Upto 35
Pakistani companies to attend China Import Expo in Shanghai
03 November,2019 07:29 pm
He said the TDAP will also set up a stall to show
Pakistani products.
BEIJING (APP) – Over 35 Pakistani
companies will participate and showcase their products including top textile,
leather, and sports goods, surgical equipment, home furnishing and other
products at the 2nd China International Import Expo (CIIE) scheduled to be held
in Shanghai from November 5 to 10.
Advisor on Commerce, Textile,
Industry and Production and Investment, Abdul Razak Dawood will lead the
Pakistani delegation. Pakistan’s top business executives will attend.
“As many as 35 top
export-oriented Pakistani companies will display textile, leather and sports
goods, surgical equipment, home furnishing and other products at their stalls
set up at the expo in an effort to enhance exports to China,” Badar uz Zaman,
Commercial Counsellor, Embassy of Pakistan, Beijing confirmed here on Sunday.
The companies included: From Karachi,
M/s Garib Sons, Marhaba Laboratories, Sarmco International, Continental
Traders, Al-Hamra Handicrafts, Indus Marbles, Pak Products, Chadyala Art,
Ansari Brothers, Hamdan Traders, FB Enterprises, H. Rehman & Sons, MJ
Traders, ARI Traders, AJ Traders, Dewan Enterprises, Saleem Associates, Rana Co
(Exports), American Safety Power Tool, Peena Carpets Industries, Shahid Nazir
Carpet Centre, from Lahore, WBM Pvt. Ltd, Starlet Innovations, Al Rasheed
Traders, Pak Shalimar Carpets, Fateh Woolen Mills, Sheikh Carpets, Splendor
& Souvenir Carpets, from Sialkot, Green Hill Corporation, Fraz Enterprises,
ABRO Group, H. Skill Sports and Fircos Shoes.
These companies export rice,
textile, garments, leather products, carpet, handicrafts, wood furniture,
sports and natural herbal products and are set to look at opportunities in the
Chinese market to enhance exports from Pakistan, he added.
The Trade Development Authority
of Pakistan (TDAP) will also set up a stall to show Pakistani products, he
added. The advisor will also talk to media on trade and investment
opportunities in Pakistan during the expo.
The advisor will attend the
ministerial meeting of WTO and hold a bilateral meeting with Chinese Minister
of Commerce in Beijing. It may be mentioned that Pakistan had also participated
in the last year’s expo in Shanghai where many Pakistani companies showcased
their products.
According to a senior official of
China’s Ministry of Commerce, so far 63 countries have registered for the
exhibition and over 3,000 businesses from more than 150 countries and regions
will be attending the business exhibition, exceeding the number at the first
CIIE. This year’s expo will involve two key exhibition categories: country
exhibitions and business exhibitions.
As for business exhibitions, they
will cover more than 300,000 square meters of floor space, and over 3,000
enterprises from about 150 countries and regions will participate in the
exhibitions. In addition, registration for the business exhibition of the third
CIIE has begun, and overseas enterprises can register on the official website
of the CIIE.
A total of 172 countries, regions
and international organizations and more than 3,600 enterprises participated in
the first CIIE, held from Nov. 5 to 10 in Shanghai last year. It was the
world’s first import-themed national-level expo.
Upto 35 Pakistani companies to attend China Expo in Shanghai
November 4, 2019
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Observer Report
Beijing
Over 35 Pakistani companies will participate and showcase their
products including top textile, leather, and sports goods, surgical equipment,
home furnishing and other products at the 2nd China International Import Expo
(CIIE) scheduled to be held in Shanghai from November 5 to 10.
Advisor on Commerce, Textile, Industry and Production and Investment, Abdul Razak Dawood will lead the Pakistani delegation. Pakistan’s top business executives will attend. “As many as 35 top export-oriented Pakistani companies will display textile, leather and sports goods, surgical equipment, home furnishing and other products at their stalls set up at the expo in an effort to enhance exports to China,” Badar uz Zaman, Commercial Counsellor, Embassy of Pakistan, Beijing confirmed here on Sunday.
The companies included: From Karachi, M/s Garib Sons, Marhaba Laboratories, Sarmco International, Continental Traders, Al-Hamra Handicrafts, Indus Marbles, Pak Products, Chadyala Art, Ansari Brothers, Hamdan Traders, FB Enterprises, H. Rehman & Sons, MJ Traders, ARI Traders, AJ Traders, Dewan Enterprises, Saleem Associates, Rana Co (Exports), American Safety Power Tool, Peena Carpets Industries, Shahid Nazir Carpet Centre, from Lahore, WBM Pvt. Ltd, Starlet Innovations, Al Rasheed Traders, Pak Shalimar Carpets, Fateh Woolen Mills, Sheikh Carpets, Splendor & Souvenir Carpets, from Sialkot, Green Hill Corporation, Fraz Enterprises, ABRO Group, H. Skill Sports and Fircos Shoes. These companies export rice, textile, garments, leather products, carpet, handicrafts, wood furniture, sports and natural herbal products and are set to look at opportunities in the Chinese market to enhance exports from Pakistan, he added. The Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) will also set up a stall to show Pakistani products, he added.
The advisor will also talk to media on trade and investment opportunities in Pakistan during the expo. The advisor will attend the ministerial meeting of WTO and hold a bilateral meeting with Chinese Minister of Commerce in Beijing. It may be mentioned that Pakistan had also participated in the last year’s expo in Shanghai where many Pakistani companies showcased their products. According to a senior official of China’s Ministry of Commerce, so far 63 countries have registered for the exhibition and over 3,000 businesses from more than 150 countries and regions will be attending the business exhibition, exceeding the number at the first CIIE.
This year’s expo will involve two key exhibition categories: country exhibitions and business exhibitions. As for business exhibitions, they will cover more than 300,000 square meters of floor space, and over 3,000 enterprises from about 150 countries and regions will participate in the exhibitions.
In addition, registration for the business exhibition of the third CIIE has begun, and overseas enterprises can register on the official website of the CIIE. A total of 172 countries, regions and international organizations and more than 3,600 enterprises participated in the first CIIE, held from Nov. 5 to 10 in Shanghai last year. It was the world’s first import-themed national-level expo.
Advisor on Commerce, Textile, Industry and Production and Investment, Abdul Razak Dawood will lead the Pakistani delegation. Pakistan’s top business executives will attend. “As many as 35 top export-oriented Pakistani companies will display textile, leather and sports goods, surgical equipment, home furnishing and other products at their stalls set up at the expo in an effort to enhance exports to China,” Badar uz Zaman, Commercial Counsellor, Embassy of Pakistan, Beijing confirmed here on Sunday.
