about six feet long. While genetics are surely a factor, they also attribute their robust locks to the nourishing effect of fermented rice water treatments.
It's not just DIYers and bloggers who have caught on to this old-made-new trend. The beauty industry at large has been using rice as an ingredient in cosmetics more and more, from Origins to Dove to Burt's Bees. And to those of you who attended USA Rice's Outlook Conference in December, you might recall that the Marriott Marquis hotel in San Diego supplied their rooms with rice bran hand soap. Consumers are demanding natural, simple ingredients in their products, and nothing is more natural or simple than rice.
So what is it about rice that's causing all this beauty buzz? Rice contains a number of vitamins and minerals that are excellent for your skin, including vitamins B, C, and E. It also contains phytic acid, which is used in many commercial beauty products as a gentle chemical exfoliant; niacin (or vitamin B3), which encourages cell regeneration, heals wounds, and strengthens the skin barrier, allowing skin to better retain moisture; manganese, which supports collagen production and fights free-radicals, keeping skin healthy and resilient; and selenium, an antioxidant that protects skin cells from damage.
If you're interested in trying a DIY rice beauty treatment, there are plenty of recipes and instructions to choose from online. Simply soak half a cup of rice in one inch of water for 30-60 minutes, and you've got an excellent base for a facial or hair mask.
It goes without saying that you should use U.S.-grown rice in these endeavors; who knows what's present on imported rice, and you don't want to gamble when it comes to skincare - something the cosmetics industry has already figured out. Beauty giant Dove, for example, exclusively uses rice sourced in the U.S.
So while the best way to enjoy the health benefits of rice is still simply to eat it, rice beauty treatments are an easy and cost-effective way to utilize rice, especially when considering the exorbitant prices of cosmetics these days. Maybe you've got just a little bit of rice leftover in a bag that's been sitting in your pantry for weeks; it's not enough to make a whole serving, but you hate to throw it out. It's a good opportunity to soak it in some water and give one of these treatments a try.
The roots of beautifying rice water go all the way back to the origins of rice cultivation itself, when women rice farmers in Asia noticed that the skin on their hands was soft and nourished after spending hours washing rice, and took to washing their faces and hair with it as well. The Yao women from Huangluo village in Southern China are infamous for their long, thick, and healthy hair, which averages about six feet long. While genetics are surely a factor, they also attribute their robust locks to the nourishing effect of fermented rice water treatments.
It's not just DIYers and bloggers who have caught on to this old-made-new trend. The beauty industry at large has been using rice as an ingredient in cosmetics more and more, from Origins to Dove to Burt's Bees. And to those of you who attended USA Rice's Outlook Conference in December, you might recall that the Marriott Marquis hotel in San Diego supplied their rooms with rice bran hand soap. Consumers are demanding natural, simple ingredients in their products, and nothing is more natural or simple than rice.
So what is it about rice that's causing all this beauty buzz? Rice contains a number of vitamins and minerals that are excellent for your skin, including vitamins B, C, and E. It also contains phytic acid, which is used in many commercial beauty products as a gentle chemical exfoliant; niacin (or vitamin B3), which encourages cell regeneration, heals wounds, and strengthens the skin barrier, allowing skin to better retain moisture; manganese, which supports collagen production and fights free-radicals, keeping skin healthy and resilient; and selenium, an antioxidant that protects skin cells from damage.
If you're interested in trying a DIY rice beauty treatment, there are plenty of recipes and instructions to choose from online. Simply soak half a cup of rice in one inch of water for 30-60 minutes, and you've got an excellent base for a facial or hair mask.
It goes without saying that you should use U.S.-grown rice in these endeavors; who knows what's present on imported rice, and you don't want to gamble when it comes to skincare - something the cosmetics industry has already figured out. Beauty giant Dove, for example, exclusively uses rice sourced in the U.S.
So while the best way to enjoy the health benefits of rice is still simply to eat it, rice beauty treatments are an easy and cost-effective way to utilize rice, especially when considering the exorbitant prices of cosmetics these days. Maybe you've got just a little bit of rice leftover in a bag that's been sitting in your pantry for weeks; it's not enough to make a whole serving, but you hate to throw it out. It's a good opportunity to soak it in some water and give one of these treatments a try.
AGI to purchase rice
equipment manufacturer
AGI to acquire Milltec.
03.12.2019
By Susan Reidy
WINNIPEG, MANITOBA, CANADA — Ag Growth
International Inc. (AGI) has agreed to purchase the outstanding shares of
Milltec Machinery Limited for $109.5 million, with the potential for up to an
additional $38.4 million based on earning targets.
