Thursday, October 03, 2019

3rd October,2019 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter


Soil scientists increase phosphorus content in paddy soils

Description: Soil scientists from RUDN manage to increase phosphorus content in paddy soilsCredit: RUDN University
Soil scientists from the RUDN University (Russia) and Huazhong Agricultural University (China) have demonstrated that adding carbon compounds to the soil can increase phosphorus availability in paddy fields. For these purposes, biologists have described the processes of iron (III) compounds reduction and phosphorus release by soil microorganisms in the presence of carbon as an energy source. These results will help reduce dependence on phosphate fertilizers and increase agricultural productivity. The research has been published in the journal Geoderma.
Phosphorus deficiency in soils limits crop production capabilities. Often it is found in soils in the form that is unavailable for plants, i.e. iron compounds. Phosphorus unavailability is particularly typical for tropical and subtropical soils, for example, in paddy fields, where iron is one of the most common elements. To resolve this problem, expensive phosphorus fertilizers are used in agriculture. Soil scientists from the RUDN have shown that it is possible to mobilize phosphorus in paddy soils using soil microorganisms. The process requires soil carbon.
Paddy fields are watered to prevent weeds from growing. The depth of watering is periodically changed depending on the phase of plant development. When rice is ripening, water is drained from the fields, and the soil is dried. Therefore, paddy soils have specific properties: They constantly alternate periods of oxidative and reducing processes, when the acidity of such soils increases during stagnation of water and decreases when the water recedes. In addition, a large amount of carbon-rich organic material is accumulated in the upper layer, as well as sedimentary iron due to the destruction of iron-containing rocks affected by water.
Soil microorganisms oxidize or reduce inorganic compounds, transforming them into a different digestible form. In weathered, acidic rice soils, soil microorganisms decompose iron and phosphorus compounds, reducing ferric iron to ferrous, and releasing phosphorus in a form accessible to plants. But this process requires oxygen. Flooded fields with increased soil acidity are prone to oxygen deficiency, which impedes the process of phosphorus release. Scientists have assumed that microorganisms need carbon as an energy source to restore iron without oxygen.
To test this assumption, soil scientists conducted an experiment: They took 255 soil samples from two paddy fields in China with a typical subtropical climate. Researchers removed visible plant debris, stones, and soil microfauna and added oxalate, acetate, propionate, and formiate solutions—labile, that is easily degradable, organic matter that is a readily available carbon source. One sample was left without adding any compound as a control. Soil samples were kept underwater for two months, that is, without oxygen. Paddy soils exist in similar conditions. For 60 days, researchers measured the concentration of ferrous iron in the samples. Iron appears once phosphorus is released and can serve as a marker to find out the concentration of free phosphorus. Direct measurement of phosphorus is more complex and costly.
Measurements showed that labile organic matter accelerated phosphorus release from iron compounds. Moreover, phosphorus is released faster in soil samples with an initially higher concentration of labile organic matter and iron compounds. This proved the assumption that in oxygen-free conditions in paddy soils, carbon can "replace" oxygen as an energy source for soil microorganisms that release phosphorus in the form available for plants.
Research findings show that relatively small amounts of labile organic matter can release soil phosphorus reserves and reduce the dependence of paddy farms on fairly expensive and environmentally unsafe phosphorus fertilizers.

Pretenders at Public Forum   

WASHINGTON, DC -- Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) held a public meeting to discuss the FDA's efforts to modernize standards of identity for foods (SOI).  USA Rice President & CEO Betsy Ward presented public comments to FDA officials and spoke with representatives from the food and agriculture industries on the importance of adopting an SOI for rice in the United States and protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of rice pretenders.

While CODEX, the international food safety standard of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization (WHO), defines rice as "whole or broken kernels from the Oryza sativa L. plant," there currently is no SOI for rice in the U.S. with the exception of enriched rice.  This is in stark contrast to most commercial grains, which have national SOIs defined and enforced by the FDA.

This has become an ever-growing problem in recent years, as more and more vegetables and pulse-based flour products masquerading as rice have cropped up on retail shelves next to bags of actual rice.  These rice imposters, often vegetables processed into small pieces, do not have the same dietary or nutritional profile as rice yet are marketed as rice products.  While both rice and cauliflower products are healthy, they fit different essential nutrient categories.

"These standards exist to protect against consumer deception," said Ward in her testimony.  "The current use of the common or usual name "rice" has created confusion in the marketplace.  Rice is a grain, not a shape.  We recommend that these guidelines be adapted into formal standards of identity in the United States to meet consumer expectations from a nutritional and culinary standpoint, as well as allow for innovation."

The meeting was part of the FDA's Nutrition Innovation Strategy, a program designed to improve healthy dietary behavior and help reduce preventable death and disease related to poor nutrition.  The public forum allowed industry leaders, health experts, and concerned citizens to weigh in on how the FDA can modernize SOI while facilitating innovation and flexibility for the development of healthier foods.  

"USA Rice supports new product innovation and the use of pulse-based flours to create new and innovative products," Ward continued.  "It is not our goal to limit such product development, but to ensure that all products are clearly labeled and not deceptive.  We believe a standard of identity for rice will do that."

The meeting also featured breakout sessions focused on nutrition, innovation, and consumer expectations, where attendees discussed the relationship between the establishment and enforcement of food standards and innovation in nutrition.  During these sessions, Ward stressed that SOIs and innovation are not at odds.  "Providing a standard of identity allows for innovation while maintaining customer expectations.  Protecting rice's SOI promotes honesty and fair dealings while ensuring products labeled as rice meet the nutritional profile consumers expect.  Ensuring a concept is protected does not limit innovation into different products."

On the question of how SOIs can support nutritional goals, Ward commented that SOIs "do not pose a barrier to production of more nutritious food.  Lack of standard definitions creates ambiguity and paths to consumer confusion.  Currently, anything can call itself rice.  While cauliflower can be riced, the final product is not rice as consumers understand the name.  Calling this product "rice" does not promote honesty and fair dealings in the interest of consumers."

She went on to say that the CODEX rice definition "provides great flexibility for nutritional advancement, while clearly defining its key characteristics.  The CODEX provides a standard for the use of the term "rice" and also protects its use.  Rice is an identity that should be reserved for rice grains."

In March of 2018, Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson signed a resolution establishing an SOI for rice using the common understanding of the term "rice."  In June of this year, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards signed similar legislation in his state that goes into effect next October.  Such actions on the state level, as well as making rice's voice heard at FDA meetings such as last week's, are crucial steps toward achieving a national SOI for rice and protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of rice pretenders.
usa rice
Pretenders at Public Forum   
 
WASHINGTON, DC -- Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) held a public meeting to discuss the FDA's efforts to modernize standards of identity for foods (SOI).  USA Rice President & CEO Betsy Ward presented public comments to FDA officials and spoke with representatives from the food and agriculture industries on the importance of adopting an SOI for rice in the United States and protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of rice pretenders.

While CODEX, the international food safety standard of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization (WHO), defines rice as "whole or broken kernels from the Oryza sativa L. plant," there currently is no SOI for rice in the U.S. with the exception of enriched rice.  This is in stark contrast to most commercial grains, which have national SOIs defined and enforced by the FDA.

This has become an ever-growing problem in recent years, as more and more vegetables and pulse-based flour products masquerading as rice have cropped up on retail shelves next to bags of actual rice.  These rice imposters, often vegetables processed into small pieces, do not have the same dietary or nutritional profile as rice yet are marketed as rice products.  While both rice and cauliflower products are healthy, they fit different essential nutrient categories.

"These standards exist to protect against consumer deception," said Ward in her testimony.  "The current use of the common or usual name "rice" has created confusion in the marketplace.  Rice is a grain, not a shape.  We recommend that these guidelines be adapted into formal standards of identity in the United States to meet consumer expectations from a nutritional and culinary standpoint, as well as allow for innovation."

The meeting was part of the FDA's Nutrition Innovation Strategy, a program designed to improve healthy dietary behavior and help reduce preventable death and disease related to poor nutrition.  The public forum allowed industry leaders, health experts, and concerned citizens to weigh in on how the FDA can modernize SOI while facilitating innovation and flexibility for the development of healthier foods.  

"USA Rice supports new product innovation and the use of pulse-based flours to create new and innovative products," Ward continued.  "It is not our goal to limit such product development, but to ensure that all products are clearly labeled and not deceptive.  We believe a standard of identity for rice will do that."