The companies included: From Karachi, M/s Garib Sons, Marhaba Laboratories, Sarmco International, Continental Traders, Al-Hamra Handicrafts, Indus Marbles, Pak Products, Chadyala Art, Ansari Brothers, Hamdan Traders, FB Enterprises, H. Rehman & Sons, MJ Traders, ARI Traders, AJ Traders, Dewan Enterprises, Saleem Associates, Rana Co (Exports), American Safety Power Tool, Peena Carpets Industries, Shahid Nazir Carpet Centre, from Lahore, WBM Pvt. Ltd, Starlet Innovations, Al Rasheed Traders, Pak Shalimar Carpets, Fateh Woolen Mills, Sheikh Carpets, Splendor & Souvenir Carpets, from Sialkot, Green Hill Corporation, Fraz Enterprises, ABRO Group, H. Skill Sports and Fircos Shoes. These companies export rice, textile, garments, leather products, carpet, handicrafts, wood furniture, sports and natural herbal products and are set to look at opportunities in the Chinese market to enhance exports from Pakistan, he added. The Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) will also set up a stall to show Pakistani products, he added.
The advisor will also talk to media on trade and investment opportunities in Pakistan during the expo. The advisor will attend the ministerial meeting of WTO and hold a bilateral meeting with Chinese Minister of Commerce in Beijing. It may be mentioned that Pakistan had also participated in the last year’s expo in Shanghai where many Pakistani companies showcased their products. According to a senior official of China’s Ministry of Commerce, so far 63 countries have registered for the exhibition and over 3,000 businesses from more than 150 countries and regions will be attending the business exhibition, exceeding the number at the first CIIE.
This year’s expo will involve two key exhibition categories: country exhibitions and business exhibitions. As for business exhibitions, they will cover more than 300,000 square meters of floor space, and over 3,000 enterprises from about 150 countries and regions will participate in the exhibitions.
In addition, registration for the business exhibition of the third CIIE has begun, and overseas enterprises can register on the official website of the CIIE. A total of 172 countries, regions and international organizations and more than 3,600 enterprises participated in the first CIIE, held from Nov. 5 to 10 in Shanghai last year. It was the world’s first import-themed national-level expo.
A different system
In Pakistan we have tried all forms
of governments. We started with bureaucrats running the show, then we tried
military governments and elected governments, in turns. In my layperson opinion
none of these have suited us. What we like to call a democratic government
actually means that only those can run for elections and hope to win who are
rich or from a political family. In a true democracy, every voter has a right
to vote for the candidate who he/she thinks is the best. In Pakistani democracy
the majority vote for whom they are told to vote for, or on the basis of caste
– or even for a plate of rice. Those in government are hounded by those not in
government like we have been seeing since the 1970s. Instead of doing what they
promised to do, the new party finds faults in the previous party.
It is time to look at a new form of
government where representatives from all parties form the government – on the
basis of proportional representation. Besides political parties, there would be
representatives from the military, civil bureaucracy, agriculture and business.
In this way almost all points of views would be discussed and hopefully the
most feasible solution would be arrived at. Pakistan's economy is at a stage
where it cannot afford dharnas every time a new government is formed. It is
time our leaders got together and worked jointly to build a country that
reflects the true potential of its human and natural resources. Here we can
take the examples of Japan, Singapore and Bangladesh that hardly have any
resources, but are great examples of how good leadership can make a country
grow and develop.
Syed Hussein El-Edroos
Islamabad
Basmati
paddy price slides in India due to tepid global demand, higher output
India is
the largest exporter of basmati rice and its price is a function of global
trade. A decline of 10% in price was recorded in the first five months of the
current financial year. During the period, the country exported 1.66 million
tonnes ...
,
ET Bureau|
Nov
02, 2019, 05.32 PM IST
0Comments
PTI
India’s output of basmati this year is expected
to rise by 10% due to higher acreage.
CHANDIGARH: Basmati paddy prices in the ongoing harvest season have
fallen by up to a fifth from last year, pulled down by a combination of higher output
and tepid global demand. The situation has exporters worried.
A domestic exporters’ lobby said a 10% dip in export of the premium quality rice in the current financial year and prevailing geopolitical situation in key export markets is keeping prices suppressed.
“Unfavorable sentiment in the export market is keeping buyers wary and it has affected prices,” Ashok Sethi, director of Punjab Rice Millers and Exporters Association, said. According to Sethi, the volatile geopolitical situation in major destinations for export of basmati, including Iran, Lebanon and Syria, is keeping uncertainty over the trade prospects.
India is the largest exporter of basmati rice and its price is a function of global trade. A decline of 10% in price was recorded in the first five months of the current financial year, as per Agricultural & Processed Foods Export Development Authority (APEDA). During the period, the country exported 1.66 million tonnes of basmati compared with 1.85 million tonnes in the same period last year.
Traders are circumspect of delay in payments from Iran, the country’s largest importer of basmati, after India cut crude oil supply from the Gulf nation. “Even though Iran annually restricts import of rice from July to December to safeguard its farmers, but this time the concern is much deeper,” said AK Gupta, director, Basmati Export Development Foundation (BEDF), an arm of APEDA.
Basmati exporters are worried that in the prevailing market, major international basmati buyers could bargain hard for lower prices. “Traders in India are avoiding taking advances from banks for the purchase of basmati paddy as they foresee squeeze in margins in exports,” Sethi said.
At a time when harvesting is at full swing, basmati paddy prices are hovering between Rs 2,300 and Rs 2,800 per quintal for the popular 1121 variety in Punjab and Haryana. The price had increased up to Rs 3,300-3,800 per quintal in the previous year due to low output and higher demand from Iran.
Despite high quality of basmati this season, farmers are earning less than last year and the situation will drive away farmers to other crops in the next season,” said Kulwant Singh, a Amritsar-based basmati rice grower.
India’s output of basmati this year is expected to rise by 10% due to higher acreage, and that could suppress prices. Also exporters are worried that Saudi Arabia could press new trade regulations on import of basmati
A domestic exporters’ lobby said a 10% dip in export of the premium quality rice in the current financial year and prevailing geopolitical situation in key export markets is keeping prices suppressed.
“Unfavorable sentiment in the export market is keeping buyers wary and it has affected prices,” Ashok Sethi, director of Punjab Rice Millers and Exporters Association, said. According to Sethi, the volatile geopolitical situation in major destinations for export of basmati, including Iran, Lebanon and Syria, is keeping uncertainty over the trade prospects.
India is the largest exporter of basmati rice and its price is a function of global trade. A decline of 10% in price was recorded in the first five months of the current financial year, as per Agricultural & Processed Foods Export Development Authority (APEDA). During the period, the country exported 1.66 million tonnes of basmati compared with 1.85 million tonnes in the same period last year.
Traders are circumspect of delay in payments from Iran, the country’s largest importer of basmati, after India cut crude oil supply from the Gulf nation. “Even though Iran annually restricts import of rice from July to December to safeguard its farmers, but this time the concern is much deeper,” said AK Gupta, director, Basmati Export Development Foundation (BEDF), an arm of APEDA.
Basmati exporters are worried that in the prevailing market, major international basmati buyers could bargain hard for lower prices. “Traders in India are avoiding taking advances from banks for the purchase of basmati paddy as they foresee squeeze in margins in exports,” Sethi said.
At a time when harvesting is at full swing, basmati paddy prices are hovering between Rs 2,300 and Rs 2,800 per quintal for the popular 1121 variety in Punjab and Haryana. The price had increased up to Rs 3,300-3,800 per quintal in the previous year due to low output and higher demand from Iran.