Milltec, based in Bangalore, India, is a
leading manufacturer of rice milling and processing equipment in India. It has
400 full-time employees and operates four production facilities in India, three
of them in Bangalore, and one in Chennai.
“Milltec is a launching pad for AGI in India
and the broader Asian region with a complete product line for rice as well as
providing the manufacturing, design, engineering, service and installation
capabilities that AGI will leverage across our current product lines,” said Tim
Close, AGI president and chief executive officer. “This comprehensive platform
brings a talented management group, excellent manufacturing facilities,
pan-India distribution and service teams, as well as turn-key systems
capabilities.”
AGI said it will fund the purchase with its
revolving credit facility. Milltec reported sales of $56.2 million and earnings
before interest, income, tax, deprecation and amortization of $10.1 million for
the 12 months ended Jan. 31.
Ravindranath Ramaiah and Rajendran Joghee
founded Milltec in 1998 and each have over 25 years of experience in the rice
milling equipment industry. They will continue to provide leadership and
vision to Milltec going forward in their roles as managing directors of the
company. Over the past few years Milltec has also bolstered its
management team with the addition of two very experienced individuals, Rajan
Aggarwal, chief executive officer, and Ganapathy Subramaniam, chief financial
officer.
Completion of the transaction is subject to
customary conditions precedent and is expected to close prior to March 31.
The acquisition fits with AGI’s 5-6-7 strategy,
the company said, noting that it moves AGI into rice processing with a complete
product line and establishes AGI’s platform in India. It is also complementary
to AGI’s existing product offerings and provides a strategic platform for
further consolidation.
In addition, AGI said it has identified several
opportunities for sales, operational and supply chain synergies including the
service and support of AGI’s current product lines through Milltec’s pan-India
distribution platform, the sale of Milltec’s products across AGI’s established
global distribution network, and significant advantages in engineering support.
Rising income in India and the ability to
purchase higher quality and branded rice is rapidly increasing the size of the
rice processing equipment market.
Growth drivers identified, including: (i) As
incomes rise in India consumers are choosing to purchase higher quality, and
branded, rice products which is rapidly increasing the size of the rice
processing equipment market; (ii) Milltec has recently expanded into pulses and
seed equipment adding another lever for growth in the region; and (iii) The
additional access to capital that AGI provides will support both domestic and
export growth.
Milltec’s equipment offerings include:
·
Front-end equipment: pre-cleaners, boilers, parboilers and dryers.
·
Milling equipment: classifiers, gravity separators, de-stoners, pneumatic
shellers, thickness graders, whiteners, silky polishers, rotary sifters and length
graders.
·
End-of-line equipment: color sorters, packaging equipment with a capacity range
of 10 to 75 kilograms.
Milltec also offers end-to-end turnkey
solutions for rice processing activities. It has also expanded its product
portfolio to include pulse, seed, maize and wheat processing equipment as well
as ancillary products including silica extraction and co-generation plants.
Number of rice row crops growing across
Arkansas
The number of rice row crops farming is
becoming more popular across the state. (Source: KAIT)
(KAIT) -Rice is one of the most popular crops
grown in the state of Arkansas, but a more popular way to grow the crop is
trending across the state.
According to a report from content partner Talk Business
& Politics, the number of rice row acres across the state
increased from 40,000 acres in 2017 to more than 100,000 acres in 2018.
“Row rice is an emerging production practice for
rice that is increasing adoption, but lacks a consensus on production
practices,” Chris Henry, associate professor and extension water management
engineer with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said.
According to Dr. Jarrod Hardke, University of
Arkansas Division of Agriculture rice agronomist, row crop rice could put more
money in a farmer’s pocket, saving a farmer up to $70 per acres, per season.
This can save farmers hours of labor on their
combines and equipment used to harvest the crop.
Saving up to $70 can also have significant
results on the state’s economy.
According to the report, Arkansas farmers grew
1.4 million acres of rice in 2018 compared to 1.161 million acres in 2017.
Row rice gaining in popularity in Arkansas
William Fuller went on a hunting trip in 1896
with a friend to Louisiana and little did the Arkansas farmer know that the
trip would turn him into a “king” and transform his state forever. While he was
on the trip, he noticed farmers growing rice, the most consumed grain in the
world.
Rice was first introduced in the southern U.S.
in South Carolina in 1694, according to historians. Slowly, the crop made its
way across the south. Fuller noted that the soil in Louisiana was similar to
soils found in the Arkansas Delta Region. It took him nearly a decade to
perfect a technique for growing rice in the Natural State, but when he was
finished it was a game changer. Arkansas would go on to become the largest rice
producing state in the country, growing roughly half the nation’s rice a
century later, and Fuller is known as the “King of Arkansas rice.”