The meeting also featured breakout sessions focused on nutrition, innovation, and consumer expectations, where attendees discussed the relationship between the establishment and enforcement of food standards and innovation in nutrition.  During these sessions, Ward stressed that SOIs and innovation are not at odds.  "Providing a standard of identity allows for innovation while maintaining customer expectations.  Protecting rice's SOI promotes honesty and fair dealings while ensuring products labeled as rice meet the nutritional profile consumers expect.  Ensuring a concept is protected does not limit innovation into different products."

On the question of how SOIs can support nutritional goals, Ward commented that SOIs "do not pose a barrier to production of more nutritious food.  Lack of standard definitions creates ambiguity and paths to consumer confusion.  Currently, anything can call itself rice.  While cauliflower can be riced, the final product is not rice as consumers understand the name.  Calling this product "rice" does not promote honesty and fair dealings in the interest of consumers."

She went on to say that the CODEX rice definition "provides great flexibility for nutritional advancement, while clearly defining its key characteristics.  The CODEX provides a standard for the use of the term "rice" and also protects its use.  Rice is an identity that should be reserved for rice grains."

In March of 2018, Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson signed a resolution establishing an SOI for rice using the common understanding of the term "rice."  In June of this year, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards signed similar legislation in his state that goes into effect next October.  Such actions on the state level, as well as making rice's voice heard at FDA meetings such as last week's, are crucial steps toward achieving a national SOI for rice and protecting consumers from the misleading marketing of rice pretenders.

Customs breaches P10-billion rice tariff collection target for 2019

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Description: https://39byfk2z09ab1y1bzj1l5r82-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Bureau-of-Customs.jpgBureau of Customs
The Bureau of Customs (BOC) has already exceeded its P10-billion rice import tariff collection target for this year.
“Yes, we have already reached P10.7 billion as of end-September,” Customs Assistant Commissioner Vincent Philip Maronilla told the BusinessMirror on Wednesday.
His confirmation came as the BOC is working with the Department of Agriculture and the Tariff Commission on the possible imposition of safeguard duties on rice imports to protect the farming industry.
Agriculture Secretary William Dar said last month that they are eyeing to raise tariffs on imported rice as early as mid-October in a bid to arrest an oversupply of the staple.
As of September, Dar said, they have already imported 2.4 million tons since March.
Despite the plan to double the current rice import tariff of 35 percent, Maronilla said, they think they would still be able to hit P15 billion even if the volume of rice imports would decrease.
“If they [importers] are going to shoulder [the additional 30 percent to 35 percent safeguard duties], then we’ll still have the same volume, then so much better. But if the volume decreases even by half of our projected price, I think we will still be able to make it because we are going to collect double the duties,” he said.
Under the rice trade liberalization law, or Republic Act 11203, the tariff revenues in excess of the P10 billion shall be earmarked by Congress and included in the General Appropriations Act for the following year.
Moreover, the law also provides that these excess tariff revenues shall be allocated for rice farmers’ financial assistance, titling of agricultural rice lands, expanded crop insurance program on rice, and crop diversification program.
Last month, National Statistician and Civil Registrar Dennis S. Mapa confirmed that average farm-gate price of unhusked rice have gone up from P8 per kilogram  to P10 kg, particularly in Luzon.
Meanwhile, the average farm-gate prices of wet palay have reached P14 per kg to P18 kg in other provinces, such as those in the Visayas.

100th rice harvest


·       Oct 1, 2019


Ty Spooner, left, Dennis Spooner and Marshall Masters pose on a rice harvester on Wednesday, Sept. 25. 
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Description: Spooner & Sons

Spooner & Sons with a wooden harvester in 1915. Dennis Spooner said his great-grandfather is standing in front – five of his sons are also pictured. The harvester was pulled by 28 mules and was likely pictured in a wheat or barley field. Their first rice harvest was in 1919.


Dennis Spooner, left, Ty Spooner and Marshall Masters pose in front of a rice harvester and tractor and grain cart on Wednesday, Sept. 25. 
·      
A local family rice business is in the process of harvesting their 100th rice crop.
Dennis Spooner, of Spooner & Sons, has been farming for most of his life – being involved in the family business for the last 52 years – and his son, Ty Spooner, has been involved for about 29 years.
Dennis Spooner said his family came from Canada in the late 1850s and some ended up in what is now Willows – at that time the area was known as Glenn and was part of Colusa County. 
Dennis Spooner has a photo from 1915 of his great-grandfather and five of his sons (one of whom is Dennis Spooner’s grandfather) with a wooden harvester that was pulled by 28 mules – he believes it was either in a wheat or barley field when the photo was taken.
“They used the harvester to cut that first rice crop (in 1919),” Dennis Spooner said. “... You wouldn’t catch anybody doing that today, you can imagine all the work of getting those prepared every morning and then putting them away at night and putting in a full day with them is quite an extravaganza.”
They were the original Spooner & Sons – his great-grandfather being the first generation.
Dennis Spooner said his grandfather was the second, his father was the third generation, he is the fourth and his children are the fifth generation – his daughter is not currently involved in the business. 
“Like a lot of farmers, I was born into it,” Ty Spooner said. “... I grew up here, I grew up on the ranch ... and it’s all I ever knew. I was driving a tractor when I was 10 years old. It’s a nice lifestyle, and I’m very fortunate to have the opportunity to be able to continue that.”
Dennis Spooner said they grow both organic and commercial rice for Lundberg Family Farms and they also grow a number of specialty varieties such as long-grains and Jasmines. 
The father-son duo, along with their full-time employee, Marshall Masters, are currently in the process of harvesting this season’s crop. 
“So far we’re off to a good start this year,” Dennis Spooner said. “... It looks real good, we’re on pace to have a good year.”
He said they started in September and it can last about a month, depending on the weather. 
“Anytime we finish before Halloween, I think that’s pretty good,” Dennis Spooner said. 
When he was a child, he said, it wasn’t uncommon for them to be harvesting through Thanksgiving. 
“Between the equipment and between our new varieties that California has produced … that has probably taken a month off our growing time,” Dennis Spooner said. “It’s quite an advantage for growers to have these varieties and the equipment we have, it makes it a lot easier.”
He said one of the biggest changes he’s noticed in farming is the equipment that’s used.
“It’s just gotten so much more technical because we have computers, it’s more of a science,” Dennis Spooner said. “You’re hands on from experience but you have soil tests that you monitor … your equipment has monitors on it … you drive (the equipment) but everything is off a GPS satellite so it goes in a straight line and you don’t have to worry about it as you’re tending a harvester or tractor or driving anything else. The equipment has come a long way.”
Ty Spooner said there have been changes in regulations as well. 
“We’re so restricted in California for what we can and can’t do, what we can use, when we can use it, how we use it,” he said. “... Everybody is in that same boat, so regulations are a big part of the changes we’ve overcome … for the better most of the time it seems like. We get pushed in a direction that maybe we didn’t always want to go but us farmers are resilient and always figure out how to make it better.”
Dennis Spooner said California has been instrumental in leading the nation in how farming and equipment has progressed.
“We have the infrastructure that most places don’t have, we have water, we have the land, we have a good climate,” he said. 
“I feel very fortunate doing what I do,” he said. “... There’s satisfaction in knowing that you feed a lot of people, that you’re productive and efficient ... We’ve been doing it for a while and most of the time we enjoy it.”

How a rice-mimicking weed has taken over the planet

By Daniel T Cross on October 3, 2019
Description: How a rice-mimicking weed has taken over the planetThe domestication of plants proved a pivotal point in human history, propelling our species to ever newer heights of sophistication and control over the environment, for better or worse. Right from the get-go, though, farmers made mistakes with long-lasting consequences.
Take the wild grass Echinochloa crus-galli, which originated in tropical Asia and has turned into one of the world’s worst agricultural weeds. The grass has long caused people plenty of trouble as the fast-growing grass needs to be weeded constantly, usually by hand. Barnyard grass is an invasive weed that has conquered the planet.
The reason for its spread? A mistake by early rice growers in the Yangtze River region a millennium ago. These farmers mistook the grass for rice because the plant has come to imitate rice stalks, explain the authors of a new study published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.
The researchers behind the study postulate that the mimic version of the grass emerged during the Song Dynasty in China when local populations were growing fast and demand for rice as the region’s staple grain was very high. A quick-maturing rice called Champa rice, which is better able to resist droughts, was introduced to the Yangtze basin from Vietnam at this time. Its cultivation allowed farmers to have two harvests in a year instead of just one. On the downside, the weedy grass that mimics rice likely gained a foothold in and around paddies.
“In Asia, rice farmers have traditionally planted and weeded their paddies by hand. Any weeds that stick out are easily detected and removed,” said Kenneth Olsen, a professor of biology. “Over hundreds of generations, this has selected for some strains of barnyard grass that specialize on rice fields and very closely mimic rice plants. This allows them to escape detection.”
This form of crop mimicry, also known as Vavilovian mimicry, is an evolutionary adaptation whereby weeds come to resemble domesticated plants so as to avoid detection by people. Echinochloa crus-galli has come to imitate rice stalks with nearly identical green stems.
“With the advent of agriculture about 10,000 years ago, humans all over the planet began creating a wonderful habitat for naturally weedy plant species to exploit,” Olsen explained. “The most successful and aggressive agricultural weeds were those that evolved traits allowing them to escape detection and proliferate in this fertile new environment,” he added.