Despite high quality of basmati this season, farmers are earning less than last year and the situation will drive away farmers to other crops in the next season,” said Kulwant Singh, a Amritsar-based basmati rice grower.
India’s output of basmati this year is expected to rise by 10% due to higher acreage, and that could suppress prices. Also exporters are worried that Saudi Arabia could press new trade regulations on import of basmati
Rice Yields Plummet and Arsenic
Rises in Future Climate-Soil Scenarios
By
-
November 4, 2019
Rice
is the largest global staple crop, consumed by more than half the world’s
population – but new experiments from Stanford University suggest that with
climate change, production in major rice-growing regions with endemic soil
arsenic will undergo a dramatic decline and jeopardize critical food supplies.
These
experiments exploring rice production in future climate conditions show rice
yields could drop about 40 percent by 2100 — with potentially devastating
consequences in parts of the world that rely on the crop as a basic food
source. What’s more, changes to soil processes due to increased temperatures
will cause rice to contain twice as much toxic arsenic than the rice consumed
today. The research was published Nov. 1 in Nature Communications.
“By
the time we get to 2100, we’re estimated to have approximately 10 billion
people, so that would mean we have 5 billion people dependent on rice, and 2
billion who would not have access to the calories they would normally need,”
says co-author Scott Fendorf, the Terry Huffington Professor in Earth system
science at Stanford University’s School of Earth, Energy & Environmental
Sciences (Stanford Earth). “We have to be aware of these challenges that are
coming so we can be ready to adapt.”
The
researchers specifically looked at rice because it is grown in flooded paddies
that help loosen the arsenic from the soil and make it especially sensitive to
arsenic uptake. While many food crops today contain small amounts of arsenic,
some growing regions are more susceptible than others. Future changes in soil
due to higher temperatures combined with flooded conditions cause arsenic to be
taken up by rice plants at higher levels – and using irrigation water with
naturally occurring high arsenic exacerbates the problem. While these factors
will not affect all global commodities in the same way, they do extend to other
flood-grown crops, like taro and lotus.
“I
just didn’t expect the magnitude of impact on rice yield we observed,” says
Fendorf, who is also a senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute for the
Environment. “What I missed was how much the soil biogeochemistry would respond
to increased temperature, how that would amplify plant-available arsenic, and
then – coupled with the temperature stress – how that would really impact the
plant.”
A
naturally occurring, semi-metallic chemical, arsenic is found in most soils and
sediments, but is generally in a form that doesn’t get taken up by plants.
Chronic exposure to arsenic leads to skin lesions, cancers, aggravation of lung
disease and, ultimately, death. It is especially concerning in rice not only
because of its global significance, but also because the low-allergen food is
often introduced early to infants.
“I
think this problem is also crucial for people that have young kids in our
society,” says lead author E. Marie Muehe, a former postdoctoral scholar at
Stanford and now at the University of Tübingen, Germany. “Because infants are a
lot smaller than we are, if they eat rice, that means that they take up more
arsenic relative to their body weight.”
Climate
Simulations
The
researchers created future climate conditions in greenhouses based on estimates
of a possible 5 degree Celsius temperature increase and twice as much
atmospheric carbon dioxide by 2100, as projected by the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change.
While
previous research examined the impacts of increasing temperature in the context
of the global food crisis, this study was the first to account for soil
conditions in combination with shifts in climate.
For
the experiments, the group grew a medium-grain rice variety in soil from the
rice-growing region of California. The greenhouses were controlled for
temperature, carbon dioxide concentrations and soil arsenic levels, which will
be higher in the future due to its buildup in soils from irrigating crops with
arsenic-contaminated water, a problem that is worsened by over-pumping
groundwater.
“We
don’t often think about this, but soil is alive — it’s teeming with bacteria
and a lot of different microorganisms,” Fendorf says. “It turns out those
microorganisms determine whether the arsenic stays partitioned onto the
minerals and away from the plants or comes off the minerals into the water
phase.”
The
researchers found that with increased temperatures, microorganisms destabilized
more of the soil’s inherent arsenic, leading to greater amounts of the toxin in
the soil water that is available for uptake by the rice. Once taken up, arsenic
inhibits nutrient absorption and decreases plant growth and development,
factors that contributed to the 40 percent decrease in yield the scientists
observed.
Early
Warning, Future Planning
While
the dramatic loss in production is a major cause for concern, the scientists
are hopeful that this research will help producers find potential solutions for
feeding the world.
“The
good news is that given past advances in terms of the global community’s
ability to breed varieties that can adapt to new conditions, along with
revisions to soil management, I’m optimistic we can get around the problems
observed in our study,” Fendorf says. “I’m also optimistic that as we continue
to shine a light on the threats resulting from a 5 degree Celsius change,
society will adopt practices to ensure we never reach that degree of warming.”
As
next steps, Fendorf, co-author Tianmei Wang and Muehe hope to asses rice yields
on a global scale by using remote sensing to pinpoint contaminated rice paddies
in order to model future yields and arsenic contamination.
“This
is most likely to be a problem where most rice is consumed, so we think about
South and East Asia,” says Wang, a PhD candidate in Earth system science.
“Especially for people like my dad — he consumes rice three times a day and he
just cannot live without it.”
New Kind of Concrete Cracks Much Less Than the Regular Stuff
The
secret is in the mix.
Nov 4, 2019A new concrete mix replaces 40 percent of cement with plentiful materials and
byproducts.
· This
formula reduces brittleness and “bounces back” more than traditional concrete.
Russian scientists have developed a new, more flexible form of
concrete that could mean stronger, safer buildings and structures around the
world, reports New Atlas. The secret is in the mix, where
the scientists replaced 40 percent of the cement binder with plentiful,
eco-friendly materials that increase the “give” and make the concrete both more
ductile and elastic.
All concrete is made by combining aggregate (the gravel or other
solid materials) and cement (a powder saturated with water to form a paste). Cement
seems like an everyday thing in the modern world, but its invention in ancient
Rome paved the way for millennia of subsequent progress. The Romans created
the earliest known concrete when they mixed batches of
cement and then added gravel and volcanic ash to bulk it up.
Concrete is immeasurably useful, most of all when it’s poured
around a frame or cage of the reinforcing steel beams known as rebar. Using
steel reinforcement makes concrete not just stronger, but also somewhat more
flexible. But there are major drawbacks to using steel-reinforced concrete, including simple human variance
when concrete is poured around steel rebar frames. Any kind of moisture or
foreign matter clinging to rebar’s nooks and crannies can contain bacteria and
other agents that work to weaken the concrete over time. Once concrete has even
tiny cracks, that’s where the trouble begins.
Postponing the “first crack” was mission number one for the scientists at the Military Studies
Center at Far Eastern Federal University in Russia. They wanted to find a more
elastic concrete mix, and according to New Atlas, the mix is indeed
six to nine times more crack-resistant than traditional concrete.
Concrete has a major environmental cost, not just from the process
of making cement, but in waste concrete that accumulates over time. In a Guardian feature earlier this year, experts
recommended using less concrete in new projects. That might sound like
pie-in-the-sky advice, but Far Eastern’s new concrete reduces cement by 40
percent and replaces it with mostly waste materials that we already generate.