Rice is typically grown in paddies, or fields
inundated with water. Rice row crop farming, or furrow irrigated rice as it’s
sometimes called, is becoming more and more popular, according to the
University of Arkansas Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service. Two meetings
detailing the emergence of row crop rice were held during the month of February
in Jonesboro and Stuttgart.
“Row rice is an emerging production practice
for rice that is increasing adoption, but lacks a consensus on production
practices,” Chris Henry, associate professor and extension water management
engineer with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture said.
“Farmers are interested in furrow irrigated
rice because of the potential to reduce tillage passes, plant earlier and
explore the use of no-till and cover crops,” Henry said. “By sharing
experiences, we hope to gather information that can be used to improve
recommendations and direct research efforts and it’s an opportunity to learn
from other farmers and consultants from across the region.”
Rice paddies have been common in the Delta for
many years. During the 1980s farmers experimented with systems that allowed
rice to be grown in standard rows, but those fields produced a lot of blast fungus,
a disease that can damage or kill a rice plant, University of Arkansas Division
of Agriculture rice agronomist Dr. Jarrod Hardke said. Science has been able to
stem that trend, and rice rows have steadily grown in recent years. The number
of rice row acres has jumped from 40,000 in 2017 to more than 100,000 acres in
2018, he said.
In a recent three-year study, funded by the
Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board, Henry found that row rice used
significantly less water than flooded rice using polypipe or multiple inlet
rice irrigation and the yields were not significantly different.
“That really surprised us, because we expected
higher water use numbers and less yield,” he said.
Row crop rice could mean more money in a
farmer’s pocket, Hardke said. A typical rice acre has about $750 in input
costs. Growing rice in rows can save a producer up to $70 per acre, per season,
he said. Rice in rows can be grown in former soybean beds, meaning they don’t
have to be prepped like typical rice paddies. This can save a farmer many hours
on their combines and other equipment, Hardke said, adding that those fields
don’t require the levee systems and are irrigated with pipes, much like other
row crops.
Hybrid varieties of rice make the row system
possible. About half of Arkansas’ rice acreage or 700,000 acres is hybrid,
Hardke said. Hybrids can develop resistance to diseases such as blast fungus,
but a hybrid blend can only be used for one growing season. Hybrids are
produced when one part infertile male pollen and one fertile male pollen are
combined to produce an offspring, he said. These hybrids tend to produce better
yields and are more disease resistant, he said.
Saving $70 per rice acre could have a
significant impact on the state’s economy.
According to the Arkansas Farm Bureau, the rice
industry is the second largest agriculture sector in Arkansas, only trailing
soybean production. Rice contributes billions of dollars to the state’s economy
and creates about 25,000 jobs, AFB reported.
In 2018, Arkansas farmers grew 1.4 million rice
acres, a 30% uptick from 2017 when about 1.161 million acres were planted. It
was 47.1% of all rice acres planted in the U.S., according to the B.R. Wells
Arkansas Rice Research.
Those acres accounted for 82.6 million
hundredweight of rice and it represented 46.4% of the 178.2 million
hundredweight produced in the country. During the last three years, Arkansas
has accounted for more than 47% of the nation’s total rice production, the
report found. Per acre, farmers had a yield of 164.4 bushels per acre or 7,400
pounds. It was the third highest yield on record in the state and a 570 pound
per acre uptick from 2016.
Rice is grown in 40 of Arkansas’ 75 counties
and is predominantly grown in the eastern section of the state. The rice
growing region in the state starts with Clay County in Northeast Arkansas and
extends southward to Chicot County in southern Arkansas. Traditionally, the top
rice producing counties in the state are Lawrence, Poinsett, Jackson, Arkansas,
and Lonoke, according to the United States Department of Agriculture.
Viewpoint: Despite anti-GMO
opposition, poor farmers will finally plant ‘life-saving’ golden rice
Ronald Bailey | Reason | March 12, 2019
Golden
rice could help combat malnutrition in Asia.
Golden
Rice which has been genetically engineered to have higher levels of the vitamin
A precursor beta-carotene is finally about be to approved for planting by poor
farmers in Bangladesh….Environmentalist ideologues have fought fiercely for two
decades to prevent this crop from being offered to poor farmers in developing
countries. Among other things, they hired thugs to rip up test fields of
the grain at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines.
