Paddy Scam in Chhattisgarh:
Harvest of Tears
The Chhattisgarh government seems
to have given inflated figures of paddy procurement and squeezed farmers at
each step of the procurement process, leaving them agitated. By Neeraj Mishra
March 1, 2020, 12:44 pm
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The farmers of Chhattisgarh seem
to have been taken for a ride. Politicians and bureaucrats are dishing out
figures that don’t match as far as paddy procurement is concerned. The Congress
government of Bhupesh Baghel promised that it would procure 85 lakh tonnes of
paddy during this kharif season at Rs 2,500 per quintal. This is five lakh
tonnes more than the last procurement by the BJP government of Raman Singh in
2018-19.
Officials now say that they have
already procured 72 lakh tonnes and paid out Rs 11,700 crore at the rates
between Rs 1,815 per quintal and Rs 1,835 (depending on the quality). This
effectively means 7.2 crore quintals at an average of Rs 1,825. Does it match
up? (One tonne is 10 quintals, so this comes to 7.2 crore quintals. Procurement
is done in quintals and compilation in tonnes.)
At the end of the season when the
procurement is complete on February 20, the government should have procured 8.5
crore quintals or 85 lakh tonnes of paddy and paid out nearly Rs 17,000 crore
at the present rate. It has actually promised to pay at the rate of Rs 2,500
per quintal amounting to nearly Rs 22,000 crore. It has so far shied away from
paying it completely.
The centre has refused to
increase its intake of rice from 24 lakh tonnes. This is equivalent to 48 lakh
tonnes of paddy (two kg of paddy yields one kg of rice). Back of the envelope
calculations mean that of the total paddy procurement and post custom milling
for which the government pays 150 per quintal to rice millers, the bill will
stand at something like Rs 30,000 crore. Of this, the central government will
pick up the tab for approximately Rs 9,000 crore only. The state will still be
saddled with a payout of more than Rs 20,000 crore, money it does not have.
So what did the Chhattisgarh
government do? It tried to limit its liability by procuring less and showing
more. It started by squeezing the farmers at each step of the procurement
process. First, it started a survey of all land under cultivation by farmers.
This perhaps was necessary to weed out fake farmers, many of whom had sprung up
in the past 15 years of BJP rule.
It has yet to put out figures of
how much actual land is under paddy cultivation and how much is lying fallow.
The only figure officially given out is that 19.6 lakh farmers have registered
to sell their produce to the state which offers the best minimum support price.
The state now claims that 13.5 lakh farmers have sold their produce and they
have already procured 72 lakh tonnes.
So if another six lakh farmers
were to approach the mandi, there will be a deluge of paddy. But in reality,
each farmer is being squeezed to show much less area under cultivation than he had
last year.
The next step the state took was
announcing that it would procure 15 quintals per acre from each farmer. Then it
delayed the procurement date from November 15 to December 1. When the farmers
started coming in, it announced that only eight quintals would be taken and the
rest later. Registration receipts being issued to farmers were stopped.
This led to restlessness among
farmers at the gates of the mandi in each procurement centre. At Kawardha, they
gheraoed the local tehsildar and kept him prisoner for hours. At Bijapur, they
sat indefinitely on the road. In Durg, which is the chief minister’s home
district, the farmers took out a huge rally against such deliberate
mismanagement. The government relented and perhaps juggled its books to find some
money for the procurement. The date of procurement was extended till February
15 and extended further to February 20 because of unseasonal rains.
If this wasn’t enough, farmers
were harassed in the name of “fake produce”. This is the produce that millers
or some farmers bring in from neighbouring states and show on a bona fide kisan
book. The local machinery then issues a receipt to the farmer but now they are
being harassed in the name of fake produce.
To add to farmers’ woes,
unseasonal rains in January and the first week of February not only hit stocks
but disturbed the procurement process. Several thousand tonnes of procured
paddy at various centres have been destroyed. Then local body elections
intervened. The process has just been completed and as the ruling party
Congress has done reasonably well in it, it does not reflect the simmering
anger farmers feel.
The farmers here as everywhere
else in the country are a miserable lot. But perhaps more here because they
wait endlessly for their elected representatives to give them what has been
promised. So far, the equilibrium has not been disturbed because free rice or
rice at Rs one per kg has been made available to all BPL families. The Baghel
government has decided to extend the facility at Rs 10 per kg to APL families
too. Thus, free rice quantities required for the year are estimated to be 32
lakh tonnes.
Now look at the figures again.
The entire paddy crop in the state should be around 1.2 crore tonnes. Of this,
the government seeks to procure 85 lakh tonnes. There are 19 lakh registered
farmers, of which nearly six lakh don’t sell to the state.
The bill stands at around Rs
30,000 crore. The entire state annual budget is around Rs 90,000 crore. The
receipts from excise, mining, transport, etc are only about Rs 35,000 crore.
The state’s share in the GST and royalties will be about Rs 20,000 crore. It
has been clamouring for an increase in coal and ore mining royalties but to no
avail. If central assistance does not come in paddy procurement, where will the
state get the money to pay the farmers? The centre, at any rate, is not likely
to endorse the Rs 2,500 per quintal rate that has been assured by Baghel. It
did not allow the Raman Singh government to pay Rs 300 extra over the MSP,
which ultimately was paid as bonus. Baghel also aims to give Rs 650 as bonus
but that is another issue as most states have been demanding that paddy MSP
should be Rs 2,500.
Can this bonus distribution go on
year after year for the next five years? Raman Singh managed it once in five
years and that too at the rate of Rs 300. No one has the answers but the state
publicity machinery continues to claim that farmers in the state have become so
rich that their buying capacity has gone up by 17 percent as compared to the
rest of the country. The farmers know that they have been fooled.
Drive Plant Mimicry
Hand weeding of fields spurred an
interloper to evolve a rice-like appearance, researchers conclude.
Shawna Williams
Mar 1, 2020
1
Nikolai Vavilov’s story has stuck
with Longjiang Fan ever since he learned about
the Soviet plant biologist during his undergraduate studies in China in the
1980s. Vavilov’s scientific ideas were both important and novel, explains Fan,
now a crop scientist at Zhejiang University. Vavilov refused to renounce those
ideas even when he faced a death sentence in the 1940s because his research on
genetics and inheritance ran counter to the Lamarckian ideas favored under
Joseph Stalin. He died of starvation in prison in 1943.
One of Vavilov’s enduring contributions to science is a concept
known as Vavilovian mimicry. Based on his observations of domesticated oats and
rye, as well as of their wild relatives, Vavilov proposed that the crops’
ancestors were weeds that, over generations, came to resemble domesticated
wheat because wheat-like characteristics helped them avoid being weeded out by
farmers. It was only after this transformation, Vavilov conjectured, that
people began to purposely cultivate and eat these interlopers.
It’s
just such a fascinating phenomenon, this evolution
of
these weedy species that are exploiting crop environments.
