DD
Indonesia's rice stockpile is secure for up to Nov -official
APRIL 23, 2020 / 3:21 PM
JAKARTA, April 23 (Reuters) -
* Indonesia’s rice supply is expected to remain at a
“secure” level up to November, the Trade Ministry’s director general of
domestic trade Suhanto told parliament on Thursday
* He said Indonesia is expected to have an additional 19.8
million tonnes of new rice supply between March and August from harvest, citing
an outlook from the Agriculture Ministry
* Suhanto said that would add to around 3.3 million tonnes
currently in the stockpile, while rice consumption up to August is expected at
around 15 million tonnes
* Rice stockpile and the expected new supply are “sufficient
to meet demand up to November. Rice supply is secure,” he said. (Reporting by
Bernadette Christina Munthe Writing by Fransiska Nangoy; Editing by Toby
Chopra)
https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL3N2CB2R9
Report: Rice prices rise slightly, while corn, cotton and
soybean farmers face historic lows
AGRICULTURE
by George Jared (gjared@talkbusiness.net) 22 hours ago 306 views
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COVID-19 continues to loom over the world’s cotton industry
and other crops have a gloomy outlook, according to a report by agricultural
economists with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. One
bright spot might be rice, with the price and number of planted acres rising
this spring.
In addition to COVID’s impact on the global markets,
Arkansas’ crop producers have two other worries. The first includes the
extended periods of wet conditions and waves of severe weather that have
damaged farms and shut power down to large swaths of the state for days at a
time. The second is the lingering fear that COVID will affect the health and
availability of on-farm labor.
“The next issue I see potentially coming up are issues
associated with workers becoming ill and not having the manpower,” said Jarrod
Hardke, extension rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture. “Most do not
have sufficient crews to withstand loss of personnel, but if more cases begin
increasing in the farming community these operations are going to be extremely
burdened getting fields prepared and planted. I’m starting to encourage growers
to make their ‘what if’ plans for these scenarios.”
The report, published online, was produced by Scott Stiles,
extension economist, Brad Watkins, professor, Bob Stark, professor based at the
University of Arkansas-Monticello, and Alvaro Durand-Morat, assistant
professor.
According to a report released by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture on March 31, Arkansas farmers were projected to plant 800,000 acres
of corn, a 4% increase from the previous year. Cotton acres were projected to
drop by 5% to 590,000 acres and soybean acres were projected to be up 9% at 2.9
million acres. Peanuts are projected to rise by 3% to 35,000 acres, while rice
acres were projected to jump by 21% to 1.4 million.
Acres in many crop sectors are expected to grow, but recent
commodity prices are a mixed bag at best.
Rice prices in the U.S. remain strong with cash paddy prices
ranging from $14.25-$15.00 per hundredweight. New crop future prices increased
slightly by 0.5% and closed at $12.11 the week of April 13. Thai 5% broken long
grain rice was quoted at $572 per ton the week of April 13, running at least
$100 above competing Asian countries. In India and Pakistan, COVID-19 is
putting a drag on the countries’ export capacity.
Corn futures were down 2% last week. Arkansas cash corn
price bottomed last Wednesday at $3.27 per bushel before rising to a closing
statewide average of $3.32 on Friday (April 17).
Soybean futures prices were down 2.8% last week, closing at
$8.51 per bushel for the week of April 17. Despite a midweek recovery before
Easter, prices slid to an $8.30 closing average on April 17.
“Cotton prices remain under pressure as the U.S. Department
of Agriculture projects global cotton consumption to fall to a six-year low and
world ending stocks to reach five-year highs,” Siles said.
In its April supply and demand estimates, USDA expects the
U.S. 2019-20 season-average farm price to be 59-cents per pound.
“Over the past four weeks, applications in the U.S. for
unemployment benefits have swelled to more than 22 million people,” Stiles
said. “This likely translates into a massive drop in textile and apparel sales
and a significant impact on the global textile sector overall. Anecdotal
evidence in recent weeks indicates that growers are still evaluating planting
decisions and, in some instances, reducing cotton acreage.”
“Alternative corn and soybean crops are seeing prices at
historically low levels, however, they might offer advantages in terms of lower
production costs and less intensive management,” Stiles said.
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https://talkbusiness.net/2020/04/report-rice-prices-rise-slightly-while-corn-cotton-and-soybean-farmers-face-historic-lows/
Spoiling Rice in Vietnam Show Perils of Food Protectionism
By Mai Ngoc Chau
23 April 2020, 02:00 GMT+5Updated on 23 April 2020, 14:08
GMT+5
•
Some 300,000 tons of rice are stuck at ports nationwide
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The owner of one of Vietnam’s biggest rice exporters, Nguyen
Quang Hoa, can only watch as 500 containers of sticky rice stranded in a port
container yard for a month slowly degrades.
He’s furloughed 400 factory workers, but his losses keep
growing. If he doesn’t ship the 12,500 tons of rice soon, he’s worried his
Chinese clients will reject it, and his company will be forced to default on
$13 million in bank loans.
“We may have to throw away all the sticky rice, and spend more
money getting rid of it,” said Hoa, director and founder of Duong Vu Co. “My
company is teetering on the edge of collapse.”
Hoa is one of more than 100 traders in Vietnam hurt by a
government measure last month to restrict shipments on concerns that global
demand will spike as the coronavirus upends supply chains. While the world’s
third-biggest rice exporter has since reopened some trade, hundreds of
thousands of tons of spoiling rice at the country’s ports show the dangers of
curbing exports.
In an effort to ease some of the bottlenecks at ports, the
customs department on Thursday said it is resuming exports of glutinous rice.
The shipments will not be part of this month’s rice export quota, according to
a statement on its website. There would be no limits placed on the April
shipments of sticky rice, the trade ministry said on its website.
Midnight Registration
Less than three weeks after suspending overseas shipments on
March 24, the Vietnamese government said it would allow 400,000 tons of exports
in April. To do so, traders had to submit customs declarations, with
registration opening at midnight on Saturday April 11.
Within three hours, the export quota was full, according to
local news. Many were unable to register, and an estimated 300,000 tons are
still stuck at ports, according to Pham Thai Binh, chief executive at exporter
Trung An High-Tech Agriculture Co., who sits on the Vietnam Food Association’s
governing board.
The trade ministry, which oversees exports, was unavailable
to comment.
If the rice isn’t shipped, the companies involved will
struggle to survive, the Vietnam Food Association said in a state newspaper.
Even with the April quota deducted, there’s still about 1.3 million tons of
contracted undelivered rice, according to Bloomberg calculations.
Additionally, uncertainty over whether the government could
restrict shipments again is holding back traders from signing new export deals.
No new contracts have been signed, even after the export halt was lifted,
according to the Vietnam Food Association’s Binh.
Tough Predicament
“Over 100 rice exporters are in financial trouble as
thousands of rice containers have been ensnared at ports,” said Binh, whose
firm was also unable to sign up for rice exports in April, and has more than
100 containers of rice trapped at ports since March 24.
A farmer works in a paddy field in Can Tho.
Photographer: Hoang Dinh Nam/AFP via Getty Images
In Can Tho, a city in Vietnam’s rice belt, officials
estimated that a majority of its rice exporters have been losing as much as
$14,000 a day each on damages paid to shipping companies, container fees, and
fines for being unable to fulfill export contracts, according to Tien Phong
newspaper.
Vietnam’s handling of the situation has drawn criticism,
with the food association urging the government’s customs department to stop
opening the registration for customs declarations at midnight like it did this
month. Many traders signed up to ship large amounts even though they didn’t
have enough volumes ready for exports, Vietnam News reported.
In response, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc ordered an
investigation into profiteering as well as whether there has been any
wrongdoing in the state’s management of rice exports. The government also
directed the trade ministry to bring forward some of May’s export quotas to
this month, adding 100,000 tons for April shipments.
The Vietnam Food Association and rice firms on Wednesday
urged the government to terminate the export quotas from May to facilitate
traders’ shipments and purchases from farmers, local news website BNews
reported, citing a meeting held by the trade ministry.
The Southeast Asian country has shipped 127,600 tons of rice
this month through April 23 out of 400,000 tons registered by traders,
according to the customs department’s website. Nearly 700,000 tons of rice was
exported from Vietnam a year earlier, the customs data show.
More Curbs?
The trade ministry has been ordered by the premier to submit
its rice export plan for next month before April 25. It also proposed that the
country ship 2.7 million tons of rice to help farmers, without specifying if
the amount is meant for this year.
But concerns over the outlook for exports is only growing.
National rice stockpiles, the very reason the export ban happened in the first
place, have failed to grow to the state’s target levels due to a spike in
domestic prices, raising speculation the government could intervene again.
Low-quality rice shipments, which account for about 1/5 of total shipments, may
be halted until mid-June to help build inventories.
“We’ve stopped signing new contracts. How can we know if we
are able to deliver?” said Nguyen Van Thanh, director of rice exporter Phuoc
Thanh IV Co. “Vietnam is offering our export market to other rice producers,
and we traders will have to restart from scratch after everything settles
down.”
— With assistance by Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen
(Updates to add customs decision to allow resumption of
glutinous rice exports in the 5th paragraph.)
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-22/spoiling-rice-in-vietnam-ports-show-perils-of-food-protectionism
Bernas assures stability of rice price and supply
Bernama
April 23, 2020 00:35 am +08
KUALA LUMPUR (April 22): Padiberas Nasional Bhd (Bernas)
will ensure the price stability and adequate supply of rice even as the nation
battles against COVID-19.
In a statement today, the national foodgrain management
agency said while the price of rice had surged in the global market due to the
pandemic, it was committed to monitoring and ensuring the market price of the
commodity here remains stable and affordable.
“As stated by the Agriculture and Food Industry Ministry and
other relevant Ministries, food security and supply in the country are under
control. The staple food of Malaysians is easily available and the retail price
of rice remains as it was prior to the COVID-19 outbreak,” Bernas said.
It also said it had maintained the prices set for
wholesalers for the local white rice and imported rice.
Bernas said it would bear the extra cost of rice or
operations to maintain the stability of the market price.
It said this in response to a report which quoted the Malay
Economic Action Council (MTEM) as saying rice millers and wholesalers were
complaining of being squeezed by a “rice import cartel”.
Bernas refuted the statement by MTEM that it received a
subsidy on rice imports and that such imports were being monopolised by the
Agriculture and Food Industry Ministry.
https://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/bernas-assures-stability-rice-price-and-supply
Rice trade to slash prices
PUBLISHED : 23 APR 2020 AT 09:04
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
WRITER: PHUSADEE ARUNMAS
Packaged rice manufacturers and distributors yesterday
agreed to cut their prices by as much as 50%, as requested by the Commerce
Ministry.
This is the second campaign initiated by the ministry to
lower the prices of goods to help people during the coronavirus crisis.
On April 16, the ministry requested consumer goods makers,
distributors and modern trade operators lower prices by 5-58% to help reduce
living costs during the pandemic.
The campaign starts with six categories covering 72 items
from March 16 to June 30.
The six categories in the campaign are food and beverage;
frozen finished food; seasoning sauce; daily-use products; body care products;
and cleaning products.
Six versions of packaged rice including Hom Mali rice 100%,
premium Hom Mali rice and premium fragrant rice are part of the first campaign.
In the second round of the sales campaign started yesterday,
running until the end of June, an additional 98 items from 18 manufacturers and
distributors will have prices cut by as much as 50%.
Commerce Minister Jurin Laksanawisit said apart from
products in the first and second campaigns, the ministry has assigned the
Interior Ministry to add items in the following rounds. He also expects more
manufacturers to participate in special sales campaigns to help reduce living
costs for consumers hurt by the pandemic.
Somkiat Makayatorn, honorary president of the Thai Rice
Packers Association, predicted packaged rice prices to increase further after
domestic rice prices rose by 20-30% since the start of the year, mostly due to
drought and a sharp rise in demand because of the pandemic.
The price of milled rice, which is used as a raw material in
packaged rice production, has risen to 15 baht per kilogramme from 12.50 baht
in early January.
The price of milled rice is expected to continue increasing
until August or September, before the release of the new harvest into the
market, said Mr Somkiat.
He said the worst drought in 40 years is responsible for
farmers reporting a decrease of 1.5-2 million tonnes of milled off-season rice.
Despite the short-term demand surge, domestic rice
consumption is expected to drop this year as foreign tourists veer away from
Thailand.
https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/1905445/rice-trade-to-slash-prices
Bernas urged not to ration rice supply in Sabah
APRIL 23, 2020,
THURSDAY AT 9:42 AMSABAH
Azuwan
KOTA KINABALU: Syarikat Padiberas Nasional Berhad (Bernas)
has been urged not to implement rationing of rice supply on wholesalers in
Sabah.
National Youth Council Vice President Azuwan Marjan @ Norjan
said he was informed by rice wholesalers that Bernas had started rationing its
supply to them since April 13.
Bernas’ move has resulted in a shortage in the rice supply
for domestic use especially during the Movement Contol Order and the coming
Ramadhan, he alleged.
Azuwan said the MCO which has entered into its third phase
has caused the demand for rice, which is a food staple of Malaysia to increase
adding that in March, it was 30 per cent higher than before.The rationing by
Bernas means wholesalers in Sabah are unable to supply rice to retailers,
Azuwan said in a statement on Wednesday.
On average, rice wholesalers gets about 20,000 metric tonnes
of rice from Bernas a month.“With the increase in demand, why should Bernas
implement rationing in supply?” he asked adding that other than supplying to
retailers, rice wholesalers have also received requests from corporate
companies, NGOs and individuals who are actively donating food aid to the needy
during the MCO.
https://www.theborneopost.com/2020/04/23/bernas-urged-not-to-ration-rice-supply-in-sabah/
Govt to beef up rice and palm oil reserves
THIHA KO KO 23 APR 2020
Photo: Aung Htay Hlaing/The Myanmar Times
The government is planning to beef up the national rice and
palm oil reserves for emergencies in case the COVID-19 outbreak drags on.
The Ministry of Commerce (MOC) announced in an April 22
statement that it will buy and stockpile 50,000 tonnes of rice and 12,000
tonnes of palm oil as reserve food for emergencies. It also added that the
ministry will purchase the items at a reasonable price.
“We would like to inform the public that there is no need to
worry about the supply of rice. We have sufficient supply of rice in the
country. The government is planning to buy 10 percent of the amount of rice
exports, which is 50,000 tonnes,” commerce minister U Thant Myint said.
The MOC said it has already received funds to procure the
supplies needed.
The ministry is also working on the national reserve food
plan with the private sector as well as the Union of Myanmar Federation of
Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Myanmar Rice Federation and Myanmar Edible
Oil Dealers’ Association.
https://www.mmtimes.com/news/govt-beef-rice-and-palm-oil-reserves.html
Indian rice rates ease as rupee flounders, labour woes hit
Bangladesh
APRIL 23, 2020 / 7:39 PM /
Eileen Soreng
BENGALURU (Reuters) - Rice export prices in India eased from
a eight-month peak this week on the rupee’s record fall, while the coronavirus
lockdown has raised concerns about a shortage of labour to harvest the summer
crop in neighbouring Bangladesh.
FILE PHOTO: A worker spreads rice for drying at a rice mill
on the outskirts of Kolkata, India, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Rupak De
Chowdhuri/File Photo
Top exporter India’s 5 percent broken parboiled variety was
quoted $374-$379 per tonne this week, down from $375-$380 per tonne quoted last
week.
“The lockdown has been limiting the movement of paddy and
milled rice,” said an exporter based at Kakinada in southern state of Andhra
Pradesh, adding that demand from African countries had been good.
India extended a lockdown on its 1.3 billion people until at
least May 3 as the number of coronavirus cases exceeded 20,000.
The Indian rupee hit a record low this week, increasing
traders’ margin from overseas sales.
In Bangladesh, where the lockdown has been extended until
May 5, harvesting of the summer rice crop varieties could be affected due to a
shortage of labourers.
If this persists, Bangladesh could miss its target of 20
million tonnes for the “Boro” summer variety rice crop this season,
agricultural ministry officials said.
Boro contributes more than half of Bangladesh’s typical
annual rice output of around 35 million tonnes.
Meanwhile in Vietnam, rates were nominal since exporters
were not ready to sign new contracts, given uncertainty over whether they can
ship the rice due to the government’s export quota, a Ho Chi Minh City-based
trader said.
However, prices for 5% broken rice were quoted at $440-$450
per tonne - their highest in nearly two-years. “Buyers are not willing to sign
contracts as they are not sure if they can buy,” the trader said.
The Vietnamese government said on Wednesday it would raise
its white rice exports quota for April to 500,000 tonnes from 400,000 tonnes.
Traders said the 500,000 tonnes of rice to be exported this
month were not enough to cover contracts signed before the government
introduced a ban on rice exports in March.
Thailand’s benchmark 5-percent broken rice prices were
quoted at $530-$556, wider from last week’s $530-$538.
Traders say rice prices have not fluctuated much as demand
has been steady with no major deals in sight.
“Many Thai exporters are waiting to see how the return of rice
exports from competitors like Vietnam will impact prices and demand, after the
disruption from the COVID-19 pandemic,” a Bangkok-based rice trader said.
Disruptions to sale by major exporters like Vietnam and
India earlier this month raised the price of Thai rice to their highest level
since April 2013.
Concerns over possible shortages of rice supply due to the
ongoing drought continue to impact prices as well, traders said.
https://in.reuters.com/article/asia-rice/indian-rice-rates-ease-as-rupee-flounders-labour-woes-hit-bangladesh-idINKCN2252HJ
Wheat production set to surpass rice output for first time
Published: April 23, 2020 12:40:51 AM
According to the second advance estimates for crop year
2019-20 (July-June), the rice output is seen at 117.47 million tonne and wheat
at 106.21 million tonne.
Backed by the bumper production, the states have geared up
plan to purchase 40.7 million tonne of wheat this year for the central Pool,
the food ministry said in a statement.
The country’s wheat production is set to surpass the rice
output for the first time this year, according to feedback the Centre has
received from the states. The food ministry has been informed by wheat-growing
states that production of the rabi-grown cereal may be 118.41 million tonne,
11.5% higher than the estimate of the agriculture ministry. Due to unseasonal
rains and hailstorms in March, there were concerns over the wheat crop.
According to the second advance estimates for crop year
2019-20 (July-June), the rice output is seen at 117.47 million tonne and wheat
at 106.21 million tonne. The estimates, released by the agriculture ministry in
February, also pegged the food grain output at record 291.95 million tonne.
Backed by the bumper production, the states have geared up
plan to purchase 40.7 million tonne of wheat this year for the central Pool,
the food ministry said in a statement. The procurement which has commenced from
April 15 will continue until June 30 in most of the states except Bihar, where
it is slated to continue till July 15 due to late harvest. Punjab and Gujarat
have fixed the procurement schedule till May-end.
The rabi rice procurement has also been fixed at a record
level of 11.29 million tonne, out of which more than half will be from
Telangana as the state has decided to buy the entire 6.2 million tonne of
winter-grown crop from farmers.
https://www.financialexpress.com/market/commodities/wheat-production-set-to-surpass-rice-output-for-first-time/1936995/
Price of rice records a sharp increase in Tiruchi
C. Jaisankar
TIRUCHI, APRIL 23, 2020 20:29 IST
Most retail and grocery stores in Tiruchi sell one kg of
high quality Ponni rice at ₹60
a kg. | Photo Credit: M_SRINATH
‘Upward revision is due to high cost of transportation’
Despite availability of sufficient stocks of paddy with rice
mills, price of rice has recorded sharp increase in the retail market in
Tiruchi.
On an average, the price has gone by ₹6 -12 a kg of boiled rice, depending on the
quality and variety. In retail rice stores and grocery shops in Tiruchi, one kg
of Mannachanallur Ponni (old) variety was sold between ₹56 and ₹62.
The price of Mannachanallur ponni (new) was hovering between ₹45 and ₹50.
Before the imposition of lockdown, one kg of Mannachanallur
Ponni (old) was sold at ₹48
-54 and new rice was sold at ₹42-46.
Prices of Andhra and Karnataka ponni have also gone by ₹5-6 a kg. Similarly, the rates of idly rice have
also risen by ₹5 a kg.
“Most retail and grocery stores in the city sell one kg of
high quality Ponni rice at ₹60
a kg. The rate is ₹56 in
a few stores. The upward revision is due to high cost of transportation of
rice,” says Manikandan, who runs a grocery store in Cantonment.
However, except a few old varieties of rice, the rates in
Mannachanallur, where about dozens of rice mills are located, remain unchanged
for the last five months. Though the supply chain was disrupted for a week
after the lockdown, it was restored quickly with the intervention of the State
government.
Due to sharp increase in prices of rice, several consumers
visit Mannachanallur to buy rice directly from the mills.
M. Sivanandan, who owns a rice mill at Mannachallur, told
The Hindu that the number of consumers from Tiruchi, who visited Mannachallur
to buy rice directly from the mills, had gone up sharply over the last few
days. It was mainly due to a big difference in price.
Industry sources attributed the price rise to a section of
retailers, who have created an “artificial shortage” of rice in the wake of
curfew restrictions. Some traders, who have taken, advantage of restriction in
business hours and business days, have increased the prices.
Industry sources further said that there was no reason for
price rise in the near future as rice mills have piled up stocks. Moreover,
farmers also have a huge stock. The current price would likely to continue up
to the year end.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Tiruchirapalli/price-of-rice-records-a-sharp-increase-in-tiruchi/article31417421.ece
Rice growing localities, exporters want export limits
scrapped
Update: April, 23/2020 - 08:30
Harvesting rice in the Mekong Delta. Rice growing localities
and exporters have urged the Government to resume rice exports without setting
limits. — VNA/VNS Photo
HCM CITY — Officials from many localities in the Cửu Long
(Mekong) Delta and rice exporters have urged the Government to resume rice exports
without setting limits, saying many firms face difficulties because of this.
Speaking at a conference in HCM City on April 22 they also
exhorted the ministries of Industry and Trade and Finance and the customs
department to quickly clear the consignments of rice exports stuck at ports.
The Government recently lifted a ban on rice exports, but
capped them at around 400,000 tonnes each in April and May citing national food
security concerns amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
On April 12, the General Department of Customs began
accepting online customs declarations from rice exporters, but many were left
disappointed since the quota of 400,000 tonnes was reached in just three hours.
Some hundreds tonnes of rice are now stuck at ports.
Lê Minh Đức, director of the Long An Province Department of
Industry and Trade, said: "Last year, we sat together to discuss solutions
to boost rice exports, but this year we discuss whether to export or not. This
is abnormal, especially in the context that rice output this year has not
decreased despite being affected by drought and saltwater intrusion."
As the COVID-19 pandemic rages globally, demand for rice has
increased in many markets, and Việt Nam should pay attention to this
opportunity, he said.
"In the current situation, we have recommended the
Government should allow export of rice without applying limits.”
Nguyễn Ngọc Nam, chairman of the Việt Nam Food Association,
said: “As of April 18, rice inventory at member companies was 1.94 million
tonnes. Enterprises had signed contracts to export 1.7 million tonnes with
delivery until June. If they fulfil the contracts, they will still have more
than 200,000 tonnes in stock. Besides, the summer-autumn rice crop is about to
be harvested.
“Therefore, we have petitioned the Government to allow
normal rice exports from May.”