In 2016,
an open letter signed
by 100 Nobel Laureates directly called on “Greenpeace to cease and desist in
its campaign against Golden Rice specifically, and crops and foods improved
through biotechnology in general.” The laureates pointed out that “scientific
and regulatory agencies around the world have repeatedly and consistently found
crops and foods improved through biotechnology to be as safe as, if not safer
than those derived from any other method of production.”
Read
full, original article: Life-Saving Golden Rice Finally
Gets to Poor Farmers Despite Environmentalist Opposition
The GLP
aggregated and excerpted this article to reflect the diversity of news,
opinion, and analysis. Click the link above to read the full, original article.
DIY Science: Walnuts, Rice and Avalanches
12 March
2019
Interview
with
Amalia
Thomas, University of Cambridge
Part of the
show Q&A: Atoms, Avalanches & Armpits
SNOW-MOUNTAIN
Credit:
Grab a jar, fill it with some walnuts, uncooked
rice and give it all good shake. Amalia Thomas is a mathematician from
Cambridge University who’ll be taking this demo and her research to Parliament
as part of a competition called STEM for Britain. She explained to Chris Smith
how this work helps to save people from avalanches...
Amalia - Thank you Chris. Adam has prepared
this jar thank you very much. And as you might be doing it home I’m shaking it
really well.
Chris - That’s worked already.
Amalia - Yeah. Three of four shakes and can you
tell me what you see?
Ljiljana - The nuts came on the top.
Amalia - Yeah, the nuts came to the top. So
this is a phenomenon that happens in granular systems; these are systems that
are made of small solid things, particles - in this case rice and nuts. And
it's a very interesting thing that happens in granular systems only that the
large materials will always come to the top so this is called size segregation.
Chris - Would that work, Amalia, if the nuts
were really heavy? So if had ball bearings in there would it still work?
Amalia - That's a very good point. Size
segregation, is only one type, there are other factors which contribute and one
of them is density, so if it's larger but a lot denser it would still not rise.
Another factor is say surface properties, so if it's very rough it will go up
faster.
Chris - And what's the physics of that? What's
actually driving that because that was extraordinary, all of the nuts are now
perched on top of the rice. All of them and it's within two or three shakes it
was phenomenal so why does that happen?
Amalia - Well, that is what my PhD is about.
This is something that is still not completely well understood. You might think
that the smaller particles are more likely to fit into gaps so they fall but
here we've only got a few big ones and they are pushed upwards. The key to
that, and for this I'm going to make an analogy with fluid systems, so say with
a mudslide, this would not happen in fluid continuous systems because in granular
systems forces are not distributed evenly. What that means is some granules
carry a lot of weight and some of them don't carry any weight at all and the
large particles are more likely to carry weights and, therefore, they’re more
likely to be subjected to forces and, as a result they’re levered upwards.
Chris - So it's an average thing is it?
Resolves that on average you end with a force being exerted against the big
stuff because they're more likely to be pushed somewhere, whereas a small stuff
would just slip and slide away and distribute towards the bottom?
Amalia - Yes, to carry weight than small ones.
Chris - Where do we see the same science being
manifested in the real world?
Amalia - We see it all the time; we don't know
it. This is actually called the breakfast cereal effect and for this I stole my
housemate’s granola.
Chris - You really have got a tub of granola.
Amalia - I've got a transparent tub made with a
mixture made by my housemate Emily. In here she's got granola, she's got
peanuts, walnuts, and coconut.
Chris - And it's all nicely mixed up at the
moment? There's no obvious pattern to anything?
Amalia - So we put it on its side and I just
give it a little shake, and just with that little shake...
Chris - She could eat three different breakfast
with that but now because you've got three different layers in there.
Amalia - I'll put this above my head. Can
someone else tell me what they see?
Ljiljana - The bigger things come up.
Amalia - And all the coconut has gone to the
bottom, and it's a same phenomenon. Sometimes it's a good thing so this is used
in recycling plants when you know you want the different types of garbage
separated. And it's a bad thing say in pharmaceutical companies when they want
all their active ingredients well mixed.
One big interesting application is in
avalanches which is where I actually study this phenomenon. Imagine your free
skiers so you're skiing in the mountains and not going through any specific
path you get stuck in an avalanche. There is a procedure for that, you have to
wear what look like airbags so that if you're caught in an avalanche you pull
it and you suddenly become a big particle and then you will rise in the
avalanche.
Chris - You literally float to the top of the
snow?
Amalia - You will, just like a walnut.
Chris - Does it work?
Amalia - Yeah they do. And they save lives that
way because like the walnut you're brought to the top and then your not crushed
like everything else that the avalanche has taken with it.
Chris - You might be beaten up a bit but at
least you'll be at the top and findable?