—Kenneth Olsen, Washington
University in St. Louis
Such human-driven evolution of weeds to resemble crop plants has
never been conclusively demonstrated, Fan tells The Scientist. But
recently, with genome sequencing becoming ever faster and cheaper, Fan thought
the time had come to see whether genetic analysis of apparent weedy mimics
would support Vavilov’s idea.
Fan chose to focus initially on a weed that seems to have
evolved its crop-mimicking characteristics in China: barnyard grass (Echinochloa
crus-galli), a variety of which takes on a rice-like appearance early in
its lifecycle. This mimicry had been documented in the early 1980s by
University of Toronto plant evolutionary biologist Spencer Barrett, who proposed that hand weeding of rice fields
had exerted selective pressure on the variety, driving it to grow upright like
rice rather than spread out along the ground like its close relatives.
Fan’s team collected 328 specimens of barnyard grass from paddy
fields throughout the Yangtze River basin—the epicenter of rice cultivation in
China for centuries—and grew their seeds in a field and in a greenhouse to
determine whether their seedlings had the rice-mimicking phenotype. The
researchers also sequenced each plant’s genome and used the data to construct a
phylo-genetic tree of barnyard grass varieties. The mimic and non-mimic
varieties diverged from each other about 1,000 years ago, the research
team concluded, and the
mimic’s genome showed evidence of selection in 87 genes thought to control
plant architecture. The timeline, the researchers note in their paper,
coincides with intensified rice cultivation in the Yangtze basin during China’s
Song dynasty.
The results are consistent with the idea that humans, through
hand weeding, provided the selective pressure that drove the evolution of the
rice-imitating variety. It’s remarkable that Vavilov’s decades-old predictions
align so well with the data, says Manyuan Long, a
University of Chicago evolutionary biologist who was not involved in the
research but wrote a review of the paper for the site
F1000.com. Fan’s study, he says, is “really wonderful work.” Like Fan, Long
remembers learning about Vavilov as an undergraduate in China in the 1980s.
“Vavilov is my hero in science,” he says, although he notes that he hadn’t been
aware of the idea of Vavilovian mimicry until he read Fan’s paper.
BLENDING
IN: A variety of barnyard grass takes on a rice-like appearance early in its
lifecycle (right), growing upright instead of staying low to the ground like
its close relatives (left).
© JORDAN R. BROCK
Fan’s collaborator on the study, Washington University in St.
Louis plant biologist Kenneth Olsen, says it was
exciting to revisit Barrett’s work with the benefit of modern sequencing
technology. “It’s really satisfying in a way to see these results at the
genetic level and the genomic level,” he says. The results line up nicely with
the known history of rice agriculture, he adds, but the study couldn’t confirm
that the genes found to have been under selective pressure really do control
the rice-like phenotype in barnyard grass. His group is now working on
follow-up experiments to more conclusively determine the relationship between
the mimics’ genes and phenotypes.
Olsen also studies a variety of rice known as weedy rice, an
offshoot of domesticated rice that’s re-adopted some characteristics of wild
plants that farmers find undesirable. Like other weeds, he explains, weedy rice
plants are “aggressive competitors in crop fields. But at the same time, they
aren’t actually wild species; they’re really specifically adapted to these
agricultural environments that we’ve created.” Such a system, he explains, can
lend insight into whether the genes that control certain traits differ between
truly wild rice and domesticated rice with a rebellious streak. “It’s just such
a fascinating phenomenon, this evolution of . . . these weedy species that are
exploiting crop environments,” he says.
As Olsen takes a closer look at barnyard grass genetics, Fan is
planning to apply the approach from their recent study to other species. His
mind still on Vavilov, Fan wants to use genomic sequencing on rye and oat to
see whether their phylogenies show evidence that they were selected based on
mimicry of wheat.
Indeed, the barnyard grass study “adds an impetus to going after
and looking at some of these other cases that had been well documented
phenotypically, but not at the genomic level,” says Elizabeth Kellogg,
a plant geneticist at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis who
collaborates with Olsen but was not involved in the new work. “That is, we
don’t know what specific genes were selected, and I think there [are] clearly
now opportunities to go after those specific genes.”
Shawna Williams is a senior
editor at The
Scientist. Email her at swilliams@the-scientist.com or
follow her on Twitter @coloradan.
Keywords:
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Iran
has been the largest importer of basmati rice from India in recent years. New
Delhi: Prices of basmati rice, cotton and soyabean have dropped by up to 10 per
cent in the last one month as the coronavirus outbreak curtailed overseas
shipments leading to a build-up of stock. Since early February, cotton and yarn
prices in the wholesale market have fallen by 7 per cent, while basmati is
cheaper by 10 per cent and soybean by 5 per cent, according to traders. Basmati
rice and soyabean meal exporters said sales were down at a time when shipments
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Opposed illegal mining, 60-yr-old killed in attack
Kashmir Kaur, daughter-in-law of
Tarsem Singh, was injured in the attack by armed men.
Tribune
News Service
Amritsar,
March 1
A
60-year-old man was killed in an attack by armed men here on Saturday. The
deceased has been identified as Tarsem Singh, a resident of Ajnala. His
daughter-in-law Kashmir Kaur was injured in the incident.
Tarsem
Singh
According
to information, Tarsem had opposed illegal sand mining near his land.
According
to family members of the deceased, when Tarsem was returning home from Dera
Beas, he was attacked by nine persons, including Dalbir Singh, his sons Lakha
Singh and Sukha Singh. When Kashmir came to his rescue, the suspects also
attacked her. The suspects were armed with sharp weapons.Thereafter, they fled
from the spot. After the incident, the victims were taken to hospital where
doctors declared Tarsem dead.
Kamalmeet
Singh, SHO, Ajnala police station, said the body has been taken into custody.
He said the land of the suspects was situated near the land of the victims.
According to information, Tarsem used to believe that the suspects were
involved in illegal sand mining, which was damaging their land. He had even
asked Dalbir and others to do away with illegal mining.
Intoxicants,
mobile seized from prisoners
A
mobile phone and some prohibited material were seized from three prisoners
during a search operation inside the jail on Saturday.
During
an inspection of barrack no. 6, an intoxicating substance, which is suspected
to be heroin, was seized from Rahul Bhatti, alias Laddo, of 88 Feet Road area.
He told the jail authorities he bought the same from Gurbir Singh, alias Manu,
of Brahmpura village in Tarn Taran. Gurbir is also lodged in the same barrack.
While
checking, the authorities seized 48 intoxicant tablets and 10 silver papers
from Gurbir.
A
case under Sections 21, 22, 27, 61 and 85 of the NDPS Act and Section 42 of the
Prisons Act has been registered against both of the inmates.
Investigating
officer Jatinder Singh said the inmates would be brought on production warrant
to ascertain the source of the contraband.