The new concrete is better for the environment and will likely be cheaper for
builders.
What are these cement-alternative fillers? The scientists used
rice husk cinder, limestone crushing waste, and silica sand. Silica is a wildly plentiful
mineral whose
crystal form is quartz and is the natural “sand” in sandstone. Beach or
playground sand is composed of both silica sand and finely ground calcium-based
particles from coral and other sea creatures.
Scientists have long investigated rice husk cinder, meanwhile, as an alternative or
addition to coal-industry “fly ash,” a byproduct with similar properties that
helps to offset emissions. Rice husk ash is more elastic and may be feasible in
higher percentages than fly ash. Limestone crushing waste is from quarries,
where giant machines called crushers turn mined rock into gravel
and other small aggregate. Recapturing quarry waste like limestone and marble
dust may reduce environmental impact as well as increasing concrete’s tensile
strength.
It isn’t clear if the concrete with 40 percent less cement is
suited for large-scale construction. Builders already have many types of rebar
to consider in different climates, because temperature and humidity play a part
in how rebar and concrete age separately and together.
A more flex-friendly concrete could be a great alternative for
bridge building, where the ability to bend but retain shape is a requirement,
not just a nice benefit. The Russian scientists also cited its potential for
bunkers and other secure military and government facilities.
Cross River to launch rice mill
by December, set to boost local rice production
-
November
4, 2019
Governor
Ben Ayade
The Cross
River State Government has unveiled plans to build an
ultra-modern rice mill, expected to be ready by December of this year.
This disclosure was made by Francesco Antonio Lucarelli, the contractor engaged to
deliver the rice mill project who also serves as the General Manager of AA Universal
Agro Industries Ltd.
Capacity of the Mill: According to Lucarelli, an
experienced contractor in the business, the Cross River Rice Mill boasts of a
storage capacity of more than 6500 metric tonnes, which makes it one of the
biggest in Nigeria.
Giving more details about the
project,
he explained that all the equipment required for the construction of the mill
had been made available since April this year. He also noted that the project
had approached advanced stages.
Friday Aruko Odey, a former Special Adviser to
the Cross River governor on projects, disclosed that the rice mill would
produce certain varieties of rice, create more opportunities as well as boost
the revenue of the state.
The project is expected to engage more than 20,000
employees who would work on three shifts, the former aide explained. He also
confirmed the project would be completed by the end of the year.
In a recent Nairametrics article, rice farmers assured the
general public that a 50kg bag of rice will sell for N9,000 in three weeks’
time, after recording a bumper harvest this year. They also promised that more
rice would flood the market thereby forcing market prices downward, against the
continual hoarding that raised the price to about N26,000.
Aminu Goronyo, the President,
Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), confirmed the
development. He said: “We have a bumper harvest that we never had before. We
have never had the type of bumper harvests that we recorded this year.”
He also promised that the increase in the
prices of rice will no longer persist.
Customs, Importer Disagree Over
Impounded Containers Of Rice
By Economic Confidential -November 4, 2019
Customs,
Importer Disagree Over Impounded Containers Of Rice The Nigeria Customs
Service and Masters Energy Commodities Trading Limited, owners of some of the
containers of rice recently seized by the former, have disagreed over the dates
when the seizures were made. While the Customs on Friday insisted that the rice
containers were recently impounded, the importer, Masters Energy, said they
were seized by the NCS in 2016, about three years before the current partial
closure of land borders by the Federal Government. On October 29, the NCS had
announced that it impounded 52 containers of banned goods worth N2.7bn smuggled
through the Tin Can Island Port in Lagos. While announcing the seizure, the
Comptroller General of the NCS, Col Hameed Ali (retd), disclosed that 34 of the
52 containers had rice in them.
He
said the border closure had prompted smugglers to route some banned items
through the seaports. He said since certificate (Form M) had not been issued by
the Central Bank of Nigeria for importation of rice since 2015, any rice that
came through the seaport must have been smuggled. Ali also disclosed that some
of the rice had expired while others were about to expire. A day after the
story broke, Masters Energy responded through its lawyer, Mr Monday Ubani, that
it imported the rice and was seized in 2016 and not 2019 as claimed by the
Customs boss. Reports quoted Ubani as saying that the rice containers were
impounded in 2016 due to the inability of the company’s clearing agent to pay
the correct tariff on the commodity.
“It
was even reported that Masters Energy then petitioned the House Committee on
Customs, Excise and Tariff that its agent Messrs Destiny Impex Limited, a
clearing company registered and licensed by the Customs made a false
declaration in order to cut tariffs for the 30 containers of rice,” the lawyer stated.
Ubani said Masters Energy had offered to pay the correct tariff on the rice
since the agent had been paid the full amount but decided to cut down the
amount and pay lower tariff. The firm, according to him, was told that the rice
had already been distributed to the Internally Displaced Persons homes.
He said 60 containers of rice were imported
and they came in two batches. Thirty containers were seized at first and the
remaining 30 arrived later. However, by the time the remaining 30 containers
came in, the CBN had added rice on its list of 41 items not eligible for
foreign exchange. He said due to this policy, the 30 containers were abandoned
and not cleared, adding that the Customs had written to them asking them to
seek CBN’s permission to have the containers cleared. But sources at the
Customs had said that the rice containers were seized between 2018 and 2019 and
that Masters Energy is not the owners of all the impounded containers of rice.
On
Friday, the spokesperson for the NCS, Joseph Attah, who had earlier addressed
the issue in the report, issued a statement confirming that in 2016/2017, 30
containers of rice declared as yeast by Masters Energy were seized and
distributed to the IDPs. He said out of the 33 containers of rice unveiled by
Ali on October 29, only 25 containers belonged to Masters Energy. He said, “The
discovery of these containers stacked in the terminal came as a result of
painstaking profiling of unutilised bills of lading and undisclosed manifests
which led to the physical discovery of these containers with expired rice.
“It should be noted that when goods are
imported but not declared, they are not yet brought to the Customs’ attention,
hence cannot exit the port unless the owners succeed in compromising port
officials and operatives to smuggle them out. This was not (or could not) be
the case here.” Attah also said, “Containers have distinct identities
(numbers); so they cannot be mixed (up) to confuse the public. We have the
numbers of those falsely declared as yeast and seized then and these (25 in
reference) are containers that were not declared and have been fished out
through profiling. They are distinct and clear for any well-meaning individual
to understand.”
Myanmar
Farmers Say Govt Failing to Buy Rice at Floor Price
Farmers at Kangyidaunt Township in Ayeyarwady
Region / Salai Thant Zin / The Irrawaddy
By SALAI THANT ZIN 4
November 2019
PATHEIN, Ayeyarwady Region—Rice
paddy farmers in Ayeyarwady Region have complained that merchants are paying
them less than the minimum price recently set by the government.
The government’s Leading
Committee for the Protection and Promotion of the Rights and Interests of
Farmers, led by Vice President Henry Van Thio, fixed the floor price for rice
this year at 500,000 kyats for 100 baskets of paddy (US$327.30 for about 2.09
tons) in a move to protect the interests of paddy farmers.