Amalia -
And findable, which is key, yeah.
Research
shows health benefits of red rice
·
·
Mar 13, 2019
RED
RICE: Annatto is an orange-red condiment and food coloring derived from the
seeds of the achiote tree. It gives an orange color to foods such as rice. Post
file photo
RED
RICE: Annatto is an orange-red condiment and food coloring derived from the
seeds of the achiote tree. It gives an orange color to foods such as rice. Post
file photo
Various
forms of annatto can be used to make red rice, including fresh annatto seeds
picked from trees on Guam, commercial seeds, and commercial annatto powder.
While walking on one of Guam’s sandy beaches,
you may see locals grilling barbecue meat and completing this CHamoru meal with
a scoop of red rice.
Tropical annatto (achiote) seed gives red rice
its unique taste and color. Annatto is one of the oldest dyes. For more than
200 years, the natural dye was used in England to color cheese. Today, annatto
seeds are commonly used as a natural food colorant in the food industry.
Cheese, salad dressing, butter and cooking oil are some examples of food
colored by annatto seeds.
During the ancient CHamoru period, rice was
consumed in drinks or foods for special occasions, such as weddings, funerals
or reunions, according to guampedia.com.
In the 17th century, the Spanish introduced red
rice to Guam. Today, red rice has become a staple at fiestas and other
gatherings on Guam.
The red rice that Guamanians often consume has
various health benefits such as antioxidants as well as antibacterial and
anti-inflammation properties. My research suggests this very seed also contains
anti-cancer properties.
I first conducted an anti-mutagenicity study to
test local plants: annatto seed, hibiscus, plumeria flower, and moringa seeds.
In the Salmonella Ames assay, the annatto seed displayed the highest
anti-mutagenicity among these selected plants.
Various forms of annatto can be used to make
red rice, including fresh annatto seeds picked from trees on Guam, commercial
seeds, and commercial annatto powder. Different products exhibited different
anti-mutagenicity activity. Among these seed products, fresh local annatto
seeds and commercial annatto powder exhibited high anti-mutagenicity.
Commercial seeds, usually packaged and shipped from other countries, displayed
weak antimutagenicity.
Red rice is cooked with heat. Will heat
treatment affect the anti-mutagenicity of annatto during cooking rice? An experiment
was designed to treat fresh annatto extract at 100°C for 30 to 120 minutes to
imitate cooking rice. After heat treatment of 30 minutes, surprisingly, instead
of a decrease in anti-mutagenicity, annatto seed extract exhibited an increase
in anti-mutagenicity. Further research experiments suggest that heat treatment
changed “bixin,” the major pigment in annatto seed, into another active form in
anti-mutagenicity.
With more research, the pigment bixin possesses
special anti-cancer properties against radiation, which induces skin cancer.
This is good news especially because of the strong direct sunlight, a primary
cause for skin cancer on Guam.
Based on the results of my study on annatto
seeds, consumption of red rice may be beneficial for reducing the risk of
cancer. For potential health benefits, preparing and cooking red rice with
fresh annatto seed or high-quality annatto powder is recommended.
PhilRice steps up efforts to help farmers cope with El
Niño
By Marilyn Galang March 13, 2019,
5:03 pm
SCIENCE
CITY OF MUNOZ, Nueva Ecija --
The Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) has recommended the use of
drought-tolerant varieties and technologies to help farmers cope with the
ongoing El Niño phenomenon.
PhilRice
agriculturist Fredierick Saludez said rice farmers must be prepared to plant
drought-resistant varieties that could help them mitigate the impact of
prolonged dry spell.
Based on
studies, rice normally grows at temperatures between 20-35 degrees Celsius.
Temperature above 35 degree Celsius is critical for rice growth especially
during the reproductive stage.
Likewise,
rice yield can decrease by 10 percent for each 1degree Celsius increase in
minimum night temperature during the dry season.
Aside
from planting drought-tolerant rice varieties, Saludez said farmers with water
source can also try the aerobic rice technology which requires irrigation at
2-5 centimeter every week.
He said
farmers in irrigated areas, meanwhile, are advised to use water efficiently so
it can reach tail-end areas in the irrigation system.
By
practicing controlled irrigation, he said water use can be reduced by around
16-35 percent without reducing yield.
“This
technology is aided with an observation well used in monitoring water levels.
It is time to irrigate when the water level hits 15 centimeter below ground
level,” Saludez said.
While
PhilRice recommends a fallow period every cropping season, in times of drought,
it also encourages farmers with stable water supply to plant rice immediately
after harvest.
Dr.