In
a separate incident, a mobile phone was seized from Nishan Singh of Batala Road
area here during a surprise checking in room no. 5 of barrack no. 4. A case
under Sections 42 and 52-A of the Prisons Act has been registered against him.
Man
held for sexually harassing girl
A
man has been arrested on the charge of sexually harassing an eight-year-old
girl. The suspect has been identified as Balraj Singh, alias Kohli.
A
case under Sections 354, 354-A and 506 of the IPC and Sections 8 and 12 of the
POCSO Act was registered against him. He was produced before the duty
magistrate who sent him to judicial remand.
The
victim’s mother told the police that her daughter used to remain silent for the
past couple of days. Worried over it, she asked her the reason for this. The
victim told her that she, along with her friends, had gone to a grocery shop run
by Balraj for buying toffees on Thursday.
She
said Balraj called her daughter inside the shop and sexually harassed her. She
said he also threatened to kill her daughter. Thereafter, the victim’s mother
approached the police.
Ludhiana lawyer is international bar body member
Posted: Mar 02, 2020 06:50 AM (IST)
CHANDIGARH
Ludhiana-based senior advocate
Jasbir Singh Bindra has been admitted as member of the prestigious
International Bar Association having its headquarters in London for the year
2020-21. The International Bar Association is an association of elite members
of legal fraternity. "It is a rare honour for lawyers in India," says
Bindra, who has been in legal practice for 52 years. TNS
Fatehgarh
Sahib
Storage
woes worry rice mill owners
Rice
millers of the state have been facing financial losses. The custom-milled rice
is not being delivered to the FCI, as the latter is facing acute space problem.
Addressing mediapersons here on Sunday, Nakesh Jindal, press secretary, Punjab
Rice Miller's Association, said the association had urged the CM and the Food
Minister to take up the case with the Union Minister of Food and Public
Distribution. TNS
Head
constable suspended for taking bribe
Muktsar: After the video of a head
constable, who was posted at a bus stand police post here, allegedly
taking bribe of Rs 1,000 from a man went viral on social media, the SSP on
Sunday suspended the accused. The accused has been identified as Kulwant Singh.
The head constable had allegedly taken the money in a rash driving case.
TNS
FG warns rice millers, dealers against outrageous price
By m
Murtala Adewale, Kano and Joke Falaju, Abuja
02 March 2020 |
3:55 am
The Minister of Agriculture, Alhaji Mohammad Sabo Nanono, has
warned rice millers and dealers against selling a 50kg bag of Nigeria’s rice
more than N15,000.
He
explained that there is no justification for selling a bag of rice above
N15,000 when the paddies are sourced cheaply from farmers and the cost of
production is minimal.
“I see
no reason why a 50kg bag of rice should be sold for N17,000. The same paddy
rice is sold at N8,500 and maximum processing expense is N2,000, making a total
of N10,500, it is unpatriotic to sell a bag more than N14,000 or N15,000.
“This is
a major challenge and we have resolved to meet with rice dealers and millers
and retail marketers to tell ourselves the truth because we cannot continue
like this as a nation. We need rice not to be sold more than N14,500.
However,
Nanono did not factor another cost such as transportation fare, haulage,
loading and offloading, cost of independent power supply and multiple taxations
from various government agencies, one of the processors explained.
The
minister also disclosed that the appeal from neighboring countries to re-open
the borders is not being positively considered.
Alhaji
Nanono, who spoke at the weekend while inspecting a rice processing facility of
Popular Farms and Mills Limited in Kano, insisted that the government would not
accept the activities of some middlemen and unpatriotic millers to circumvent
progress recorded in rice production.
Nanono,
who said price control on rice might not be a good solution, explained that the
outcome of the meeting would likely crash the price.
He
warned that the trend of selling 50kg of rice at N17,500 was capable of forcing
the country back to the dark days of smuggling and thwarting the achievement of
food security in the country.
He
commended firm for investing over the US $70 million to boost production of
agricultural businesses, especially rice and sesame in Nigeria.
“We will
not accept this because of two implications. If we continue like this, we are
encouraging the return of smuggling and destroying the achievement recorded so
far. There will be a political pressure on government. We would not consider
price control and I will be the last person to go into that. We would consider
moral persuasion first because we don’t see any reason why people should remain
unpatriotic,” he said.
BOC eyes P25-B
rice tariff take in 2020
March 2, 2020
THE Bureau of Customs (BOC) is eyeing a 20-percent increase in
its total rice tariff collection to reach at least P25 billion this year amid
the downside risks posed by the coronavirus outbreak.
Data from the BOC obtained by the BusinessMirror showed the
grand total 2019 rice tariff collection before and after implementation of the
rice trade liberalization law (RTL) reached P21.6 billion from traders who
imported a record-high 3.13 million metric tons (MMT) of rice, making the
Philippines the world’s top rice importer, exceeding China’s 2.4 MMT.
BOC Assistant Commissioner and spokesman Vincent Philip C.
Maronilla said in an interview that a higher rice tariff collection this year
is achievable as the bureau tightens its watch on the valuation of rice imports
this year while the government is implementing RTL.
However, Maronilla said their rice tariff collection this year
would still depend on the rice import volume considering that there was a 61.8
percent year-on-year decline in the volume as of February 14, a development
that may have been partly caused by the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019
(COVID-19).
“As long as the volume increases, I think our collection will
increase. If the volume remains constant, it will increase because you have to
remember, if you take into consideration that will come in from January up to
March, there’s going to be a significant difference from last year’s tariff
rate and volume so our tariff collection will increase,” he said in a phone
interview with the BusinessMirror.
As of February 14, the BOC collected P1.71 billion in tariffs
from traders who imported 209,320 metric tons of rice. The volume is lower than
the 759,810 MT brought into the country during the same period in 2019.
“But of course, this is tentative because we’ll see where the
figure is after all of these things, in terms of the slowdown in the trade
volume, how will this all play in terms of projection in rice imports to the
country,” he added.
Data from BOC also showed rice tariff collection before RTL
settled at P9.28 billion from 1.1 million metric tons of rice imports. On the
other hand, rice tariff collection after RTL amounted to P12.32 billion from
2.03 MMT of rice.
The RTL, which took effect on March 5, 2019, liberalized the
country’s rice trade by removing quantitative restrictions on rice imports and
replacing it with tariffs. It also transformed the National Food Authority into
a buffer-stocking agency.
Tariffs collected from rice imports of private traders since the
enactment of RTL will benefit palay growers as such revenues are earmarked for
the annual P10-billion Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund. The excess of P10
billion collected for RCEF will also be used to finance other programs to boost
the yields of farmers and improve their global competitiveness.
Leading the country’s sources of rice imports last year is
Vietnam with 510,032 MT of rice before RTL and 1.76 MMT of rice after RTL,
according to BOC.
On rice imports coming from Vietnam, the BOC collected P1.93
billion before RTL and P10.75 billion after RTL.