But farmers in Ayeyarwady Region
said merchants only pay for around 450,000 kyats for 100 baskets of paddy.
“In Maubin, paddy prices are
between 450,000 and 480,000 kyats. This is the price given by merchants and
rice millers. Though the government said the minimum price is 500,000 kyats,
nobody is paying that price, and the government is not buying directly from
farmers, so we can only sell at market rates,” said rice farmer U Hla Htay of
Yenangyoung village in Maubin Township.
The government said in the second
week of October that it will pay the floor price for paddy that meets quality
standards: the grains, once processed, must have a moisture content of 14
percent and the baskets can’t contain any dust, sand or gravel.
According to the government’s
statement, if the market rate is higher than the floor price, rice is to be
bought according to the market rate, but if the market rate is lower than the floor
price, rice is to be bought at floor price.
The floor price will be applied
for this year’s monsoon paddy season and next year’s summer paddy season. Once
minimum prices fall below the minimum price, paddy purchase committees formed
by regional and state governments are responsible for purchasing rice from
farmers with the approval of the vice president’s leading committee. But in the
case of Ayeyarwady Region, the regional paddy purchase committee is failing to
intervene.
Currently, the market prices of
lower grade paddy are between 400,000 and 480,000 kyats per 100 baskets in
Hinthada District, between 450,000 and 480,000 kyats in Maubin District and
between 480,000 and 500,000 kyats in Myaungmya and Pathein districts.
“The price of 500,000 kyats fixed
by the government is not bad. But we are paid only just over 400,000 in
Kyangin,” said farmer U Hlaing Kyi from Koe Taung Village in Hinthada
District’s Kyangin Township. “The profit is quite small. If the government will
buy paddy, I want them to show up, on the ground, soon after the harvest.”
The problem is partly due to
measurement differences. The government has adjusted the size of one basket to
equal 46 pounds. But rice merchants and millers are still using the previous
basket size of 50 pounds. As a result of the discrepancy, farmers are forced to
sell an extra 400 pounds of rice per 100 baskets for no additional pay.
The Irrawaddy was unable to
obtain a comment from Ayeyarwady Regional Minister for Financing and Planning U
Htay Win about the fact that the government has yet to purchase rice from the
farmers.
“The Ayeyarwady regional
government has held two meetings with us to buy rice when it falls below
500,000 kyats,” said Ayeyarwady Region Rice Millers Association Chairman U Soe
Win. “We drafted plans for rice purchases and presented them to the government.
The government said it would seek approval and budget from the Union
government.”
Around 50 percent of Myanmar’s
rice exports are shipped to China. Myanmar exported 3.58 million tons of rice during
the 2017-18 fiscal year, the largest volume in 70 years, according to the
Ministry of Commerce.
Though the Myanmar government
allows official rice exports to China, Chinese authorities consider most rice
imports from Myanmar to be illegal but still allow rice merchants to bring rice
across the border. After Chinese authorities launched a crackdown on illegal
rice imports from Myanmar in 2018, Myanmar’s rice exports to its neighbor
declined significantly, dropping by around 1 million tons.
Rice prices have so far continued
the downward trend in the 2019-20 fiscal year due to low demand from China.
Translated from Burmese by Thet
Ko Ko
Senate approves P33.9B rice subsidy
November 4, 2019 | 8:27 pm
PHILSTAR
THE Senate yesterday approved on
third and final reading a resolution allowing the government to distribute
locally produced palay instead of cash to 4.1 million social welfare
beneficiaries.
The P33.9-billion rice subsidy
will come from this year’s national budget and will go to beneficiaries of the
Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, according to Senate Joint Resolution 8.
The palay must come from farmers
in the provinces of Pangasinan, Ilocos Norte, Cagayan, Isabela, Nueva Vizcaya,
Oriental and Occidental Mindoro, Tarlac, Nueva Ecija, Zamboanga del Sur and
Iloilo.
The measure was filed in light of
the Rice Tariffication Law, which removed restrictions on rice imports.
“Despite the efforts made by the
government to protect the local rice industry, large stocks of imported rice
have depressed the buying price of local palay to levels way below the cost of
production,” according to the resolution.
As of Aug. 22, the National Food
Authority (NFA) had in its custody 209,525 metric tons (MT) of imported rice
and another 209,525 MT of locally procured palay.
“The warehouses of NFA are
already full, and the problem of oversupply is expected to exacerbate during
the period from October to December, which is the peak palay harvest season.”
This has caused average palay
prices to go down to P16.28 a kilo from P23.10 a kilo a year earlier.A similar
resolution is pending at the committee level of the House of Representatives.
— CAT
Climate Change Effects May Soon Expose Billions Of People To Toxic Rice
Many
parts of the world have been experiencing the growing impact of climate change.
The rising temperatures are expected to affect the sea levels and global food
supply in the future.
A
new study, published in the journal Nature Communications, found that the world may soon
see a dramatic drop in rice production. Climate change has been causing changes
to soil processes, which increase levels of toxic arsenic in rice.
“I
just didn’t expect the magnitude of impact on rice yield we observed,” Scott
Fendorf, study co-author and a professor of earth system science at Stanford
University, said. “What I missed was how much the soil biogeochemistry would
respond to increased temperature, how that would amplify plant-available
arsenic, and then—coupled with the temperature stress—how that would really
impact the plant.”
Researchers
said the increasing temperatures combined with flooding could significantly
increase arsenic from the soil and being absorbed by rice plants. Arsenic is a
naturally occurring, semi-metallic chemical linked to cancer, lung disease,
skin lesions and even death, Futurity reported.
“By
the time we get to 2100, we’re estimated to have approximately 10 billion
people, so that would mean we have 5 billion people dependent on rice, and 2
billion who would not have access to the calories they would normally need,”
Fendorf said. “We have to be aware of these challenges that are coming so we
can be ready to adapt.”
The
findings come from the analysis of simulated climate conditions when the global
temperature increases by 5 degrees Celsius. Researchers said the study is the
first to look into impact of shifts in climate on soil conditions.
They
examined the effects of climate change with a medium-grain rice variety in soil
from the rice-growing region of California. The team exposed the rice to
controlled temperature, carbon dioxide concentrations and soil arsenic levels.
Results
showed that with increased temperatures, microorganisms disrupted the arsenic
in the soil, which led to higher toxin in the soil water surrounding rice
plants. The increased levels of arsenic also blocked nutrients and reduced
plant growth and development.
The
researchers said with the current climate conditions, many regions may soon see
the same changes in soil. The study predicts that by 2100 the rice production
could drop by 40 percent.
However,
researchers noted there are ways to prevent such decrease and continue a stable
production of rice. Fendorf said revisions to soil management and farmers’
ability to breed varieties of rice that can adapt to new conditions would help
address the potential issue.