Trương Quang Hoài Nam, deputy chairman of the Cần Thơ City
People’s Committee, agreed with Đức and called for allowing exporters who
submitted customs declaration forms in March to ship their rice and enabling
firms with consignments stuck at ports to complete customs clearance.
"Firms in the city had shipped 76,181 tonnes of rice to
ports. They submitted customs declarations for more than 46,000 tonnes in
March. But all consignments are stuck at ports."
Trần Hồ Hiền of the Bình Định Food Joint Stock Company
(Bidifood) said his company had nearly 10,000 tonnes stuck at Mỹ Thới Port
because customs lost its customs declaration form.
His company has been suffering heavy losses since it has to
meet VNĐ200 million a day (US$8,476) for a month in unexpected expenses, he
said.
"Our company is in danger of collapse.”
He sought the help of the ministries of Industry and Trade
and Finance.
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Trần Quốc Khánh, who
chaired the conference, called on customs to help Bidifood and other companies
in similar circumstances clear their consignments as soon as possible.
He admitted that there have been difficulties for
businesses, but the recent changes in rice export regulations were due to
concerns related to food security and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic and
saltwater intrusion.
Localities in the Mekong Delta have reported a bumper
winter-spring crop, and farmers in the north have also started harvesting their
rice crop, which has not affected by pests as earlier feared.
Based on this, his ministry would recommend that the
Government should adjust the rice export regulations from May, he promised. —
VNS
https://vietnamnews.vn/economy/715704/rice-growing-localities-exporters-want-export-limits-scrapped.html
GIEWS Country Brief: Benin 23-April-2020
Source
• FAO
23 Apr 2020
Originally published:23 Apr 2020
Origin:View originalDownload report(PDF | 390.69 KB)
FOOD SECURITY SNAPSHOT
• Planting of
2020 main season maize ongoing in south under normal moisture conditions
• Above
average 2019 cereal crop harvested
• Prices of
coarse grains overall stable in March
• Pockets of
food insecurity persist
Start of 2020 cropping season in south follows timely onset
of rains
Following the timely onset of seasonal rains in the south,
planting of yams was completed in March, while planting of the main season
maize crop is ongoing and will be completed by the end of April. The harvest of
yams is expected to start in July, while harvesting operations of maize will
start in August. Planting of rice crops, to be harvested from August, is
underway. The cumulative rainfall amounts since early March have been average
to above average in most planted areas and supported the development of yams
and maize crops, which are at sprouting, seedling and tillering stages. Weeding
activities are normally taking place in most cropped areas. In the north,
seasonal dry weather conditions are still prevailing and planting operations
for millet and sorghum, to be harvested from October, are expected to begin in
May June with the onset of the rains.
In April, despite the ongoing pastoral lean season, forage
availability was overall satisfactory in the main grazing areas of the country.
The seasonal movement of domestic livestock, returning from the south to the
north, started in early March following the normal onset of the rains in the
south. The animal health situation is generally good and stable, with just some
localized outbreaks of seasonal diseases, including Trypanosomiasis and
Contagious Bovine Peripneumonia.
Above average 2019 cereal crop harvested
Harvesting activities for the 2019 rainfed and irrigated
crops was completed by end January. Favourable rainfall across the country and
adequate supply of inputs by the Government and several NGOs benefited the 2019
national cereal production, estimated at 1.9 million tonnes, about 5 percent
above the five year average.
Cereal import requirements for the 2019/20 (November/October)
marketing year, mostly rice and wheat for human consumption are estimated at
400 000 tonnes, about 20 percent below the previous year and 17 percent below
the average. The country usually re exports rice to neighboring Nigeria to
cover household consumption needs. Following the closure of the border with
Nigeria imposed by the Nigerian Government since late 2019, traders are unable
to re export their rice stocks into Nigeria. This will likely result in the
decline of the quantity imported by the country.
Stable food prices due to increased supply
Most agricultural markets are well supplied following the
commercialization of newly harvested crops and the relatively high level of
carryover stocks from the previous year. Prices of maize have been broadly
stable since the start of the harvests in October on account of good domestic
availabilities. Prices of imported rice were also relatively stable due to the
regular supply from the international markets.
Pockets of food insecurity persist
Despite overall favourable food security conditions, some
vulnerable households need external food assistance. According to the March
2020 “Cadre Harmonisé” analysis, about 14 500 people (less than 0.5 percent of
the population analysed) are estimated to need food assistance from June to
August 2020, below the level of 20 000 food insecure people in June August
2019. The main drivers of food insecurity are localized crop shortfalls in 2019
due to floods, mostly in northern areas, including Alibori and Donga regions.
COVID-19 and measures adopted by the Government
In view of the evolving COVID 19 situation, the Government
has decreed a total country lockdown. The Government has also taken some
sanitary, social and economic measures, including the free diagnosis and
treatment of all suspected and confirmed cases of COVID 19. Official
restrictions on population movements, combined with heightened levels of fear,
have led many people to stay at their homes. Although these measures have not
affected access to food, further restrictions on population movements could
hamper access to land and have a negative impact on 2020 agricultural
production. In addition, the measures taken by the Government to limit
population movements in 15 high risk communes in southern parts of the country
could lead to atypical price increases for basic foodstuffs.
Primary country
• Benin
Other country
• Nigeria
Source
• Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
https://reliefweb.int/report/benin/giews-country-brief-benin-23-april-2020
No need to control food prices – Agric Minister
Source: Naa Sakwaba Akwa
23 April 2020
12:21pm
The Minister of Food and Agriculture has dismissed calls for
government to regulate food prices to curb hikes, in the wake of the
coronavirus pandemic in the country.
At a press briefing in Accra Thursday, Dr. Owusu Afriyie
Akoto said, government is putting in place measures to ensure there is enough
food in the system, therefore, price controls are not necessary at the moment.
“There is no need to control prices, absolutely no need. The
market is working, farmers are working.
“I think that the open pricing system that this government
is following shows the kind of confidence that we have that we will be able to
supply food to the market for consumers at very reasonable prices,” he added.
As residents of Accra, Tema, Kumasi and Kasoa rushed to
purchase food items before a partial lockdown in March – which has now been
lifted – food prices soared.
This resulted in the sharp rise in the prices of food items
like gari. An ‘Olonka’ (a local unit of measure) of gari which used to sell at
₵5.00 was sold at ₵25.00.
The prices of tomatoes and other staple food items shot up
by more than 100 percent, prompting calls for government to step in and put in
place a standard price regime.
But the Agric Minister says he is not a believer of
controlling prices.
The move, in his view, creates “an artificial environment
for the misallocation of resources. That is the very simple economic reason why
I do not believe in controlling prices.
“In any case, we are talking about nearly three million of
farm produce, hundreds of thousands of traders, small and large in the market.
We see the teeming numbers of market women and men, how do you go about
controlling prices,” he queried.
But to ensure that there is an abundance of food, Dr Akoto
said governemnt has distributed improved seeds to farmers across the country to
expand their yield.
In the case of rice, he said the country was rarely
self-sufficient before the current administration took over.
However, from less than 150,000 metric tonnes, the country
in 2019 harvested 665,000 metric tonnes of rice and government is targeting a
harvest of between 750,000 and 800,000 metric tonnes for 2020.
“I am saying these figures with confidence. It is the amount
of improved seeds that we supply to farmers that we use to do these
extrapolations. We have moved from supplying 1,600 metric tonnes of improved
rice seeds to 4,600 to 6,600 and last year we distributed close to 9,000 metric
tonnes of seed.
“So we are ramping up the amount of improved rice seeds we
are giving to farmers. You cannot compare the yield of the improved seeds to
the traditional seeds…it is double. So the farmer who was harvesting four bags
per acre or so, is now dong more than that…some are doing eight and nine bags
and it is attracting a lot of interest into the seed business in this country
and also farming of rice seeds,” he added.
Dr Akoto said government is hoping to do more through the
supply of mills to rice-producing communities ,so the farmers themselves can
mill rice before it goes on to the traders.
https://www.myjoyonline.com/news/national/no-need-to-control-food-prices-agric-minister/
Labour shortage likely to hit Bengal rabi paddy harvest
Shobha Roy Kolkata |
Updated on April 23, 2020 Published on
April 23, 2020
Govt trying to remedy situation with mechanical harvesters
Harvesting of boro paddy in West Bengal, set to begin in
about a week, is likely to be hampered by labour shortage as most of the
workers have gone to their villages following the pandemic scare.
The State government is trying to deal with the manpower
shortage by deploying additional combine harvesters.
Govt arrangements
According to Pradip Kumar Mazumder, Chief Advisor (Agriculture)
to the Chief Minister, the State has close to 2,500 combine harvesters and it
tried to induct some more just before the Covid-19 lockdown was imposed. Local
labourers are available for harvesting and some migrant labourers, who got
stuck at potato harvesting, will also be used for harvesting of boro paddy.
“We are keeping our ears to the ground. Depending on the
situation, we have to take decisions but as of now, we feel the situation is a
manageable, if not comfortable,” Mazumder told BusinessLine.
West Bengal produces 15-16 million tonnes of paddy annually
in three seasons; that include aus, aman and boro. The kharif paddy (aus and
aman) output accounts for about 70 per cent of the total production in the
State. Boro paddy is usually cultivated on land which has canal or irrigation
facility. The sowing of boro paddy, just like that of potato, was staggered
this year on account of unusual weather conditions.
Though harvesting will begin by next week, it will peak by
April-end or early May.
Cost escalation
While the use of combine harvesters will ensure that
harvesting is not hampered much, it will push up the cost of production.
“Many paddy cutting machines have been brought from north
Indian States such as Punjab and Haryana. In a normal year, if 50 per cent of
harvesting is done by machines, this year it would be 90 per cent. It will
increase the cost of paddy sold to millers, which will ultimately result in
higher prices for rice,” said Suraj Agarwal, CEO, Tirupati Agri Trade.
The overall cost of harvesting is likely to increase by
around 20 per cent. The rental cost of machines are high due to the lockdown.
Labour cost is also likely to double due to the shortage. This apart, the
transportation cost of paddy from farms to warehouses and then to rice mills
will also be higher.
Procurement
Paddy procurement will begin in the first week of May. The
Bengal government usually offers incentivised MSP to people coming to
procurement centres to cover the cost of transportation. In view of the
Covid-19 situation, the State government is also considering the possibility of
picking up paddy from farmers’ houses, if need arises.
“If the lockdown continues in May, transportation could be
an issue. The Chief Minister has instructed that we plan to pick up paddy from
far-flung villages and gram panchayats. The additional cost of procurement will
be borne by the State and we are preparing for that,” Mazumder said.
According to Sushil Kumar Choudhury, President, Bengal Rice
Mills Association, mills are yet to receive “clear guidelines” from the State
government on procurement.
Mobile app
The government is also mulling the possibility of rolling
out a mobile application for farmers to place requests for collection of
foodgrain from their doorstep.
“Usually the BDO informs farmers in a particular village
about rice mills starting their procurement. Now this would be facilitated
through a mobile app. However, we need to see how adept the people in villages
are when it comes to technology adoption,” Choudhury said.
Published on April 23, 2020
Fresh export orders for tea, basmati from Iran, China and
Russia
West Asian nations led by Iran have also placed orders for
basmati rice, but traders are likely to miss the crucial Ramzan period, April
23-May 23, as it takes 40-45 days to ship the consignments.
By Sutanuka Ghosal
, ET Bureau|Last Updated: Apr 23, 2020, 10.24 AM IST
Basmati rice (File Photo)
KOLKATA: Iran, China and Russia have placed fresh orders for
Indian black tea in the midst of the Covid-19 outbreak, a boost for the
domestic industry which has incurred losses of about 100 million kg of teas
owing to the lockdown. West Asian nations led by Iran have also placed orders
for basmati rice, but traders are likely to miss the crucial Ramzan period,
April 23-May 23, as it takes 40-45 days to ship the consignments.
Mohit Agarwal, director, Asian Tea, told ET: “There is good
demand from Iran for orthodox teas. Their banks have opened and payments for
the earlier consignments are coming. Exporters are buying privately since the
auction centres are yet to open.” Prices of tea have firmed up by 7-8% compared
from that a year ago, to Rs 280-300 per kg, he said.
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/foreign-trade/fresh-export-orders-for-tea-basmati-from-iran-china-and-russia/articleshow/75312806.cms?from=mdr
Domestic Usage Report Benefits All
The Market Year 2018-2019 Domestic Usage Report Survey has
been issued to RMA members. Following
successful updates of the 2017-18 report, the DUR Subcommittee agreed to
continue using the same questionnaire going forward, and asks that completed
forms be returned by May 1.
The updated report provides an accurate and representative
picture of the domestic U.S. rice industry.
The entire U.S. rice industry benefits from a comprehensive DUR report,
and USA Rice encourages maximum participation from mill members. Gaining a solid perspective on current market
conditions and market segment shipments helps identify opportunities for
growth.
For more information, please contact Jesica Kincaid.
USA RICE DAILY
A Return to Normal for California Rice Planting
By Jim Morris
SACRAMENTO, CA -- Tractors are working ground and the first
airplanes are flying seed in the Sacramento Valley, marking the first normal
start to planting season in several years in California.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said
grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County.
"The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good
head start. We are now waiting for
Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather
later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more
rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide
acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home
order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the
essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps
to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a
six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a
station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to
work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California,
with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
A Return to Normal for California Rice Planting
By Jim Morris
SACRAMENTO, CA -- Tractors are working ground and the first
airplanes are flying seed in the Sacramento Valley, marking the first normal
start to planting season in several years in California.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said
grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County.
"The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good
head start. We are now waiting for
Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather
later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more
rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide
acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home
order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the
essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps
to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a
six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a
station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to
work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California,
with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
USA RICE DAILY
Could Changing the Way We Farm Rice Be a Climate Solution?
Farmers are on focusing on ways to reduce methane emissions
and save water to further reduce the staple crop’s climate footprint.
BY LISA HELD
Climate, FARMING
April 23, 2020 | Leave a Comment
This article is published in partnership with Covering
Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the
climate story.
Rice may be having a moment. Until recently, the average
American ate only about a half a pound of the grain annually, while people in
some Asian countries eat upwards of eight pounds a year. By early March,
however, one data firm found that sales of rice and other staples were up 84
percent. And, as significant questions have arisen about the short-term future
of meat production, this grain could become a more significant part of the U.S.
diet.
As one of only a few commodities grown in the U.S. that go
directly to feed people, rice also has a much smaller environmental footprint
than many other foods.
“People underestimate rice. It’s a small grain,” says Meryl
Kennedy, who is the daughter of a Louisiana rice farmer, the CEO of Kennedy
Rice Mill, and the founder of 4Sisters Rice. During a pandemic, however, it can
feed a lot of people efficiently.
But rice farming isn’t perfect. In fact, global rice
production accounts for at least 10 percent of agricultural emissions. It’s
responsible for producing large quantities of methane—a greenhouse gas that’s
24 times more potent than carbon dioxide. But, as it turns out, that’s more a
factor of quantity than it is about growing method. Rice provides one fifth of
the world’s calories, and research shows that, per calorie, it actually has one
of the lowest emissions footprints compared to meat, fruit, vegetables, wheat,
and corn.
Now, there is growing attention to practices that further
reduce the climate impact of rice. And, given that it is the fourth largest
crop grown in the world, those changes could amount to a significant climate
solution.
In the 2020 Drawdown Review, which analyzes the impact of
various climate solutions across industries using the latest scientific
research, the nonprofit thinktank Project Drawdown includes two methods of
shifting rice production.
“Both of these solutions are about how you can grow rice
most sustainably. This is a shift from conventional to an improved way of rice
cultivation,” said Dr. Mamta Mahra, a senior fellow at Drawdown in
biosequestration modeling. “The point is: If we’re already growing rice, why
not see how much emissions can be reduced?”
Rice Production Today
According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), rice is the fourth largest crop in the world. If adjusted
to account for how much is eaten by people, it would probably rise in the
ranks, since corn and sugarcane are both also used to produce biofuels.
China’s farmers far and away grow the most. The U.S. ranks
twelfth in global rice production, and the vast majority happens in six states:
Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. In 2019,
American rice farmers harvested about 18 billion pounds of rice from just under
2.5 million acres. About half of that rice is exported, primarily to Mexico,
Central America, and Northeast Asia, to feed global appetites that are bigger
than those in the U.S.
“The U.S. produces more rice than we eat,” said Kennedy. “I
hope that that changes in my lifetime.”
‘Improved Rice Production’
What is gradually changing is how the industry is thinking
and talking about its environmental impact. Last year, USA Rice, which
represents the industry, published a 64-page sustainability report. And this
week, it announced new sustainability goals, pledging to reduce both water use
and greenhouse gas emissions by 13 percent by 2030.
Most rice in the U.S. is produced on thousands of acres that
are flooded for the entire season. Flooding controls weeds and serves other
purposes, like making nutrients in the soil available to the plant. But it
requires a lot of water, and microbes that live in the soil beneath flooded
fields produce methane, which is then released by the plants.
An Arkansas rice farm. (USDA Photo by Lance Cheung)
Reducing the amount of time that fields are flooded, then,
serves two purposes: conserving water and reducing emissions. That’s one of the
primary practices involved in what Project Drawdown classifies as “improved
rice production.”
In the Southern U.S., a growing number of farmers are using
a method called alternate wetting and drying (AWD). Studies have found that
depending on how often and for how long farmers drain their fields, the
practice can reduce methane emissions by as much as 65 or even 90 percent. AWD
is not widespread, though, and it’s not yet clear how it affects yields.
Kennedy said other methods of water conservation like furrow
irrigation (also called row rice) and tailwater recovery, which allows farmers
to reuse water multiple times, are more popular.
There is also evidence that some rice farmers are tilling
their soil less, another approach that reduces emissions. According to USA
Rice’s report, a study out of Louisiana found that the number of rice farmers
using low- or no-till methods increased from 26 to 41 percent between 2000 and
2011.
Breeding new strains of rice can also help farmers implement
these practices and has the potential to directly reduce emissions. Anna
McClung has been researching rice varieties since 1991 and is the director of
the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Dale Bumpers National Rice
Research Center in Arkansas.
Her team uses a sophisticated form of traditional breeding
that tracks existing genes within plants. Researchers in other countries have
used genetic modification to modify rice for resistance to climate change, but
there is currently no GMO rice approved for production in the U.S.
“Our current research plan is 80 percent focused on …
climate change,” McClung told Civil Eats. Drought and extreme heat threaten
rice crops, and her team is looking at traits and varieties that can withstand
those conditions while supporting new farming methods. “Water is being used to
control weeds, but it also provides this uniform growing environment so the
plant can do its best,” she explained. “If you go to a system where you’re not
keeping the field flooded, but all of your varieties have been optimized for
flooding, that’s not going to work.”
McClung’s team has also compared methane is production based
on the variety of rice grown. “We saw big differences in the amount of methane.
Rondo has about 2.5 times the methane released as the next variety, Jupiter.
And about 5 times the methane released as the other three rice cultivars,” she
said. “The question is: why?” More research on that front may yield discoveries
that allow farmers to plant low-methane rice varieties.
More growers are choosing to grow rice using organic
practices. USDA data show a 5,000-acre increase between 2008 and 2016, and USA
Rice’s report says organic production has “increased six fold in the past 20
years.” But there is little research on how organic systems compare in terms of
emissions.
At Lundberg Family Farms in California, Bryce Lundberg’s
parents were growing organic rice before there was a national organic standard.
His family started milling its own rice in 1969, and he started farming with
his brother in 1985. Today, the family grows about half of the rice they sell
and sources the rest from other farmers, the vast majority of whom are nearby.
Eighty percent of the rice they sell is organic; the rest
meets a standard they call eco-farmed. “There’s no burning of rice straw,
there’s a requirement for rotation. There’s only one insecticide approved…and
several herbicides, but none of them can be in the danger [category],” he said.
“It can’t be a carcinogen. It can’t be a mutagen. It can’t be on PAN’s ‘bad actor’
list. It can’t be a broad-based killer that would affect frogs, snakes, fish.
It can’t persist in water.”
The approach his parents took, he adds, was based on their
“wanting to work closely with nature, and not poison the place where they farm
or the place where they live.”
On organic rice farms, skipping synthetic fertilizers and
herbicides (which are widespread in conventional rice farming) is a strategy
that can result in healthier soil, which may hold more carbon. Without weed
killers, however, flooding becomes even more important. Lundberg controls weeds
by flooding fields to kill grasses and then drying fields out for months to
kill aquatic weeds. The system ends up looking like a version of AWD, and
Lundberg said U.C. Davis has been working with the company on research that
shows it does reduce methane emissions because the plants and soil spend less
time immersed in water. They hope to release the study by the end of this year.
System of Rice Intensification
To Norman Uphoff, all of these improvements are small
compared to the benefits of a revolutionary system called System of Rice
Intensification (SRI).
Uphoff is the senior advisor for SRI-Rice, an international
network and resource center out of Cornell University, where he has taught
since 1970. SRI was developed in Madagascar in the 1990s as a method for
smallholder farmers to feed themselves using fewer resources.
Unlike in conventional systems which involves “broadcasting”
seeds (basically, dropping them from a plane) all over a flooded field, farmers
using the SRI system plant rice seedlings in a grid pattern in dry soil, with
space between them. They spread compost to build soil health (although some
also use synthetic fertilizers) and then use an alternating wet-dry irrigation
system instead of flooded fields. They control weeds with rotary weeders or by
hand, rather than use herbicides.
Rice planting under the System of Rice Intensification.
(Photo courtesy of Lotus Foods)
“The plant will grow to fill available space,” Uphoff
explains. “If the roots can grow freely, with not too much water and enough
organic matter, you get more root growth and more tiller growth.” Tillers are
like the branches of the plant; when there are more of them, each plant can
produce more rice.
A number of studies over the years have shown SRI can
produce high yields—usually from 20 to 50 percent higher—compared to
traditional flooded paddy systems, while saving money on inputs. A
meta-analysis done in 2013 found SRI management resulted in 22 percent less
water use. Several studies have also shown that SRI leads to significant
reductions in methane emissions, and while it does increase emissions of
nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, the net greenhouse effect is
still positive.
Uphoff said farmers in 60 countries are using SRI today,
with about 20 countries leading the charge. “We estimate that at least 20
million farmers are using these ideas in full or in part—enough so that they’re
getting improvements in their crop performance,” he said. Most U.S. farmers,
however, have shied away from the practice.
“Our primary concern has been for farmers in poor countries.
U.S. rice production is highly capitalized and subsidized,” he explained. The
idea of cutting a plant population by 80 or 90 percent, isn’t likely to be
popular here, he adds. “The people who make their livelihood on…seeds,
fertilizers, and herbicides don’t want to hear about this.”
There are a few examples of small American farms using some
of SRI’s principles to grow “dryland” rice. Blue Moon Acres in New Jersey is
well known in the Northeast, and Next Step Produce and Purple Mountain Organics
are pioneering their own processes in the Mid-Atlantic. California-based Lotus
Foods also sells rice produced by smallholder farmers around the world using
SRI.
But for the vast majority of rice production—which is
large-scale—sources said farmers brush SRI off as impractical, especially
because it tends to be labor-intensive. Uphoff said the missing piece is
specialized equipment, and if that mechanization existed, there would be no
reason not to apply it on a larger scale.