Prior to RTL, the second- and third- biggest country sources of
rice imports in 2019 were Thailand (291,345 MT of rice) and Pakistan (172,729
MT of rice).
After RTL, Myanmar (146,027 MT) and Thailand (118, 545 MT)
followed Vietnam as top sources of rice imports.
Aside from tightening its watch on the valuation of rice
imports, the bureau, Maronilla said, will implement automation programs, and
more streamlined processes this year in a bid to have a more conducive trading
environment.
“It has been our experience that once there is consistency
and if there is a very good trading environment in terms of policies,
streamlined processes, people tend to invest more in bringing in goods and
going into these kinds of businesses like trading and importing raw materials
for manufacturing,” he said.
The United States Department of Agriculture expects the
Philippines to remain as the top rice importer in the world this year as the
country’s purchases are projected to reach 2.5 MMT despite the waning appetite
of traders for the staple.
For 2020, BOC targets to collect P731 billion, 10.6 percent
higher than its goal of P661 billion in 2019.
Citing lower import volume and delay in the implementation of
the fuel-marking program, BOC missed its 2019 collection goal, and only
achieved P630.47 billion or 95.4 percent of the target in 2019.
Farm mechanisation:
Incentive scheme stuck on fund crisis
FE
REPORT | Published: March
02, 2020 10:51:02
-
FE file photo
The
government's programme to provide incentive to farmers for purchasing farm
machinery has become stagnant due to lack of fund, said officials at the
Ministry of Agriculture (MoA).
To boost farm
production and address the issue of scarcity of farm labourers, the government
has put thrust on mechanisation. The government gives incentive to farmers for
purchasing farm machinery, aiming to attain the targeted growth in the
agriculture sector.
But the fund
crisis has forced the authorities to stop providing incentive on farm machinery
since June last, said an official.
"The MoA
sought Tk 4.0 billion from the Ministry of Finance (MoF) in this regard, but
the MoF has recently allocated only Tk 1.0 billion," he said.
He also said
frustration has gripped the officials concerned amid fund crisis, as they are
in the doldrums with such a low amount against high demand.
Agriculture
Minister Dr Abdur Razzaque, however, said his ministry sought Tk 4.0 billion
after taking into account field-level demand and that there is nothing to worry
about incentive.
"I hope
the MoF will provide our expected amount to help continue the country's farm
mechanisation process smoothly."
He also said
the MoA has almost completed compiling data on demand for farm equipment, which
can be published soon.
"We are
focusing on farm mechanisation process to attain food autarky, and to make our
production almost double within 2030."
He opined that
farm mechanisation can also minimise the demand for labourers, whose scarcity
has emerged as a problem in recent days.
"Besides
tractor and power-tiller, farmers are now also interested to use other
machinery such as combined harvester, ripper and rice transplanter etc,"
he added.
Alimul Ahsan
Chowdhury, President of Bangladesh Agricultural Machinery Manufacturers
Association, told the FE that their sales declined by 70 per cent following the
halt in providing incentive.
He said about
21,000 farm machinery manufacturers and sellers in the country are trying to facilitate
the farm mechanisation process. But higher prices of some equipment are
discouraging farmers from buying those.
"For the
last few months, we have been hearing from agriculture officials that fund for
incentive will be released soon."
"Farmers
are now highly interested to buy machinery, if they get incentive facility,
amounting to 30-70 per cent of equipment prices," he noted.
Prof Dr Md
Monjurul Alam of Bangladesh Agricultural University (BAU) said in terms of crop
harvesting mechanisation, use of mini combine harvesters, which cut, thresh and
bag grains simultaneously, has emerged as a game-changing solution to farmers
through saving cost, time and human labour.
The government
should take up measures to raise incentive, as sale of modern equipment such as
combined harvesters and transplanters remains sluggish and much below
expectation.
Besides, local
agriculture sector has almost stopped growing amid lack of proper incentive and
awareness campaign.
Agri officials
should also work to raise awareness among farmers about usefulness of
harvesters, transplanters and reapers etc, he added.
Md Enamul
Haque, head of business development of Metal Pvt Ltd, said at present the
country's farmers are using about 50,000 tractors and 700,000 power tillers,
and these have mechanised 90 per cent of ploughing.
"But use
of ripper, combined harvester or rice planter is very low, which is also
necessary to make total farming process mechanised."
He further
said there is a demand for 100,000 units of combined harvester in the country,
but local farmers have only 1,000 units. Demand for rice planter is 200,000
units, whereas farmers have only 950 units.
China-made
global combine harvester brands, marketed by Metal Pvt Ltd, costs Tk 2.0
million each, which may be available to farmers at a cost of Tk 1.0 million, if
50 per cent subsidy is given.
A rice
transplanter (walking type) can be bought for Tk 350,000 and a reaper for Tk
150,000 with subsidy, he added.
tonmoy.wardad@gmail.com
OCP, IRC raise farmers’
capacity in Adamawa community
2nd March 2020 in Business
OCP Group, a global leader in
phosphate production and plant nutrition, in collaboration with the
International Rescue Committee (IRC), has intervened in critical areas of the
agricultural value chains in Muchalla, a community in Mubi North Local
Government Area of Adamawa State affected by conflict, by boosting the fortune
of 500 smallholder farmers and 119 agro dealers.
Operating through a
first-of-its-kind two-year pilot project, titled ‘Improving Livelihoods and
Agricultural Development for Smallholder Farmers in Nigeria’, which was
launched last year, the duo intervened in three key areas: market and value
chain analysis, strengthening the capacity of agro dealers, and improving
farming practices in rice and maize production.
According to the year-one report,
the key milestones of the project include community engagement meetings,
baseline surveys, establishment of Farmer Field Schools (FFS), demonstration
plots, Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLAs), agribusiness training
for smallholder farmers and distribution of farming inputs.
In the first year, 500 farmers in
the community, made up of 450 women and 50 men, benefitted from the programme,
which targets women and youth. In-kind support from OCP contributed to a 44%
decrease in the number of NPK fertilizer bags purchased by beneficiaries,
significantly reducing the burden on farmers.
In the course of the year, a total
of 2,500 kilograms of rice seeds (Faro-44), 2,500 kilograms of maize seeds
(Summaz 27), 1000 hoes and other farming equipment such as gloves, shovels,
water containers and rakes were distributed to the beneficiaries.
In addition, project participants
benefitted from upskilling programmes in seed germination testing, land
preparation, ridging seed dressing and agro ecosystem analysis.
Soil testing, which helps to
diagnose and optimize soil health, is also a key component of the intervention.
Implemented by OCP Africa, OCP School Labs provide free soil testing to farmers
in remote areas across Africa, and make recommendations for fertilizer
application that take into account specific soil and crop needs.
Under the rice value chain scheme,
two improved parboiling machines were supplied to pilot test modern methods
against the traditional method typically used by the beneficiaries. The report
demonstrated that the new machinery has enabled the beneficiaries, majority of
whom are women, to determine when the boiling process is complete with the aid
of a thermometer.