A farmer spraying herbicide to
rice plants before harvest season. Pixabay
Vietnamese
rice prices fall; India’s rates steady
Rice
export rates for the Vietnamese variety fell this week from multi-month highs
on weak demand from Philippines and China, while prices were steady in top
exporter India on festival-thinned trading. Vietnam's 5% broken rice inched
lower to $345-$350 a tonne on Thursday, from a 4-1/2 month high of $350-$355
last week. “Trading is thin this week on weak demand from major buyers such as
Philippines and China," said a trader based in Ho Chi Minh City. “The
autumn-winter crop season will be in full swing in December," the trader
added. Vietnam's rice shipments in the first 10 months of this year rose 6.1%
from a year earlier to 5.56 million tonnes, but export revenue fell 7.8%,
government data showed. In India, prices of the 5 percent broken parboiled
variety were unchanged from last week at $368-$372 per tonne. “Trading was
negligible due to the Diwali festival. New season supplies have also been
delayed due to recent rainfall," said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global
trading firm. Prices had recovered from a four-month low on a stronger rupee
last week. Many rice growing states had rainfall in the last few days, damaging
paddy crops ready for harvesting, exporters said. Meanwhile, in Thailand,
benchmark 5 percent broken rice prices were at $390-$413 a tonne, versus
$396-$410 last week. “The domestic price of rice is actually quite low but it's
the baht that's really pushing up export prices and this has deterred overseas
buyers," a Bangkok-based rice trader said. Exporters have wrestled with a
strong baht this year, which has kept prices for the Thai variety higher than
those of competitors.
“New
supply will gradually enter the market over the next few weeks until the end of
the year and if exporters can't sell, stockpiles may build and prices would
fall," another Bangkok-based trader said. Elsewhere, Bangladesh will buy 1
million tonnes of rice and paddy, up from 600,000 tonnes last year, in the
upcoming harvesting season from local farmers who incurred losses from high
production costs and low domestic prices this year, Agriculture Minister Abdur
Razzaque said on Thursday. Rain-fed rice output or the Aman crop, accounting
for nearly a third of country's annual rice output of around 35 million tonnes,
is estimated to hit 15.3 million tonnes this year from nearly 14 million tonnes
last year, the minister said.
Rice will be cheaper before Christmas, says Kebbi governor
November 04
18:462019
The National Food Security Council (NFSC), chaired by President
Muhammadu Buhari, says it will make rice available before Christmas.
Atiku Bagudu, governor of Kebbi and
the deputy chairman of the council, told NAN in Makkah, Saudi Arabia, that the
council is aware of the current high prices of rice.
According to the governor, the
government is also aware of the activities of some individuals and groups bent
on frustrating the new rice policy.
“The good news is that there is a
lot of production in the country. All the millers in Nigeria have enough paddy
and farmers are producing and the harvest is coming in strong,” he said.
“We believe in addition to market
forces, there are some people bent on manipulating the situation in order to
exploit bigger revenue, bigger profits and some may even be doing so for the
wrong reason.
“They want to truncate policy which
is helping the Nigerian economy; which is helping Nigerian millers; which is
helping the Nigerian farmers and the Nigerian population.
“We are taking steps to ensure that
more rice is taken to markets where shortages can easily be created.
“There is enough product in the
country and the National Food Security Council is focused on how to ensure that
availability is restored all across the country so that prices will come down
reflective of the cost of production.”
Since the country’s land borders
were closed and forex restricted for the importation of rice, a 50kg bag of the
commodity has increased to an average of N22,000 from N14,000.
On the reported loss of about N1
billion by onion farmers in Kebbi state, Bagudu said the government would
always respond to farmers’ predicaments promptly.
He disclosed that the federal
government had approved N23billion for distribution to states affected by
floods.
“For the onion farmers, they have
calculated that the rain will stop by September because when onion is growing
there is a point at which it does not desire rainfall, now we have rainfall,”
he said.
“I’m not sure of the N1 billion
loss in terms of the quantum because we have not done the assessment but we are
always willing and ready to support all our producers especially when they are
faced with unforeseen circumstances like this.”
Bagudu was on the entourage of
Buhari’s official visit to Saudi Arabia which ended on Saturday.
Others governors on the entourage
included Babagana Zulum of Borno and Aminu Masari of Katsina.
Rise in inflation rate in Nigeria man-made
– Experts
By Ibukun Emiola
Ibadan – Experts have said that the current rise in inflation rate
in the country is man-made and self-inflicted, occasioned by preference for
foreign goods by Nigerians.
Mr Tunji Adepeju, an economist and Mr Raji Rasaki, an ex-banker,
made this known in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on
Monday, in Ibadan.
Adepeju, who commended the Federal Government policy on border
closure, said it would help grow the nation’s economy and make it self-
reliant.
“At the commencement of this policy, prices will have to go up
because of government’s move to curb smuggling.
“The border closure is in the best interest of this country,
because people who make illegitimate income are not happy about the policy and
they are trying to frustrate government’s efforts,” he said.
Adepeju urged Nigerians to start consuming locally-made goods
which, he said, were healthier and capable of saving the nation’s economy from
recession.
Similarly, Rasaki stressed the need for Nigerians to consume the
goods being produced in the country.
“The present government is doing the needful, to ensure that our
economy bounces back; it is also important for rice millers to appreciate
government’s efforts and stop creating artificial scarcity as well as hike in
the price of locally-produced rice.
“We should stop being enemies of ourselves; local consumers should
not be exploited.
“If government keeps encouraging the millers, they too should
boost their production to meet the demands,” the ex-banker said.
Fermented rice
is cancer curing’ properties, says yoga expert
PublishedNov 5, 2019, 5:54 am IST
UpdatedNov 5, 2019, 5:54 am IST
The event was organised by Pathanjali free yoga
center here in Hosur.Venkata.
On Sunday evening,
Venkata, a yoga campaigner for over three decades of Bengaluru have handed over
the certificates to those qualified to the level of becoming yoga teachers.
Krishnagiri: A
yoga expert has urged people to revert back to the old custom of consuming
fermented rice (cooked rice soaked in water for a night) which according to him
has cancer-curing properties.
“Days are not too far for our mildly fermented
rice, branded as the poor man's food, to enter hotel's menu card” Dr Venkata
Rayadu Venigala said.
He added, “already Chinese restaurants started
selling mildly fermented foods because probiotics has become popular in the
modern wellness trend and also found of having cancer curing properties”.
On Sunday evening, Venkata, a yoga campaigner
for over three decades of Bengaluru have handed over the certificates to those
qualified to the level of becoming yoga teachers. The event was organised by
Pathanjali free yoga center here in Hosur.Venkata, while speaking on the
occasion said, “people think that only those who have training can do yoga. But
we all do it daily without knowing that as yoga. Particularly habits like
scrape your tongue, breathing and good food habits”
He continued, “three scientists have been
awarded the Nobel prize 2019 for their discovery of how cells sense and adapt
to oxygen availability. It should be termed as rediscovery because our ancient
sages have discovered for what the scientist have now been honoured.”
“For example let us take the pranayama asana
which helps our body to get sufficient oxygen. The loss of energy we feel
in our body was due to incorrect breathing. The body functions are slowed down,
both the tissue and cells becomes weak, and could not regenerate themselves due
to lack of sufficient energy,” Venkata said. He also felt concern that the
present generation come to know the value of our native customs, culture and
tradition only after they are validated by the foreigners who came to India and
returned to their nation not only with the material wealth, but also carried
our other practices including the habit of consuming fermented rice and yoga.