'Manoomin' brings together UMN researchers and tribal members

University researchers and local tribes are working to preserve manoomin, commonly known as wild rice, and cultural traditions.

Sarah Mai
For the past two years, River Spry has ventured out in his canoe to harvest wild rice. Spry, a forestry technician for the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in northern Minnesota, said harvesting the tall, green stalks of wild rice is an intimate process.
“Just being out there, you are so connected to the plant and the Earth. It is a beautiful thing,” Spry said. “It changed my life. The rest of my life I will be a ricer.” 
Spry, along with other tribal members, harvests wild rice for food but also to honor tribal culture and tradition around the grain. While Native American tribes have harvested wild rice, called manoomin in Ojibwe, for generations, about one-third of the wild rice in Minnesota has disappeared over the past century. 
Because of the decline, University of Minnesota researchers are working with tribes through the Grand Challenges Initiative. Since last year, they have been examining why wild rice is disappearing and seeking ways to preserve its habitat while honoring sacred traditions surrounding the grain.  
“We make sure the research is driven by our tribal partners and not the University,” said Michael Dockry, an assistant professor in the Department of Forest Resources who is involved with the work. “Our project is pretty unique and important, because it gives an example of how to work with tribes while protecting tribal sovereignty."
Wild rice, which grows in water, has been declining because of environmental factors caused by human activity, said Thomas Howes, natural resources manager for the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa. Part of the reason for the decline can be attributed to issues such as industrial pollution and poor water quality. 
According to Howes, the Great Lakes region is the only place in the world wild rice grows. 
“We have to do our best to take care of it,” he said. 
While the Fond du Lac tribe has been able to revitalize their wild rice habitats, there continues to be a decline in the plant outside the reservation. 
The grain is significant to many tribal communities. According to the migration story of the Anishinaabe, or Ojibwe people, the Creator instructed tribes to find the “food which grows upon the water.” Wild rice, or manoomin, was discovered in the Great Lakes region, and that is why people settled there. 
Not only are University researchers doing this work to study and preserve the sacred grain, but also to repair the University’s relationship with local tribes – which has been rocky in the past.
“Our projects goal is to … really make sure we are researching wild rice collaboratively and making sure we understand what wild rice means to them,” said Crystal Ng, head researcher for the project. 
Almost two decades ago, University researchers tried to develop a genetically engineered form of wild rice without input from tribes, which made tribal communities unhappy. They feared creating new forms of wild rice would contaminate the ecosystem for traditional wild rice, Howes said. 
In a 2009 letter  written by Anishinaabe tribal members and the University, the University acknowledged wrongdoing. 
“...virtually all wild rice research emerging from the University has reflected the goals and desires of non-Indians with little regard for native concerns, perspectives or the considerable store of traditional knowledge,” the letter read. 
The letter was written to propose the University and Anishnaabe nations in Minnesota work to build a relationship built on mutual respect and reciprocity.
“The University messed this up royally previously,” Karen Driver, former chairwoman of the Fond Du Lac tribe, said regarding previous University work around wild rice. “It left a bad taste in tribal peoples’ mouths.” 
Driver, who is an adviser for the Grand Challenge project, said researchers for this project are taking the time to establish good relationships and establish mutual respect.
Tribal members can add value to the research being done by sharing their knowledge accumulated from generations of being good stewards of wild rice, Driver said. 
“Because of this respect, both sides can learn from each other.” 
While it has not been easy to rebuild relationships and regain trust, Ng said the University researchers keeping their word and working collaboratively with tribes has helped the partnership.  
“We are working together and really trying to heal a lot of what has happened in the past from us not working together,” Ng said. 
Last month, tribal partners were invited to the University as part of President Joan Gabel’s inauguration week, to honor the research and relationship between tribal communities and the University. 
Gabel said bringing community members together and doing work like this allows them to share both indigenous wisdom and scientific discovery.
While funding for the Grand Challenge project only goes through January 2020, researchers are looking to other funding sources to continue their work.
The long-term goal for researchers involved with the project is for the University to go beyond wild rice research and someday be a center of excellence for supporting tribal resource management. 
One of Spry’s favorite parts of harvesting wild rice is that he feels personally connected to the food.“We need to protect that.”