The 119 agro dealers that
participated in the first half of the scheme were trained in business strategy,
living/operating costs, making/spending money, and product marketing. The
project partners also gave calculators, recordkeeping books and other tools to
facilitate their businesses.
The project has also revealed how
cooperatives and soft loans could help to unlock the capacity of agriculture to
create wealth. The team organised the beneficiaries into 21 VSLA groups to
encourage a saving culture among them and facilitate access to loans.
A total of N12.3 million loan was
accessed by members with 94 per cent spent on farm inputs and agrochemicals.
Odisha Government Organises Krushi
Odisha To Empower Its Farmers
1st March, 2020
‘Krushi Odisha’, the annual flagship five-day exhibition cum
agriculture fair was organised by the Department of Agriculture and Farmers’
Empowerment, Government of Odisha in collaboration with FICCI. The fair was
held from 20-24th January 2020 at Janata Maidan, Bhubaneswar. The mega program
envisages leading farmers to profitability. Krushi Odisha takes into
consideration various aspects of agriculture including farm income, implements,
modern technology in farming, financial assistance to farmers and capacity
building. The second day of Krushi Odisha is being celebrated as Cooperation
and Banking Day.
The highlight of the Cooperation and Banking Day was that it was
celebrated in the evening in presence of Dr Arun Kumar Sahoo, Hon’ble Minister
for Agriculture and Farmers’ Empowerment, Fisheries and Animal Resources
Development and Higher Education, Government of Odisha. A user guide, as well
as a website on e-licensing for farmers, was launched by the Government of
Odisha on the occasion.
The Hon’ble Minister said that Krushi Odisha is an opportune
platform for development and awareness of farmers in the state and that the
Naveen Patnaik-led government is working tirelessly towards enhancing the
farmers’ income. The e-licensing website launched today will immensely help our
farmer brothers. Dr. Arun Kumar Sahoo also visited the exhibition and stalls.
The Chief Guest of the occasion, Sri Ranendra Pratap Swain, Hon’ble
Minister for Food Supplies and Consumer Welfare Co-operation, invoked the
Father of Nation Mahatma Gandhi while addressing the gathering. He said that Gandhiji always talked about
empowering the farmers. He then went on to say that discussion on farmer
suicide mitigation and decreasing dependence on imports for potato and onions
should be made at forums like Krushi Odisha. He extended full support of his
department towards farmer welfare. He also pointed out that while farmers over
the country are facing
losses, farmers in Odisha are seeing an upward trend in their income
and lifestyle, thanks to the farmer-friendly policies of the state government.
The day consisted of two seminars and two pathshaalas running
simultaneously from 10-1 pm and then 2-5 pm respectively. The first seminar of
the day was on ‘Climate Smart Technology’ and ‘Water Resources Management for
Improved Productivity in Agriculture’. The session was moderated by Mr Tapan
Padhy, Director of Water and Forestry Programme, RCDC.
J.K. Rath, Chairman, FICCI MSME Committee, Odisha, introduced
the panel, which included Tapan Padhy, Director of Water and Forestry
Programme, RCDC, Mr Anjan Mandal, Chief of Sales and Marketing, SkyMet Weather,
Dr Sangita Ladha, VP-Marketing and Business Development, Jain Irrigation and
Pushpendra Johari, Sr VP, RMSI Noida.
Tapan Padhy discussed how climate change has outsmarted all of
us and suggested ways and means of carrying out sustainable agriculture in the
time of climate change. Similarly, Anjan Mandal focused on forecasting
technologies for agriculture supply chain management. He elaborated on the app
developed by SkyMet Weather, SkyMitra, which helps in giving local farmers
advance weather forecast in seven languages including English, Hindi, Gujarati,
Marathi, Telugu, Odia and Punjabi. He also informed that SkyMet has put up than
7,000 Automated Weather Stations (AWS) across the country, with over 100 AWS
located in Odisha in Bhadrak, Balasore and Ganjam districts.
Dr Sangita Ladha is an M. Tech from IIT Kharagpur. She delved on
the issues of greenhouse technology and precision farming. She displayed a
video where her team planted a grapevine across 600 hectares of desert in
Israel by using drip irrigation methods. The first paathshala of
the day was on ‘Farm Mechanisation and Micro Irrigation for Minimising
Production Cost’. The paathshala enlightened
the audience on important facts like how Odisha uses power tillers more than
any other state in the country. The paathshala lay
stress on the fact that in order to increase production, we have to increase
usage of farm machine tools from the existing 40 percent to a more advanced 90
percent, like the USA.
The second seminar of the day was on the topic: Sustainable
Solutions for Agriculture in India with Special Focus on Odisha. Dr M
Muthukumar, Director of Agriculture and Food Production, Govt. of Odisha was
present on the occasion. He said that industrialisation and urbanisation have
led to loss of farmland. He also pointed that Odisha has achieved doubling of
farm income, but as we see, farm income has lessened while non-farm income has
increased.
Session moderator Dr. Himanshu Pathak, Director, National Rice
Research Institute (NRRI) welcomed everyone, from scientists to students and
farmers, to the event. He said:
“In India, we have been
cultivating paddy for the last 7,000 years. It has become a part not only of
our food but also our culture. Rice is not just a business, it’s our heritage.
No social or community program is complete without rice and it forms a big part
of society in Odisha, India and in fact the whole of Asia.”
Dr. Arvind Kumar, Director, IRRI, International Rice Research
Institute, South Asia Regional Centre (ISARC), stressed on the need for
transforming a food-deficit Asia to a food secure one. He also said, “I don’t
think there is a trade-off between sustainable agriculture and farmer’s
profitability.”
Likewise, the second paathshala of
the day focused on ‘Risk in Agriculture – Management and Mitigation’. The paathshala educated farmers on
mitigation of problems faced by them right from sowing seeds, to harvesting
their crops, and the insurance policy of the government of Odisha. The day was
concluded by a cultural program that was thoroughly enjoyed by the audience.
Featured image provided by the
author.
Scientists gather to study risk from microplastic
pollution
·
By GILLIAN FLACCUS Associated
Press
This 2013 photo from the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows piece of microplastic foam
debris found along the coast of Alaska, on a person's finger. Scientists are
finding "microplastics" - incredibly tiny bits of broken-down plastic
smaller than a fraction of a grain of rice - everywhere in the environment,
from ocean water to inside the guts of fish and even mixed in with the poop of
sea otters and giant killer whales. Dozens of scientists from around the U.S.
West will attend a gathering this week in Bremerton, Wash., to better focus the
research on the environmental threat. (NOAA via AP)
In
this summer 2018 photo, volunteers with the Puget Soundkeeper Alliance look for
marine debris in Washington state's Puget Sound during an annual clean-up day.