Bumper paddy
crop raises storage woes in Telangana
Roushan Ali
| TNN | Updated: Nov 3, 2019, 9:47 IST
TimesPoints
Representative image
HYDERABAD: Widespread rains, water supply from irrigation
projects, 24x7 power supply, minimum support price, Rythu Bandhu and other
farmer welfare schemes have resulted in bumper crop this kharif
in Telangana.
As against 42 lakh metric tonnes (MTs) of paddy in kharif season last year, this time 65 lakh MTs of paddy is being expected. However, the bumper crop is also bringing with it its own problems. The state is faced with the huge task of making arrangements for storage of 65 lakh MTs of paddy.
As against 42 lakh metric tonnes (MTs) of paddy in kharif season last year, this time 65 lakh MTs of paddy is being expected. However, the bumper crop is also bringing with it its own problems. The state is faced with the huge task of making arrangements for storage of 65 lakh MTs of paddy.
Officials said the storage capacity in government, private and
Food Corporation of India godowns in Telangana is 40 lakh MTs. Though the
entire paddy won’t be procured and brought to godowns in one go, officials said
the existing storage capacity is not sufficient to store so much paddy.
Chinese researchers
develop database for rice molecular breeding
2019-11-02
19:40:58XinhuaEditor : Cheng Zizhuo
Chinese researchers have developed
a knowledge base for molecular breeding of rice to facilitate the
breeding of different rice varieties.
With the development of genome
sequencing technology, large amounts of genomic and phenotypic data have been
accumulated in the fields of crop genomic research. The integration and deep
mining of these data are key for crop breeding.
Researchers from the Institute of
Genetics and Developmental Biology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences
developed a database which integrates more than 7,000 sets of global rice
re-sequencing data, large amount of rice germplasm resources information, as
well as annotations of more than 13,000 rice genes, many of which are related
to improved rice quality, disease-resistance and high yield.
The database also provides advanced
online tools for germplasm screening, individual comparison and variation
analysis.
The research also offers a
reference for the database on the molecular breeding of other crops such as
soybeans, wheat and corn.
The research was published in the
journal Nucleic Acids Research.
GOCC subsidies climb in Sept
November 4, 2019
Subsidies extended by the
national government to government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs)
climbed in September, data from the Bureau of the Treasury showed.
Thirty-one state-run firms
secured P54.70 billion, a 179.34-percent rise from P19.58 billion in the same
month last year.
The Philippine Health Insurance
Corp. (PhilHealth) accounted for the bulk, or P29.75 billion, of total
subsidies in the month.
PhilHealth is responsible for
administering the country’s health insurance program, particularly the
Universal Health Care program that aims to provide Filipino families equitable
access to quality and affordable health care services.
The Land Bank of the Philippines
(LandBank) followed with P12 billion, the National Irrigation Administration
(NIA) with P7.54 billion, and the Small Business Corp. with P1.25 billion.
Also receiving assistance in
September were the Local Water Utilities Administration, Light Rail Transit
Authority, National Food Authority, National Power Corp., Aurora Pacific
Economic Zone and Freeport Authority, Bases Conversion and Development
Authority, Cultural Center of the Philippines, Cagayan Special Economic Zone,
Credit Information Corp., Center for International Trade Expositions and
Missions, Lung Center of the Philippines, National Dairy Authority, National
Kidney and Transplant Institute, Philippine Coconut Authority, Philippine Crop
Insurance Corp., Philippine Children’s Medical Center, Philippine Heart Center,
Philippine Rice Research Institute, Philippine Institute for Development
Studies, Philippine Institute of Traditional and Alternative Health Care,
Philippine Postal Corp., People’s Television Network Inc., Subic Bay
Metropolitan Authority, Social Housing Finance Corp., Southern Philippines
Development Authority, Sugar Regulatory Administration, and Zamboanga City
Special Economic Zone Authority.
The September figure boosted the
year-to-date government subsidies to surge by 21.36 percent to P151.49 billion
from the year-earlier figure of P124.83 billion.
State-run companies with the
biggest funding assistance in the first nine months of the year were PhilHealth
with P58.90 billion; NIA with P31.57 billion, and LandBank with P30.48 billion.
Subsidies fell under the national
government’s disbursements program.
State spending in September rose
by 39.01 percent to P415.1 billion from P298.6 billion a year ago, boosting the
year-to-date tally by 5.5 percent to P2.62 trillion.
In 2018, the government gave away
a record P136.652 billion in subsidies.
November is
National Rice Awareness Month
Philippine Information Agency
4th November 2019, 19:38 GMT+11
4th November 2019, 19:38 GMT+11
QUEZON CITY, Nov. 4 (PIA)--Did
you know? November is being observed as National Rice Awareness Month by virtue
of Proclamation No. 524 signed on Jan. 5, 2004, by then President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo.
The proclamation also tasked the
Department of Agriculture as the lead agency for the month-long observance.
The celebration coincided with
the anniversary of the Philippine Rice Research Institute created under
Executive Order No. 1061 dated Nov. 5, 1985.
This year's theme, "Quality
Rice, Quality Life," forms part of the Department of Agriculture's
awareness campaign to encourage farmers to produce quality rice for consumers,
contribute in achieving rice security, promote the values of responsible rice
consumption, and to inspire public influencers in advocating this cause.
With NRAM 2019 encouraging
consumers to not waste rice, producers are also challenged to use efficient
farming technologies and to become agri-entrepreneurs.
There will be various activities
lined-up across the country including Agri-Trivia shows for elementary and
junior high school students; feeding programs; press conferences on the
Suggested Retail Price for rice, and radio guesting, among others.
Meanwhile, as part of the
celebrations, the Philippine Ambassador to Italy Domingo P. Nolasco hosted a
dinner for the Ambassadors, the Charge d'Affaires, a.i., and the Deputy Chiefs
of Mission of the member states of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia
and the Pacific (ESCAP) Asia Pacific group in Rome recently. The guests were
treated to traditional Filipino fare, highlighting the rich culinary arts of
the country.
Ambassador Nolasco is the current
Dean of the UN ESCAP Asia Pacific grouping in Rome. The hosting of the
luncheons or dinner rotates among the ESCAP Ambassadors. Specifically, the
observance also aims to strengthen the bond between rice farmers and the
consumers towards quality life.
Accordingly, DA encourages
farmers to produce quality rice and instill the values of responsible rice
consumption among consumers, thus contribute in achieving rice sufficiency in
the country. (PIA NCR)
Outlook
Conference Rates Rising This Week
By Michael Klein
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA - The 2019 USA
Rice Outlook Conference is just over a month away and registration rates are
set to increase on Wednesday as the Early Bird window closes. With more than two days of top-notch programming,
a packed Exhibit Hall, the annual Rice Awards Luncheon, networking
opportunities galore, and a special First Timers' rate of just $99, there is
little reason not to attend this year's conference - expected to be the largest
ever.