Farm Hands on the Potomac: Trump nominates MacGregor

By Hannah Pagel
President Donald Trump has nominated Katharine MacGregor to be the deputy secretary of the Department of the Interior (DOI). MacGregor is currently serving as the deputy chief of staff exercising the authority of the deputy secretary. She has served as the principal deputy assistant secretary of lands and minerals management, and before coming to the DOI she was on Capitol Hill for 10 years on the House Natural Resources Committee … Interior Secretary David Bernhardt has signed a secretarial order to redelegate authority for vacant, non-career positions. The appointments are as follows: deputy secretary to Kate MacGregor; solicitor to Daniel Jorjani; director of the Bureau of Land Management to William Perry Pendley; director of the National Park Service to David Vela; and director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Margaret Everson.
Christy Seyfert is set to join the American Soybean Association Oct. 21 as its new executive director of government affairs, completing a transition of the organization’s lobbying efforts to in-house staff. Seyfert comes to ASA from her most recent stop at Zurich North America, but her resume also features stops at Wells Fargo and Michael Torrey Associates as well as time working for the House and Senate Ag Committees. Seyfert will lead an office that will include Hanna Abou-El-Seoud, who will handle trade and international policy, Renee Munasifi, who will focus on biotechnology, crop innovation, and regulatory policy, and Wendy Brannen, who will lead ASA’s policy communications. All three come to ASA from Gordley Associates, the lobbying firm that previously handled ASA’s government affairs efforts in Washington. 
Rachel Millard is leaving the House Agriculture Committee, where she has served as the communications director for the Republicans. She is heading over to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission where she will serve as the deputy director of public affairs. Replacing her on the House Agriculture Committee as communications director is Emily Hytha. She currently serves as Rep. Mike Conaway’s, R-Texas, communications director in his personal office.
Anne DeCesaro is leaving the House Ways and Means Committee, where she served as the staff director for the Worker and Family Support Subcommittee for Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb., to begin a new job at USDA in the Office of the Undersecretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services. In 2015, she was the lead staffer on the House Agriculture Committee Subcommittee on Nutrition.
Kristina Baum began a new job at the White House as the communications director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy. She previously served on the House Natural Resources Committee for Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, as the communications director.
Kate O’Connor is now the chief counsel for Rep. Bob Latta, R-Ohio, on the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on communication and technology. She previously served as a congressional liaison for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.
Emily Benavides has been promoted to communications director for Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, succeeding Kevin Smith, who has been promoted to chief of staff. She previously served as deputy communications director. Smith replaces Mark Isakowitz, who joined Google as its new head of government affairs and public policy.
Marsha Espinosa is now the chief of staff for Rep. Linda Teresa Sánchez, D-Calif. She most recently worked at Swann Street Strategies and previously worked for Rep. Nanette Diaz Barragán, D-Calif., as her chief of staff in 2017. Melissa Kiedrowicz is now the deputy chief of staff for Sánchez, covering the appropriations and foreign trade portfolio. She previously served as the legislative director.
Harper Stephens has been promoted to legislative assistant covering the energy, environment protection, natural resources, science and technology, and transportation portfolio for Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala. She previously served as legislative correspondent.
Olivia Hodge has been promoted to communications director for Rep. Lois Frankel, D-Fla. She previously served as Frankel’s press secretary. 
Huston Wallace has been promoted to legislative aide for Rep. Kendra Horn, D-Okla., covering the agriculture and food, animal welfare, energy, environment protection, and natural resources portfolio. He previously served as a staff assistant.
Sara Werner is now the communications director for Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. She previously served as press secretary.
Ryan Dierker is now a legislative assistant for Rep. Mark Amodei, R-Nev., covering the foreign trade, immigration, and labor portfolio. Dierker previously served as the senior legislative assistant for Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio.
Catherine Costakos has left the office of Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer, R-Mo., where she served as communications director. Replacing her is Georgeanna Sullivan, who currently works for Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., in the Senate Republican Majority Leader Office as deputy press secretary. Sullivan's first day in Luetkemeyer’s office is Tuesday, October 8.
Chelsea Erin Brown has left the office of Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, where she served as chief of staff. She is being replaced by John Porter, who previously served as Rep. Kevin Brady's, R-Texas, legislative director and deputy chief of staff. Porter also previously worked on the House Agriculture Committee as a legislative assistant to Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Okla.
Catherine Knowles has left the office of Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas, where she served as chief of staff. Replacing her is Suzi Plasencia, who previously served as legislative director. Plasencia covers the labor and appropriations portfolio.
Claire Borzner has left the office of Rep. Mike Doyle, D-Pa., where she served as a legislative assistant covering the energy and environment portfolio. 
Halie Craig has left the office of Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., where she served as a legislative assistant covering the trade, labor, and education portfolio. Craig now works for Facebook as a product policy associate manager.
Jessica Wharton has left Gordley Associates and the American Soybean Association, where she served as the state policy and communications coordinator. Beginning Oct. 14, she is starting a new role with Farm Journal Foundation, leading its communications efforts in Washington, D.C.
Lucas Lentsch has joined Dairy Management Inc. as the executive vice president of the United Dairy Industry Association. In this newly created role, Lentsch will oversee work across the state and regional system to optimize execution and evaluation of the Unified Marketing Plan. Lentsch previously served as the South Dakota Agriculture Secretary and most recently served the past three years as the CEO of Midwest Dairy.
Molly Pelzer now serves as the CEO of Midwest Dairy. She has been with the organization since 1984 and most recently served as the chief experience officer.
Alfonso Clavijo has been appointed as director of the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility, effective Oct. 13. Before his appointment, Clavijo served as laboratory executive director of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency's National Centers for Animal Disease. He has also directed the management of biosafety level (BSL) 2-4 facilities that allow for the contained study of pathogens that cause foreign animal diseases, including foot-and-mouth, African swine fever, classical swine fever and highly pathogenic avian influenza.
Maggie Stith has been promoted to sustainability and external relations manager for Valent. She previously served as sustainability coordinator.
Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue has appointment 20 members to serve on the Advisory Committee for New and Beginning Farmers and Ranchers (ACBFR). Members newly appointed to serve two-year terms are: Davon Goodwin, Raeford, N.C; Katie Carpenter, Attica, N.Y.; Casey Spradley, Cuba, N.M.; Jacob Handsaker, Radcliffe, Iowa; Adam Brown, Decatur, Ill.; Amanda Jo Carey, Morley, Mich.; Paul Bickford, Ridgeway, Wisc.; Jason Brand, Honolulu; Jeffry Gittins, Smithfield, Utah; Denis Ebodaghe (USDA NIFA); Latrice Hill (USDA FSA); R. Alan Hoskins, Evansville, Ind.; Tony Gudajtes, Minto, N.D.; Juli Obudzinski, Washington, D.C.; John Bailey, Ukiah, Calif.; Elicia Chaverest, Madison, Ala.; Shelby Swain Myers, Crawfordsville, Ind.; Liya Schwartzman, Sacramento, Calif.; Anusuya Rangarajan, Freeville, N.Y. James Carl Hafer, Colstrip, Mont., is reappointed to serve a one-year term.
Anuvia Plant Nutrients has hired Michael Hoger as its new vice president of sales for agriculture. Hoger comes to Anuvia from HELM Agro, where he served as national sales manager. He has also led sales, agronomy and marketing initiatives for crop protection and seed brand portfolios for DuPont Crop Protection and Pioneer Seed. 
Chris Hoffman has been named America’s Pig Farmer of the Year for 2019-2020. The award is given to an individual who exemplifies industry leadership, raises hogs following the We Care ethical principles, and connects consumers with farmers to help them learn more about where their food comes from. Hoffman is a pig farmer from McAlisterville, Pa.
The National Association of State Foresters (NASF) elected a new slate of officers at its annual meeting in Asheville, N.C. Greg Josten, state forester of South Dakota, will lead NASF as president in 2020. Joe Fox, state forester of Arkansas, will serve as the association’s new vice president, and Chris Martin, state forester of Connecticut, as its new treasurer. Each will serve a 12-month term.
Archer Daniels Midland Rice President Christian Bonnesen announced he will retire Oct. 31 after more than 40 years in the U.S. and international rice industry. Bonnesen started his career working for the Continental Grain Company. In 1999 he founded ADM Rice, and in 2004, Bonnesen spearheaded the acquisition of a California rice mill to add to the ADM Rice portfolio. In his career he served on the USA Rice Board of Directors, the USA Rice Millers' Association Board of Directors, and the USA Rice International Trade Policy Committee. 
Tom Tracy unexpectedly passed away due to health complications at the age of 47. Tracy joined Farm Credit Illinois (FCI) in 2009, and in 2015 he was named president and CEO. Prior to joining FCI, he worked 20 years in banking and served as a senior officer and board member of a publicly traded financial institution. Condolences may be offered online at www.morganmemorialhome.com.
For more news, go to www.agri-pulse.com
202-488-0185



Voting lines were 29 percent LONGER in black neighborhoods: Study uses cell phone pings and census data to determine racial differences in voting wait times during 2016 US election - with the longest wait time being 41 minutes in Missouri

Study found those in predominately black neighborhoods waited 29% longer 
Also found they were 74% more likely to spend more than 30 minutes
Study used smartphone pings and census data to determine wait times 

Political scientists have long been outraged over voting waiting times, but a new study has revealed it is not just an inconvenience – it is also a civil rights issue.
By matching the location data from 10 million smartphones to 93,000 polling facilities in the US, researchers found that those in predominately black neighborhoods waited 29 percent longer than those living in primarily white areas.
Smartphone 'pings' were collected from within nearly 200 miles of each poling location during the 2016 presidential election and combined with demographic data to determine the racial differences in voting wait times.
Description: By matching the location data from 10 million smartphones to 93,000 polling facilities in the US, researchers found that those in predominately black neighborhoods waited 29 percent longer than those living in primarily white areas+4

By matching the location data from 10 million smartphones to 93,000 polling facilities in the US, researchers found that those in predominately black neighborhoods waited 29 percent longer than those living in primarily white areas
The study was conducted by a team of experts ranging in fields of business, economics and management, who collectively believe 'equal access to voting is a core feature of democratic government'.
'Relative to entirely-white neighborhoods, residents of entirely-black neighborhoods waited 29% longer to vote and were 74% more likely to spend more than 30 minutes at their polling place,' the team shared in the study published in Arxiv.

HOW WAS IT DONE? 

The researchers created a map of used 93,658 different polling places across the US.
They then used  smartphone pings that came within nearly 200 feet of a selected polling place.
At the end of the collection, there was a sample of more than 150,000 voters at 40,000 polling locations.
In order to determine the race of these neighborhoods, the team looked to demographic data from the US Census.
'This disparity holds when comparing predominantly white and black polling places within the same states and counties, and survives numerous robustness and placebo tests.'
'Our results document large racial differences in voting wait times and demonstrates that geospatial data can be an effective tool to both measure and monitor these disparities.'
To get their results, researchers used 93,658 different polling places across the US and converted each location into latitude and longitude coordinates in order to create a map of voting spots using Google Maps API and use Microsoft-OpenStreetmaps, according to Scientific American.
Then smartphone pings were collected from cellphone towers in the area, as this technology determines the owner's location 'with reasonable accuracy'.
The team gathered pings that came within nearly 200 feet of a selected polling place during the 2016 US presidential election.
Description: Then smartphone pings were collected from cellphone towers in the area, as this technology determines the owner's location 'with reasonable accuracy'. The team gathered pings that came within nearly 200 feet of a selected polling place during the 2016 US election
+4

Then smartphone pings were collected from cellphone towers in the area, as this technology determines the owner's location 'with reasonable accuracy'. The team gathered pings that came within nearly 200 feet of a selected polling place during the 2016 US election
However, data was combed through to determine who was and was not a voter.
At the end of the collection, there was a sample of more than 150,000 voters at 40,000 polling locations.
In order to determine the race of these neighborhoods, the team looked to demographic data from the US Census.
Description: Relative to entirely-white neighborhoods, residents of entirely-black neighborhoods waited 29% longer to vote and were 74% more likely to spend more than 30 minutes at their polling place
Relative to entirely-white neighborhoods, residents of entirely-black neighborhoods waited 29% longer to vote and were 74% more likely to spend more than 30 minutes at their polling place
And that is when the team found those in majority-black neighborhoods (as well as other non-white-majority neighborhoods) waited longer.
'The median and average times spent at polling locations are 14 and 19 minutes, respectively, and 18% of individuals spent more than 30 minutes voting,' reads the study.
'Average wait times vary from as low as 11 minutes in Massachusetts's sixth congressional district — primarily in Essex County — to as high as 41 minutes in Missouri's fifth congressional district, which contains Kansas City.'
Still, the smartphone method does not answer a key question: 'What it doesn't tell us is why. What's going on here?' Robert Stein, a political scientist at Rice University, who did not participate in the new research, told Scientific America.
'I would want to use it as a basis for doing further observational studies. You know, you just can't get that from the phone.' 
However, the researchers of the study believe their findings can be used for the greater good.
Description: Smartphone pings were collected from cellphone towers in the area. At the end of the collection, there was a sample of more than 150,000 voters at 40,000 polling locations
+4