Eduardo Jimmy P. Quilang of PhilRice Agronomy, Soils, and Plant Physiology
Division, said the practice, called “quick turnaround (QTA),” has to be done in
synchrony within a community.
“QTA is
advised to ensure enough rice supply amid the dry spell. In doing this,
however, synchronous planting is strongly recommended to prevent pest outbreak.
Thus, this has to be well-coordinated with the National Irrigation
Administration,” he said.
Likewise,
PhilRice recommended to farmers application of direct seeding to reduce
production time by an average of 10 days.
In areas
with limited water supply, Dr. Ricardo Orge, program leader of Climate
Resiliency for Enhanced Agricultural Trade and Efficiency for Rice
(CREATE-Rice) Program, advised farmers to diversify from rice.
“If it
is already too risky to plant rice, farmers may consider planting
short-duration crops instead. We suggest high-value crops requiring less water
use such as watermelon. Farmers may also focus on tending livestock,” Orge
said.
The
PhilRice experts also encouraged farmers to avail of farm insurance to protect
their crops from natural calamities. (PNA)
Drought
warning leads Cambodian government to tell rice farmers not to plant
03/12/2019,
13.07
Water shortages have been reported in 16
Cambodian provinces. El Niño is behind higher-than-average temperatures. About
75 per cent of Cambodia is farmland, devoted mostly to growing rice. The
authorities hand out fertiliser and water to affected communities.
Phnom Penh (AsiaNews) – Cambodian rice farmers
should refrain from planting crops because of a drought and record high
temperatures. The cause is this year’s El Nino with temperatures expected to
peak in April and May, warned Neth Pheaktra, spokesman and secretary of state
for the Cambodian Environment Ministry.
Communities in 16 provinces around the Kingdom
have reported water shortages due to higher than average temperatures – a stark
reality in a nation more used to dealing with floods than droughts.
A tributary of the Tonle Sap River in Kampong
Thom province has dried out. As a result, a local rice farmer said he had been
relying on eating lotus roots to survive.
About 75 per cent of the country’s farmland is
devoted to growing rice. Cambodia exports about three per cent of the world’s
supply, according to the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).
Pheaktra said his office, in conjunction with
the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology, has been distributing
fertiliser and water to communities hit by drought.
The Mekong River
Commission (MRC), which manages the river and its
sustainable development along with its member states (Cambodia, Laos,
Thailand and Vietnam), said that it was ready to help Cambodia.
Temperatures in Cambodia will reach 40-42
Celsius between April and May this year, said Pheaktra. “Higher temperatures
associated with El Nino can lead to forest fires and water shortages,” he
added.
Despite heightened concerns, climatologists do
not expect this year's drought to be as bad as the one that hit the
country in 2016.
Speaking about the latter, Cambodian Prime
Minister Hun Sen called it was “the worst natural disaster to hit Cambodia in
100 years”.
Piñol junks proposal to
import unhusked rice
March
12, 2019, 7:46 pm
MANILA --
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel "Manny" Piñol has junked the planned
importation of palay or unhusked rice as it may pose danger to Philippine
agriculture.
"We will not allow the importation of
palay (unhusked rice) because it could pose danger to our rice industry. It
could also bring in pests and diseases," said Piñol, in a press briefing
on Tuesday.
The Food and Beverage unit of diversified
conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC) earlier said it plans to import unmilled
rice should the government pass a law lifting quantitative restrictions (QR) on
the volume of rice imports annually.
SMC President and Chief Operating Officer Ramon
S. Ang said the company can undertake rice importation to help ensure food
security and to assist local farmers.
“We will help by importing. We have grain
terminals where we can build extra silos… We will be able to help in the food
security,” said Ang on the sidelines of the SMC stockholders’ meeting.
He said these silos would allow for the proper
storage of grains so that SMC can import rice by bulk and not just by sacks,
after which the commodity can be stored for as long as two years.
Piñol, however, noted that the Rice
Tariffication Law does not allow the importation of palay.
"It is only rice in milled form," he
stressed, effectively bucking the tycoon's ambitious plans.
Piñol said that the DA still reserves the right
to revoke importation of unmilled rice, particularly if it concerns the safety
of the country's agriculture sector.
"We still reserve the right, we still hold
the power to determine whether it is safe for Philippine agriculture or not,
because nobody can assure us na yung mga unhulled rice na papasok dito ay
walang nakakabit na sakit," he said. (PNA)
Farmers
told not to plant next rice crop
Husain Haider |
Publication date 12 March 2019 | 08:31 ICT
Villagers
collect water at a dwindling watering hole amid drought in Banteay Meanchey
province in 2016. Hong
Menea
THE Ministry of Environment has told Cambodian
rice farmers to refrain from planting crops in the midst of a drought
heightened by record temperatures due to this year’s El Nino phenomenon.