Project Drawdown, for its part, presents the two approaches—promoting
SRI among smallholder farmers around the world while using other techniques on
large-scale farms—as complementary solutions with real potential. In other
words, with so much rice in the world and a rapidly changing climate, all
efforts to shrink this important grain’s footprint are worth the effort.
https://civileats.com/2020/04/23/rice-farming-has-a-huge-carbon-footprint-could-it-become-a-climate-solution/
Int'l researchers fear double blow
Covid-19 threatens hike in food prices, supply chain disruptions
________________________________________
FE REPORT |
Published: April 23, 2020 09:19:12 |
Updated: April 23, 2020 13:08:28
Boro farmers
returning home with the newly-harvested paddy in Bashkuta village under Sadar
upazila in Magura, May 09, 2018. — FE/Files
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR) identified a number of emerging concerns in the country's food
production and supply chain system during Covid-19 pandemic that require
immediate attention.
"Notable reduction in the availability of perishable
foods, including vegetables, fruits, and fish, which are crucial for health and
nutrition" is among the concerns, according to a CGIAR statement released
on Wednesday.
It said farmers are beginning to face challenges in selling
perishable goods at reasonable prices, as the government has put the entire
country on lockdown to stop spread of Coronavirus pandemic.
CGIAR said despite measures to control prices, foods along
with some crucial commodities are becoming unaffordable, especially for the
poor in urban areas.
"Social distancing measures appear to be slowing down
ongoing horticultural and Boro crop harvests, and delay in maize harvest looms
as a near-term concern." The statement further said trucks are permitted
to transport agricultural inputs and produces. But, informal and courier
transport services that play a key role in input supply and food distribution
are suffering.
The livestock, poultry, and aquaculture sectors are
suffering, as their supply of essential feeds and veterinary services has been
disrupted, and these sectors are experiencing unprecedented shocks, CGIAR
noted.
It also expressed concern, as reduced food and labour demand
by food processors, supermarkets, eateries, restaurants and hotels are, in turn,
impacting hundreds of thousands in the service industry.
To improve the food production and supply situation, the
organisation also offered a set of suggestions, including enhanced permission
for transportation.
"Enhanced permission for transportation is required to
assure the flow of food items from rural to urban areas as well as the flow of
crucial inputs to farmers through market systems."
CGIAR also said ample supply of horticultural, fish and
livestock products should be guaranteed in addition to the staple foods, rice
and wheat to provide diverse, nutritious and safe diets for all.
It urged the government to take some measures, including
minimising impacts on farmers' incomes from high input and labour costs,
supporting flow of remittance and cash flow to rural areas, and expanding
access to finance options for farmers. CGIAR opined that increased social
safety-net measures will be required to support both rural and urban poor
consumers.
It further stressed on the need of action plans to support Bangladesh's
food systems in response to international trade restrictions. "Even
partial closure of ports may result in high prices and limited stocks of
pulses, edible oils, wheat, and crucial feed supplies."
CGIAR added that prolonged suspension of international trade
could undermine the future supply of key inputs (particularly phosphorous and
potassium fertilisers, vaccinations, pesticides, and fuel) at reasonable
prices.
Bangladesh country heads of International Food Policy
Research Institute, International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CMMYT),
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), WorldFish and International Food
Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), constituents of CGIAR, signed the statement.
bdsmile@gmail.com
https://thefinancialexpress.com.bd/trade/intl-researchers-fear-double-blow-1587611952
[Interview] Lockdown throws up challenges for quarantine of
plant samples for research
by Sahana Ghosh on 22 April 2020
• The
International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) said that while the world
battles COVID-19, plant pests, and diseases continue to pose a threat to food
production, stressing we must not let our guard down.
• Quarantine
processes for samples of plant materials brought into the country for research
purposes have been impacted due to the novel coronavirus disease
(COVID-19)-associated lockdown, according to the National Bureau of Plant
Genetic Resources (NBPGR) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research.
• In an
interview with Mongabay-India, NBPGR scientists discuss the challenges in plant
quarantine for research samples under the lockdown, the gaps in plant
biosecurity in India and implications for a post-COVID world.
The International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC), an
inter-governmental treaty signed by 184 countries, dubbed it an “unfortunate
coincidence” that during the International Year of Plant Health (IYPH) in 2020,
the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) global outbreak is “showing the world
how adopting preventive measures is essential to secure countries from the
introduction and spread of devastating human diseases.”
IPPC, aimed at protecting the world’s plant resources from
the spread and introduction of pests and promoting safe trade, said that the
COVID-19 pandemic is proving that prevention is always better than cure, and
this applies to the health of humans, animals, and plants.
India is a signatory to the IPPC, which stresses while the
world battles COVID-19, plant pests, and diseases that continue to pose a threat
to food production, must not slip through the cracks.
In the past, India like the rest of the world has seen the
devastating effects resulting from diseases and pests introduced along with the
international movement of plant material, agricultural produce, and product,
experts have said. Among these are examples like coffee rust introduced in Sri
Lanka in 1875 and its subsequent introduction in India in 1876; fluted scale
(sap-sucking insect) on citrus introduced from Sri Lanka in 1928; San Jose scale
in apple introduced into India in the 1930s; and bunchy top of banana
introduced from Sri Lanka in 1943.
The COVID-19 associated lockdown in India has posed
challenges to scientists involved in quarantine processing of samples of plant
materials that are brought into India for research purposes. Quarantining these
samples prevents the entry of exotic pests during import.
These small samples are of immense quarantine importance
because they usually comprise of germplasm material or wild relatives or landraces
of a crop and are thus more likely to carry diverse biotypes/ races/ strains of
the pest.
In India, the National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources
(NBPGR) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), New Delhi,
undertakes quarantine processing of germplasm including transgenic planting
material imported into the country for research purposes and issues
phytosanitary certificate for research material meant for export. Phytosanitary
certification is an official declaration by the exporting country attesting
that consignments meet phytosanitary import requirements-stating that plants
and plant materials are free from pests and disease. In a year, at least
100,000 (one lakh) samples are examined by NBPGR in quarantine processes.
In an interview with Mongabay-India, Kuldeep Singh,
director, NBPGR and S.C. Dubey, head and principal scientist, division of plant
quarantine at NBPGR, discussed the challenges in plant quarantine for research
samples, the gaps in plant biosecurity in India, the solutions and implications
for a post-COVID world.
How do plants and plant products enter India? What is the
role of NBPGR in plant biosecurity?
In India, the entry of plants or their parts is in two ways.
The bulk import for commercial use and consumption is being monitored by the
Directorate of Plant Protection Quarantine and Storage (DPPQS), Faridabad,
Government of India. Small samples for research purposes are imported through
ICAR-NBPGR.
In both cases, the Plant Quarantine (Regulation of Import
into India) Order 2003 has to be followed.
ICAR-NBPGR has been empowered under the Plant Quarantine
(Regulation of Import into India) Order 2003 to undertake quarantine processing
of germplasm including transgenic planting material imported into the country
for research purposes.
Besides, NBPGR also issues ‘phytosanitary certificate’ for
research material meant for export. We have well- equipped laboratories, a
greenhouse complex, and a CL-4 level containment facility to undertake the
quarantine processing effectively. NBPGR also has a well-equipped quarantine
station at Hyderabad, which mainly deals with the export samples of the
International Crop Research Institute for Semi-arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and
samples for the southern part of the country.
NBPGR’s Kuldeep Singh
(left) and SC Dubey (right). Photo courtesy the scientists.
Can you elaborate on plant quarantine and phytosanitary
certification?
Over the years, during quarantine processing in post-entry
quarantine (PEQ) facilities, a large number of pests have been intercepted in
germplasm and other research material which includes several pests that have
not been reported yet from India. The consignments must be accompanied by a
phytosanitary certificate stating the status of the consignment to be free from
the pests mentioned in the declaration. NBPGR’s role in the biosecurity of the
country is well defined and known. In past (1976-2019), a total of 78 pests
including fungi (6), viruses (19), insects/ mites (26), nematodes (9) and weeds
(18) not reported from India and of quarantine significance for India were
intercepted in imported germplasm and their entry into India through samples
received by NBPGR was checked.
ICAR-NBPGR is providing regular inputs on biosecurity to
government agencies like the Indian Council of Agricultural Research,
Department of Agricultural Research and Education, Ministry of Agriculture,
Ministry of External Affairs, and MoEF&CC
What are the major challenges in plant biosecurity in India?
We need more certified post-entry quarantine (PEQ) facilities
to accommodate a larger number of plant materials for quarantine processes and
rigorous inspection of the material before release.
Further, the Pest Risk Analysis (PRA) procedure is one of
the biggest challenges for quarantine workers. PRA in plant introduction is
essential to decide whether a particular planting material could be permitted
entry or not. If permitted, what would be the manner of import to prohibit the
introduction of new pests in the country. One of the primary responsibilities
of plant protection organisation/ institutions is to identify foreign pests of
crops that are important in the Indian agricultural scenario and assess the
potential damage that those pests could cause if introduced in our country.
This is part of a PRA exercise which consists of risk
assessment (scientific estimation of likelihood and magnitude of risk of
establishment of a given pest) and impact assessment (estimation of the
consequences of the establishment of pest).
Therefore, to ensure that imported commodities have no pest
or disease risk to our agriculture and forestry, the Plant Quarantine Order
2003 has made it mandatory to conduct a PRA for all commodities other than
those given in Schedule V, VI and VII, prior to the issue of import permit.
Updated lists of endemic pests, authentic data on
country-wide survey/ surveillance, as well as literature, are indispensable in
PRA procedures. To facilitate quarantine processing, and biosecurity, we need
to strengthen the harmonisation of the Indian plant quarantine system with the
global plant quarantine system.
This, in turn, depends on enhanced co-ordination of
scientists and resource sharing among the three concerned organisations:
Directorate of Plant Protection Quarantine and Storage (Department of
Agriculture and Cooperation and Farmers Welfare), Indian Council of
Agricultural Research (Department of Agricultural Research and Education) and state
agricultural universities/other research institutions.
Additionally, there is a need for integrated agricultural
biosecurity efforts. Presently in India, agricultural biosecurity is managed on
a sectoral basis through the development and implementation of separate
policies and legislative frameworks (e.g. for animal and plant life and
health).
Post Entry Quarantine
growing of seed samples of French bean and soybean for the detection of
seed-borne pests especially viruses associated with seeds. Photo from NBPGR.
Although the sectoral agencies organise their work with
proper attention towards the other sectors to meet the challenges of
biosecurity that are of interdisciplinary nature, in the present national
system, there is a need for a more harmonised and integrated approach for
agricultural biosecurity working together towards common goals.
At the national level efforts are being made to develop a
coherent biosecurity strategy for the country by the formulation of a
comprehensive Agricultural Biosecurity Bill in 2013. The Department of
Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers’ Welfare (DACFW) has initiated the
establishment of a National Agricultural Biosecurity System. Also, the
re-drafting of the Agricultural Biosecurity Bill in 2018 by the DACFW to address
the issue of national biosecurity in a holistic manner are some of the
important steps in the right direction.
Has the lockdown impacted plant quarantine measures and
biosecurity measures?
Certainly, as the seed materials are not moving across the
world. We do receive a major part of rice germplasm from International Rice
Research Institute during March-April and this may be affected. NBPGR is
monitoring the seeds grown in the post-entry quarantine facility (PEQ) at New
Delhi and Hyderabad. Up to the last week of February, we did post-entry
quarantine inspections at sites where
they were indented across the country for research materials.
In a post-pandemic world, what will be the major changes
with respect to plant biosecurity? Any specific way the NBPGR will also evolve
its strategies?
We are going to receive huge consignments of seed samples
for research purposes after the lockdown period ends. We will take utmost care
at institute level for disinfestation of the outer surface of the packages
containing seeds before it is opened for quarantine.
Internationally, so far there are no specific guidelines for
safe and secure handling of plant and plant products from the areas having an
outbreak of COVID 19. ICAR is having trained scientists and well-equipped laboratories
to handle any such conditions in the case of plant pests. However, the plant
quarantine system in the country needs to be strengthened both in the terms of
manpower and facilities.
What are the control points in plant biosecurity procedures
that will need rethinking in the wake of COVID-19?
The virus (SARS-CoV-2) that causes COVID-19 is known to be a
surface contaminant, the bags containing seed samples need a certain minimum
policy to be handled with care to avoid contamination. Our staff has been
instructed to surface- sanitise the boxes holding the seed samples.
Banner image: Joint inspection of seed samples by Plant
Quarantine staff at NBPGR, New Delhi. Photo by NBPGR.
https://india.mongabay.com/2020/04/interview-lockdown-throws-up-challenges-for-quarantine-of-plant-samples-for-research/
IFPRI, IRRI, CIMMYT, WorldFish make joint call for measures
to avert risk to food system
Reaz Ahmad
• Published
at 08:40 pm April 22nd, 2020
Photo: Mahmud Hossain Opu/Dhaka Tribune
The CGIAR Centres commend Bangladesh’s response to contain
Covid-19 spread, call for ensuring transportation of food and farm inputs
World’s leading food security think-tank and research
centres have recommended Bangladesh to ensure transportation of food from rural
to urban areas and the flow of crucial inputs to farmers through market systems
so that risk to food system during Covid-19 pandemic can be averted.
In a statement paper jointly issued on Wednesday by a few
top CGIAR Centres called for guaranteeing the supply of horticultural, fish and
livestock products–in addition to the staple foods, rice and wheat–to provide
diverse, nutritious and safe diets for all.
The CGIAR Centers include the International Maize and Wheat
Improvement Center (CIMMYT), International Food Policy Research Institute
(IFPRI), WorldFish, and the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).
Formerly called Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research,
CGIAR is largest global agricultural innovation network.
These institutions called for minimizing impacts on farmers’
incomes from high inputs and labor costs and lower than normal farmgate prices,
supporting the private sector in its crucial role in providing affordable
inputs to farmers, supporting the flow of remittances and cash flows to rural
areas, and expanding access to finance options for farmers in need of capital
to assure production.
Their statement noted, “As seen in the response to the
social distancing challenges currently affecting boro harvest, scale-appropriate
farm mechanization options will also become increasingly important to assure
timely operations.”
The statement is jointly signed by Dr Akhter Ahmed, Country
Representative of IFPRI-Bangladesh; Dr Timothy J. Krupnik, Country Liaison for
Research and Partnerships of CIMMYT-Bangladesh; Dr Humnath Bhandari, Country
Representative of IRRI-Bangladesh and Dr Christopher Price, Country Director
WorldFish-Bangladesh.
They feared that even partial closure of ports may result in
high prices and limited stocks of pulses, edible oils, wheat, and crucial feed
supplies (particularly maize and soybean). “Similarly, although current
national stocks appear to be initially sufficient, prolonged suspension of
international trade could undermine the future supply of key inputs
(particularly phosphorous and potassium fertilizers, vaccinations, pesticides,
and fuel) at reasonable prices.”
They commended Bangladesh government’s response in
implementing timely, appropriate measures to contain the spread and mitigate
the impacts of COVID-19 but, hastened to caution that, “This situation presents
substantial risks to Bangladesh’s food systems–with important implications for
national food, nutrition, and economic security.”
They, however, appreciated that the government has
recognized these challenges, and has responded with measures to exempt
essential agricultural activities during the boro season from closure. “In
particular, we are encouraged that essential inputs continue to be provided
through ongoing agricultural business trade and that appropriate farm machinery
is being used for timely harvesting.”
Similarly, the announcement of financial support for seed
purchase and requisition of wheat and rice are expected to mitigate this
crisis, the statement added.
In an initial rapid analyses carried out by the CGIAR
Centers, they identified some of the emerging concerns as: notable reductions
in the availability of perishable foods, including vegetables, fruits, and
fish; farmers facing challenges in selling perishable goods at reasonable
prices; social distancing measures appear to be slowing ongoing horticultural
and boro crop harvests; and delays in maize harvests loom as a near-term
concern.
“While trucks are permitted to transport agricultural inputs
and produce, informal and courier transport services that play a key role in
input supply and food distribution are suffering,” said the CGIAR Centres.
“The livestock, poultry, and aquaculture sectors are
suffering as the supply of essential feeds and veterinary services has been
disrupted and are experiencing unprecedented shocks.”
https://www.dhakatribune.com/business/2020/04/22/ifpri-irri-cimmyt-worldfish-make-joint-call-for-measures-to-avert-risk-to-food-system
Arkansas Rice Growers Could See Increased Demand Due To
COVID-19
By DAVID MONTEITH • APR 22, 2020
Rice is one of the few Arkansas crops positively impacted by
the coronavirus.
CREDIT SHAREALIKE 4.0 INTERNATIONAL / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
One of the state's biggest crops could help some Arkansas
farmers stay afloat during the economic challenges caused by COVID-19.
Arkansas is the nation's leading rice producer and that may
benefit the state in the coming months, says to Dr. Tim Burcham, Director of
the Northeast Rice Research and Extension Center for the University of Arkansas
System Division of Agriculture.
"The good news is that from the standpoint of our rice
production, again that's holding steady for us right now as far as market
prices for rice. With that being one of our leading commodities here in Arkansas,
that really helps us out. Of course, we're taking a hit in these other
commodity areas."
A rice report produced by the Division of Agriculture in
early April, says some other rice-producing countries, like Vietnam and India
are limiting their exports as result of COVID-19. This has increased demand for
Arkansas rice. However, prices for soybeans and corn, two of the state's other
large row crops, have dropped significantly.
Other crops, like strawberries, which are just coming into
season in Arkansas, have less certain futures, according to Matthew Davis, also
with Division of Agriculture.
"We're putting the crop in the ground right now, but
we're not guaranteed a home for it. And that's clearly shown with vegetable
growers and fruit producers. Right now, they don't have a home for their crops
and a lot of it is having to be destroyed just because it costs too much to
even try to harvest and donate. I've seen several try to donate to foodbanks,
but at some point that becomes not cost effective either,” Davis said.
Last week the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the
Coronavirus Food Assistance Program, which it claims will provide $16 billion
in direct support to farmers and $100 million per month for the purchase of
fruits and vegetables from farmers across the country. As they wait for details
on the new program, Arkansas farmers will continue planting and hoping for less
rain than last year.
"We're making strides and trying to move ahead, but I
definitely think the weather hasn’t played fair again this year," Davis
said. "We've had some issues, but I think, as usual, everybody's
resilient. As soon as we get some dry days everybody hits the field running. I
talked to one guy yesterday; he was out until 1 o'clock in the morning trying
to beat the rain. That's just part of it."
Weather permitting, some predict the state's farmers could
plant up to 1.5 million acres of rice, up nearly half a million acres from last
year.
https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/arkansas-rice-growers-could-see-increased-demand-due-covid-19
Food psychologist shares her tips for getting into healthy
eating habits
by Julia Bryce
April 23, 2020, 10:00
am
Dr Christy Fergusson (credit: Lawrence Scott Photography)
Julia Bryce talks with Dr Christy Fergusson about how to
make positive food choices during lockdown.
We’ve all been there. The moment when reaching for the
biscuit tin you realise that in fact, this is not your first of the day.
And while there’s nothing wrong with a little comfort eating
now and then, Dr Christy Fergusson of The Food Psychologist says there’s a fine
balance between keeping our spirits up and ensuring we have ‘good foods’
readily available.
With daily routines across the country affected by lockdown,
it’s easy to fall into bad habits, and fast.
So how do we keep on track and stay in our usual routines as
much as we possibly can given the circumstances?
She said: “I think that is the biggest challenge for people.
Certainly when it comes to my clients you can feel like you’re doing well,
eating well and following what you want to be doing. Then it gets to the
weekend and everything falls to the wayside and not having that sort of
structure to the day.
Dr Christy Fergusson (credit: Lawrence Scott Photography)
“At the moment everything has just been kind of thrown
upside down and it’s just getting back to that sort of structure. One of the
key things I always recommend is to make sure you’re having breakfast within an
hour of getting up. That helps set you up for the day.
“I also recommend eating every three to four hours to keep
your blood sugars steady throughout the day. It can really help you avoid
dipping into the biscuit tin which I know people can struggle with. I think
it’s about getting yourself set up for success in the morning and trying to
follow a nice pattern where you’re eating regularly throughout the day.”
Keeping healthy and looking after your body and your mind
has become increasingly more important than ever with the majority of the UK
workforce operating from home.
But how easy is it to stay motivated when it comes to
consuming healthier foods over those not so healthy foods?
She added: “If you’re used to going out to work every day
you may be in a system of what you would usually have before work in the
morning. Some people eat before they leave for work, other times people eat on
the train or when travelling, and a lot of my clients wait until they are at
work to have their breakfast at their desk.
“It’s the same when it comes to lunchtime. You have to sort
of redefine and create those healthy patterns and habits. Even if it is just
going to be on a temporary period.
Dr Christy Fergusson (credit: Lawrence Scott Photography)
“I think because we’ve not got that definition of the week
and weekend its about creating a pattern that works for you and also that you
enjoy. I don’t think it needs to be something that’s boring or strict. It’s a
great time to try different breakfasts you may not normally have been able to
try because you were rushing out the door to get to work. It’s the same with
lunches and I think people are embracing having more time to prepare stuff ans
do a bit more cooking at home. Use it as a positive thing to explore more
things.”
For those struggling to keep focused, Dr Christy’s advice is
very much centred around having good-quality protein throughout the day and
being mindful of stimulants which will also affect your concentration.
“Keeping our blood sugar balanced throughout the day comes
from having good quality protein regularly,” said Dr Chrsity.
“Protein can be a variety of things, it doesn’t have to be
meat. Things like eggs of course are great, some hummous and oatcakes for
snacks, fish, chicken, goat’s cheese. It’s a great way to avoid sugar cravings
and keep your blood sugar steady. Low glycemic load carbohydrates are those
slower releasing carbohydrates. Things like oats, brown basmati rice, oatcakes,
things that aren’t going to cause that big spike in your blood sugar levels.
“Eating consistently during the day will help you avoid that
‘crash’ moment. Be mindful of stimulants like caffeine. A little bit can be
great to give you that boost and alertness in the morning, but when we start
having too much, or over relying on it, it’s almost like we’re down regulating
our system and we need more and more. Just be mindful of the foods becoming
your crutches and focus on the good stuff you’re eating regularly.”
And with so many parents home schooling their children just
now, the food psychologist has some sound advice on how to combat them
constantly asking for food.
She said: “I have my 11-year-old daughter at home and it’s
an on-going process. I think it depends on what age the kids are. If you’ve got
toddlers and young ones, sort of primary school age then one of the things I do
with my daughter is make up a snack plate. Instead of having crisps we would
make up a plate with all of these different foods on it. Children often don’t
like combining too much in one dish, they like things in isolation. A little
bit of cheese, some crackers, chopped up fruit, some raisins, it’s all on one
plate but separate.
“I think it’s a good opportunity for us to let our kids make
some things for themselves. Of course if they are younger you have to get involved
more. My daughter will bake her own cupcakes and we help her with the oven and
stuff. Getting them used to making their own food, or getting them involved in
the process is great, especially if you have a fussy eater. It makes them part
of the process.”
One thing is for certain, beating ourselves up about having
a treat or experiencing a bad day is not going to benefit our long-term mental
health, says Dr Christy.
She added: “It is a time where a lot of people are going
through anxiety and we’re facing a lot of changes to our daily lives. There’s
maybe concerns around financial security or health and I think at this point
it’s also about looking after our mental health. Yes of course being healthy
and nourishing our body is important but it’s not about some strict routine
that we’ve got to come out of this achieving something. It’s all about being a
little kinder to ourselves.