The nonprofit organization has conducted two rounds of extensive water sampling
for microplastic pollution in and around the Puget Sound using "citizen
scientist" volunteers. (Puget Soundkeeper Alliance via AP)
Microplastic
debris that has washed up at Depoe Bay, Ore. Dozens of scientists from around
the U.S. West gathred last week in Bremerton, Wash., to better focus the
research on the environmental threat.
PORTLAND,
Ore. — Tiny bits of broken-down plastic smaller than a fraction of a grain of
rice are turning up everywhere in oceans, from the water to the guts of fish
and the poop of sea otters and giant killer whales.
Yet
little is known about the effects of these “microplastics” on sea creatures or
humans.
“It’s
such a huge endeavor to know how bad it is,” said Shawn Larson, curator of
conservation research at the Seattle Aquarium. “We’re just starting to get a
finger on the pulse.”
Last
week, a group of five dozen microplastics researchers from major universities,
government agencies, tribes, aquariums, environmental groups and even water
sanitation districts across the U.S. West gathered in Bremerton, Wash., to
tackle the issue. The goal is to create a mathematical risk assessment for
microplastic pollution in the region similar to predictions used to game out
responses to major natural disasters such as earthquakes.
The
largest of these plastic bits are 5 millimeters long, roughly the size of a
kernel of corn, and many are much smaller and invisible to the naked eye.
They
enter the environment in many ways. Some slough off of car tires and wash into
streams — and eventually the ocean — during rainstorms. Others detach from
fleeces and spandex clothing in washing machines and are mixed in with the
soiled water that drains from the machine. Some come from abandoned fishing
gear, and still more are the result of the eventual breakdown of the millions
of straws, cups, water bottles, plastic bags and other single-use plastics
thrown out each day.
Research
into their potential impact on everything from tiny single-celled organisms to
larger mammals like sea otters is just getting underway.
“This
is an alarm bell that’s going to ring loud and strong,” said Stacey Harper, an
associate professor at Oregon State University who helped organize the
conference. “We’re first going to prioritize who it is that we’re concerned
about protecting: what organisms, what endangered species, what regions. And
that will help us hone in ... and determine the data we need to do a risk
assessment.”
A
study published last year by Portland State University found an average of 11
microplastic pieces per oyster and nine per razor clam in the samples taken
from the Oregon coast. Nearly all were from microfibers from fleece or other
synthetic clothing or from abandoned fishing gear, said Elise Granek, study
co-author.
Scientists
at the San Francisco Estuary Institute found significant amounts of
microplastic washing into the San Francisco Bay from storm runoff over a
three-year sampling period that ended last year. Researchers believe the black,
rubbery bits no bigger than a grain of sand are likely from car tires, said
Rebecca Sutton, senior scientist at the institute. They will present their
findings at the conference.
Those
studying the phenomenon are worried about the health of creatures living in the
ocean — but also, possibly, the health of humans.
Some
of the concern stems from an unusual twist unique to plastic pollution. Because
plastic is made from fossil fuels and contains hydrocarbons, it attracts and
absorbs other pollutants in the water, such as PCBs and pesticides, said Andrew
Mason, the Pacific Northwest regional coordinator for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s marine debris program.
“There’s
a lot of research that still needs to be done, but these plastics have the
ability to mine harmful chemicals that are in the environment. They can
accumulate them,” said Mason. “Everything, as it goes up toward the top, it
just gets more and more and the umbrella gets wider. And who sits at the top of
the food chain? We do. That’s why these researchers are coming together,
because this is a growing problem, and we need to understand those effects.”
Researchers
say bans on plastic bags, Styrofoam carry-out containers and single-use items
like straws and plastic utensils will help when it comes to the tiniest plastic
pollution. Some jurisdictions have also recently begun taking a closer look at
the smaller plastic bits that have the scientific community so concerned.
California
lawmakers in 2018 passed legislation that will ultimately require the state to
adopt a method for testing for microplastics in drinking water and to perform
that testing for four years, with the results reported to the public. The first
key deadline for the law — simply defining what qualifies as a microplastic —
is July 1.
And
federal lawmakers, including Sen. Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, and Sen.
Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, last week introduced bipartisan
legislation to establish a pilot research program at the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency to study how to curb the “crisis” of microplastic pollution.
Larson,
the conservationist at the Seattle Aquarium, said a year of studies at her
institution found 200 to 300 microfibers in each 100-liter sample of seawater
the aquarium sucks in from the Puget Sound for its exhibits. Larson said those
results are alarming.
“It’s
being able to take that information and turn it into policy and say, ‘Hey, 50
years ago we put everything in paper bags and wax and glass bottles. Why can’t
we do that again?’” she said.
Ominously rising
foodflation needs medium to long-term strategy to improve agricultural
productivity
/ Monday, 2 March 2020 01:40
The long-term solution to
foodflation is to improve productivity and yield levels in main agricultural
crops in the country – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
Foodflation raising its ugly head
As at end-January 2020, both price indices that record Sri
Lanka’s consumer price levels have shown a sudden upsurge mainly due to
increases in food items, a situation known as ‘foodflation’. The Colombo
Consumers’ Price Index or CCPI that covers only the consumers in the Colombo
District accelerated 6.2% by end-February compared to the price levels that had
prevailed a year ago. While non-food items had recorded an increase of only
2.9%, the food items had increased by 14.7%, up from 6.3% two months ago.
Following the same trend, Sri Lanka’s National Consumers’ Price
Index or NCPI that covers the whole island too recorded an increase of 7.6% by
end-January, compared to 1.2% a year ago. Of this, the non-food items rose only
by 3%, while food items steeped by 13.7%, up from again 8.6% a month ago.
According to NCPI, the main culprits have been vegetables, coconuts, red onions
and fresh fish which had recorded a sharp increase compared to their levels in
December 2019.
In Colombo District, in addition to these four culprits, the
prices of three popular varieties of rice too had recorded sharp increases
compared to the prices that had prevailed a year ago. Against this foodflation,
the consolation for consumers had been the slower rise in the non-food items that
had been included in the indices. That component in NCPI constitutes 56% of a
consumer’s budget.
This time, it isn’t a seasonal issue
Food prices are seasonal and therefore with the expected entry
of the Maha crop to the market in about two months’ time, they could be
expected to reverse. However, in this year, in addition to the seasonal
factors, they have been adversely affected by the prolonged drought and warm
weather conditions in most of the food producing areas in the country. This is
also shown by the reversal, by the end of the year, of the downward trend in
the producer prices which had been the salient feature till mid-2019.
According to the Producer Price Index or PPI compiled by the
Department of Census and Statistics, the prices faced by the agricultural
producers continued to fall till August 2019. Accordingly, the index value for
this sub-category which stood at 160 in December 2018 fell to 138 by August
2019. But since, then, it took a sharp upward trend ending at 162 by December.
This is a 17% increase in the agricultural producer prices in the last four
months of the year.