Temperatures are expected to peak in April and May.
“Every year, [farmers usually] harvest crops
several times [each year], but due to the impact from El Nino this year, the
government is appealing to people not to plant during this period,” Neth
Pheaktra, the spokesman and secretary of state for the Minister of Environment,
told The Post.
Communities in 16 provinces around the Kingdom
have reported water shortages due to higher than average temperatures – a stark
reality for a nation more accustomed to dealing with floods than droughts.
A tributary of the Tonle Sap river in Kampong
Thom province has dried out, where a local rice farmer said he had been relying
on eating lotus roots to survive.
“My farm usually only produces one harvest each
year, so I’m used to living on lotus roots, but there are some farmers who grow
two yields each year and they can now only produce one,” he said.
About 75
per cent of the Kingdom’s agricultural land is devoted to growing rice, and
Cambodia exports about three per cent of the world’s supply, according to the
UN Food and Agricultural Organisation [FAO].
Pheaktra said his office, in conjunction with
the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology, has been distributing
fertiliser and water to communities hit by drought.
The Mekong River Commission [MRC] Secretariat,
which works to jointly manage the water resources of the river shared by member
nations Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, and its sustainable development,
told The Post that it “stands ready to support its member countries, including
Cambodia, which is experiencing abnormally higher temperatures”.
“It is a good move by Cambodia’s Ministry of
Water Resources and Meteorology to notify farmers earlier so that they can be
more vigilant."
“Most farmers will get lower rice yields and
perhaps insufficient agricultural crop production due to insufficient rainwater
[in Cambodia’s case]."
“In some areas such as Kampong Cham and Takeo,
there are some potential plant diseases and strange insects [which may take
hold] by high air temperature. The situation is normally resolved when the rain
comes,” it said.
Pheaktra said that temperatures in Cambodia
will reach 40-42 Celsius between April and May this year.
“Higher temperatures associated with El Nino
can lead to forest fires and water shortages,” he said.
The MRC Secretariat said that along with lower
agricultural productivity, people’s livelihoods and health could be affected
this season.
“Drought causes water shortages in communities
which need water for daily use. People need to go far to fetch water for daily
consumption from wells or natural ponds.
“Water quality can also become the main issue
when water for daily needs cannot be supplied. This can cause some major
waterborne diseases to affect local households, such as diarrhoea,” the MRC
Secretariat said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen called the last El Nino fuelled
drought in 2016 “the worst natural disaster to hit Cambodia in 100 years”.
Fortunately, climatologists consulted by the
Mekong River Commission predict that this year will not be as severe as the
2015-16 phenomenon.
“Unlike this year, the El Nino of 2015-16 was
considered a double El Nino event as it was supposed to arrive in 2010-11 but
did not happen until 2015-16.”
The Ministry of Environment is undertaking
efforts to avoid a similar fate this year.
“We cannot water [crops], and in some areas, the
shortage of water [has restricted] daily activities . . . the El Nino
phenomenon is not just affecting Cambodia, but also other countries in the
Mekong region like Myanmar, Vietnam [and] Laos,” said Pheaktra.
Farmers usually adjust for the dry season by planting
fewer crops, especially rice. However, a later arrival of the monsoon season
and prolonged dry spells during the wet season may cause them concern this
year.
“It is usual for farmers to get enough rain
during the wet season or irrigated water from irrigation systems connected to
their land. When [dry spells continue too long], crops become prone to die
out,” the MRC Secretariat said.
Tenders to import rice aimed
at increasing supply
Tue, Mar. 12, 2019
AIRO - 12 March 2019: The General Authority for
Supply Commodities (GASC) announced on Tuesday it will invite a third tender to
import white short and medium grain rice with a broken percentage varying from
10 to 12 percent.
Offers, covering the technical and financial aspects, must be submitted by March 30 along with four samples. The size of each is 3 kilograms. One of them will be sent to Food Technology Research Institute affiliated with the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation to carry out a cooking test ensuring it matches the Egyptian consumer. Decisions will be based on the test’s results.
The minimum quantity to be supplied is 20,000 tons. The delivery dates are June 1 - 15, and June 16 - 30.
The offers must be coupled with unconditional bond in the value of $50,000 with GASC being the client.
In February, GASC signed contracts to import 68,000 tons accepting certain offers submitted in the second tender. Twenty thousand tons will be delivered on March 20 - April 20. Forty eight thousand tons will be delivered on April 1 - 30. The offers accepted in the first tender consisted of delivering 47,500 tons last month.