“If you’re at home and want to continue to look after
yourself, one of the key things is to make sure there’s lots of good,
nourishing foods in the house and not having too much of the so called ‘junk
food’. It can be so easy and convenient to reach for that food if it’s there. I
actually find the more we rely on those foods the worse we can feel on an
emotional level as it really does mess with our system. It’s that balancing act
of looking after our bodies and being healthy, and we’re not going to beat
ourselves up if occasionally we indulge in something.”
For more information visit www.thefoodpsychologist.com.
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RECIPES HOW-TO DINNER IN MINUTES TRENDING NEWSLETTER VIDEO
We challenged our favorite chefs to cook out of the pantry —
ours, not theirs
By Washington Post Staff
April 23 at 8:00 AM
(Dish photos by Tom McCorkle for The Washington Post; food
styling by Lisa Cherkasky for The Washington Post. Chef photos: Carla Hall, top
left, photo by Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post; bottom middle, Jordan Ruiz,
bottom middle, photo by Alexis Ruiz; and Vikram Sunderam, top right, photo by
Joseph Victor Stefanchik for The Washington Post.)
We know you’ve been there. We all have: staring at the
contents of the refrigerator, freezer and pantry, and thinking, “What the heck
do I make with all this?” Whether your larder is bare or flush, unless you’re
an expert meal planner, you have surely had moments when you’ve been positively
flummoxed. That feeling is exacerbated during the coronavirus pandemic, when
you’re limiting trips to the store, can’t find quick grocery delivery
appointments and are trying to stretch your dollar even further than usual.
Falling for a recipe and then filling any gaps needed to make it is...
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Consumers being charged higher than official rates
LAHORE:In the absence of the writ of the government
different prices of the same essential items are being implemented and charged
in the market. Violations of laws regarding displaying of prices, official
rates, weight, manufacturing and expiry dates on products are being committed
openly, The News has learnt.
Consumers’ rights are being violated in connivance with the
government authorities while Chief Minister Usman Buzdar is busy only issuing
verbal orders against the profiteers. Interestingly, the industry department
responsible for issuing and controlling prices is just issuing guidelines and
holding the deputy commissioners responsible for the violation of the laws. On
the other hand, Deputy Commissioner Lahore is aware of all these violations and
admitted that different rates are being charged against the official rates. The
government has failed to take action against the violators.
There are four different rates for some same essential items
in the city. The price notified by the Punjab government could not be
implemented, exposing incompetence or connivance of the officers concerned with
the profiteers. Prices of super stores could not be controlled. Whenever the
government tries to control the super stores, they go on strike. Interestingly,
the rates of Utility Store Corporations (USC), super stores and Akbari Mandi
are higher than the government notified rates which exposed flaw in price
fixation mechanism or the government efforts to check inflation. TheUtility
Store Corporations (USC) governed by the federal ministry for industries and
production has its own rates which are also higher than the official notified
rates of the government.
USC announced the Ramzan relief package according to which
the price of gram pulse is fixed at Rs 160 per kg, white gram Rs 125 per kg,
Masoor pulse Rs 130 per kg, Mash pulse Rs 235 per kg, sugar at Rs 68 per kg,
rice broken Rs 73 per kg, basin (gram powder) Rs 140 per kg, Basmati rice Rs
135 per kg, Ghee 175 per kg, cooking oil Rs 195 per liter, dates Rs 160 per kg.
The prices of the USC are higher than the notified price by
the deputy commissioner Lahore. The DC notified rates are gram pulse (special)
Rs 128 per kg, bareek Rs 118 per kg, white gram Rs 108 per kg, Masoor pulse
(bareek) Rs 152 per kg, imported at Rs 104 per kg, Mash pulse washed imported
Rs 198 per kg, Mash pulse unwashed imported Rs 168 per kg, Moong pulse unwashed
Rs 202 per kg, basmati rice Rs 128 per kg, dates 215-260 per kg.
On the other hand in Akbari Mandi, the rates were also
higher than the DC rates and the DC is aware of the things but does not take
action. In Akbari Mandi, gram pulse is being sold at Rs 130-150 per kg, White
gram Rs 100 to 120 per kg, Masoor pulse bareek Rs 160-220 per kg, Masoor pulse
imported 110 to 125 per kg, Mash pulse washed Rs 250 to 320 per kg, Mash pulse
unwashed Rs 220 to 250 per kg, Moong pulse unwashed 220 to 240 per kg, Moong
pulse washed Rs 280 per kg, sugar Rs 79 per kg, black gram 125 to 150 per kg,
Basin (gram powder) Rs 140 to 160 per kg. The rates charged by super stores in
Lahore are gram pulse (special) Rs 200 per kg, bareek Rs 130 to 140 per kg,
Masoor pulse bareek Rs 240-260 per kg, Masoor pulse imported 130 to 160 per kg,
black gram Rs 160 to 180 per kg, white gram 130 to 150 per kg, sugar 83 per kg,
Basin (gram powder) 140 to 160 per kg, Moog pulse washed 340 to 360 per kg,
Moong pulse unwashed Rs 260 to 280 per kg, Mash pulse washed Rs 340 to 360 per
kg, Mash pulse unwashed Rs 260 to 280 per kg, Rice basmati Rs 150 to 190 per
kg.
Deputy Commissioner Danish Afzal admitted that the official
price rates were not being implemented and there was difference between the
market rates and official rates. “We were waiting for Faisalabad management
which has revised the rates and we will hold the price review meeting tomorrow
(today) to revise the price list”,’ he said.
On the issue of violation of laws by the super stores for
not mentioning the price, weight, manufacturing and expiry dates on the
packaging of the products, especially of pulses and spices, the DC admitted
that the law was being violated.
Interestingly, no action was taken over the violation of
this law, but the DC said the administration will also enforce the law in this
regard.
Secretary Industry Punjab, Zafar Iqbal, said it was the
responsibility of the deputy commissioners of the respective districts to
implement official rates of essential edibles. He said the Industry department under
the law issues clear instructions to the deputy commissioner to enforce and
implement the official rate list which once notified in consultation with all
the stakeholders. “The industry department gives policy guidelines. The policy
is clear that no one should be overcharged,” he said and added checking of
printing of prices, weight, manufacturing and expiry dates on products is also
responsibility of the deputy commissioners and they must ensure protection of
the consumers.
Secretary General Lahore Super Stores Association (LSA)
Imran Saleemi refused to comment saying the association chairman decided not to
speak on any of pricing and other related issues.
https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/648371-consumers-being-charged-higher-than-official-rates
Where to eat during a quarantine: vegetarian edition
APR222020
104
BY JOE DESENSI
As a lot of us in The ‘Ville settle into our quarantined,
socially distant lives, we still need to eat. Before the world shut down on us,
Louisville was an effortless place to find good gluten-free, vegetarian food.
The good news is: That is still the case.
My wife Hope and I have been trying to eat out three to five
times a week to support our favorite establishments as well as to have a
governor-approved reason to leave the house. Some places have shortened hours,
some have a curbside menu (a little smaller than the eat-in menu), and some
have added some great cocktail and drink specials to their takeout options.
Here are some places and meals the veggies might enjoy:
________________________________________
Wild Ginger Sushi Bistro
Wild Ginger provided me with the healthiest meal that I will
eat all week. I used to order some great low-carb sushi there in my quest to
lose a little weight before I realized 2020 would not require a beach bod (and
then decided to pull the ripcord).
Veggies: My favorite roll is the Oshinko roll, featuring a
crunchy, vibrant pickled vegetable, but you can ask for added grilled shiitake
mushrooms for savory chewiness. I also order a veggie roll and tamago roll, a
fluffy sweet scrambled egg with a cucumber wrap.
Meatiness: Carnivores like the bulgogi beef and the chicken
katsu. From the meatier side of the sushi menu, the chef recommends the Surf
and Turf roll (tempura shrimp, cucumber, avocado inside, and topped with spicy
crab meat, torched steak, eel sauce, wasabi mayo, spicy mayo and sweet chili
sauce).
1700 Bardstown Road
384-9252
wildgingerky.com
Beverages: Bottled beer, wine and sake are available for
takeout.
Ordering: Call in or order online or curbside pickup.
Postmates and Doordash also deliver.
________________________________________
Dragon King’s Daughter
Hope and I eat at DKD at least once a week. It has the
largest selection of veggie sushi in town, and most rolls can be ordered
gluten-free as well. With its all-day alcohol happy hour prices for takeout, it
satiates all of our sushi whims and wine pairing needs. In Indiana? There’s a
New Albany location as well, although its menu differs slightly.
Veggies: We always start with a warm, salted edamame that
never gets shared exactly 50-50 between us (we use the “you snooze, you lose”
principle of edamame division).
I order the Summer Salad Roll (fresh mozzarella, spring mix,
red onion, avocado, cucumber and cilantro with a drizzle of spicy mayo) and the
Buffaroll (fresh mozzarella, cucumber and avocado). The Summer offers a variety
of crunches and flavors pulled together by the rich, mayo drizzle. The
Buffaroll has subtler flavors making it perfect for dipping into gluten-free
soy with a healthy portion of wasabi mixed in for good measure.
Seafood: Hope’s two faves are the Sushi and the Banshis
(avocado, cream cheese and roasted garlic on the inside with salmon and basil
atop the roll) and the Selfish Shellfish, part of the new menu (cocktail
shrimp, cilantro and fresh avocado on the inside and lobster salad and lime).
Meatier options: A friend that eats things with a face
recommended: the Japan Fried Tuna (red tuna battered and deep fried with a
special dressing) and the kimchi beef tacos (strip steak with sautéed kimchi
and Kewpie over a spring mix).
1126 Bardstown Road
208-1626
dragonkingsdaughter.com
Specials: Happy hour prices on alcohol all day, and it now
offers bags of frozen cocktails to go.
________________________________________
Ramsi’s Café on the World
Ramsi’s was one of the first vegetarian -friendly
restaurants I found in The ‘Ville over two decades ago. It was also one of the
early adopters of farm-to-table and has long been sensitive to many eating
restrictions. All of those things are nice, but we ordered from here for the
food. With much of it raised at its own farm, you get fine dining at a much
cheaper price.
Veggie side o’ life: I have a lot of favorites at Ramsi’s
when we are able to dine in: Jun Kun Stew (root veggies, broccoli and limas in
a Japanese broth), Peanut-ginger Thai Noodles with tofu (make sure to ask for
the GF tofu) and the Crispy Petal Salad (roasted Brussels sprout petals with
limas, goat cheese crumbles and an almond fig cake with olive oil and a
balsamic glaze.) If you are ever unsure which way to go with a side dish, order
the limas.
During quarantine, I have been enjoying the Faithful
Falafel, a Pakistani inspired dish with baked falafel patties served with a
vegan, homemade yogurt over sweet potatoes, tomatoes and cucumber and accented
with a fresh mint sauce. I usually order a side of the pesto lima beans and
dump them right into the yogurt sauce.
Things that died: Hope is a creature of habit at Ramsi’s.
Unless we are going twice in one week, her order is always: basil salmon
sandwich, but she asks them to grill the salmon (instead of fried) and swaps
out the potatoes for the pesto lima beans.
Some other carnivorous favorites are: the blacked chicken
Pollo Nueva Havana (blackened chicken breast, tamarindo jalapeño sauce, Boursin
cheese served with basmati rice and stir-fried vegetables) and the Z-Man Steak
(blackened beef tenderloin, Boursin cheese).
1293 Bardstown Road
451-0700
ramsiscafe.com
Beverages: You can order bottles of beer and wine.
Ordering: Ramsi’s is serving its entire menu. Call in or go
to its website to order for curbside pickup.
BoomBozz Pizza & Taphouse — Highlands
BoomBozz has great pizza, lots of veggie options and
excellent gluten-free crust. The gluten-free crust comes in only one size, a
12-inch at $2 more, but is still plenty of food for two people. Order a starter
salad if you are extra hungry, and do yourself a favor and order a side of
marinara sauce for crust and starter dipping purposes. BoomBozz’s Hurstbourne
location is closed at this time, but its Highlands and Jeffersonville
restaurants are still open.
Veggie Za: we have two go-tos if we don’t design our own pie
— the Portobello Bello pizza (portobello mushrooms, fresh spinach, roasted red
peppers, garlic olive oil glaze, asiago and fontina cheese) and the Farmers
Market pizza (artichoke hearts, mushrooms, caramelized bell peppers and onions,
black olives, spinach, roma tomatoes, feta and red sauce). Both provide
smokiness in the grilled veggies, and the black olives and artichokes combine
for a great flavor profile in the Farmers Market.
Post slaughterhouse options: In case you were thinking, “I
haven’t killed anything in a while, but I just can’t decide,” BoomBozz has the
dish for you. Its most popular pizza is the All Meats Classic with every kind
of red meat it serves (pepperoni, Italian sausage, ground beef, ham and bacon).
Another specialty for people who prefer to use their eyeteeth, the Buffalo
Chicken (marinated chicken, buffalo ranch sauce, red onion, asiago cheese,
diced celery and hot sauce drizzle and served with ranch dressing).
1448 Bardstown Road
458-8889
boombozz.com/lou-highlands
Beverages: It has drink specials, growlers and bottled beer
and wine.
Ordering: BoomBozz is serving its full menu and uses most of
the delivery services. Or, call or order online. It is offering free cheese
bread with online orders.
________________________________________
Monnik Beer Co.
I have written about Monnik a few times over the last year.
The first time was because it has amazing vegetarian and gluten-free options.
The second time was for the healthy selections for those of us trying to make
sure the buttons on our shirts aren’t social distancing. You can still order
pub comfort food, but the salad and side options with their varieties of
proteins make this a good, healthy stop as well.
Veggies: The salads are amazing and unique. I usually order
the Harvest Salad (mixed greens, blood oranges, purple potato, mixed olives and
edamame, accented with fennel and topped with a hardboiled egg for little
protein). If I am particularly hungry and we are not getting a starter, I will
get a second egg on top or an order of fried jackfruit. Hope enjoys the Kalette
and Brussel Salad (fried kalettes, roasted Brussels sprouts, toasted almond
slivers, pecorino, garlic, shallots and the Dijon lemon glaze). She will add a
chicken breast for the protein and to ensure I am not grazing on her plate when
she’s not looking.
If you are picking a starter, definitely try the Jackfruit
Al Pastor Nachos (eggplant queso, pickled onion, corn pico, pineapple and
pepita cheese). This is my favorite appetizer in town at the moment, rich and colorful
with a unique flavor profile including the jackfruit tasting like pulled pork.
Meatiness: Monnik offers classic Bavarian dishes: Beer Brat
(beer poached bratwurst, grilled onions and mustard on a pretzel bun with curry
ketchup), Sauerbraten (sour beef pot roast, pickled cabbage, potato dumpling,
gingersnap sauce and crème fraîche) and Rouladen (sliced beef, mustard, onions,
bacon, pickles, potato fritters and a red wine sauce).
1036 E Burnett Ave.
742-6564
monnikbeer.com
Beverages: It offers drink kit specials weekly, canned beer,
crawlers (24 ounces) and growlers, and wine by the bottle.
Ordering: Online and call in orders. Delivery within five
miles.
________________________________________
Sou!
SOU! has been open less than a year and has already made my
list of favorite Louisville restaurants. Chef James Moran has put together a
menu catering to the veggies and those with eating restrictions as well as
being welcoming to the red meat crowd.
Veggie recommendations: SOU! has two amazing salads that can
be made gluten-free and vegetarian. The Romaine is heirloom carrot, radish,
hardboiled egg and Kenny’s Farmhouse (Kentucky) gouda served with spicy buttermilk ranch and crispy potato. My
other regular order is the Mixed Green Salad (black pepper pear vinaigrette,
Capriole Goat Cheese, pickled currant, gala apple and marcona almond, served
with brown butter waffle croutons).
Its Crispy Cauliflower appetizer is amazing: nutty and
smokey with just a little sweetness. It’s also a generous portion, so more than
enough to share (though the thought of sharing it is purely theoretical for
me).
The Meat: SOU!’s bestseller, the hanger steak, is still on
the menu, but the chef also recommends the classic burger. The chef says he
puts love into it, but the meat from Black Hawk Farms is really doing the heavy
lifting on the taste profile. •
9980 Linn Station Road
614-6499
sou-louisville.com
Menu: Order from the curbside menu for takeout.
Beverages: SOU! has several cocktails available for takeout
including the citrusy bourbon punch (which is awesome on a warm day) and
top-shelf margaritas, and bottles of wine are available for pairing.
Published under Food & Drink, Veg Out....dining out in a
meat eater's world
104
https://www.leoweekly.com/2020/04/eat-quarantine-vegetarian-edition/
How Aldi, Morrison's and Marks & Spencer's food boxes
compare - full list of contents
Coronavirus lockdown has led supermarkets to offer food
boxes for delivery - here's the main differences
Aldi released it's
Food Parcel delivery service last week - but how does it compare to other food
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The UK is a month into coronavirus lockdown with social
distancing continuing to affect our lives.
As a result, restrictions and queues at supermarkets are
expected and much of the public are encouraged to limit their shopping -
ideally getting deliveries where possible.
This is easier said than done, with slots becoming
unavailable weeks in advance, leading a number of retailers to offer 'food
boxes' - providing much needed items particularly to the elderly and
vulnerable.
Last month, both Morrisons and Marks & Spencer released
their food boxes which were an instant hit, paving the way for Aldi to launch
its own version just days ago.
The boxes each contain a number of essential products and
are generally priced at around £30 each, with the exact contents and cost
varying per supermarket.
And whilst the current food boxes are in high-demand, with
some reportedly temporarily out of stock, we've compiled a guide to the three
versions based on industry reviews of the products.
Aldi
She ordered the box on Friday - the day it was released -
and was disappointed to be informed that delivery could take up to 10 days,
which "seemed long to wait for a box full of essentials."
To the reporter's "surprise" though, the food
parcel was delivered on Monday, towards the shorter end of the delivery
estimate.
The product itself arrived in a big cardboard box by the
courier - similarly to the delivery of the products sold by Morrisons and Marks
& Spencers recently.
Whilst the reporter had a primarily positive experience with
Aldi's service, there was an issue with how the box arrived.
After opening the parcel, she found a jar of instant coffee
was "completely smashed" and had consequently "spilled all over
the box."
This meant that the advertised coffee was not usable and
left our reporter a little disappointed with her food parcel.
She said: "It would benefit customers if glass items
were wrapped separately.
"When I opened the box it looked like everything had
just been thrown in."
It's also worth noting that the box itself is "heavy to
lift" which is something to bear in mind if you're planning to order one
for an elderly relative or someone who has limited mobility.
The reviewer concluded: "Overall, the box does come
with essentials items but I do think the delivery of it needs some work."
Morrisons
)
The Morrisons food box, which was released last month, is
slightly more expensive than some of the alternatives.
It costs £30 plus £5 delivery, and is available as either a
meat or vegetarian box - both containing household essentials as well.
Customers however aren't told specific products that they'll
receive when ordering, so the exact contains remain a mystery until the box is
opened after delivery.
According to Morrisons though, customers can expect to
receive the following general items:
• Canned baked
beans, soup and pasta sauce
• Milk
• Dairy
products such as butter and cheese
• Bread
• Rice and
pasta
• Meat
products, such as sausage, bacon and cooked meat (meat box only)
• Fresh meat
such as chicken or beef (meat box only)
• Vegetables,
such as potatoes, carrots and onions
• Vegetarian
proteins (vegetarian box only)
• Essential
household items
A reporter at our sister site Stoke-on-Trent Live revealed
that their meat box contained a variety of different meats, including chicken
breast fillets, sausages, bacon and steak mince.
The reviewed box also featured potatoes, large onions,
carrots, peppers and broccoli.
The reporter said that the Morrisons box was
"reasonable" in terms of price and praised the contents for being
"varied and [for containing] enough food to comfortably feed a small
family with a variety of tastes."
M&S
The contents of the £35 Marks & Spencer's box (Image:
Kent Live)
The Marks & Spencer food box costs £35 with delivery
then adding an extra £3.50 to the overall cost.
It contains a number of essential items such as soup, tea
bags and toilet paper - as well as some edible treats like Percy Pig sweets.
According to the supermarket chain, the following products
are included in the food box:
• Fusilli
(500g)
• Baked beans
(220g)
• Tomato and
herb pasta sauce (550g)
• Beef
Bolognese pour over pasta sauce (340g)
• Chunky
vegetable soup (400g)
• Basmati
rice (500g)
• Cream of
tomato soup (400g)
• Chunky
steak (206g)
• Rich roast
instant coffee (100g)
• English
breakfast tea bags (125g/50 bags)
• Scottish
all butter homebake style shortbread squares (200g)
• Dark
chocolate (100g)
• Milk
chocolate (100g)
• Prime
corned beef (205g)
• Wild
Alaskan red salmon (213g)
• Vegetable
curry (400g)
• Roasted and
salted large peanuts (200g)
• Giant milk
chocolate buttons (150g)
• Percy Pig™
(170g)
• Soft white
2-ply toilet tissue (pack of 4)
Earlier this month, our sister site Kent Live discussed this
food box, even comparing it to Morrisons'.
The reporter said that whilst it contains welcomed sweets
and a variety of meals, "it's still lacking basic food items such as
bread" - which can be found in other competitor's food boxes.
And whilst there's "a lot of long life food
items," the reviewer noted that "the meals you can make lack
sustenance, especially with the lack of fresh vegetables."
They stated that even though the Marks & Spencer box
isn't as "appealing" or "adventures" as the Morrisons
version, for example, it is however "more practical in the long run."
This food box is in fact the only one which already has
customer reviews on its official website, with 89 per cent of customers saying
they would recommend the product to a friend.
At the time of writing there were 150 reviews of the food
box on the Marks & Spencer website, with an average rating of 4.5 out of 5.
https://www.dailypost.co.uk/whats-on/shopping/how-aldi-morrisons-marks--18129090
Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate Urges the Family
of a Navy Veteran Who Has Lung Cancer in Utah and Had Service-Related Asbestos
Exposure to Call for Direct Access to the Lawyers at KVO-Get Compensated
"To make certain a Navy Veteran or person with lung
cancer in Utah--who had exposure to asbestos decades ago gets compensated we
have endorsed the attorneys at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO.”
— Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, USA, April 23, 2020 /EINPresswire.com/
-- The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, "We are urging the
family of a Navy Veteran or person with lung cancer anywhere is Utah to call us
anytime at 800-714-0303 if their loved one had heavy exposure to asbestos
decades ago. Even if the person smoked cigarettes the financial compensation
for a person like this could exceed a hundred thousand dollars. The typical
person we are trying to identify is over 60 years old. Most people like this
are not aware the $30 billion dollar-asbestos trust funds were set up for them
too as we would be happy to explain.