Though we do not have the later data on producer prices, the
increasing trend portends that agricultural prices will continue to be high for
a few months more, despite the entry of the Maha crop to the market. This is
bad news for the government and sweet-music for the opposition, since Sri
Lanka’s voters are mostly driven by emotions surrounding the stomach and not by
rational views that rule the head.
Suggestion to eliminate the middleman
The reaction of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, fondly called
Gota, to this unwarranted increase in food prices happens to be based on his
firm belief that prices are high because of monopolistic manipulation of prices
by a few wholesalers. Addressing the officials of the Ministry of Mahaweli
Development and those from the Trade Ministry, he is reported to have directed
them to intervene in the market and put an end to the ongoing price increases
(available at:
http://www.ft.lk/news/President-orders-immediate-steps-to-control-vegetable-prices/56-696483).
He has drawn their attention to the structural issues in the
vegetable market in the form of vegetables being transported to specially
established wholesale markets – known as special economic centres such as
Dambulla – from producing areas and then being re-transported to those areas
for use by consumers. In this two-way transit, according to Gota, a large
quantity of vegetables gets destroyed causing vegetable prices to remain high
even when the supply conditions may have improved significantly.
He has also suggested that lands belonging to the state,
especially those assigned to plantation companies, should be used to cultivate
vegetables thereby increasing their supply to the market. But this cannot be
fulfilled before the elections and therefore, it can be considered as a medium
to long-term remedy to the problem.
It is generally believed that a few large-scale paddy millers operate
in the market as an oligopoly and control both the quantity and the price of
rice to the detriment of paddy farmers as well as rice consumers. This
‘anti-middlemen sentiment’ is being cultivated among even the students studying
in the commerce stream. I have observed that one of the most popular items
performed by commerce students on stage in their Commerce Day Events is a short
drama depicting the curse of the middlemen in the market. This is despite the
fact that they themselves train to be middlemen, since commerce means buying
and selling, the job of the middlemen
The charge against so-called oligopolistic paddy-millers
The general perception of many is that the middlemen are
exploiting both the producers and consumers. As a result, they claim that
producers are getting a price lower than what they should get. At the other
end, consumers are paying a price higher than what they should generally pay.
Hence, the suggestion is either to eliminate the middlemen or handover the
middlemen’s functions to a governmental authority. This charge is specifically
levelled against the middlemen who are operating in the paddy/rice markets in
the country.
It is generally believed that a few large-scale paddy millers
operate in the market as an oligopoly and control both the quantity and the
price of rice to the detriment of paddy farmers as well as rice consumers. This
‘anti-middlemen sentiment’ is being cultivated among even the students studying
in the commerce stream. I have observed that one of the most popular items
performed by commerce students on stage in their Commerce Day Events is a short
drama depicting the curse of the middlemen in the market. This is despite the
fact that they themselves train to be middlemen, since commerce means buying
and selling, the job of the middlemen.
The exploitation theory not supported by evidence
This popular claim is not borne out in empirical evidence. Two
economics dons attached to the University of Colombo – S.M.P. Senanayake and
S.P. Premaratne – have worked backward from the retail price of rice in two
markets in the Western Province in 2012 – one in Kirulapana and the other in
Gampaha – to the price received by paddy farmers to identify the margins earned
by each participant in the rice/paddy value chain in Sri Lanka. This they had
done in a paper submitted to Australia-South Asia Research Centre in 2016.
In both cases, out of the price paid by consumers, paddy farmers
have collected between 80 and 82% of the final price. The balance has been
earned by wholesalers, retailers, millers, transport agents and collectors in
the supply chain. The cost of processing by the miller has been about 7%, while
his margin has been only 3% of the final price paid by consumers.
In the case of vegetables, the comparison of the farmgate price
with the market price paid by consumers reveals that there is a price-gap of
about 40%. However, this high price gap is due to the high transport costs, on
the one hand, and the high waste of vegetables, estimated to be around 40%, in
transit, on the other. An improvement in post-harvest handling systems through
improved technology will certainly reduce this high waste costs, thereby
narrowing the price gap significantly. It would benefit both the producer and
the consumer.
Foodflation causes an increase in the
cost of living of people. In the case of the present increases in food prices,
the increase in the expenditure by a consumer on food items from end-August
2019 to end-January 2020 has been Rs. 2,010, according to NCPI. It records an
increase of 11% on the food budget of a consumer over the budget as at
end-August 2019. This is a significant increase and intolerable by an average
consumer in the country
Foodflation increases the cost of living
Foodflation causes an increase in the cost of living of people.
In the case of the present increases in food prices, the increase in the
expenditure by a consumer on food items from end-August 2019 to end-January
2020 has been Rs. 2,010, according to NCPI. It records an increase of 11% on
the food budget of a consumer over the budget as at end-August 2019. This is a
significant increase and intolerable by an average consumer in the country. To
relieve the consumers of the high cost of living two measures can be taken by
the government. Immediately, it can increase the market supply by permitting
imports to come into the country.
However, since there is a time lag of about one month for any
imported food item to reach the market, the relief to consumers will be
delivered not earlier than early April. But, by that time, the Maha crop will
come to the market and if the market is inundated by both the locally produced
food items and imported ones, the prices would fall worsening the conditions of
the local farmers. Hence, the decision to import food items should have been
taken some time in November last year and, therefore, it is too late to resort
to that strategy now.
The other strategy is a medium to long term strategy to increase
the productivity and the output in food items so that the market would be kept
supplied by a bigger quantity of food items in line with the increase in the
population. The improvement in the productivity in food items is essential to
keep the costs of production in check and prevent them from percolating to the
markets through an increase in the supply prices.
A technical report covering all the subsectors in the
agriculture sector
A technical report released in May 2018 and authored by Verite
Research for the National Planning Department and the European Union on Sri
Lanka’s agriculture sector has listed out the measures to be taken in the
medium to long-run to improve both the productivity and the output. It is a
comprehensive report covering all the subsectors in Sri Lanka’s agriculture:
paddy, field crops, vegetables, fruits, tea, rubber and coconut, sugar,
floriculture, inland fisheries, livestock and agroforestry.
The previous government did not consider it necessary to
implement these strategies despite it being commissioned by it. As a result,
Sri Lanka has already lost nearly two years without a comprehensive
agricultural implementation strategy. In this background, the present
government run by Gota cannot ignore it since the problem has hit the country
head-on today. The longer the country would postpone the implementation of
these measures, the worse would be the destiny of its agriculture sector.
Rice paradox: produce more and become bankrupt
Rice is a part of Sri Lankans’ DNA and therefore, early measures
are needed to address the existing issues faced by the sector in the style of a
‘rice paradox’. With low productivity, the paradox faced by Sri Lanka’s paddy
farmers is that when the harvest is bountiful, they become bankrupt due to
prices falling below the production costs. Hence, it is to the benefit of
farmers if the country’s rice output is low.