On Monday, Minister of Supply and Internal Trade Ali al-Meselhy stated that imported rice will be available at the ministry’s outlets for LE 9 per kilo in April, and that currently there are 46,000 tons of rice in Egypt.
Prices of rice have risen a bit recently because the size of lands cultivated in the crop decreased as per a decision by the government to rationalize the use of water.
Offers, covering the technical and financial aspects, must be submitted by March 30 along with four samples. The size of each is 3 kilograms. One of them will be sent to Food Technology Research Institute affiliated with the Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation to carry out a cooking test ensuring it matches the Egyptian consumer. Decisions will be based on the test’s results.
The minimum quantity to be supplied is 20,000 tons. The delivery dates are June 1 - 15, and June 16 - 30.
The offers must be coupled with unconditional bond in the value of $50,000 with GASC being the client.
In February, GASC signed contracts to import 68,000 tons accepting certain offers submitted in the second tender. Twenty thousand tons will be delivered on March 20 - April 20. Forty eight thousand tons will be delivered on April 1 - 30. The offers accepted in the first tender consisted of delivering 47,500 tons last month.
On Monday, Minister of Supply and Internal Trade Ali al-Meselhy stated that imported rice will be available at the ministry’s outlets for LE 9 per kilo in April, and that currently there are 46,000 tons of rice in Egypt.
Prices of rice have risen a bit recently because the size of lands cultivated in the crop decreased as per a decision by the government to rationalize the use of water.
Buffer
stock boosted by rice imports – NFA
THE National Food Authority (NFA) is exerting all efforts to boost the
country’s buffer stock to provide Filipino consumers, particularly those from
the marginalized sector, with affordable rice.
Latest
data from the NFA showed a total of 203,000 metric tons (MT) of 25-percent
broken long grain white rice from Thailand and Vietnam have arrived under
government-to-government (G to G) tenders.
Of
another 500,000 MT under the open tender scheme, a total of 478,050 MT has also
been delivered with the balance already in transit and expected to arrive soon.
The
imports, which are part of the 1.25 million MT ordered last year, were
discharged in the ports of Manila, Subic, Cebu, Cagayan de Oro, Davao, General
Santos City, La Union, Surigao, Tacloban and Zamboanga.
The
country has imported rice from Thailand and Vietnam since these are the only
ones with existing memorandums of agreement with the Philippines. The rice
imports are meant to increase the NFA’s market participation and beef up its
own inventory.
With the
implementation of Republic Act 11203 or the Rice Tariffication Law, however,
the NFA will no longer be allowed to import rice and will have to buy its
buffer stock from local farmers.
The NFA
said its current imported rice inventory stood to last until August this year,
prompting the agency to ramp up its nationwide palay (unmilled rice)
procurement program. In the first two months of 2019, the NFA’s total palay
procurement reached 232,447 bags, a 22-fold increase from the 10,960 bags
procured a year ago.
NFA
acting administrator Tomas Escarez said more farmers were now selling their
harvests to the NFA after its policy-making body NFA Council approved an
additional P3 per kilogram buffer stocking incentive (BSI) in October last
year.
Agriculture
Secretary Emmanuel Piñol also assured the NFA would continue buying farmers’
produce and sell rice at P27 per kilo in spite of its new role as a buffer
stocking agency.
The NFA
releases rice at P25 per kilo to accredited retailers who sell at P27 per kilo
to consumers across the country.
Before
the enactment of RA 11203, the NFA was mandated to have at least 15-days worth
of buffer stock at any given time except during the lean seanson when it is
required to have 30-day buffer stock which could only be released during
calamities and emergencies.
Based on
the amended implementing rules and regulations of the new law, the NFA will
adopt the “rolling buffer stocking” scheme — buy palay from local farmers
all-year round with an optimal level of buffer stock good for 30 days and
release the aged stock once it reaches the optimal level.
In 2018,
President Rodrigo Duterte ordered to have at least 60 days’ worth of buffer
stock. To bring down rice prices and ensure the availability of the staple
food, the government decided to flood the market with impored rice.
Meanwhile,
the NFA said it had readied a total of 303 palay buying stations nationwide as
the agency prepares to procure a sizeable portion of the summer crop harvest
starting this month.
The NFA
currently maintains more than 300 warehouses across the country with total
capacity of 22 million bags or about 30 days of national daily consumption
requirement. https://www.manilatimes.net/buffer-stock-boosted-by-rice-imports-nfa/524174/
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