"To make certain a Navy Veteran or person with lung
cancer in Utah--who had significant exposure to asbestos decades ago gets
compensated we have endorsed the amazing attorneys at the law firm of Karst von
Oiste-KVO. The lawyers at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO have been
assisting Navy Veterans with asbestos exposure lung cancer and mesothelioma for
decades and they are responsible for over a billion dollars in financial
compensation for people like this. For direct access to the law firm of Karst
von Oiste-KVO please call 800-714-0303." www.karstvonoiste.com
The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate is offering
to assist a Navy Veteran or person with asbestos exposure lung cancer in Utah
organize the how, where and when they were exposed to asbestos. They call this
free service the 'list' and it is this vital information that becomes the
foundation for a compensation claim as the would be happy to explain at
800-714-0303. https://Utah.USNavyLungCancer.Com
The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate’s free
services are available to people with asbestos exposure lung cancer or
mesothelioma in Salt Lake City, Provo, West Jordan, Sandy Hills, Ogden, Saint
George or anywhere in Utah. https://Utah.USNavyLungCancer.Com
High-risk work groups for exposure to asbestos in Utah
include US Navy Veterans, a civilian employee at Hill Air Force Base, a worker
at one of Utah’s dozen+ power plants, oil refinery workers, public utility
workers, plumbers, electricians, auto mechanics, welders, insulators,
machinists, or construction workers. In most instances, a diagnosed person with
mesothelioma was exposed to asbestos in the 1950’s, 1960’s, 1970’s, or 1980’s.
www.karstvonoiste.com
The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, “If your
husband, dad, coworker or neighbor has just been diagnosed with lung cancer and
you know they had significant exposure to asbestos in the navy, at a shipyard
or while working at a factory, at power plant, public utility, or as a plumber,
electrician welder, mechanic or any kind of skilled trades group in any state
please have them call us anytime at 800-714-0303. Most people like this never
get compensated-even though the asbestos trust funds were set up for them too.
We are trying to change this sad fact.” https://USNavyLungCancer.Com
States with the highest incidence of lung cancer include Kentucky,
West Virginia, Maine, Tennessee, Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana, Louisiana,
Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Alabama, and Delaware.
www.karstvonoiste.com/
For more information about lung cancer and asbestos exposure
please review the following website:
https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/asbestos/health_effects_asbestos.html.
Michael Thomas
Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate
+1 800-714-0303
email us here
https://agriculture.einnews.com/pr_news/511867811/utah-us-navy-veterans-lung-cancer-advocate-urges-the-family-of-a-navy-veteran-who-has-lung-cancer-in-utah-and-had-service-related-asbestos-exposure-to?n=2&code=VuZLay2YinrVF2-0&utm_source=NewsletterNews&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Basmati+Rice+News&utm_content=article
Could Changing the Way We Farm Rice Be a Climate Solution?
Farmers are on focusing on ways to reduce methane emissions
and save water to further reduce the staple crop’s climate footprint.
By Lisa Held
Climate, FARMING
Posted on: April 23, 2020
|
This article is published in partnership with Covering
Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the
climate story.
Rice may be having a moment. Until recently, the average
American ate only about a half a pound of the grain annually, while people in
some Asian countries eat upwards of eight pounds a year. By early March,
however, one data firm found that sales of rice and other staples were up 84
percent. And, as significant questions have arisen about the short-term future
of meat production, this grain could become a more significant part of the U.S.
diet.
As one of only a few commodities grown in the U.S. that go
directly to feed people, rice also has a much smaller environmental footprint
than many other foods.
“People underestimate rice. It’s a small grain,” says Meryl
Kennedy, who is the daughter of a Louisiana rice farmer, the CEO of Kennedy
Rice Mill, and the founder of 4Sisters Rice. During a pandemic, however, it can
feed a lot of people efficiently.
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But rice farming isn’t perfect. In fact, global rice
production accounts for at least 10 percent of agricultural emissions. It’s
responsible for producing large quantities of methane—a greenhouse gas that’s
24 times more potent than carbon dioxide. But, as it turns out, that’s more a
factor of quantity than it is about growing method. Rice provides one fifth of
the world’s calories, and research shows that, per calorie, it actually has one
of the lowest emissions footprints compared to meat, fruit, vegetables, wheat,
and corn.
Now, there is growing attention to practices that further
reduce the climate impact of rice. And, given that it is the fourth largest
crop grown in the world, those changes could amount to a significant climate
solution.
In the 2020 Drawdown Review, which analyzes the impact of
various climate solutions across industries using the latest scientific
research, the nonprofit thinktank Project Drawdown includes two methods of
shifting rice production.
“Both of these solutions are about how you can grow rice
most sustainably. This is a shift from conventional to an improved way of rice
cultivation,” said Dr. Mamta Mahra, a senior fellow at Drawdown in
biosequestration modeling. “The point is: If we’re already growing rice, why
not see how much emissions can be reduced?”
Rice Production Today
According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), rice is the fourth largest crop in the world. If adjusted
to account for how much is eaten by people, it would probably rise in the
ranks, since corn and sugarcane are both also used to produce biofuels.
“If we’re already growing rice, why not see how much
emissions can be reduced?”
China’s farmers far and away grow the most. The U.S. ranks
twelfth in global rice production, and the vast majority happens in six states:
Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. In 2019,
American rice farmers harvested about 18 billion pounds of rice from just under
2.5 million acres. About half of that rice is exported, primarily to Mexico,
Central America, and Northeast Asia, to feed global appetites that are bigger
than those in the U.S.
“The U.S. produces more rice than we eat,” said Kennedy. “I
hope that that changes in my lifetime.”
‘Improved Rice Production’
What is gradually changing is how the industry is thinking
and talking about its environmental impact. Last year, USA Rice, which
represents the industry, published a 64-page sustainability report. And this
week, it announced new sustainability goals, pledging to reduce both water use
and greenhouse gas emissions by 13 percent by 2030.
Most rice in the U.S. is produced on thousands of acres that
are flooded for the entire season. Flooding controls weeds and serves other
purposes, like making nutrients in the soil available to the plant. But it
requires a lot of water, and microbes that live in the soil beneath flooded
fields produce methane, which is then released by the plants.
An Arkansas rice farm. (USDA Photo by Lance Cheung)
Reducing the amount of time that fields are flooded, then,
serves two purposes: conserving water and reducing emissions. That’s one of the
primary practices involved in what Project Drawdown classifies as “improved
rice production.”
In the Southern U.S., a growing number of farmers are using
a method called alternate wetting and drying (AWD). Studies have found that
depending on how often and for how long farmers drain their fields, the
practice can reduce methane emissions by as much as 65 or even 90 percent. AWD
is not widespread, though, and it’s not yet clear how it affects yields.
Kennedy said other methods of water conservation like furrow
irrigation (also called row rice) and tailwater recovery, which allows farmers
to reuse water multiple times, are more popular.
There is also evidence that some rice farmers are tilling
their soil less, another approach that reduces emissions. According to USA
Rice’s report, a study out of Louisiana found that the number of rice farmers
using low- or no-till methods increased from 26 to 41 percent between 2000 and
2011.
Breeding new strains of rice can also help farmers implement
these practices and has the potential to directly reduce emissions. Anna
McClung has been researching rice varieties since 1991 and is the director of
the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Dale Bumpers National Rice
Research Center in Arkansas.
Her team uses a sophisticated form of traditional breeding
that tracks existing genes within plants. Researchers in other countries have
used genetic modification to modify rice for resistance to climate change, but
there is currently no GMO rice approved for production in the U.S.
“Our current research plan is 80 percent focused on …
climate change,” McClung told Civil Eats. Drought and extreme heat threaten
rice crops, and her team is looking at traits and varieties that can withstand
those conditions while supporting new farming methods. “Water is being used to
control weeds, but it also provides this uniform growing environment so the
plant can do its best,” she explained. “If you go to a system where you’re not
keeping the field flooded, but all of your varieties have been optimized for
flooding, that’s not going to work.”
McClung’s team has also compared methane is production based
on the variety of rice grown. “We saw big differences in the amount of methane.
Rondo has about 2.5 times the methane released as the next variety, Jupiter.
And about 5 times the methane released as the other three rice cultivars,” she
said. “The question is: why?” More research on that front may yield discoveries
that allow farmers to plant low-methane rice varieties.
More growers are choosing to grow rice using organic
practices. USDA data show a 5,000-acre increase between 2008 and 2016, and USA
Rice’s report says organic production has “increased six fold in the past 20
years.” But there is little research on how organic systems compare in terms of
emissions.
At Lundberg Family Farms in California, Bryce Lundberg’s
parents were growing organic rice before there was a national organic standard.
His family started milling its own rice in 1969, and he started farming with
his brother in 1985. Today, the family grows about half of the rice they sell
and sources the rest from other farmers, the vast majority of whom are nearby.
Eighty percent of the rice they sell is organic; the rest
meets a standard they call eco-farmed. “There’s no burning of rice straw,
there’s a requirement for rotation. There’s only one insecticide approved…and
several herbicides, but none of them can be in the danger [category],” he said.
“It can’t be a carcinogen. It can’t be a mutagen. It can’t be on PAN’s ‘bad
actor’ list. It can’t be a broad-based killer that would affect frogs, snakes,
fish. It can’t persist in water.”
The approach his parents took, he adds, was based on their
“wanting to work closely with nature, and not poison the place where they farm
or the place where they live.”
On organic rice farms, skipping synthetic fertilizers and
herbicides (which are widespread in conventional rice farming) is a strategy
that can result in healthier soil, which may hold more carbon. Without weed
killers, however, flooding becomes even more important. Lundberg controls weeds
by flooding fields to kill grasses and then drying fields out for months to
kill aquatic weeds. The system ends up looking like a version of AWD, and
Lundberg said U.C. Davis has been working with the company on research that
shows it does reduce methane emissions because the plants and soil spend less
time immersed in water. They hope to release the study by the end of this year.
System of Rice Intensification
To Norman Uphoff, all of these improvements are small
compared to the benefits of a revolutionary system called System of Rice
Intensification (SRI).
Uphoff is the senior advisor for SRI-Rice, an international
network and resource center out of Cornell University, where he has taught
since 1970. SRI was developed in Madagascar in the 1990s as a method for
smallholder farmers to feed themselves using fewer resources.
Unlike in conventional systems which involves “broadcasting”
seeds (basically, dropping them from a plane) all over a flooded field, farmers
using the SRI system plant rice seedlings in a grid pattern in dry soil, with
space between them. They spread compost to build soil health (although some
also use synthetic fertilizers) and then use an alternating wet-dry irrigation
system instead of flooded fields. They control weeds with rotary weeders or by
hand, rather than use herbicides.
Rice planting under the System of Rice Intensification.
(Photo courtesy of Lotus Foods)
“The plant will grow to fill available space,” Uphoff
explains. “If the roots can grow freely, with not too much water and enough
organic matter, you get more root growth and more tiller growth.” Tillers are
like the branches of the plant; when there are more of them, each plant can
produce more rice.
A number of studies over the years have shown SRI can
produce high yields—usually from 20 to 50 percent higher—compared to
traditional flooded paddy systems, while saving money on inputs. A
meta-analysis done in 2013 found SRI management resulted in 22 percent less
water use. Several studies have also shown that SRI leads to significant
reductions in methane emissions, and while it does increase emissions of
nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, the net greenhouse effect is
still positive.
Uphoff said farmers in 60 countries are using SRI today,
with about 20 countries leading the charge. “We estimate that at least 20
million farmers are using these ideas in full or in part—enough so that they’re
getting improvements in their crop performance,” he said. Most U.S. farmers,
however, have shied away from the practice.
“Our primary concern has been for farmers in poor countries.
U.S. rice production is highly capitalized and subsidized,” he explained. The idea
of cutting a plant population by 80 or 90 percent, isn’t likely to be popular
here, he adds. “The people who make their livelihood on…seeds, fertilizers, and
herbicides don’t want to hear about this.”
There are a few examples of small American farms using some
of SRI’s principles to grow “dryland” rice. Blue Moon Acres in New Jersey is
well known in the Northeast, and Next Step Produce and Purple Mountain Organics
are pioneering their own processes in the Mid-Atlantic. California-based Lotus
Foods also sells rice produced by smallholder farmers around the world using
SRI.
But for the vast majority of rice production—which is
large-scale—sources said farmers brush SRI off as impractical, especially
because it tends to be labor-intensive. Uphoff said the missing piece is
specialized equipment, and if that mechanization existed, there would be no
reason not to apply it on a larger scale.
Project Drawdown, for its part, presents the two
approaches—promoting SRI among smallholder farmers around the world while using
other techniques on large-scale farms—as complementary solutions with real
potential. In other words, with so much rice in the world and a rapidly
changing climate, all efforts to shrink this important grain’s footprint are
worth the effort.
Indonesia's
rice stockpile is secure for up to Nov -official
APRIL 23, 2020 / 3:21 PM
JAKARTA, April
23 (Reuters) -
* Indonesia’s
rice supply is expected to remain at a “secure” level up to November, the Trade
Ministry’s director general of domestic trade Suhanto told parliament on
Thursday
* He said
Indonesia is expected to have an additional 19.8 million tonnes of new rice
supply between March and August from harvest, citing an outlook from the
Agriculture Ministry
* Suhanto said
that would add to around 3.3 million tonnes currently in the stockpile, while
rice consumption up to August is expected at around 15 million tonnes
* Rice
stockpile and the expected new supply are “sufficient to meet demand up to
November. Rice supply is secure,” he said. (Reporting by Bernadette Christina
Munthe Writing by Fransiska Nangoy; Editing by Toby Chopra)
https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL3N2CB2R9
Report: Rice prices rise slightly,
while corn, cotton and soybean farmers face historic lows
COVID-19
continues to loom over the world’s cotton industry and other crops have a
gloomy outlook, according to a report by agricultural economists with the
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. One bright spot might be
rice, with the price and number of planted acres rising this spring.
In
addition to COVID’s impact on the global markets, Arkansas’ crop producers have
two other worries. The first includes the extended periods of wet conditions
and waves of severe weather that have damaged farms and shut power down to
large swaths of the state for days at a time. The second is the lingering fear
that COVID will affect the health and availability of on-farm labor.
“The
next issue I see potentially coming up are issues associated with workers becoming
ill and not having the manpower,” said Jarrod Hardke, extension rice agronomist
for the Division of Agriculture. “Most do not have sufficient crews to
withstand loss of personnel, but if more cases begin increasing in the farming
community these operations are going to be extremely burdened getting fields
prepared and planted. I’m starting to encourage growers to make their ‘what if’
plans for these scenarios.”
The
report, published online, was produced by Scott Stiles,
extension economist, Brad Watkins, professor, Bob Stark, professor based at the
University of Arkansas-Monticello, and Alvaro Durand-Morat, assistant professor.
According
to a report released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture on March 31,
Arkansas farmers were projected to plant 800,000 acres of corn, a 4% increase
from the previous year. Cotton acres were projected to drop by 5% to 590,000
acres and soybean acres were projected to be up 9% at 2.9 million acres.
Peanuts are projected to rise by 3% to 35,000 acres, while rice acres were
projected to jump by 21% to 1.4 million.
Acres
in many crop sectors are expected to grow, but recent commodity prices are a mixed
bag at best.
Rice
prices in the U.S. remain strong with cash paddy prices ranging from
$14.25-$15.00 per hundredweight. New crop future prices increased slightly by
0.5% and closed at $12.11 the week of April 13. Thai 5% broken long grain rice
was quoted at $572 per ton the week of April 13, running at least $100 above
competing Asian countries. In India and Pakistan, COVID-19 is putting a drag on
the countries’ export capacity.
Corn
futures were down 2% last week. Arkansas cash corn price bottomed last
Wednesday at $3.27 per bushel before rising to a closing statewide average of
$3.32 on Friday (April 17).
Soybean
futures prices were down 2.8% last week, closing at $8.51 per bushel for the
week of April 17. Despite a midweek recovery before Easter, prices slid to an
$8.30 closing average on April 17.
“Cotton
prices remain under pressure as the U.S. Department of Agriculture projects
global cotton consumption to fall to a six-year low and world ending stocks to
reach five-year highs,” Siles said.
In
its April supply and demand estimates, USDA expects the U.S. 2019-20
season-average farm price to be 59-cents per pound.
“Over
the past four weeks, applications in the U.S. for unemployment benefits have
swelled to more than 22 million people,” Stiles said. “This likely translates
into a massive drop in textile and apparel sales and a significant impact on
the global textile sector overall. Anecdotal evidence in recent weeks indicates
that growers are still evaluating planting decisions and, in some instances, reducing
cotton acreage.”
“Alternative
corn and soybean crops are seeing prices at historically low levels, however,
they might offer advantages in terms of lower production costs and less
intensive management,” Stiles said.
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Spoiling Rice in Vietnam Show Perils of Food
Protectionism
By Mai Ngoc Chau
23 April 2020, 02:00 GMT+5Updated on 23 April 2020, 14:08 GMT+5
·
Some 300,000 tons of rice are stuck at ports nationwide
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The owner of one of Vietnam’s
biggest rice exporters, Nguyen Quang Hoa, can only watch as 500 containers of
sticky rice stranded in a port container yard for a month slowly degrades.
He’s furloughed 400 factory workers, but his losses keep growing.
If he doesn’t ship the 12,500 tons of rice soon, he’s worried his Chinese
clients will reject it, and his company will be forced to default on $13 million in bank loans.
“We may have to throw away all the sticky rice, and spend more
money getting rid of it,” said Hoa, director and founder of Duong Vu Co. “My company
is teetering on the edge of collapse.”
Hoa is one of more than 100 traders
in Vietnam hurt by a government measure last month to restrict shipments on
concerns that global demand will spike as the coronavirus upends supply chains.
While the world’s third-biggest rice exporter has since reopened some trade,
hundreds of thousands of tons of spoiling rice at the country’s ports show the
dangers of curbing exports.
In an effort to ease some of the
bottlenecks at ports, the customs department on Thursday said it is resuming
exports of glutinous rice. The shipments will not be part of this month’s rice
export quota, according to a statement on its website. There would be no limits
placed on the April shipments of sticky rice, the trade ministry said on its
website.
Midnight Registration
Less than three weeks after
suspending overseas shipments on March 24, the Vietnamese government said it
would allow 400,000 tons of exports in April. To do so, traders had to submit
customs declarations, with registration opening at midnight on Saturday April
11.
Within three hours, the export quota was full, according to local
news. Many were unable to register, and an estimated 300,000 tons are still stuck at ports,
according to Pham Thai Binh, chief executive at exporter Trung An High-Tech
Agriculture Co., who sits on the Vietnam Food Association’s governing board.
The trade ministry, which oversees
exports, was unavailable to comment.
If the rice isn’t shipped, the companies involved will struggle to
survive, the Vietnam Food Association said in a state newspaper. Even with the
April quota deducted, there’s still about 1.3 million tons of contracted undelivered rice,
according to Bloomberg calculations.
Additionally, uncertainty over
whether the government could restrict shipments again is holding back traders
from signing new export deals. No new contracts have been signed, even after
the export halt was lifted, according to the Vietnam Food Association’s Binh.
Tough Predicament
“Over 100 rice exporters are in
financial trouble as thousands of rice containers have been ensnared at ports,”
said Binh, whose firm was also unable to sign up for rice exports in April, and
has more than 100 containers of rice trapped at ports since March 24.
A farmer works in a paddy field in Can Tho.
Photographer: Hoang Dinh Nam/AFP via Getty Images
In Can Tho, a city in Vietnam’s rice belt, officials estimated
that a majority of its rice exporters have been losing as much as $14,000 a day each on damages paid to shipping
companies, container fees, and fines for being unable to fulfill export
contracts, according to Tien Phong newspaper.
Vietnam’s handling of the situation has drawn criticism, with the
food association urging the government’s customs department to stop opening the
registration for customs declarations at midnight like it did this month. Many
traders signed up to ship large amounts even
though they didn’t have enough volumes ready for exports, Vietnam News
reported.
In response, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc ordered an
investigation into profiteering as well as whether there has been any
wrongdoing in the state’s management of rice exports. The government also directed
the trade ministry to bring forward some of May’s export quotas to this
month, adding 100,000 tons for April shipments.
The Vietnam Food Association and rice firms on Wednesday urged the
government to terminate the export quotas from May to facilitate traders’
shipments and purchases from farmers, local news website BNews reported, citing a meeting
held by the trade ministry.
The Southeast Asian country has shipped 127,600 tons of rice this
month through April 23 out of 400,000 tons registered by traders, according to
the customs department’s website. Nearly 700,000 tons of rice was exported from
Vietnam a year earlier, the customs data show.
More Curbs?
The trade ministry has been ordered
by the premier to submit its rice export plan for next month before April 25.
It also proposed that the country ship 2.7 million tons of rice to help
farmers, without specifying if the amount is meant for this year.
But concerns over the outlook for exports is only growing.
National rice stockpiles, the very reason
the export ban happened in the first place, have failed to grow to the state’s
target levels due to a spike in domestic prices, raising speculation the
government could intervene again. Low-quality rice shipments, which account for
about 1/5 of total shipments, may be halted until mid-June to
help build inventories.
“We’ve stopped signing new
contracts. How can we know if we are able to deliver?” said Nguyen Van Thanh,
director of rice exporter Phuoc Thanh IV Co. “Vietnam is offering our export
market to other rice producers, and we traders will have to restart from
scratch after everything settles down.”
— With assistance by Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen
(Updates to add customs decision
to allow resumption of glutinous rice exports in the 5th paragraph.)
Bernas assures stability
of rice price and supply
April 23, 2020 00:35 am +08
KUALA LUMPUR (April 22):
Padiberas Nasional Bhd (Bernas) will ensure the price stability and adequate
supply of rice even as the nation battles against COVID-19.
In a statement today, the
national foodgrain management agency said while the price of rice had surged in
the global market due to the pandemic, it was committed to monitoring and
ensuring the market price of the commodity here remains stable and affordable.
“As stated by the Agriculture and
Food Industry Ministry and other relevant Ministries, food security and supply
in the country are under control. The staple food of Malaysians is easily
available and the retail price of rice remains as it was prior to the COVID-19
outbreak,” Bernas said.
It also said it had maintained
the prices set for wholesalers for the local white rice and imported rice.
Bernas said it would bear the
extra cost of rice or operations to maintain the stability of the market price.
It said this in response to a
report which quoted the Malay Economic Action Council (MTEM) as saying rice
millers and wholesalers were complaining of being squeezed by a “rice import
cartel”.
Bernas refuted the statement by
MTEM that it received a subsidy on rice imports and that such imports were
being monopolised by the Agriculture and Food Industry Ministry.
Rice trade to
slash prices
PUBLISHED : 23 APR 2020 AT 09:04
Packaged rice manufacturers and distributors yesterday agreed to
cut their prices by as much as 50%, as requested by the Commerce Ministry.
This is the second campaign
initiated by the ministry to lower the prices of goods to help people during
the coronavirus crisis.
On April 16, the ministry
requested consumer goods makers, distributors and modern trade operators lower
prices by 5-58% to help reduce living costs during the pandemic.
The campaign starts with six
categories covering 72 items from March 16 to June 30.
The six categories in the
campaign are food and beverage; frozen finished food; seasoning sauce; daily-use
products; body care products; and cleaning products.
Six versions of packaged rice
including Hom Mali rice 100%, premium Hom Mali rice and premium fragrant rice
are part of the first campaign.
In the second round of the sales
campaign started yesterday, running until the end of June, an additional 98
items from 18 manufacturers and distributors will have prices cut by as much as
50%.
Commerce Minister Jurin
Laksanawisit said apart from products in the first and second campaigns, the
ministry has assigned the Interior Ministry to add items in the following
rounds. He also expects more manufacturers to participate in special sales
campaigns to help reduce living costs for consumers hurt by the pandemic.
Somkiat Makayatorn, honorary
president of the Thai Rice Packers Association, predicted packaged rice prices
to increase further after domestic rice prices rose by 20-30% since the start
of the year, mostly due to drought and a sharp rise in demand because of the
pandemic.