Smartphone pings were collected from cellphone towers in the area. At the end of the collection, there was a sample of more than 150,000 voters at 40,000 polling locations
'Exploiting the recent advent of large geospatial datasets, we provide new, nationwide estimates for the wait times of voters during the 2016 US presidential election,' according to the paper.
'We find substantial and significant evidence of racial disparities in voter wait times, and detail that geospatial data can robustly estimate these disparities.' 
'This provides policymakers an easily available and repeatable tool to both diagnose and monitor progress towards reducing such disparities.'
Hillary Clinton talks to Mother Jones

French rice salad for when you’re on the go

 
Description: https://www.mvtimes.com/mvt/uploads/2019/10/IMG_1731-696x522.jpgA colorful French rice salad. —Paul Bagnall
Perhaps one of the most straightforward and flexible recipes I have tried is rice salad. Hot or cold, oil or vinaigrette, veggies or meat — there are many ways to approach it. The idea came to me while listening to “Splendid Table” on the Cape and Islands NPR station in my car on the way to work. I heard rice salad, and it sounded like a great recipe to experiment with.
Rice salad can be hot or cold, depending on the ingredients you use. The rice salad I chose to make took some inspiration from a Niçoise salad, which is a French salad that uses tuna fish and capers. I experimented with cold ingredients.
Since the recipe is incredibly flexible, you can use vinegar, vinaigrette, or oil to coat the rice. I used two tablespoons of extra-virgin olive oil for the two cups of rice I cooked.
The goal I keep in mind is to make the salad as colorful as possible without one flavor overshadowing another. If you like crunchy vegetables, some red onion or any colorful pepper will do.
I also recommend that you cut up the veggie, or meat, to about the size of the rice pieces. Rice salad is a great way to experiment with many different spices, herbs, and oils.

Ingredients:

·       2 cups basmati rice
·       1 cup frozen peas
·       4 garlic cloves, minced
·       1 cup capers
·       10 diced cherry tomatoes
·       1 can tuna fish
·       4 garlic cloves, minced
·       ¼ tsp. oregano
·       ¼ tsp thyme
·       2 Tbsp. lemon juice
·       2 Tbsp. olive oil
Boil two cups of rice and defrost the frozen peas, then rinse the rice in cold water before putting in the fridge for 20 minutes. While the rice is cooling, prepare the tomatoes, tuna fish, and garlic by dicing them on the cutting board. Mix a little oregano and thyme into the tuna fish, so it blends in better. Remove the cold rice from the fridge and toss the rice in with the oil, lemon juice, vegetables, and seasonings. Add salt and pepper to taste and enjoy.



Massey Ferguson harvester gains ground

OCTOBER 03, 2019
Since its introduction in 2017, All Certified Equipment Trading Corp. (ACETC) has sold more than 100 units of the Massey Ferguson 2168 Rice Combine Harvester nationwide, proving the preference by businesses involved in rice farming for the Massey Ferguson brand.
Description: https://s14255.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/03-PHOTO.jpg
The Massey Ferguson 2168 Rice Combine Harvester CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
ACETC President and Chairman of the Board Benigno Limcumpao said the Massey Ferguson 2168 is a product of the brand’s proven technologies for harvesting grains like rice and wheat. Massey Ferguson is the pioneer for large combine harvesters.
“Like the Massey Ferguson farm tractors ACETC has been distributing in the Philippines since 2011, the Massey Ferguson 2168 rice combine harvester is durable and easy to operate, and will serve its owners and users for decades given proper maintenance,” he said.
Bhong Amoroso, vice president and general manager at ACETC, added the company carefully studied and tested the Massey Ferguson 2168 for the Philippine setting, making sure it could withstand tropical conditions.
“We at ACETC subjected the Massey Ferguson 2168 for more than a year of study and testing, ultimately getting it certified by the Agricultural Machinery and Testing and Evaluation Center (Amtec). In tropical countries like the Philippines, factors like excessive heat, dust and torrential rains should always be taken account when introducing farm equipment for use by Filipino farmers and agribusiness companies,” Amoroso said.
Amtec is based at the University of the Philippines Los Banos.
Limcumpao said ACETC’s introducing the Massey Ferguson 2168 rice combine harvester in the Philippines is the company’s contribution to modernizing the country’s farming sector.
The Massey Ferguson 2168 can harvest and bag palay (unmilled rice) in just 1.17 hours over one hectare. On the other hand, at least 10 laborers are needed to harvest and bag palay in 12 to 24 hours also over 1 hectare. It is powered by a diesel engine that produces 87 horsepower and has rubber tracks.
ACETC also distributes in the Philippines are the 7600 Series for large plantation operations; the Global series that offers versatility for both large plantations and consolidated small farms; and the 2600 and 1500 series for use in non-plantation operations.
ACETC also distributes Yanmar, Kaiao and Platinum small engines for largely agriculture applications; farm implements from Kuhn, KK, SiP, FAE, Berti, Bison and CMT; GT Mobile Fast Dryers; Max Cane Loaders; Rain Bird advanced irrigation systems; and Tajima 3-in-1 knapsack type sprayers.

Rice Value Chain for Increasing Farm Income and Entrepreneurship

 

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Description: rice
Dr. Trilochan Mohapatra, Secretary (DARE) & DG (ICAR) visited the ICAR-National Rice Research Institute, Cuttack and reviewed the Institute’s activities there.    The Director General interacted with the 22 participants of a two-months “Start-up Agri-Business Incubation Programme” launched by the VIKAS R-ABI, ICAR-NRRI. He also applauded the innovative prototypes and provided his valuable tips for improving them.
Dr. Mohapatra also visited the newly built Central Genomics and Quality Laboratory, Social Science Building and other facilities created at the Institute.
Among the various approaches to increase farm income and promote entrepreneurship, the prospect of value chain is being advocated in agriculture and allied sectors. Dr. Trilochan Mohapatra, the then Director of ICAR-NRRI first made an attempt to operationalize in rice.
According to him, the rice value chain besides having the fundamental benefits have some added prospective which were
  • Rice will continue to dominate the farm production for various socioeconomic and cultural reasons in spite of poor financial gains and market glut.
·       Demand in the national and international market for quality rice is quite apparent
·       Apart from farmers other stake holders can join the chain leading to creation of additional employment and
·       Quality and speciality rice varieties developed by research institutes can spread quickly with less investment in extension.
Having the above logic in view, the planning for the model was initiated. Dr. H. Pathak, Director, ICAR-NRRI along with various other Dignitaries was present during the review.
The VIKAS R-ABI aims to promote the innovation led entrepreneurship through Start-Up creation. The programme has been funded under the Scheme of RKVY-RAFTAAR Agribusiness Incubator by the Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana of Department of Agriculture, Cooperation & Farmers’ Welfare, Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, Government of India, New Delhi.
PH rice scientist honored for pioneering breeding research
 October 3, 2019, 2:44 pmDescription: https://files.pna.gov.ph/category-list/2019/10/03/filipino-rice-scientist-dr-gregorio-honored.png
HONORED. Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio (2nd from right), director of the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA), receives the 2019 Crop Science Society of the Philippines (CSSP) Honorary Fellow during the 25th Federation of Crop Sciences Societies of the Philippines and 1st Federation of Plant Science Association of the Philippines Scientific Cooperation in Davao City on Sept. 19, 2019.  CSSP President Edna A. Anit (right) presented the award in front of CSSP Awards and Recognition Committee chairperson Marissa V. Romero (left), and Gregorio’s wife Myla Beatriz Audije (3rd from right) and two of their six children. (Photo courtesy of SEARCA)
LOS BAŇOS -- Dr. Glenn B. Gregorio, a scientist, research manager, and teacher, was awarded Crop Science Society of the Philippines (CSSP) Honorary Fellow for his significant contributions to crop science through his pioneering breeding research.
Gregorio, who is also director of the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA), led the development of at least 20 rice varieties with tolerance to abiotic stresses while at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) as senior plant breeder.
Gregorio’s studies on the genetics and molecular mapping for salinity tolerance, and his development of rapid screening techniques resulted in the first batches of salt-tolerant varieties in the Philippines and other countries in Asia and Africa.
The iron-enhanced rice he and his team had developed has been proven to significantly increase levels of total body iron in the blood of women.
Gregorio has 112 scientific publications to date and has also mentored many undergraduate and graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows in the Philippines and other countries.
The award was presented during the 25th Federation of Crop Science Societies of the Philippines (FCSSP) and 1st Federation of Plant Science Associations of the Philippines (FPSAP) Scientific Conference in Davao City last September 19.
The CSSP promotes human welfare through the discovery and dissemination of knowledge concerning the nature, use, improvement, and interrelationships of plants and their environment and the people.
“The prestigious award could dissuade one from making mistakes, and thus making one hesitant to explore and trying new and different things more daunting,” Gregorio said in his acceptance speech.
However, he affirmed that it will not be so for him and asserted that he still wants to explore and takes risks.
He also pushed young crop science professionals to “continue to explore and enjoy, to try and to be ready, to fail and learn from it.”
“We tried it; succeed or fail, we always learn. Explore, dare, be different and take risks for the sake of science. But, at the same time, be patient. Perseverance is the key,” Gregorio said.
“There are three types of people who are likely to be great or successful: those who are related to great people, those who are pioneers or the first in doing things, and those who are different. Most of us cannot be the first two, so be different,” he added. (PR)