Headshots of keynote speakers
Keynotes (clockwise from upper left: Kang, Wiesemeyer,
Stoddard, and Childs)
General Session attendees will
witness a sit down between Arkansas rice farmer Jeff Rutledge and NRCS Chief
Matthew Lohr, and take a deep dive into the global rice industry with USDA's
Nathan Childs, and the intersection of U.S. ag policy and politics with
ProFarmer's Jim Wiesemeyer. RealClearPolitics' Senior Editor A.B. Stoddard will
unpack the 2019 elections and tell attendees what she thinks it all means for
2020. Keynote speaker Dr. Shimi Kang will share insights into the science of
stress and anxiety, how it impacts us all, and what we can do to live our best
lives, be productive, and not give in to the pressure.
This year's Exhibit Hall has a new
look as well. In addition to being sold out, four stages will host cutting edge
breakout sessions throughout the conference.
The FMC Stage will host sessions on
mapping technology; plant breeding innovation; the latest in mid-south
groundwater; and more. Over at the IndigoAg Stage attendees will learn about
setting up an eCommerce platform; farm estate planning; new research into
consumer grocery shopping habits; and much more. Those interested in making
sense of competing data sets from NASS, FSA, and RMA; hearing a row rice annual
review, or learning about the future of rice co-ops will find that and more at
the Heritage Agriculture Stage.
The Rice Foundation Innovation Stage
will once again host the state outlook and research reports as well as
presentations on new products, technologies, and services designed to improve
your bottom line.
"There is quite literally
something for everyone at the USA Rice Outlook Conference. No matter the size
of your operation or whether you are in farming, ag equipment or inputs,
financial services, milling, end use, exporting, transportation, or somewhere else
on the value chain, you will leave the conference with new practical
knowledge," said Charley Mathews, Jr., California rice farmer and Chair of
USA Rice. "Our team has worked hard to make this the biggest and best
Outlook yet and I know you won't want to miss it."
As was the case last year, the Think
Rice Road Trip truck, a 2019 F-150 currently partaking in consumer promotion
events across the Mid-Atlantic, will be raffled off during the Tuesday General
Session - so be sure to include a raffle ticket in your registration!
Registration and programming details
can be found at www.usarice.com/outlook.
The 2019 USA Rice Outlook Conference
will take place from December 8-10, 2019 at the Statehouse Convention Center in
Little Rock, Arkansas. The conference hotel is sold out, however, guests can
lock in a special conference rate of $139/night at the Little Rock Doubletree,
just steps from the Convention Center, by mentioning Group Code RIC.
Headshots of Outlook Conference
Speakers
Just some of the speakers on tap
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices Open- November 04, 2019
NOVEMBER 4, 2019 /
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open Market-November 4,
2018 Nagpur, Nov 4 (Reuters) – Gram and tuar prices reported strong again in
Nagpur Agriculture Producing and Marketing Company here on good seasonal demand
from local millers amid weak supply from producing regions. Notable hike on
NCDEX in gram, good recovery in Madhya Pradesh pulses and reported demand from
South-based millers also helped to push up prices. About 100 bags of gram and
50 bags of tuar reported for auctions here, according to sources.
GRAM
* Desi gram raw and mill quality recovered strongly in
open market here on good
demand from local traders.
TUAR
* Tuar varieties firmed up in open market here on good
buying support from local
traders. Stockists were reportedly active because of
damage of crop due to
unseasonal rains.
* Masoor varieties and Lakhodi dal showed upward tendency
in open market here on good
demand from local traders amid tight supply from producing
belts.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 5,500-5,700, Tuar dal (clean) –
8,300-8,400, Udid Mogar (clean)
– 7,900-9,000, Moong Mogar (clean) 8,500-9,200, Gram –
4,350-4,500, Gram Super best
– 6,000-6,300 * Wheat, rice and other foodgrain items
moved in a narrow range in
scattered deals and settled at last levels in thin
trading activity.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in
rupees for 100 kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 3,800-4,350 3,700-4,270
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 5,000-5,450 5,000-5,300
Moong Auction n.a. 3,950-4,200
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,200-2,500
Wheat Lokwan Auction 2,000-2,075 2,000-2,060
Wheat Sharbati Auction n.a. 2,900-3,000
Gram Super Best Bold 6,200-6,500 6,200-6,500
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 4,600-4,750 4,500-4,700
Desi gram Raw 4,450-4,650 4,400-4,600
Gram Kabuli 8,500-10,000 8,500-10,000
Tuar Fataka Best-New 8,500-8,800 8,400-8,600
Tuar Fataka Medium-New 8,000-8,300 8,000-8,200
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New 7,800-8,000 7,600-7,800
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New 7,200-7,600 7,000-7,400
Tuar Gavarani New 5,800-5,900 5,700-5,750
Tuar Karnataka 6,250-6,350 6,050-6,150
Masoor dal best 5,600-5,800 5,500-5,800
Masoor dal medium 5,300-5,400 5,200-5,400
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New) 9,100-9,600 9,100-9,600
Moong Mogar Medium 7,600-8,200 7,600-8,200
Moong dal Chilka New 7,200-8,000 7,200-8,000
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 8,500-9,500 8,500-9,500
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 8,300-9,600
8,300-9,600
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG) 7,200-8,100 7,200-8,100
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG) 5,500-5,900 5,300-5,800
Mot (100 INR/KG) 6,000-7,000 5,800-6,800
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg) 4,800-5,200 4,500-4,900
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG) 4,700-5,000 4,700-5,000
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG) 6,850-7,100 6,850-7,100
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG) 2,300-2,400 2,300-2,400
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG) 2,150-2,250 2,150-2,250
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG) 2,650-2,750 2,650-2,750
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG) 2,600-2,750 2,600-2,750
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG) 2,400-2,500 2,400-2,500
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,400-4,000 3,400-4,000
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,800-3,200 2,800-3,200
Rice Parmal (100 INR/KG) 2,400-2,500 2,400-2,500
Rice BPT best new (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,500 3,000-3,500
Rice BPT medium new(100 INR/KG) 2,700-3,000 2,700-3,000
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,100 3,000-3,100
Rice Swarna best new (100 INR/KG) 2,600-2,700 2,600-2,700
Rice Swarna medium new (100 INR/KG)2,400-2,500
2,400-2,500
Rice HMT best new (100 INR/KG) 3,900-4,000 3,900-4,000
Rice HMT medium new (100 INR/KG) 3,600-3,800 3,600-3,800
Rice Shriram best new(100 INR/KG) 4,500-4,800 4,500-4,800
Rice Shriram med new (100 INR/KG) 4,000-4,300 4,000-4,300
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG) 8,500-13,500 8,500-13,500
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,000-7,200 5,000-7,200
Rice Chinnor best new 100 INR/KG) 5,400-5,500 5,400-5,500
Rice Chinnor medium new(100 INR/KG)5,000-5,200
5,000-5,200
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG) 2,350-2,550 2,350-2,550
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 2,050-2,250 2,050-2,250 WEATHER
(NAGPUR) Maximum temp. 33.8 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 20.7 degree Celsius
Rainfall : Nil FORECAST: Partly cloudy sky. Maximum and minimum temperature
likely to be around 34 degree Celsius and 21 degree Celsius respectively. Note:
n.a.—not available (For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery
prices, but included in market prices)
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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