The price of milled rice, which
is used as a raw material in packaged rice production, has risen to 15 baht per
kilogramme from 12.50 baht in early January.
The price of milled rice is
expected to continue increasing until August or September, before the release
of the new harvest into the market, said Mr Somkiat.
He said the worst drought in 40
years is responsible for farmers reporting a decrease of 1.5-2 million tonnes
of milled off-season rice.
Despite the short-term demand
surge, domestic rice consumption is expected to drop this year as foreign
tourists veer away from Thailand.
Bernas urged
not to ration rice supply in Sabah
Azuwan
KOTA
KINABALU: Syarikat Padiberas Nasional Berhad (Bernas) has been urged not to
implement rationing of rice supply on wholesalers in Sabah.
National
Youth Council Vice President Azuwan Marjan @ Norjan said he was informed by
rice wholesalers that Bernas had started rationing its supply to them since
April 13.
Bernas’
move has resulted in a shortage in the rice supply for domestic use especially
during the Movement Contol Order and the coming Ramadhan, he alleged.
Azuwan
said the MCO which has entered into its third phase has caused the demand for
rice, which is a food staple of Malaysia to increase adding that in March, it
was 30 per cent higher than before.The rationing by Bernas means wholesalers in
Sabah are unable to supply rice to retailers, Azuwan said in a statement on
Wednesday.
On
average, rice wholesalers gets about 20,000 metric tonnes of rice from Bernas a
month.“With the increase in demand, why should Bernas implement rationing in
supply?” he asked adding that other than supplying to retailers, rice
wholesalers have also received requests from corporate companies, NGOs and
individuals who are actively donating food aid to the needy during the MCO.
Govt to beef up rice and palm oil reserves
THIHA KO KO 23 APR 2020
Photo:
Aung Htay Hlaing/The Myanmar Times
The government is planning to beef up the national rice and palm
oil reserves for emergencies in case the COVID-19 outbreak drags on.
The Ministry of Commerce (MOC) announced in an April 22
statement that it will buy and stockpile 50,000 tonnes of rice and 12,000
tonnes of palm oil as reserve food for emergencies. It also added that the
ministry will purchase the items at a reasonable price.
“We would like to inform the public that there is no need to
worry about the supply of rice. We have sufficient supply of rice in the
country. The government is planning to buy 10 percent of the amount of rice
exports, which is 50,000 tonnes,” commerce minister U Thant Myint said.
The MOC said it has already received funds to procure the
supplies needed.
The ministry is also working on the national reserve food plan
with the private sector as well as the Union of Myanmar Federation of Chambers
of Commerce and Industry, Myanmar Rice Federation and Myanmar Edible Oil
Dealers’ Association.
Indian
rice rates ease as rupee flounders, labour woes hit Bangladesh
APRIL
23, 2020 / 7:39 PM /
BENGALURU
(Reuters) - Rice export prices in India eased from a eight-month peak this week
on the rupee’s record fall, while the coronavirus lockdown has raised concerns
about a shortage of labour to harvest the summer crop in neighbouring
Bangladesh.
FILE
PHOTO: A worker spreads rice for drying at a rice mill on the outskirts of
Kolkata, India, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/File Photo
Top
exporter India’s 5 percent broken parboiled variety was quoted $374-$379 per
tonne this week, down from $375-$380 per tonne quoted last week.
“The
lockdown has been limiting the movement of paddy and milled rice,” said an
exporter based at Kakinada in southern state of Andhra Pradesh, adding that
demand from African countries had been good.
India
extended a lockdown on its 1.3 billion people until at least May 3 as the number
of coronavirus cases exceeded 20,000.
The
Indian rupee hit a record low this week, increasing traders’ margin from
overseas sales.
In
Bangladesh, where the lockdown has been extended until May 5, harvesting of the
summer rice crop varieties could be affected due to a shortage of labourers.
If
this persists, Bangladesh could miss its target of 20 million tonnes for the
“Boro” summer variety rice crop this season, agricultural ministry officials
said.
Boro
contributes more than half of Bangladesh’s typical annual rice output of around
35 million tonnes.
Meanwhile
in Vietnam, rates were nominal since exporters were not ready to sign new
contracts, given uncertainty over whether they can ship the rice due to the
government’s export quota, a Ho Chi Minh City-based trader said.
However,
prices for 5% broken rice were quoted at $440-$450 per tonne - their highest in
nearly two-years. “Buyers are not willing to sign contracts as they are not
sure if they can buy,” the trader said.
The
Vietnamese government said on Wednesday it would raise its white rice exports
quota for April to 500,000 tonnes from 400,000 tonnes.
Traders
said the 500,000 tonnes of rice to be exported this month were not enough to
cover contracts signed before the government introduced a ban on rice exports
in March.
Thailand’s
benchmark 5-percent broken rice prices were quoted at $530-$556, wider
from last week’s $530-$538.
Traders
say rice prices have not fluctuated much as demand has been steady with no
major deals in sight.
“Many
Thai exporters are waiting to see how the return of rice exports from
competitors like Vietnam will impact prices and demand, after the disruption
from the COVID-19 pandemic,” a Bangkok-based rice trader said.
Disruptions
to sale by major exporters like Vietnam and India earlier this month raised the
price of Thai rice to their highest level since April 2013.
Concerns
over possible shortages of rice supply due to the ongoing drought continue to
impact prices as well, traders said.
Wheat production set to surpass rice output for first time
Published: April 23, 2020 12:40:51 AM
According to
the second advance estimates for crop year 2019-20 (July-June), the rice output
is seen at 117.47 million tonne and wheat at 106.21 million tonne.
The country’s wheat production is set to surpass the rice output
for the first time this year, according to feedback the Centre has received
from the states. The food ministry has been informed by wheat-growing states
that production of the rabi-grown cereal may be 118.41 million tonne, 11.5%
higher than the estimate of the agriculture ministry. Due to unseasonal rains
and hailstorms in March, there were concerns over the wheat crop.
According to the second advance estimates for crop year 2019-20
(July-June), the rice output is seen at 117.47 million tonne and wheat at
106.21 million tonne. The estimates, released by the agriculture ministry in
February, also pegged the food grain output at record 291.95 million tonne.
Backed by the bumper production, the states have geared up plan to
purchase 40.7 million tonne of wheat this year for the central Pool, the food
ministry said in a statement. The procurement which has commenced from April 15
will continue until June 30 in most of the states except Bihar, where it is
slated to continue till July 15 due to late harvest. Punjab and Gujarat have
fixed the procurement schedule till May-end.
The rabi rice procurement has also been fixed at a record level of
11.29 million tonne, out of which more than half will be from Telangana as the
state has decided to buy the entire 6.2 million tonne of winter-grown crop from
farmers.
Price of rice records a
sharp increase in Tiruchi
TIRUCHI, APRIL
23, 2020 20:29 IST
Most retail and grocery stores in
Tiruchi sell one kg of high quality Ponni rice at ₹60 a kg. | Photo Credit: M_SRINATH
‘Upward revision is due to high
cost of transportation’
Despite availability of sufficient stocks of paddy with rice
mills, price of rice has recorded sharp increase in the retail market in
Tiruchi.
On an average, the price has gone by ₹6 -12 a kg of boiled rice, depending on the quality and variety.
In retail rice stores and grocery shops in Tiruchi, one kg of Mannachanallur
Ponni (old) variety was sold between ₹56 and ₹62. The price of Mannachanallur ponni (new) was hovering between
₹45 and ₹50.
Before the imposition of lockdown, one kg of Mannachanallur
Ponni (old) was sold at ₹48 -54 and new rice was sold at ₹42-46. Prices of Andhra and Karnataka ponni have also gone by ₹5-6 a kg. Similarly, the rates of idly rice have also risen by ₹5 a kg.
“Most retail and grocery stores in the city sell one kg of high
quality Ponni rice at ₹60 a kg. The rate is ₹56 in a few stores. The upward revision is due to high cost of
transportation of rice,” says Manikandan, who runs a grocery store in
Cantonment.
However, except a few old varieties of rice, the rates in
Mannachanallur, where about dozens of rice mills are located, remain unchanged
for the last five months. Though the supply chain was disrupted for a week
after the lockdown, it was restored quickly with the intervention of the State
government.
Due to sharp increase in prices of rice, several consumers visit
Mannachanallur to buy rice directly from the mills.
M. Sivanandan, who owns a rice mill at Mannachallur, told The
Hindu that the number of consumers from Tiruchi, who visited
Mannachallur to buy rice directly from the mills, had gone up sharply over the
last few days. It was mainly due to a big difference in price.
Industry sources attributed the price rise to a section of
retailers, who have created an “artificial shortage” of rice in the wake of
curfew restrictions. Some traders, who have taken, advantage of restriction in
business hours and business days, have increased the prices.
Industry sources further said that there was no reason for price
rise in the near future as rice mills have piled up stocks. Moreover, farmers
also have a huge stock. The current price would likely to continue up to the
year end.
Rice growing localities, exporters
want export limits scrapped
Update: April,
23/2020 - 08:30
Harvesting rice in the Mekong Delta.
Rice growing localities and exporters have urged the Government to resume
rice exports without setting limits. — VNA/VNS Photo
HCM CITY
— Officials from many localities in the Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta and rice
exporters have urged the Government to resume rice exports without setting
limits, saying many firms face difficulties because of this.Speaking at a conference in HCM City on April 22 they also exhorted the ministries of Industry and Trade and Finance and the customs department to quickly clear the consignments of rice exports stuck at ports.
The Government recently lifted a ban on rice exports, but capped them at around 400,000 tonnes each in April and May citing national food security concerns amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
On April 12, the General Department of Customs began accepting online customs declarations from rice exporters, but many were left disappointed since the quota of 400,000 tonnes was reached in just three hours.
Some hundreds tonnes of rice are now stuck at ports.
Lê Minh Đức, director of the Long An Province Department of Industry and Trade, said: "Last year, we sat together to discuss solutions to boost rice exports, but this year we discuss whether to export or not. This is abnormal, especially in the context that rice output this year has not decreased despite being affected by drought and saltwater intrusion."
As the COVID-19 pandemic rages globally, demand for rice has increased in many markets, and Việt Nam should pay attention to this opportunity, he said.
"In the current situation, we have recommended the Government should allow export of rice without applying limits.”
Nguyễn Ngọc Nam, chairman of the Việt Nam Food Association, said: “As of April 18, rice inventory at member companies was 1.94 million tonnes. Enterprises had signed contracts to export 1.7 million tonnes with delivery until June. If they fulfil the contracts, they will still have more than 200,000 tonnes in stock. Besides, the summer-autumn rice crop is about to be harvested.
“Therefore, we have petitioned the Government to allow normal rice exports from May.”
Trương Quang Hoài Nam, deputy chairman of the Cần Thơ City People’s Committee, agreed with Đức and called for allowing exporters who submitted customs declaration forms in March to ship their rice and enabling firms with consignments stuck at ports to complete customs clearance.
"Firms in the city had shipped 76,181 tonnes of rice to ports. They submitted customs declarations for more than 46,000 tonnes in March. But all consignments are stuck at ports."
Trần Hồ Hiền of the Bình Định Food Joint Stock Company (Bidifood) said his company had nearly 10,000 tonnes stuck at Mỹ Thới Port because customs lost its customs declaration form.
His company has been suffering heavy losses since it has to meet VNĐ200 million a day (US$8,476) for a month in unexpected expenses, he said.
"Our company is in danger of collapse.”
He sought the help of the ministries of Industry and Trade and Finance.
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Trần Quốc Khánh, who chaired the conference, called on customs to help Bidifood and other companies in similar circumstances clear their consignments as soon as possible.
He admitted that there have been difficulties for businesses, but the recent changes in rice export regulations were due to concerns related to food security and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic and saltwater intrusion.
Localities in the Mekong Delta have reported a bumper winter-spring crop, and farmers in the north have also started harvesting their rice crop, which has not affected by pests as earlier feared.
Based on this, his ministry would recommend that the Government should adjust the rice export regulations from May, he promised. — VNS
GIEWS
Country Brief: Benin 23-April-2020
23 Apr 2020
Originally
published:23 Apr 2020
FOOD
SECURITY SNAPSHOT
· Planting
of 2020 main season maize ongoing in south under normal moisture conditions
· Above‑average
2019 cereal crop harvested
· Prices
of coarse grains overall stable in March
· Pockets
of food insecurity persist
Start of
2020 cropping season in south follows timely onset of rains
Following
the timely onset of seasonal rains in the south, planting of yams was completed
in March, while planting of the main season maize crop is ongoing and will be
completed by the end of April. The harvest of yams is expected to start in
July, while harvesting operations of maize will start in August. Planting of
rice crops, to be harvested from August, is underway. The cumulative rainfall
amounts since early March have been average to above average in most planted
areas and supported the development of yams and maize crops, which are at
sprouting, seedling and tillering stages. Weeding activities are normally
taking place in most cropped areas. In the north, seasonal dry weather
conditions are still prevailing and planting operations for millet and sorghum,
to be harvested from October, are expected to begin in May‑June with the onset
of the rains.
In
April, despite the ongoing pastoral lean season, forage availability was
overall satisfactory in the main grazing areas of the country. The seasonal
movement of domestic livestock, returning from the south to the north, started
in early March following the normal onset of the rains in the south. The animal
health situation is generally good and stable, with just some localized
outbreaks of seasonal diseases, including Trypanosomiasis and Contagious Bovine
Peripneumonia.
Above‑average
2019 cereal crop harvested
Harvesting
activities for the 2019 rainfed and irrigated crops was completed by end‑January.
Favourable rainfall across the country and adequate supply of inputs by the
Government and several NGOs benefited the 2019 national cereal production,
estimated at 1.9 million tonnes, about 5 percent above the five‑year average.
Cereal
import requirements for the 2019/20 (November/October) marketing year, mostly
rice and wheat for human consumption are estimated at 400 000 tonnes, about 20
percent below the previous year and 17 percent below the average. The country
usually re‑exports rice to neighboring Nigeria to cover household consumption
needs. Following the closure of the border with Nigeria imposed by the Nigerian
Government since late 2019, traders are unable to re‑export their rice stocks
into Nigeria. This will likely result in the decline of the quantity imported
by the country.
Stable
food prices due to increased supply
Most
agricultural markets are well supplied following the commercialization of newly
harvested crops and the relatively high level of carryover stocks from the
previous year. Prices of maize have been broadly stable since the start of the
harvests in October on account of good domestic availabilities. Prices of imported
rice were also relatively stable due to the regular supply from the
international markets.
Pockets
of food insecurity persist
Despite
overall favourable food security conditions, some vulnerable households need
external food assistance. According to the March 2020 “Cadre Harmonisé”
analysis, about 14 500 people (less than 0.5 percent of the population
analysed) are estimated to need food assistance from June to August 2020, below
the level of 20 000 food insecure people in June‑August 2019. The main drivers
of food insecurity are localized crop shortfalls in 2019 due to floods, mostly
in northern areas, including Alibori and Donga regions.
COVID-19
and measures adopted by the Government
In view of the evolving COVID‑19 situation, the
Government has decreed a total country lockdown. The Government has also taken
some sanitary, social and economic measures, including the free diagnosis and
treatment of all suspected and confirmed cases of COVID‑19. Official
restrictions on population movements, combined with heightened levels of fear,
have led many people to stay at their homes. Although these measures have not
affected access to food, further restrictions on population movements could
hamper access to land and have a negative impact on 2020 agricultural
production. In addition, the measures taken by the Government to limit
population movements in 15 high‑risk communes in southern parts of the country
could lead to atypical price increases for basic foodstuffs.
Primary country
Other
country
Source
No need to control food prices –
Agric Minister
Source: Naa
Sakwaba Akwa
23 April 2020 12:21pm
The Minister of Food and Agriculture has
dismissed calls for government to regulate food prices to curb hikes, in the
wake of the coronavirus pandemic in the country.
At a press briefing in Accra Thursday, Dr.
Owusu Afriyie Akoto said, government is putting in place measures to ensure
there is enough food in the system, therefore, price controls are not necessary
at the moment.
“There is no need to control prices,
absolutely no need. The market is working, farmers are working.
“I think that the open pricing system that
this government is following shows the kind of confidence that we have that we
will be able to supply food to the market for consumers at very reasonable
prices,” he added.
As residents of Accra, Tema, Kumasi and
Kasoa rushed to purchase food items before a partial lockdown in March – which
has now been lifted – food prices soared.
This resulted in the sharp rise in the
prices of food items like gari. An ‘Olonka’ (a local unit of measure) of gari
which used to sell at ₵5.00 was sold at ₵25.00.
The prices of tomatoes and other staple
food items shot up by more than 100 percent, prompting calls for government to
step in and put in place a standard price regime.
But the Agric Minister says he is not a
believer of controlling prices.
The move, in his view, creates “an
artificial environment for the misallocation of resources. That is the very
simple economic reason why I do not believe in controlling prices.
“In any case, we are talking about nearly
three million of farm produce, hundreds of thousands of traders, small and
large in the market. We see the teeming numbers of market women and men, how do
you go about controlling prices,” he queried.
But to ensure that there is an abundance of
food, Dr Akoto said governemnt has distributed improved seeds to farmers across
the country to expand their yield.
In the case of rice, he said the country
was rarely self-sufficient before the current administration took over.
However, from less than 150,000 metric
tonnes, the country in 2019 harvested 665,000 metric tonnes of rice and
government is targeting a harvest of between 750,000 and 800,000 metric tonnes
for 2020.
“I am saying these figures with confidence.
It is the amount of improved seeds that we supply to farmers that we use to do
these extrapolations. We have moved from supplying 1,600 metric tonnes of improved
rice seeds to 4,600 to 6,600 and last year we distributed close to 9,000 metric
tonnes of seed.
“So we are ramping up the amount of
improved rice seeds we are giving to farmers. You cannot compare the yield of
the improved seeds to the traditional seeds…it is double. So the farmer who was
harvesting four bags per acre or so, is now dong more than that…some are doing
eight and nine bags and it is attracting a lot of interest into the seed
business in this country and also farming of rice seeds,” he added.
Dr Akoto said government is hoping to do
more through the supply of mills to rice-producing communities ,so the farmers
themselves can mill rice before it goes on to the traders.
Labour shortage likely to hit Bengal rabi
paddy harvest
Shobha Roy Kolkata | Updated on April
23, 2020 Published on April 23, 2020
Govt trying to
remedy situation with mechanical harvesters
Harvesting of boro paddy in West
Bengal, set to begin in about a week, is likely to be hampered by labour
shortage as most of the workers have gone to their villages following the
pandemic scare.
The State government is trying to
deal with the manpower shortage by deploying additional combine harvesters.
Govt arrangements
According to Pradip Kumar
Mazumder, Chief Advisor (Agriculture) to the Chief Minister, the State has
close to 2,500 combine harvesters and it tried to induct some more just before
the Covid-19 lockdown was imposed. Local labourers are available for harvesting
and some migrant labourers, who got stuck at potato harvesting, will also be
used for harvesting of boro paddy.
“We are keeping our ears to the
ground. Depending on the situation, we have to take decisions but as of now, we
feel the situation is a manageable, if not comfortable,” Mazumder told BusinessLine.
West Bengal produces 15-16
million tonnes of paddy annually in three seasons; that include aus, aman and
boro. The kharif paddy (aus and aman) output accounts for about 70 per cent of
the total production in the State. Boro paddy is usually cultivated on land
which has canal or irrigation facility. The sowing of boro paddy, just like
that of potato, was staggered this year on account of unusual weather
conditions.
Though harvesting will begin by
next week, it will peak by April-end or early May.
Cost escalation
While the use of combine
harvesters will ensure that harvesting is not hampered much, it will push up
the cost of production.
“Many paddy cutting machines have
been brought from north Indian States such as Punjab and Haryana. In a normal
year, if 50 per cent of harvesting is done by machines, this year it would be
90 per cent. It will increase the cost of paddy sold to millers, which will
ultimately result in higher prices for rice,” said Suraj Agarwal, CEO, Tirupati
Agri Trade.
The overall cost of harvesting is
likely to increase by around 20 per cent. The rental cost of machines are high
due to the lockdown. Labour cost is also likely to double due to the shortage.
This apart, the transportation cost of paddy from farms to warehouses and then
to rice mills will also be higher.
Procurement
Paddy procurement will begin in
the first week of May. The Bengal government usually offers incentivised MSP to
people coming to procurement centres to cover the cost of transportation. In
view of the Covid-19 situation, the State government is also considering the
possibility of picking up paddy from farmers’ houses, if need arises.
“If the lockdown continues in
May, transportation could be an issue. The Chief Minister has instructed that
we plan to pick up paddy from far-flung villages and gram panchayats. The
additional cost of procurement will be borne by the State and we are preparing
for that,” Mazumder said.
According to Sushil Kumar
Choudhury, President, Bengal Rice Mills Association, mills are yet to receive
“clear guidelines” from the State government on procurement.
Mobile app
The government is also mulling
the possibility of rolling out a mobile application for farmers to place
requests for collection of foodgrain from their doorstep.
“Usually the BDO informs farmers
in a particular village about rice mills starting their procurement. Now this
would be facilitated through a mobile app. However, we need to see how adept
the people in villages are when it comes to technology adoption,” Choudhury
said.
Published
on April 23, 2020
Fresh export orders for tea, basmati from Iran,
China and Russia
West Asian nations led by Iran have also placed
orders for basmati rice, but traders are likely to miss the crucial Ramzan
period, April 23-May 23, as it takes 40-45 days to ship the consignments.
, ET Bureau|Last
Updated: Apr 23, 2020, 10.24 AM IST
Basmati rice
(File Photo)
KOLKATA:
Iran, China and Russia have placed
fresh orders for Indian black tea in the midst of the Covid-19 outbreak, a boost
for the domestic industry which has incurred losses of about 100 million kg of
teas owing to the lockdown. West Asian nations led by Iran have also
placed orders for basmati rice, but traders are likely to miss the
crucial Ramzan period, April 23-May 23, as it takes 40-45 days to ship the
consignments.
Mohit Agarwal, director, Asian Tea, told ET: “There is good demand from Iran for orthodox teas. Their banks have opened and payments for the earlier consignments are coming. Exporters are buying privately since the auction centres are yet to open.” Prices of tea have firmed up by 7-8% compared from that a year ago, to Rs 280-300 per kg, he said.
Mohit Agarwal, director, Asian Tea, told ET: “There is good demand from Iran for orthodox teas. Their banks have opened and payments for the earlier consignments are coming. Exporters are buying privately since the auction centres are yet to open.” Prices of tea have firmed up by 7-8% compared from that a year ago, to Rs 280-300 per kg, he said.
Domestic
Usage Report Benefits All
The Market Year 2018-2019 Domestic Usage Report Survey has been issued to RMA members. Following successful updates of the 2017-18 report, the DUR Subcommittee agreed to continue using the same questionnaire going forward, and asks that completed forms be returned by May 1. The updated report provides an accurate and representative picture of the domestic U.S. rice industry. The entire U.S. rice industry benefits from a comprehensive DUR report, and USA Rice encourages maximum participation from mill members. Gaining a solid perspective on current market conditions and market segment shipments helps identify opportunities for growth. For more information, please contact Jesica Kincaid. |
|
USA RICE DAILY
A Return to Normal for California Rice Planting
By Jim Morris
SACRAMENTO, CA -- Tractors are working
ground and the first airplanes are flying seed in the Sacramento Valley,
marking the first normal start to planting season in several years in
California.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County. "The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good head start. We are now waiting for Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California, with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County. "The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good head start. We are now waiting for Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California, with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
A Return to Normal for California Rice Planting
By Jim Morris
SACRAMENTO,
CA -- Tractors are working ground and the first airplanes are flying seed in
the Sacramento Valley, marking the first normal start to planting season in
several years in California.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County. "The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good head start. We are now waiting for Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California, with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
"Weather has been much more cooperative," said grower Sean Doherty in Yolo County. "The cool and dry conditions have allowed growers to get a good head start. We are now waiting for Mother Nature to dictate planting, instead of the calendar. When we consistently have warmer weather later this month and into May, more airplanes will be seeding fields."