DA inks P433-million rice-seed deal

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Description: Top01 090919File photo: A farmer in Buenavista in Santiago City, Isabela, checks his rice crops soon ready for harvest.
THE Department of Agriculture (DA) has inked a P432.78-million deal with the country’s top seed growers to kick-start the government’s seed-distribution program via the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF).
The DA said it forged a memorandum of agreement (MOA) with five seed growers’ associations and cooperatives for the seed component of the RCEF. The deal accounts for 21.64 percent of the P3-billion allocated for the RCEF seed program.
Under the MOA, the seed growers will supply 25 percent, or about 500,000 bags, of the 2 million bags of inbred rice seeds to be distributed to farmer-beneficiaries of the program.
The DA said the seed program of the RCEF started on October 1, the same day the MOA was signed.
“The 2 million bags of seeds, each containing 20 kilos, will be planted to around 1 million hectares of rice land, and will benefit 1 million rice farmers in the country,” the DA said on Wednesday.
The seed growers’ associations and cooperatives that signed the MOA are: Pangasinan Organic Seed Growers and Nursery Multi-purpose Cooperative; Isabela Seed Growers Multi-purpose Cooperative; Nueva Ecija Seed Grower Multi-purpose Cooperative; South Nueva Ecija Seed Growers Multi-purpose Cooperative; and West Visayas Federation of Multi-Purpose and Seed Producers Cooperative.
The five cooperatives are all accredited by the Bureau of Plant Industry’s National Seed Quality Control Services.
“They have outstanding track records and have been in the business for a long time. None of them are newly registered and they continue to step up their game to
produce high-quality seeds that will help farmers to be productive,” the DA said.
“The 2 million bags of seeds that they will produce will be a tremendous boost to elevate the level of productivity in the countryside,” it added.
The seeds procured by the government from the seed producers will be distributed to rice farmers in 57 provinces identified to have high potential for competitiveness.
The eligible farmer-beneficiaries should be listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in Agriculture. Each farmer could receive a maximum of four bags of inbred seeds depending on farm size for the October to December planting season, according to the DA.
“This is based on the size of area harvested, yield level, cost of production and share of irrigated area. Also, the municipalities and cities must have an annual area of more than 500 hectare for the dry season 2019-2020,” it said.
The DA said the BPI will “constantly” monitor and oversee the seed growers to ensure that they comply with protocols and guidelines for seed production. Also, the Philippine Rice Research Institute will assist the rice farmers achieve their optimum yield potential.
The creation of the RCEF was mandated by the rice trade liberalization law, which took effect on March 5. The P10-billion fund will bankroll various programs for improving the productivity of planters who will have to compete with cheaper imports.

Venezuela to fund construction of US $3.8m rice research institute in Kenya

 
Description: https://constructionreviewonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/2019-10-01_5d938b1252e57_irrigationblock-696x265.jpg

A US $3.8m rice research institute is set to be constructed in Busia County, Western Part of Kenya to boost production and marketing of the crop in the region. The project which will be the first of its kind in the country will be funded by the Venezuela government.
According to Jane Ndung’u the head of the Rice Promotion Programme in the Ministry of Agriculture, the Busia project will improve innovation and research. “The institute will develop new products for the lowland areas and also quality grains that are tolerant to diseases and harsh weather conditions,” she said.
“Rice is one of the main food crops that the national government has included in the Big Four Agenda under Food security pillar, and because of that we want to start with boosting the uptake of rice from Busia through the construction of the institute,” added Ms. Ndung’u.
Availability of funds
Ms. Ndung’u who was speaking during a meeting with officials from the Department of Agriculture, led by county executive Moses Osia noted that funds for the project are already with the National Treasury awaiting disbursement. Moreover, the design of the project is ongoing and the Ministry of Public Works is expected to complete the design and hand it over to the contractor to start construction works.
Madagascar on the other side has completed the same project after receiving the funds from Venezuela. The project will not only create jobs during the construction phase but will also grow the rice market in the region and country at large by producing quality and different varieties of rice.
Chairperson Bunyala Rice Farmers said the project comes at the right time to maximize production through value addition.

'Manoomin' brings together UMN researchers and tribal members

University researchers and local tribes are working to preserve manoomin, commonly known as wild rice, and cultural traditions.

For the past two years, River Spry has ventured out in his canoe to harvest wild rice. Spry, a forestry technician for the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa in northern Minnesota, said harvesting the tall, green stalks of wild rice is an intimate process.
“Just being out there, you are so connected to the plant and the Earth. It is a beautiful thing,” Spry said. “It changed my life. The rest of my life I will be a ricer.” 
Spry, along with other tribal members, harvests wild rice for food but also to honor tribal culture and tradition around the grain. While Native American tribes have harvested wild rice, called manoomin in Ojibwe, for generations, about one-third of the wild rice in Minnesota has disappeared over the past century. 
Because of the decline, University of Minnesota researchers are working with tribes through the Grand Challenges Initiative. Since last year, they have been examining why wild rice is disappearing and seeking ways to preserve its habitat while honoring sacred traditions surrounding the grain.  
“We make sure the research is driven by our tribal partners and not the University,” said Michael Dockry, an assistant professor in the Department of Forest Resources who is involved with the work. “Our project is pretty unique and important, because it gives an example of how to work with tribes while protecting tribal sovereignty."
Wild rice, which grows in water, has been declining because of environmental factors caused by human activity, said Thomas Howes, natural resources manager for the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa. Part of the reason for the decline can be attributed to issues such as industrial pollution and poor water quality. 
According to Howes, the Great Lakes region is the only place in the world wild rice grows. 
“We have to do our best to take care of it,” he said. 
While the Fond du Lac tribe has been able to revitalize their wild rice habitats, there continues to be a decline in the plant outside the reservation. 
The grain is significant to many tribal communities. According to the migration story of the Anishinaabe, or Ojibwe people, the Creator instructed tribes to find the “food which grows upon the water.” Wild rice, or manoomin, was discovered in the Great Lakes region, and that is why people settled there. 
Not only are University researchers doing this work to study and preserve the sacred grain, but also to repair the University’s relationship with local tribes – which has been rocky in the past.
“Our projects goal is to … really make sure we are researching wild rice collaboratively and making sure we understand what wild rice means to them,” said Crystal Ng, head researcher for the project. 
Almost two decades ago, University researchers tried to develop a genetically engineered form of wild rice without input from tribes, which made tribal communities unhappy. They feared creating new forms of wild rice would contaminate the ecosystem for traditional wild rice, Howes said. 
In a 2009 letter  written by Anishinaabe tribal members and the University, the University acknowledged wrongdoing. 
“...virtually all wild rice research emerging from the University has reflected the goals and desires of non-Indians with little regard for native concerns, perspectives or the considerable store of traditional knowledge,” the letter read. 
The letter was written to propose the University and Anishnaabe nations in Minnesota work to build a relationship built on mutual respect and reciprocity.
“The University messed this up royally previously,” Karen Driver, former chairwoman of the Fond Du Lac tribe, said regarding previous University work around wild rice. “It left a bad taste in tribal peoples’ mouths.” 
Driver, who is an adviser for the Grand Challenge project, said researchers for this project are taking the time to establish good relationships and establish mutual respect.
Tribal members can add value to the research being done by sharing their knowledge accumulated from generations of being good stewards of wild rice, Driver said. 
“Because of this respect, both sides can learn from each other.” 
While it has not been easy to rebuild relationships and regain trust, Ng said the University researchers keeping their word and working collaboratively with tribes has helped the partnership.  
“We are working together and really trying to heal a lot of what has happened in the past from us not working together,” Ng said. 
Last month, tribal partners were invited to the University as part of President Joan Gabel’s inauguration week, to honor the research and relationship between tribal communities and the University. 
Gabel said bringing community members together and doing work like this allows them to share both indigenous wisdom and scientific discovery.
While funding for the Grand Challenge project only goes through January 2020, researchers are looking to other funding sources to continue their work.
The long-term goal for researchers involved with the project is for the University to go beyond wild rice research and someday be a center of excellence for supporting tribal resource management. 
One of Spry’s favorite parts of harvesting wild rice is that he feels personally connected to the food.“We need to protect that.”