However, this does not sit well with consumers who are great
rice eaters compared to their counterparts in other major rice eating
countries. On average, a Sri Lankan eats about 110 kg of rice a year, compared
to a world average of just 54 kg. Hence, it is necessary to resolve the paradox
in the rice sector if it is to sustain.
Diversify the use of rice
The permanent solution lies in improving the yields of rice
farmers, on the one hand, and creating a demand for rice as an industrial
input, on the other. The former will help farmers to beat the rising costs of
production. The latter will facilitate Sri Lanka to absorb a glut in the
market, use it to produce industrial goods and export such goods since it
cannot export its short grain rice as a food item. If there is no surplus of
rice for industrial use, such surplus can still be generated if Sri Lankans learn
to eat less rice and more meats and fats.
Even a reduction in average per head consumption by, say 20 kg,
will generate a sufficient surplus of about 42 million kg of rice for this
purpose. These are long term strategies based on proper awareness, changes in
relative prices of rice as against meat and inventions made through the
development of science and technology base of the country. The science part is
the handiwork of a new subject area called ‘biotechnology’ which has now been
added to the curricula of some state universities and private higher learning
institutions.
Rice: the water guzzler
The problem with rice compared to maize or corn is that it is a
‘water guzzler’. In farming, paddy fields are flooded by water and about a half
of that is lost through seepage and percolation. It is the balance half which
is used by the rice plant for its own purposes, known as evaporation and
transpiration.
The researchers at the Manila based International Rice Research
Institute or IRRI have computed, after verifying a vast amount of data
collected from field surveys conducted throughout the globe, the amount of
water used by rice plant to produce 1 kg of rice. Total flooding of the paddy
fields from sowing to harvesting will use about 2500 litres of water to produce
1 kg of rice. About a half of this is lost through seepage and percolation;
accordingly, the real use of water by the rice plant to produce 1 kg of rice is
about 1432 litres (available at:
https://www.scribd.com/document/34622848/Rice-Today-Vol-8-No-1).
Imagine the price of rice if water is costed at one rupee per
litre. Fortunately for consumers, water is supplied to rice farmers almost free
of charge either through rains or government sponsored irrigation schemes. But,
shortage of water due to droughts will affect both the production and
productivity of rice farmers. This is a serious problem in many rice producing
nations like China, India and Sri Lanka.
Developing drought resistant paddies
Scientists in IRRI and in leading universities are now engaged
in developing water-efficient paddy cultivation methods. IRRI has come up with
an ‘alternative wetting and drying’ method. In this method, a field is flooded
for a few days and after that water is used up, kept it dry for a few more days
before it is flooded again. This method is to save about 30% of water normally
used in paddy farming without affecting the rice yield.
Another method suggested is sprinkling water to the field
producing ‘aerobic rice’ just like watering a leafy vegetable field. This would
save water up to 50%, but there would be a reduction in the output by about 30%
(available at:
http://irri.org/blogs/bas-bouman-s-blog-global-rice-science-partnership/does-rice-really-use-too-much-water).
Hence, it is useful in cultivating paddy in relatively
water-scarce regions. But scientists in the University of Western Australia or
UWA have attempted at developing a new rice variety which is drought resistant
so that it could alleviate the drought-stress experienced by paddy plants
(available at:
https://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/en/publications/advances-in-drought-resistance-of-rice).
This is the best method of cultivating rice in arid places like Hambantota or
Mannar districts in Sri Lanka.
The solution lies in improving farmer productivity
The long-term solution to foodflation is to improve productivity
and yield levels in main agricultural crops in the country. For this, Gota
needs a medium to long-term strategy. The current approach outlined by him has
been to win the elections by pacifying both the consumers and farmers. While
keeping it as the immediate objective, Gota should assemble all the
stakeholders in the agriculture sector of the country to a common platform and
get them to implement a comprehensive agriculture reform strategy targeting
medium to long-term.
(The writer, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri
Lanka, can be reached at waw1949@gmail.com.)
Research
underpins rice industry future
DPI Southern Cropping director
Deb Slinger said the one day event, Research
now for tomorrow’s rice, is a collaboration between the department,
Ricegrowers Association of Australia, SunRice, AgriFutures Australia and Rice
Extension.
NFA to buy same level of palay this year
Updated
By MADELAINE B. MIRAFLOR
Agriculture Secretary William Dar wants National Food
Authority’s (NFA) palay procurement for this year to be at the same level as
last year’s, which was valued at ₱14 billion.
Dar said that NFA, an attached agency to the Department of
Agriculture (DA), will continue to have a critical role in addressing the low
palay prices, which was one of the negative impacts of Rice Tariffication Law
or Republic Act (RA) 11203.
“We are again strengthening the measures. Last year, ₱14 billion
worth of palay was bought by NFA. We expect the same amount for this year,” Dar
said.
Through a roll-over scheme, NFA purchased as much as 760,000 metric tons (MT) of rice last year, some of which was sold and distributed simultaneously so that the state-run grains agency won’t face an oversupply. This is also despite the fact that the agency only had a budget of ₱7 billion.
Through a roll-over scheme, NFA purchased as much as 760,000 metric tons (MT) of rice last year, some of which was sold and distributed simultaneously so that the state-run grains agency won’t face an oversupply. This is also despite the fact that the agency only had a budget of ₱7 billion.
Last year, NFA was stripped off of its regulatory functions as
part of the implementation of RA 11203. Its role was reduced to buffer stocking
for calamities and national emergencies.
But because palay prices extremely went down and the overflowing
supply of imported rice failed to significantly bring down the retail cost of
rice in the local market, NFA still continued to buy palay at ₱19 per kilogram
(/kg) as well as sell rice at ₱27/kg in select poor areas in the country.
At that time, the agency’s daily average procurement rate was
recorded at 125,754 bags per day. NFA also relaxed its requirements so more
farmers will be able to sell to the agency.
At present, individual farmers can sell a maximum of 200 bags on
their first walk-in transaction with the NFA. They only need to fill up a
Farmer’s Information Sheet (FIS) for records purposes.
Due to the high volume of palay deliveries in NFA warehouses and
buying stations, the food agency was also prompted to lease private warehouses
for extra storage. This was the case in Abra, Ilocos Sur, La Union, Eastern and
Western Pangasinan as of November last year.
Dar said that streamlining of NFA’s operations as part of RA
11203 will finish within this year. It was in May last year, two months after
the implementation of RA 11203, when the restructuring at NFA began. As much as
839 NFA employees were supposed to be retrenched.
On international rice trading, NFA has stopped processing of
documents for rice importation and issuance of rice import permits for private
importers as well as the conduct of bidding for government importation.
On the domestic front, the NFA also ceased licensing and
registration of grains businessmen, monitoring and inspection of rice
businesses and facilities, and enforcement of grains trading rules and
regulations, among others.
Is your food actually gluten-free?
CITIES Updated: Mar 02, 2020 00:19 IST
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