Rice planting will continue in California through May.
More favorable weather for planting will likely mean more rice acres planted in California, although it is too early for statewide acreage specifics.
Governor Gavin Newsom instituted a statewide stay-at-home order on March 19 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Rice farms and mills are part of the essential critical infrastructure workforce and their work is ongoing. Farms and mills have instituted several steps to protect workers from COVID-19, including employee training, maintaining a six-foot distance whenever possible, washing hands or using hand sanitizer at a station, regularly wiping down equipment, and having sick employees not come to work.
Rice is grown on about a half-million acres in California, with the vast majority of the crop farmed in the Sacramento Valley.
USA
RICE DAILY
Could Changing
the Way We Farm Rice Be a Climate Solution?
Farmers are on focusing on ways to reduce
methane emissions and save water to further reduce the staple crop’s climate
footprint.
This article is published in
partnership with Covering
Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening
coverage of the climate story.
Rice may be having a moment. Until
recently, the average American ate only about a half
a pound of the grain annually, while people in some Asian
countries eat upwards of eight pounds a year. By early March, however, one data
firm found that sales of rice and other staples were up 84
percent. And, as significant questions
have arisen about the short-term future of meat production,
this grain could become a more significant part of the U.S. diet.
As one of only a few commodities
grown in the U.S. that go directly to feed people, rice also has a much smaller
environmental footprint than many other foods.
“People underestimate rice. It’s a
small grain,” says Meryl Kennedy, who is the daughter of a Louisiana rice
farmer, the CEO of Kennedy Rice Mill, and the founder of 4Sisters Rice. During a
pandemic, however, it can feed a lot of people efficiently.
But rice farming isn’t perfect. In
fact, global rice production accounts
for at least 10 percent of agricultural emissions. It’s
responsible for producing large quantities of methane—a greenhouse gas that’s
24 times more potent than carbon dioxide. But, as it turns out, that’s
more a factor of quantity than it is about growing method. Rice provides one
fifth of the world’s calories, and research shows that, per calorie, it
actually has one of the
lowest emissions footprints compared to meat, fruit,
vegetables, wheat, and corn.
Now, there is growing attention to
practices that further reduce the climate impact of rice. And, given that it is
the fourth largest crop grown in the world, those changes could amount to a
significant climate solution.
In the 2020
Drawdown Review, which analyzes the impact of various climate
solutions across industries using the latest scientific research, the nonprofit
thinktank Project Drawdown includes two methods of shifting rice production.
“Both of these solutions are about
how you can grow rice most sustainably. This is a shift from conventional to an
improved way of rice cultivation,” said Dr. Mamta Mahra, a senior fellow at
Drawdown in biosequestration modeling. “The point is: If we’re already growing
rice, why not see how much emissions can be reduced?”
Rice Production Today
According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), rice is the fourth largest crop in the world. If
adjusted to account for how much is eaten by people, it would probably rise in
the ranks, since corn and sugarcane are both also used to produce biofuels.
China’s farmers far and away grow
the most. The U.S. ranks
twelfth in global rice production, and the vast majority
happens in six states: Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,
and Texas. In 2019, American rice farmers harvested about 18 billion pounds of
rice from just under 2.5 million acres. About half of that rice is exported, primarily to
Mexico, Central America, and Northeast Asia, to feed global appetites that are
bigger than those in the U.S.
“The U.S. produces more rice than
we eat,” said Kennedy. “I hope that that changes in my lifetime.”
‘Improved Rice Production’
What is gradually changing is how
the industry is thinking and talking about its environmental impact. Last year,
USA Rice, which represents the industry, published a 64-page sustainability
report. And this week, it announced new sustainability goals,
pledging to reduce both water use and greenhouse gas emissions by 13 percent by
2030.
Most rice in the U.S. is produced
on thousands of acres that are flooded for the entire season. Flooding controls
weeds and serves other purposes, like making nutrients in the soil available to
the plant. But it requires a lot of water, and microbes that live in the soil
beneath flooded fields produce methane, which is then released by the plants.
Reducing the amount of time that
fields are flooded, then, serves two purposes: conserving water and reducing
emissions. That’s one of the primary practices involved in what Project
Drawdown classifies as “improved
rice production.”
In the Southern U.S., a growing
number of farmers are using a method called alternate wetting and drying (AWD).
Studies have found that depending on how often and for how long farmers drain
their fields, the practice can reduce methane emissions by as
much as 65 or even 90
percent. AWD is not widespread, though, and it’s not yet clear
how it affects yields.
Kennedy said other methods of water
conservation like furrow irrigation (also called row rice) and tailwater
recovery, which allows farmers to reuse water multiple times, are more popular.
There is also evidence that some
rice farmers are tilling their soil less, another approach that reduces
emissions. According to USA Rice’s report, a study out of Louisiana found that
the number of rice farmers using low- or no-till methods increased from 26 to
41 percent between 2000 and 2011.
Breeding new strains of rice can
also help farmers implement these practices and has the potential to directly
reduce emissions. Anna McClung has been researching rice varieties since 1991
and is the director of the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Dale
Bumpers National Rice Research Center in Arkansas.
Her team uses a sophisticated form
of traditional breeding that tracks existing genes within plants. Researchers
in other countries have
used genetic modification to modify rice for resistance to
climate change, but there is currently no GMO rice approved for production in
the U.S.
“Our current research plan is 80
percent focused on … climate change,” McClung told Civil Eats. Drought and
extreme heat threaten rice crops, and her team is looking at traits and
varieties that can withstand those conditions while supporting new farming
methods. “Water is being used to control weeds, but it also provides this
uniform growing environment so the plant can do its best,” she explained. “If
you go to a system where you’re not keeping the field flooded, but all of your
varieties have been optimized for flooding, that’s not going to work.”
McClung’s team has also compared
methane is production based on the variety of rice grown. “We saw
big differences in the amount of methane. Rondo has about 2.5
times the methane released as the next variety, Jupiter. And about 5 times the
methane released as the other three rice cultivars,” she said. “The question
is: why?” More research on that front may yield discoveries that allow farmers
to plant low-methane rice varieties.
More growers are choosing to grow rice
using organic practices. USDA
data show a 5,000-acre increase between 2008 and 2016, and USA
Rice’s report says organic
production has “increased six fold in the past 20 years.” But there is little
research on how organic systems compare in terms of emissions.
At Lundberg Family Farms in
California, Bryce Lundberg’s parents were growing organic rice before there was
a national organic standard. His family started milling its own rice in 1969,
and he started farming with his brother in 1985. Today, the family grows about
half of the rice they sell and sources the rest from other farmers, the vast
majority of whom are nearby.
Eighty percent of the rice they
sell is organic; the rest meets a standard they call eco-farmed. “There’s no
burning of rice straw, there’s a requirement for rotation. There’s only one
insecticide approved…and several herbicides, but none of them can be in the
danger [category],” he said. “It can’t be a carcinogen. It can’t be a mutagen.
It can’t be on PAN’s
‘bad actor’ list. It can’t be a broad-based killer that would affect
frogs, snakes, fish. It can’t persist in water.”
The approach his parents took, he
adds, was based on their “wanting to work closely with nature, and not poison
the place where they farm or the place where they live.”
On organic rice farms, skipping
synthetic fertilizers and herbicides (which are
widespread in conventional rice farming) is a strategy that can result in healthier soil,
which may hold more carbon. Without weed killers, however, flooding becomes
even more important. Lundberg controls weeds by flooding fields to kill grasses
and then drying fields out for months to kill aquatic weeds. The system ends up
looking like a version of AWD, and Lundberg said U.C. Davis has been working with
the company on research that shows it does reduce methane emissions because the
plants and soil spend less time immersed in water. They hope to release the
study by the end of this year.
System of Rice Intensification
To Norman Uphoff, all of these improvements
are small compared to the benefits of a revolutionary system called System of
Rice Intensification (SRI).
Uphoff is the senior advisor for SRI-Rice, an
international network and resource center out of Cornell University, where he
has taught since 1970. SRI was developed in Madagascar in the 1990s as a method
for smallholder farmers to feed themselves using fewer resources.
Unlike in conventional systems
which involves “broadcasting” seeds (basically, dropping them from a plane) all
over a flooded field, farmers using the SRI system plant rice seedlings in a
grid pattern in dry soil, with space between them. They spread compost to build
soil health (although some also use synthetic fertilizers) and then use an
alternating wet-dry irrigation system instead of flooded fields. They control
weeds with rotary weeders or by hand, rather than use herbicides.
“The plant will grow to fill
available space,” Uphoff explains. “If the roots can grow freely, with not too
much water and enough organic matter, you get more root growth and more tiller
growth.” Tillers are like the branches of the plant; when there are more of
them, each plant can produce more rice.
A number of studies over
the years have shown SRI can produce high yields—usually from 20 to 50 percent
higher—compared to traditional flooded paddy systems, while saving money on
inputs. A meta-analysis done in 2013 found SRI management resulted in 22
percent less water use. Several
studies have also shown that SRI leads to significant
reductions in methane emissions, and while it does increase emissions of
nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, the net greenhouse effect is
still positive.
Uphoff said farmers in 60 countries
are using SRI today, with about 20 countries leading the charge. “We estimate
that at least 20 million farmers are using these ideas in full or in
part—enough so that they’re getting improvements in their crop performance,” he
said. Most U.S. farmers, however, have shied away from the practice.
“Our primary concern has been for
farmers in poor countries. U.S. rice production is highly capitalized and
subsidized,” he explained. The idea of cutting a plant population by 80 or 90
percent, isn’t likely to be popular here, he adds. “The people who make their
livelihood on…seeds, fertilizers, and herbicides don’t want to hear about
this.”
There are a few examples of small
American farms using some of SRI’s principles to grow “dryland” rice. Blue Moon Acres in
New Jersey is well known in the Northeast, and Next
Step Produce and Purple
Mountain Organics are pioneering their own processes in the
Mid-Atlantic. California-based Lotus
Foods also sells rice produced by smallholder farmers around
the world using SRI.
But for the vast majority of rice
production—which is large-scale—sources said farmers brush SRI off as
impractical, especially because it tends to be labor-intensive. Uphoff said the
missing piece is specialized equipment, and if that mechanization existed,
there would be no reason not to apply it on a larger scale.
Project Drawdown, for its part,
presents the two approaches—promoting SRI among smallholder farmers around the
world while using other techniques on large-scale farms—as complementary
solutions with real potential. In other words, with so much rice in the world
and a rapidly changing climate, all efforts to shrink this important grain’s
footprint are worth the effort.
Int'l researchers
fear double blow
Covid-19 threatens hike in food prices, supply chain disruptions
FE REPORT | Published: April 23,
2020 09:19:12 | Updated: April
23, 2020 13:08:28
Boro farmers returning home with the newly-harvested
paddy in Bashkuta village under Sadar upazila in Magura, May 09, 2018. —
FE/Files
Consultative Group
on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) identified a number of emerging
concerns in the country's food production and supply chain system during
Covid-19 pandemic that require immediate attention.
"Notable
reduction in the availability of perishable foods, including vegetables,
fruits, and fish, which are crucial for health and nutrition" is among the
concerns, according to a CGIAR statement released on Wednesday.
It said
farmers are beginning to face challenges in selling perishable goods at reasonable
prices, as the government has put the entire country on lockdown to stop spread
of Coronavirus pandemic.
CGIAR said
despite measures to control prices, foods along with some crucial commodities
are becoming unaffordable, especially for the poor in urban areas.
"Social
distancing measures appear to be slowing down ongoing horticultural and Boro
crop harvests, and delay in maize harvest looms as a near-term concern."
The statement further said trucks are permitted to transport agricultural
inputs and produces. But, informal and courier transport services that play a
key role in input supply and food distribution are suffering.
The livestock,
poultry, and aquaculture sectors are suffering, as their supply of essential
feeds and veterinary services has been disrupted, and these sectors are
experiencing unprecedented shocks, CGIAR noted.
It also
expressed concern, as reduced food and labour demand by food processors,
supermarkets, eateries, restaurants and hotels are, in turn, impacting hundreds
of thousands in the service industry.
To improve the
food production and supply situation, the organisation also offered a set of
suggestions, including enhanced permission for transportation.
"Enhanced
permission for transportation is required to assure the flow of food items from
rural to urban areas as well as the flow of crucial inputs to farmers through
market systems."
CGIAR also
said ample supply of horticultural, fish and livestock products should be
guaranteed in addition to the staple foods, rice and wheat to provide diverse,
nutritious and safe diets for all.
It urged the
government to take some measures, including minimising impacts on farmers'
incomes from high input and labour costs, supporting flow of remittance and
cash flow to rural areas, and expanding access to finance options for farmers.
CGIAR opined that increased social safety-net measures will be required to
support both rural and urban poor consumers.
It further
stressed on the need of action plans to support Bangladesh's food systems in
response to international trade restrictions. "Even partial closure of
ports may result in high prices and limited stocks of pulses, edible oils,
wheat, and crucial feed supplies."
CGIAR added
that prolonged suspension of international trade could undermine the future
supply of key inputs (particularly phosphorous and potassium fertilisers,
vaccinations, pesticides, and fuel) at reasonable prices.
Bangladesh
country heads of International Food Policy Research Institute, International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CMMYT), International Rice Research
Institute (IRRI), WorldFish and International Food Policy Research Institute
(IFPRI), constituents of CGIAR, signed the statement.
[Interview] Lockdown
throws up challenges for quarantine of plant samples for research
by Sahana Ghosh on 22 April 2020
The International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) said that while the world battles COVID-19, plant pests, and diseases continue to pose a threat to food production, stressing we must not let our guard down. - Quarantine processes for samples of plant
materials brought into the country for research purposes have been
impacted due to the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19)-associated
lockdown, according to the National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources
(NBPGR) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research.
- In an interview with Mongabay-India, NBPGR
scientists discuss the challenges in plant quarantine for research samples
under the lockdown, the gaps in plant biosecurity in India and
implications for a post-COVID world.
The International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC),
an inter-governmental treaty signed by 184 countries, dubbed it an “unfortunate coincidence” that during the
International Year of Plant Health (IYPH) in 2020, the novel coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) global outbreak is “showing the world how adopting
preventive measures is essential to secure countries from the introduction and
spread of devastating human diseases.”
IPPC, aimed at protecting the world’s plant
resources from the spread and introduction of pests and promoting safe trade,
said that the COVID-19 pandemic is proving that prevention is always better
than cure, and this applies to the health of humans, animals, and plants.
India is a signatory to the IPPC, which
stresses while the world battles COVID-19, plant pests, and diseases that
continue to pose a threat to food production, must not slip through the cracks.
In the past, India like the rest of the world
has seen the devastating effects resulting from diseases and
pests introduced along with the international movement of plant material,
agricultural produce, and product, experts have said. Among these are examples
like coffee rust introduced in Sri Lanka in 1875 and its subsequent
introduction in India in 1876; fluted scale (sap-sucking insect) on citrus
introduced from Sri Lanka in 1928; San Jose scale in apple introduced into
India in the 1930s; and bunchy top of banana introduced from Sri Lanka in 1943.
The COVID-19 associated lockdown in India has
posed challenges to scientists involved in quarantine processing of samples of
plant materials that are brought into India for research purposes. Quarantining
these samples prevents the entry of exotic pests during
import.
These small samples are of immense quarantine importance because they usually
comprise of germplasm material or wild relatives or landraces of a crop and are
thus more likely to carry diverse biotypes/ races/ strains of the pest.
In India, the National Bureau of Plant Genetic
Resources (NBPGR) of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), New
Delhi, undertakes quarantine processing of germplasm including transgenic
planting material imported into the country for research purposes and issues
phytosanitary certificate for research material meant for export. Phytosanitary
certification is an official declaration by the exporting country attesting
that consignments meet phytosanitary import requirements-stating that plants
and plant materials are free from pests and disease. In a year, at least
100,000 (one lakh) samples are examined by NBPGR in quarantine processes.
In an interview with Mongabay-India, Kuldeep
Singh, director, NBPGR and S.C. Dubey, head and principal scientist, division
of plant quarantine at NBPGR, discussed the challenges in plant quarantine for
research samples, the gaps in plant biosecurity in India, the solutions and
implications for a post-COVID world.
How do
plants and plant products enter India? What is the role of NBPGR in plant
biosecurity?
In India, the entry of plants or their parts is
in two ways. The bulk import for commercial use and consumption is being
monitored by the Directorate of Plant Protection Quarantine and Storage
(DPPQS), Faridabad, Government of India. Small samples for research purposes
are imported through ICAR-NBPGR.
In both cases, the Plant Quarantine (Regulation
of Import into India) Order 2003 has to be followed.
ICAR-NBPGR has been empowered under the Plant
Quarantine (Regulation of Import into India) Order 2003 to undertake quarantine
processing of germplasm including transgenic planting material imported into
the country for research purposes.
Besides, NBPGR also issues ‘phytosanitary
certificate’ for research material meant for export. We have well- equipped
laboratories, a greenhouse complex, and a CL-4 level containment facility to
undertake the quarantine processing effectively. NBPGR also has a well-equipped
quarantine station at Hyderabad, which mainly deals with the export samples of
the International Crop Research Institute for Semi-arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and
samples for the southern part of the country.
Over the years, during quarantine processing in
post-entry quarantine (PEQ) facilities, a large number of pests have been
intercepted in germplasm and other research material which includes several
pests that have not been reported yet from India. The consignments must be
accompanied by a phytosanitary certificate stating the status of the
consignment to be free from the pests mentioned in the declaration. NBPGR’s
role in the biosecurity of the country is well defined and known. In past
(1976-2019), a total of 78 pests including fungi (6), viruses (19), insects/
mites (26), nematodes (9) and weeds (18) not reported from India and of
quarantine significance for India were intercepted in imported germplasm and
their entry into India through samples received by NBPGR was checked.
ICAR-NBPGR is providing regular inputs on
biosecurity to government agencies like the Indian Council of Agricultural
Research, Department of Agricultural Research and Education, Ministry of
Agriculture, Ministry of External Affairs, and MoEF&CC
What are
the major challenges in plant biosecurity in India?
We need more certified post-entry quarantine
(PEQ) facilities to accommodate a larger number of plant materials for
quarantine processes and rigorous inspection of the material before release.
Further, the Pest Risk Analysis (PRA) procedure
is one of the biggest challenges for quarantine workers. PRA in plant
introduction is essential to decide whether a particular planting material
could be permitted entry or not. If permitted, what would be the manner of
import to prohibit the introduction of new pests in the country. One of the primary
responsibilities of plant protection organisation/ institutions is to identify
foreign pests of crops that are important in the Indian agricultural scenario
and assess the potential damage that those pests could cause if introduced in
our country.
This is part of a PRA exercise which consists
of risk assessment (scientific estimation of likelihood and magnitude of risk
of establishment of a given pest) and impact assessment (estimation of the
consequences of the establishment of pest).
Therefore, to ensure that imported commodities
have no pest or disease risk to our agriculture and forestry, the Plant
Quarantine Order 2003 has made it mandatory to conduct a PRA for all
commodities other than those given in Schedule V, VI and VII, prior to the
issue of import permit.
Updated lists of endemic pests, authentic data
on country-wide survey/ surveillance, as well as literature, are indispensable
in PRA procedures. To facilitate quarantine processing, and biosecurity, we
need to strengthen the harmonisation of the Indian plant quarantine system with
the global plant quarantine system.
This, in turn, depends on enhanced
co-ordination of scientists and resource sharing among the three concerned
organisations: Directorate of Plant Protection Quarantine and Storage (Department
of Agriculture and Cooperation and Farmers Welfare), Indian Council of
Agricultural Research (Department of Agricultural Research and Education) and
state agricultural universities/other research institutions.
Additionally, there is a need for integrated
agricultural biosecurity efforts. Presently in India, agricultural biosecurity
is managed on a sectoral basis through the development and implementation of
separate policies and legislative frameworks (e.g. for animal and plant life
and health).
At the national level efforts are being made to
develop a coherent biosecurity strategy for the country by the formulation of a
comprehensive Agricultural Biosecurity Bill in 2013. The Department of
Agriculture, Cooperation and Farmers’ Welfare (DACFW) has initiated the
establishment of a National Agricultural Biosecurity System. Also, the
re-drafting of the Agricultural Biosecurity Bill in 2018 by the DACFW to
address the issue of national biosecurity in a holistic manner are some of the
important steps in the right direction.
Has the
lockdown impacted plant quarantine measures and biosecurity measures?
Certainly, as the seed materials are not moving
across the world. We do receive a major part of rice germplasm from
International Rice Research Institute during March-April and this may be
affected. NBPGR is monitoring the seeds grown in the post-entry quarantine
facility (PEQ) at New Delhi and Hyderabad. Up to the last week of February, we
did post-entry quarantine inspections at sites where they were indented
across the country for research materials.
In a
post-pandemic world, what will be the major changes with respect to plant
biosecurity? Any specific way the NBPGR will also evolve its strategies?
We are going to receive huge consignments of
seed samples for research purposes after the lockdown period ends. We will take
utmost care at institute level for disinfestation of the outer surface of the
packages containing seeds before it is opened for quarantine.
Internationally, so far there are no specific
guidelines for safe and secure handling of plant and plant products from the
areas having an outbreak of COVID 19. ICAR is having trained scientists and
well-equipped laboratories to handle any such conditions in the case of plant
pests. However, the plant quarantine system in the country needs to be
strengthened both in the terms of manpower and facilities.
What are
the control points in plant biosecurity procedures that will need rethinking in
the wake of COVID-19?
The virus (SARS-CoV-2) that causes COVID-19 is
known to be a surface contaminant, the bags containing seed samples need a certain
minimum policy to be handled with care to avoid contamination. Our staff has
been instructed to surface- sanitise the boxes holding the seed samples.
Banner
image: Joint inspection of seed samples by Plant
Quarantine staff at NBPGR, New Delhi. Photo by NBPGR.
IFPRI,
IRRI, CIMMYT, WorldFish make joint call for measures to avert risk to food
system
·
Published at 08:40 pm April 22nd, 2020
Photo: Mahmud
Hossain Opu/Dhaka Tribune
The CGIAR Centres commend Bangladesh’s
response to contain Covid-19 spread, call for ensuring transportation of food
and farm inputs
World’s leading food security think-tank and
research centres have recommended Bangladesh to ensure transportation of food
from rural to urban areas and the flow of crucial inputs to farmers through
market systems so that risk to food system during Covid-19 pandemic can be
averted.
In a statement paper jointly issued on
Wednesday by a few top CGIAR Centres called for guaranteeing the supply of
horticultural, fish and livestock products–in addition to the staple foods,
rice and wheat–to provide diverse, nutritious and safe diets for all.