Late September storms affecting rice, cotton crops throughout Northeast Arkansas

Description: Late September storms affecting rice, cotton crops throughout Northeast Arkansas

Storms in late September did quite a number on several rice, cotton fields throughout northeast Arkansas. (Source: jenna)
By Region 8 Newsdesk | October 1, 2019 at 3:37 PM CDT - Updated October 2 at 6:31 AM
CRAIGHEAD COUNTY, Ark. (KAIT) -Heavy rain and winds during the last week of September affected crops in several Region 8 counties.
According to a report from content partner Talk Business & Politics, the National Weather Service reported on Sept. 26, more than six counties received at least one to four inches of rain, with as much as five inches being reported in central Jackson County.
Brandon Thiesse, staff chair for the Craighead County Cooperative Extension Service office, reported the western half of Craighead County received two inches of rain Sept. 25.
Most of his concerns drifted towards cotton, with most of the rice already harvested.
“Heavy wind and rain will pull the lint right out of the bolls if this continues,” Thiesse said. “We’re right on the front end of harvest, so we don’t need any more of this stuff. It needs to get out of here, so we can get to pickin’.”
Jarrod Hardke, a rice agronomist for the Univ. of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said he noticed damage to several unharvested rice acres when he toured several fields in northern Arkansas.
“Wind and rain did a number on remaining rice in the field,” Hardke said. “Fields ready for harvest have anywhere from small patches to large swaths of downed rice. This will slow down harvest in these fields and increase wear and tear on combines.”
https://www.kait8.com/2019/10/01/late-september-storms-impacting-rice-cotton-crops-throughout-region/



Texas Crop and Weather Report – Oct. 1, 2019

Rice producers faced tough 2019, yields likely below average

  • Writer: Adam Russell, 903-834-6191, adam.russell@ag.tamu.edu 
  • Contact: Ted Wilson, 409-752-3045, lt-wilson@aesrg.tamu.edu 
Texas rice growers faced a challenging 2019 due to early and late-season rains, according to a Texas A&M AgriLife Research expert.
It was a challenging growing season for Texas rice farmers. Spring rains delayed planting, and late rains may hurt ratoon yields. (Texas A&M AgriLife Research photo)
Ted Wilson, Ph.D., Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension Center director, Beaumont, said reports on yields and quality are too preliminary to determine likely outcomes, but he expects a below-average year due to late plantings and late rains that included flooding in Texas’ rice-growing regions.
Yields in recent years have averaged around 8,000 pounds per acre, Wilson said.
Texas’ rice crop includes 100% of main crop acreage and the acres that producers decide to take to a second harvest, also known as the ratoon crop. Producer surveys indicate 64 percent of producers took their acres to ratoon, but Wilson said he expects fewer acres actually producing ratoon rice.
Wilson said the wet spring will likely contribute to lower yields this growing season. Flooding from Tropical Storm Imelda likely didn’t help remaining stands of the main crop or ratoon potential.
The effects of late plantings and Imelda are still unknown because harvest surveys from producers, which help assess yields and quality are only now coming in, Wilson said.
As of Sept. 27, around 97% of the main rice crop had been harvested, Wilson said. But rains from Tropical Storm Imelda delivered up to 40-plus inches of rainfall along rice-producing areas of southern Texas.
“Wet springs tend to delay planting. For every week of delay, there is a yield penalty because an increasing amount of grain is produced when there are higher nighttime temperatures, which reduces rice plant’s efficiency,” Wilson said. “Now there are questions about a good portion of the ratoon crop, especially if there was lodging due to mud.”

Delays 

The majority of rice planting in Texas usually occurs by the last week of March or first week of April west of Houston and the second to third week of April east of Houston, he said. But there were reports of planting as late as June, and some producers missed their window to plant altogether.
Delays meant main crop harvest, which typically occurs beginning in July, extended into September, he said.
“Our research shows you lose 310 pounds per acre per week each week harvest is delayed due to higher nighttime temperatures chewing up plant energy,” he said. “So, if you were planting in June east of Houston, that’s eight to nine weeks times 310 pounds per acre. Those are considerable losses.”
Wilson said individual growers did very well this year, but crop performance will likely depend on location, planting and growing conditions and any other challenges.

Other challenges

Pests were localized in Texas rice this year, but diseases like kernel smut impacted several producers, Wilson said. The fungal disease has become progressively worse over the past five to six years.
“It hurts grain, and some individual fields where kernel smut was found had loads of rice rejected by driers and mills,” he said.
Narrow brown leaf spot is another disease that is increasing in severity and is affecting yields, Wilson said. There is no highly effective treatment for brown leaf spot.
“I’m very impressed with Texas rice growers, but when you face challenges like those presented this year, it can be difficult,” he said. “Hopefully there weren’t too many losses from Imelda, and the ratooned crop does well.”
AgriLife Extension district reporters compiled the following summaries: 
The 12 Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Districts
CENTRAL: The district reported hot temperatures and needed more moisture. Some brush work was done. Cattle were in fair condition. Stock tank and pond levels were decreasing. Pastures were drying out. Trees were showing stress from drought. Cotton harvest yields varied from very good to bad. Corn harvest was complete. Counties reported short to very short soil moisture. Rangeland and pasture conditions were mostly poor.  
ROLLING PLAINS: Most counties reported trace amounts of rain up to 3 inches. Clay County reported up to 6 inches of rainfall in areas. Rangeland and crop conditions continued to progress. Cotton continued to mature as bolls continued to open. Wheat producers continued planting. Livestock remained in good condition. 
COASTAL BEND: Scattered showers fell across the district, but some areas remained fairly dry. Fieldwork continued with remaining cotton harvest, stalk destruction, disking, plowing and some winter pastures being planted. Cotton gins were still running around the clock and were expected to continue for several more weeks. Hay baling accelerated as producers tried to get another cutting. Rangelands and pastures were improving after recent rains, but many livestock producers were still supplementing with hay or protein. Livestock were in good condition, and fall calves were hitting the ground and doing well.
EAST: Rains brought by Tropical Storm Imelda were not enough to relieve drought conditions in the district. Many counties still needed much more rain to improve pasture and meadow conditions. Producers were on hold waiting for more moisture to make another cutting of hay. Pasture and rangeland conditions were fair. Subsoil and topsoil conditions were adequate. Preparations were made for cool-season vegetable crops. Polk County reported producers were planting winter pastures and some stands of ryegrass were already established. Most other counties were on hold waiting for moisture to plant winter pastures. Livestock were in good condition. Cattle prices were higher. Wild pigs caused extensive damage to creeks, pastures and hay meadows. Houston County reported that horse flies were a tremendous problem. Armyworms continued to be an increasing problem. 
SOUTH PLAINS: Heavy rains were reported across most counties, with farmers receiving 3-4 inches of rain. Other counties still needed more moisture. Heavy hail in eastern counties destroyed cotton in several fields with all the bolls and leaves being stripped from the stalk. Several pivots were damaged in the storm. Other cotton in the eastern part of the counties received lighter damage from the hailstorm. Winter wheat was emerging and making a good stand after recent rains. Late-planted corn and sorghum were harvested for silage. Producers were busy making decisions on the best defoliant to apply when fields dry up. Cattle were in good condition. 
PANHANDLE: Northern parts of the district were warmer than normal and needed moisture. Early planted corn was being harvested. Silage harvest was complete. Wheat planting was progressing. Rangelands and pastures were in fair to good condition and going dormant. Most outlooks for cotton were poor. Eastern parts of the district reported cotton to be fair, and bolls were opening. Peanuts were fair. Subsoil moisture was less than adequate, and topsoil moisture was very short. Southern parts of the district reported moisture conditions were favorable for wheat and rangeland conditions. Moisture may affect cotton yields and quality for bolls open to the rain. 
NORTH: Soil moisture was mainly short across the district with some counties reporting adequate levels. Many counties needed rain, but Cooke County reported some areas received 3.5 inches. Temperatures ranged from the mid- to high-90s. Soils were dry and full of cracks. Hay producers were working overtime to get the last cutting out. Armyworm reports increased with heavy infestations in some places. 
FAR WEST: High temperatures were in the low-90s with lows in the low-60s. Thunderstorms brought 0.38-1.68 inches of rain. Cattle producers were rotating dry cows to fall grazing pastures and preparing for the next season. Fields were prepared and ready for wheat and oats. A small amount of wheat was planted. Cotton harvest was starting to pick up as fields already sprayed were being quickly stripped. Most harvested fields were dryland cotton. Yields were below average to very low. Irrigated cotton should be ready for harvest in coming weeks. Many cotton fields were being sprayed with defoliant. Pecans were coming along very well with earlier varieties reaching shuck split. Yields looked very good. Pastures were a little greener with a few weed issues reported. Producers continued to feed livestock and wildlife. 
WEST CENTRAL: Soil moisture and pastures declined under hot, dry conditions. Wildfire potential was high, and much of the district remained under a burn ban. Field preparations for small grains continued with some producers putting seed in the ground to be ready for the next rain. Many farmers and ranchers were feeding cattle hay and protein early due to poor grazing conditions. Stocker steers and heifers sold steady. Feeder steers and heifers sold $3 higher per hundredweight. Packer cows sold $2 higher while packer bulls sold steady. Pairs and bred cows sold in good demand.
SOUTHEAST: Most of the district received rain amounts that improved conditions, but there was flooding. Lee County reported extremely hot and dry conditions. Most of Chambers County received 40-plus inches of rain from Tropical Storm Imelda. About 30% of rice was still in fields and will not be harvested. Some fields were still underwater, and conditions will be evaluated in the coming days. Pastures rebounded with the rain. Cattle were healthy, but flies continued to be an issue. Rangeland and pasture ratings were excellent to very poor with good being most common. Soil moisture levels ranged from adequate to very short with adequate being most common.
SOUTHWEST: Very little precipitation was reported with mostly hot and extremely dry conditions. Rangelands continued to be dry, and wildfire was a concern. Livestock were in fair condition, and supplemental feeding continued for livestock.
SOUTH: Northern, eastern and western parts of the district reported warm weather conditions with very short soil moisture levels. Southern areas reported mild weather with scattered showers and short to adequate soil moisture. Parts of Live Oak County reported 1-3 inches of rain. Cotton harvest was wrapping up in some areas and continued in others. Average yields were reported. Producers were busy destroying cotton stubble and plowing harvested fields. Peanuts were maturing under irrigation and approaching harvest. Fieldwork for planting small grains continued. Wheat and oat plantings were still on hold as producers waited for moisture to get fields started. Pecans were doing well. Irrigated Coastal Bermuda grass and some vegetables were doing well. Cabbage made good progress, and some spinach was planted. Rangelands and pastures continued to suffer from extremely dry conditions. Some supplemental feeding was reported. Starr County reported rangeland and pastures continued to improve. 

Rice prices, acres and yields rebound in 2019

by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net)  175 views 
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The “store and hold” strategy employed by many rice growers in 2018 has finally paid off as rice prices rallied in 2019, hinging largely on record prevented planting acreage and general uncertainty about the year’s crop size.
According to a rice stocks report released in late August by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, rough rice stocks for five of the country’s six largest rice-producing states, including Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi and Missouri, all rose over 2018 levels. Only Texas fell in rough rice stocks from 2018 to 2019. Nationwide, August stocks rose from about 23.9 million hundredweight to about 38.6 million hundredweight year-over-year.
The report compared August stock positions, year-to-year. Arkansas increased from about 12.4 million hundredweight to about 22.9 hundredweight. Scott Stiles, extension economist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said the change reflects both the size of the crops, year-to-year, as well as market prices.
“We saw a rebound in 2018,” Stiles said, citing a rise in Arkansas rice production from 82.6 million hundredweight to 107.3 million hundredweight.
“Following a sharp cut in 2017 acres, rice prices started to rally,” he said. “By the time September 2017 contracts expired, rice futures had traded up to $12.90 per hundredweight. From late 2017, futures prices were fairly stable into April and May 2018.”
Prices helped spur a recovery in 2018 rice acreage and a rebound in rice production as well with the second highest average yield on record — 167 bushels per acre — and fifth-largest production total on record.
Naturally, the rice markets have been affected by external factors, including the weather and global economy. The same intermittent rains that delayed planting and eventually harvesting in every other major Arkansas commodity had its way with rice as well. Only this week has harvested rice acreage in the state, at 72% according to a Sept. 30 report from NASS, began to approach the five-year average. Suppressed soybean prices and the ongoing trade dispute with China affected rice marketing decisions as well, Stiles said.
Overall, rice acreage in Arkansas has seen a reduction over the past decade, however. Jarrod Hardke, rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said the state average fell from nearly 1.5 million acres in 2000-2009 to about 1.35 million acres during the past decade.
“The declining average acreage has somewhat stabilized our prices, but our production, overall, within any given two-year period, is fairly consistent,” Hardke said. “The yield averages have been mostly greater than 160 bushels per acre the past several years — that’s been largely consistent, and so have our prices.”
“Rice futures have traded from a low of $9.80 in February to a high of $12.52 in July this year,” Stiles said. “Keeping some of the 2018 crop in storage has been a sound marketing strategy this year.”


Sunrice cuts staff, reconfigures milling after second-lowest crop on record

Grain Central, October 2, 2019
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SUNRICE has announced further changes to its Riverina manufacturing operations, as a consequence of the C19 rice crop, which at 54,000 tonnes was the second-lowest on record.
Description: https://www.graincentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/191002-Sunrice-changes-pic-001-768x1024.jpgThe changes are part of a broader program announced in November 2018, which followed a comprehensive review of SunRice’s operational footprint as a consequence of the small C19 crop harvested earlier in 2019.
The changes, which will take effect from 15 November 2019, impact the Deniliquin and Leeton mills, and also Australian Grain Storage sites across the Riverina.
The reconfiguration is expected to result in the reduction of approximately 32 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions across milling, packing, maintenance, paddy and warehousing operations.
This takes the total number of employees affected by the reconfiguration to approximately 130 FTEs since the first announcement in November 2018.
Despite the continuation of drought, low general security water allocations and high temporary water pricing – which contributed to a low C19 crop – SunRice has taken two key decisions which it now expects will maintain some form of milling at its Deniliquin and Leeton mills through 2020.
The first, announced in August 2019, was to offer record fixed paddy price contracts for C20 of $750 per tonne for Medium Grain Reiziq, $950/t for Koshihikari and up to $1500/t for organic paddy.
The second is to carry over rice from the C19 crop harvested earlier this year.

Ongoing concerns

“Unfortunately, the drought, low general security water allocations and high temporary water prices continue to negatively impact annual irrigated industries, including the rice industry, in the Riverina region of NSW,” Sunrice chief executive officer, Rob Gordon, said.
Description: https://www.graincentral.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/190628-Sunrice-results-pic-001-Rob-Gordon.jpg
Rob Gordon
“While today’s changes relate to the milling of the low C19 crop, harvested earlier in 2019, we remain concerned about the ongoing impact of the low water availability and high prices ahead of planting of the C20 crop later this year.
“Despite that, SunRice has been pleased with the response from rice growers to our record contracts offered in August 2019. These fixed price contracts were designed to replenish paddy and seed stocks, underpin SunRice’s Riverina milling program and assist SunRice in meeting premium demand in markets.
“Given the interest we have received, SunRice expects to receive a volume of rice which will allow some form of milling to continue at its operations in Deniliquin and Leeton through 2020.”
Mr Gordon said there would be greater clarity on the expected C20 crop after the conclusion of planting later in 2019.
“We understand that these changes have been, and continue to be very unsettling for our employees, and we continue to remain committed to being open and transparent,” he said.
“When water is available at affordable prices, the rice industry is the powerhouse of the Riverina – directly contributing more than $400 million per annum in years of historically normal production.
“In those years, SunRice employs more than 500 people directly across the Riverina, and pays more than $90 million per annum in wages and salaries. We also pay more than $250 million to growers via paddy payments, and more than $60 million to over 400 Riverina companies, from transport and logistics, to accommodation and catering.”
Source: Sunrice


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