The CGIAR Centers include the International
Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), International Food Policy Research
Institute (IFPRI), WorldFish, and the International Rice Research Institute
(IRRI). Formerly called Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research, CGIAR is largest global agricultural innovation network.
These institutions called for minimizing
impacts on farmers’ incomes from high inputs and labor costs and lower than
normal farmgate prices, supporting the private sector in its crucial role in
providing affordable inputs to farmers, supporting the flow of remittances and
cash flows to rural areas, and expanding access to finance options for farmers
in need of capital to assure production.
Their statement noted, “As seen in the
response to the social distancing challenges currently affecting boro harvest,
scale-appropriate farm mechanization options will also become increasingly
important to assure timely operations.”
The statement is jointly signed by Dr Akhter
Ahmed, Country Representative of IFPRI-Bangladesh; Dr Timothy J. Krupnik,
Country Liaison for Research and Partnerships of CIMMYT-Bangladesh; Dr Humnath
Bhandari, Country Representative of IRRI-Bangladesh and Dr Christopher Price, Country
Director WorldFish-Bangladesh.
They feared that even partial closure of ports
may result in high prices and limited stocks of pulses, edible oils, wheat, and
crucial feed supplies (particularly maize and soybean). “Similarly, although
current national stocks appear to be initially sufficient, prolonged suspension
of international trade could undermine the future supply of key inputs
(particularly phosphorous and potassium fertilizers, vaccinations, pesticides,
and fuel) at reasonable prices.”
They commended Bangladesh government’s
response in implementing timely, appropriate measures to contain the spread and
mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 but, hastened to caution that, “This situation
presents substantial risks to Bangladesh’s food systems–with important
implications for national food, nutrition, and economic security.”
They, however, appreciated that the government
has recognized these challenges, and has responded with measures to exempt
essential agricultural activities during the boro season from closure. “In
particular, we are encouraged that essential inputs continue to be provided
through ongoing agricultural business trade and that appropriate farm machinery
is being used for timely harvesting.”
Similarly, the announcement of financial support
for seed purchase and requisition of wheat and rice are expected to mitigate
this crisis, the statement added.
In an initial rapid analyses carried out by
the CGIAR Centers, they identified some of the emerging concerns as: notable
reductions in the availability of perishable foods, including vegetables,
fruits, and fish; farmers facing challenges in selling perishable goods at
reasonable prices; social distancing measures appear to be slowing ongoing
horticultural and boro crop harvests; and delays in maize harvests loom as a
near-term concern.
“While trucks are permitted to transport
agricultural inputs and produce, informal and courier transport services that
play a key role in input supply and food distribution are suffering,” said the
CGIAR Centres.
“The livestock, poultry, and aquaculture
sectors are suffering as the supply of essential feeds and veterinary services
has been disrupted and are experiencing unprecedented shocks.”
Arkansas Rice
Growers Could See Increased Demand Due To COVID-19
Rice is one of the few Arkansas
crops positively impacted by the coronavirus.
CREDIT
SHAREALIKE 4.0 INTERNATIONAL / WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
One of the
state's biggest crops could help some Arkansas farmers stay afloat during the
economic challenges caused by COVID-19.
Arkansas is
the nation's leading rice producer and that may benefit the state in the coming
months, says to Dr. Tim Burcham, Director of the Northeast Rice Research and
Extension Center for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.
"The
good news is that from the standpoint of our rice production, again that's
holding steady for us right now as far as market prices for rice. With that
being one of our leading commodities here in Arkansas, that really helps us
out. Of course, we're taking a hit in these other commodity areas."
A rice
report produced by the Division of Agriculture in early April, says some other
rice-producing countries, like Vietnam and India are limiting their exports as
result of COVID-19. This has increased demand for Arkansas rice. However,
prices for soybeans and corn, two of the state's other large row crops, have
dropped significantly.
Other crops,
like strawberries, which are just coming into season in Arkansas, have less
certain futures, according to Matthew Davis, also with Division of Agriculture.
"We're
putting the crop in the ground right now, but we're not guaranteed a home for
it. And that's clearly shown with vegetable growers and fruit producers. Right
now, they don't have a home for their crops and a lot of it is having to be
destroyed just because it costs too much to even try to harvest and donate.
I've seen several try to donate to foodbanks, but at some point that becomes
not cost effective either,” Davis said.
Last week
the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the Coronavirus Food Assistance
Program, which it claims will provide $16 billion in direct support to farmers
and $100 million per month for the purchase of fruits and vegetables from
farmers across the country. As they wait for details on the new program,
Arkansas farmers will continue planting and hoping for less rain than last
year.
"We're
making strides and trying to move ahead, but I definitely think the weather
hasn’t played fair again this year," Davis said. "We've had some
issues, but I think, as usual, everybody's resilient. As soon as we get some
dry days everybody hits the field running. I talked to one guy yesterday; he
was out until 1 o'clock in the morning trying to beat the rain. That's just
part of it."
Weather
permitting, some predict the state's farmers could plant up to 1.5 million
acres of rice, up nearly half a million acres from last year.
Food psychologist shares her tips for
getting into healthy eating habits
Dr Christy
Fergusson (credit: Lawrence Scott Photography)
Julia Bryce talks with Dr Christy Fergusson about how to make
positive food choices during lockdown.
We’ve all been there. The moment
when reaching for the biscuit tin you realise that in fact, this is not your
first of the day.
And while there’s nothing wrong with a little comfort eating now
and then, Dr Christy Fergusson of The Food Psychologist says
there’s a fine balance between keeping our spirits up and ensuring we have
‘good foods’ readily available.
With daily routines across the
country affected by lockdown, it’s easy to fall into bad habits, and fast.
So how do we keep on track and
stay in our usual routines as much as we possibly can given the circumstances?
She said: “I think that is the
biggest challenge for people. Certainly when it comes to my clients you can
feel like you’re doing well, eating well and following what you want to be
doing. Then it gets to the weekend and everything falls to the wayside and not
having that sort of structure to the day.
“At the moment everything has just been kind of thrown upside
down and it’s just getting back to that sort of structure. One of the key
things I always recommend is to make sure you’re having breakfast within an
hour of getting up. That helps set you up for the day.
“I also recommend eating every
three to four hours to keep your blood sugars steady throughout the day. It can
really help you avoid dipping into the biscuit tin which I know people can
struggle with. I think it’s about getting yourself set up for success in the
morning and trying to follow a nice pattern where you’re eating regularly
throughout the day.”
Keeping healthy and looking after
your body and your mind has become increasingly more important than ever with
the majority of the UK workforce operating from home.
But how easy is it to stay
motivated when it comes to consuming healthier foods over those not so healthy
foods?
She added: “If you’re used to
going out to work every day you may be in a system of what you would usually
have before work in the morning. Some people eat before they leave for work,
other times people eat on the train or when travelling, and a lot of my clients
wait until they are at work to have their breakfast at their desk.
“It’s the same when it comes to
lunchtime. You have to sort of redefine and create those healthy patterns and
habits. Even if it is just going to be on a temporary period.
“I think because we’ve not got that definition of the week and
weekend its about creating a pattern that works for you and also that you
enjoy. I don’t think it needs to be something that’s boring or strict. It’s a
great time to try different breakfasts you may not normally have been able to
try because you were rushing out the door to get to work. It’s the same with
lunches and I think people are embracing having more time to prepare stuff ans
do a bit more cooking at home. Use it as a positive thing to explore more things.”
For those struggling to keep
focused, Dr Christy’s advice is very much centred around having good-quality
protein throughout the day and being mindful of stimulants which will also
affect your concentration.
“Keeping our blood sugar balanced
throughout the day comes from having good quality protein regularly,” said Dr
Chrsity.
“Protein can be a variety of
things, it doesn’t have to be meat. Things like eggs of course are great, some
hummous and oatcakes for snacks, fish, chicken, goat’s cheese. It’s a great way
to avoid sugar cravings and keep your blood sugar steady. Low glycemic load
carbohydrates are those slower releasing carbohydrates. Things like oats, brown
basmati rice, oatcakes, things that aren’t going to cause that big spike in
your blood sugar levels.
“Eating consistently during the
day will help you avoid that ‘crash’ moment. Be mindful of stimulants like
caffeine. A little bit can be great to give you that boost and alertness in the
morning, but when we start having too much, or over relying on it, it’s almost
like we’re down regulating our system and we need more and more. Just be
mindful of the foods becoming your crutches and focus on the good stuff you’re
eating regularly.”
And with so many parents home
schooling their children just now, the food psychologist has some sound advice
on how to combat them constantly asking for food.
She said: “I have my 11-year-old
daughter at home and it’s an on-going process. I think it depends on what age
the kids are. If you’ve got toddlers and young ones, sort of primary school age
then one of the things I do with my daughter is make up a snack plate. Instead
of having crisps we would make up a plate with all of these different foods on
it. Children often don’t like combining too much in one dish, they like things
in isolation. A little bit of cheese, some crackers, chopped up fruit, some raisins,
it’s all on one plate but separate.
“I think it’s a good opportunity
for us to let our kids make some things for themselves. Of course if they are
younger you have to get involved more. My daughter will bake her own cupcakes
and we help her with the oven and stuff. Getting them used to making their own
food, or getting them involved in the process is great, especially if you have
a fussy eater. It makes them part of the process.”
One thing is for certain, beating
ourselves up about having a treat or experiencing a bad day is not going to
benefit our long-term mental health, says Dr Christy.
She added: “It is a time where a
lot of people are going through anxiety and we’re facing a lot of changes to
our daily lives. There’s maybe concerns around financial security or health and
I think at this point it’s also about looking after our mental health. Yes of
course being healthy and nourishing our body is important but it’s not about
some strict routine that we’ve got to come out of this achieving something.
It’s all about being a little kinder to ourselves.
“If you’re at home and want to
continue to look after yourself, one of the key things is to make sure there’s
lots of good, nourishing foods in the house and not having too much of the so
called ‘junk food’. It can be so easy and convenient to reach for that food if
it’s there. I actually find the more we rely on those foods the worse we can
feel on an emotional level as it really does mess with our system. It’s that
balancing act of looking after our bodies and being healthy, and we’re not
going to beat ourselves up if occasionally we indulge in something.”
For more information visit www.thefoodpsychologist.com.
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April 24, 2020
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Gordon Highlanders provide inspiration as Aberdeen man pens book
of short stories
Food
psychologist shares her tips for getting into healthy eating habits
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Consumers being charged
higher than official rates
LAHORE:In the absence of the writ of the government different
prices of the same essential items are being implemented and charged in the
market. Violations of laws regarding displaying of prices, official rates,
weight, manufacturing and expiry dates on products are being committed openly,
The News has learnt.
Consumers’ rights are being violated
in connivance with the government authorities while Chief Minister Usman Buzdar
is busy only issuing verbal orders against the profiteers. Interestingly, the
industry department responsible for issuing and controlling prices is just
issuing guidelines and holding the deputy commissioners responsible for the
violation of the laws. On the other hand, Deputy Commissioner Lahore is aware
of all these violations and admitted that different rates are being charged
against the official rates. The government has failed to take action against
the violators.
There are four different rates for
some same essential items in the city. The price notified by the Punjab
government could not be implemented, exposing incompetence or connivance of the
officers concerned with the profiteers. Prices of super stores could not be
controlled. Whenever the government tries to control the super stores, they go
on strike. Interestingly, the rates of Utility Store Corporations (USC), super
stores and Akbari Mandi are higher than the government notified rates which
exposed flaw in price fixation mechanism or the government efforts to check
inflation. TheUtility Store Corporations (USC) governed by the federal ministry
for industries and production has its own rates which are also higher than the
official notified rates of the government.
USC announced the Ramzan relief
package according to which the price of gram pulse is fixed at Rs 160 per kg,
white gram Rs 125 per kg, Masoor pulse Rs 130 per kg, Mash pulse Rs 235 per kg,
sugar at Rs 68 per kg, rice broken Rs 73 per kg, basin (gram powder) Rs 140 per
kg, Basmati rice Rs 135 per kg, Ghee 175 per kg, cooking oil Rs 195 per liter,
dates Rs 160 per kg.
The prices of the USC are higher
than the notified price by the deputy commissioner Lahore. The DC notified
rates are gram pulse (special) Rs 128 per kg, bareek Rs 118 per kg, white gram
Rs 108 per kg, Masoor pulse (bareek) Rs 152 per kg, imported at Rs 104 per kg,
Mash pulse washed imported Rs 198 per kg, Mash pulse unwashed imported Rs 168
per kg, Moong pulse unwashed Rs 202 per kg, basmati rice Rs 128 per kg, dates
215-260 per kg.
On the other hand in Akbari Mandi,
the rates were also higher than the DC rates and the DC is aware of the things
but does not take action. In Akbari Mandi, gram pulse is being sold at Rs
130-150 per kg, White gram Rs 100 to 120 per kg, Masoor pulse bareek Rs 160-220
per kg, Masoor pulse imported 110 to 125 per kg, Mash pulse washed Rs 250 to
320 per kg, Mash pulse unwashed Rs 220 to 250 per kg, Moong pulse unwashed 220
to 240 per kg, Moong pulse washed Rs 280 per kg, sugar Rs 79 per kg, black gram
125 to 150 per kg, Basin (gram powder) Rs 140 to 160 per kg. The rates charged
by super stores in Lahore are gram pulse (special) Rs 200 per kg, bareek Rs 130
to 140 per kg, Masoor pulse bareek Rs 240-260 per kg, Masoor pulse imported 130
to 160 per kg, black gram Rs 160 to 180 per kg, white gram 130 to 150 per kg,
sugar 83 per kg, Basin (gram powder) 140 to 160 per kg, Moog pulse washed 340
to 360 per kg, Moong pulse unwashed Rs 260 to 280 per kg, Mash pulse washed Rs
340 to 360 per kg, Mash pulse unwashed Rs 260 to 280 per kg, Rice basmati Rs
150 to 190 per kg.
Deputy Commissioner Danish Afzal
admitted that the official price rates were not being implemented and there was
difference between the market rates and official rates. “We were waiting for
Faisalabad management which has revised the rates and we will hold the price
review meeting tomorrow (today) to revise the price list”,’ he said.
On the issue of violation of laws by
the super stores for not mentioning the price, weight, manufacturing and expiry
dates on the packaging of the products, especially of pulses and spices, the DC
admitted that the law was being violated.
Interestingly, no action was taken
over the violation of this law, but the DC said the administration will also
enforce the law in this regard.
Secretary Industry Punjab, Zafar
Iqbal, said it was the responsibility of the deputy commissioners of the
respective districts to implement official rates of essential edibles. He said
the Industry department under the law issues clear instructions to the deputy
commissioner to enforce and implement the official rate list which once
notified in consultation with all the stakeholders. “The industry department
gives policy guidelines. The policy is clear that no one should be
overcharged,” he said and added checking of printing of prices, weight, manufacturing
and expiry dates on products is also responsibility of the deputy commissioners
and they must ensure protection of the consumers.
Secretary General Lahore Super
Stores Association (LSA) Imran Saleemi refused to comment saying the
association chairman decided not to speak on any of pricing and other related
issues.
Where to eat during a quarantine:
vegetarian edition
222020
·
Canned baked beans, soup and pasta
sauce
·
Milk
·
Dairy products such as butter and
cheese
·
Bread
·
Rice and pasta
·
Meat products, such as sausage,
bacon and cooked meat (meat box only)
·
Fresh meat such as chicken or beef
(meat box only)
·
Vegetables, such as potatoes,
carrots and onions
·
Vegetarian proteins (vegetarian box
only)
·
Essential household items
A reporter at our sister site Stoke-on-Trent
Live revealed that their meat box contained a variety of
different meats, including chicken breast fillets, sausages, bacon and steak
mince.
The reviewed box also featured
potatoes, large onions, carrots, peppers and broccoli.
The reporter said that the
Morrisons box was "reasonable" in terms of price and praised the
contents for being "varied and [for containing] enough food to comfortably
feed a small family with a variety of tastes."
M&S
The Marks & Spencer food box
costs £35 with delivery then adding an extra £3.50 to the overall cost.
It contains a number of essential
items such as soup, tea bags and toilet paper - as well as some edible treats
like Percy Pig sweets.
According to the supermarket
chain, the following products are included in the food box:
·
Fusilli (500g)
·
Baked beans (220g)
·
Tomato and herb pasta sauce (550g)
·
Beef Bolognese pour over pasta sauce
(340g)
·
Chunky vegetable soup (400g)
·
Basmati rice (500g)
·
Cream of tomato soup (400g)
·
Chunky steak (206g)
·
Rich roast instant coffee (100g)
·
English breakfast tea bags (125g/50
bags)
·
Scottish all butter homebake style
shortbread squares (200g)
·
Dark chocolate (100g)
·
Milk chocolate (100g)
·
Prime corned beef (205g)
·
Wild Alaskan red salmon (213g)
·
Vegetable curry (400g)
·
Roasted and salted large peanuts
(200g)
·
Giant milk chocolate buttons (150g)
·
Percy Pig™ (170g)
·
Soft white 2-ply toilet tissue (pack
of 4)
Earlier this month, our sister site Kent Live discussed this food box, even
comparing it to Morrisons'.
The reporter said that whilst it
contains welcomed sweets and a variety of meals, "it's still lacking basic
food items such as bread" - which can be found in other competitor's food
boxes.
And whilst
there's "a lot of long life food items," the reviewer noted that
"the meals you can make lack sustenance, especially with the lack of fresh
vegetables."
They stated that even though the
Marks & Spencer box isn't as "appealing" or
"adventures" as the Morrisons version, for example, it is however
"more practical in the long run."
This food box is in fact the only
one which already has customer reviews on its official website, with 89 per
cent of customers saying they would recommend the product to a friend.
At the time of writing there were
150 reviews of the food box on the Marks & Spencer website, with an average
rating of 4.5 out of 5.
Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate Urges the Family of a
Navy Veteran Who Has Lung Cancer in Utah and Had Service-Related Asbestos
Exposure to Call for Direct Access to the Lawyers at KVO-Get Compensated
"To
make certain a Navy Veteran or person with lung cancer in Utah--who had
exposure to asbestos decades ago gets compensated we have endorsed the
attorneys at the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO.”
—
Utah US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, USA, April
23, 2020 /EINPresswire.com/ -- The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung
Cancer Advocate says, "We are urging the family of a Navy Veteran or
person with lung cancer anywhere is Utah to call us anytime at 800-714-0303 if
their loved one had heavy exposure to asbestos decades ago. Even if the person
smoked cigarettes the financial compensation for a person like this could
exceed a hundred thousand dollars. The typical person we are trying to identify
is over 60 years old. Most people like this are not aware the $30 billion
dollar-asbestos trust funds were set up for them too as we would be happy to
explain.
"To make certain a Navy
Veteran or person with lung cancer in Utah--who had significant exposure to
asbestos decades ago gets compensated we have endorsed the amazing attorneys at
the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO. The lawyers at the law firm of Karst von
Oiste-KVO have been assisting Navy Veterans with asbestos exposure lung cancer
and mesothelioma for decades and they are responsible for over a billion
dollars in financial compensation for people like this. For direct access to
the law firm of Karst von Oiste-KVO please call 800-714-0303." www.karstvonoiste.com
The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung
Cancer Advocate is offering to assist a Navy Veteran or person with asbestos
exposure lung cancer in Utah organize the how, where and when they were exposed
to asbestos. They call this free service the 'list' and it is this vital
information that becomes the foundation for a compensation claim as the would
be happy to explain at 800-714-0303. https://Utah.USNavyLungCancer.Com
The Utah US Navy Veterans Lung
Cancer Advocate’s free services are available to people with asbestos exposure
lung cancer or mesothelioma in Salt Lake City, Provo, West Jordan, Sandy Hills,
Ogden, Saint George or anywhere in Utah. https://Utah.USNavyLungCancer.Com
High-risk work groups for exposure
to asbestos in Utah include US Navy Veterans, a civilian employee at Hill Air
Force Base, a worker at one of Utah’s dozen+ power plants, oil refinery
workers, public utility workers, plumbers, electricians, auto mechanics,
welders, insulators, machinists, or construction workers. In most instances, a
diagnosed person with mesothelioma was exposed to asbestos in the 1950’s, 1960’s,
1970’s, or 1980’s. www.karstvonoiste.com
The US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer
Advocate says, “If your husband, dad, coworker or neighbor has just been
diagnosed with lung cancer and you know they had significant exposure to
asbestos in the navy, at a shipyard or while working at a factory, at power
plant, public utility, or as a plumber, electrician welder, mechanic or any
kind of skilled trades group in any state please have them call us anytime at
800-714-0303. Most people like this never get compensated-even though the
asbestos trust funds were set up for them too. We are trying to change this sad
fact.” https://USNavyLungCancer.Com
States with the highest incidence
of lung cancer include Kentucky, West Virginia, Maine, Tennessee, Mississippi,
Ohio, Indiana, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, Rhode Island,
Alabama, and Delaware. www.karstvonoiste.com/
For more information about lung
cancer and asbestos exposure please review the following website: https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/asbestos/health_effects_asbestos.html.
Could Changing the Way We Farm Rice Be a
Climate Solution?
Farmers are on
focusing on ways to reduce methane emissions and save water to further reduce
the staple crop’s climate footprint.Rice may be having a moment. Until recently, the average American ate only about a half a pound of the grain annually, while people in some Asian countries eat upwards of eight pounds a year. By early March, however, one data firm found that sales of rice and other staples were up 84 percent. And, as significant questions have arisen about the short-term future of meat production, this grain could become a more significant part of the U.S. diet.
As one of only a few commodities grown in the U.S. that go directly to feed people, rice also has a much smaller environmental footprint than many other foods.
“People underestimate rice. It’s a small grain,” says Meryl Kennedy, who is the daughter of a Louisiana rice farmer, the CEO of Kennedy Rice Mill, and the founder of 4Sisters Rice. During a pandemic, however, it can feed a lot of people efficiently.
But rice farming isn’t perfect. In fact, global rice production accounts for at least 10 percent of agricultural emissions. It’s responsible for producing large quantities of methane—a greenhouse gas that’s 24 times more potent than carbon dioxide. But, as it turns out, that’s more a factor of quantity than it is about growing method. Rice provides one fifth of the world’s calories, and research shows that, per calorie, it actually has one of the lowest emissions footprints compared to meat, fruit, vegetables, wheat, and corn.
Now, there is growing attention to practices that further reduce the climate impact of rice. And, given that it is the fourth largest crop grown in the world, those changes could amount to a significant climate solution.
In the 2020 Drawdown Review, which analyzes the impact of various climate solutions across industries using the latest scientific research, the nonprofit thinktank Project Drawdown includes two methods of shifting rice production.
“Both of these solutions are about how you can grow rice most sustainably. This is a shift from conventional to an improved way of rice cultivation,” said Dr. Mamta Mahra, a senior fellow at Drawdown in biosequestration modeling. “The point is: If we’re already growing rice, why not see how much emissions can be reduced?”
Rice Production
Today
According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), rice is the fourth largest crop in the world. If
adjusted to account for how much is eaten by people, it would probably rise in
the ranks, since corn and sugarcane are both also used to produce biofuels.“If we’re already growing rice, why not see how much emissions can be reduced?”
China’s farmers far and away grow the most. The U.S. ranks twelfth in global rice production, and the vast majority happens in six states: Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. In 2019, American rice farmers harvested about 18 billion pounds of rice from just under 2.5 million acres. About half of that rice is exported, primarily to Mexico, Central America, and Northeast Asia, to feed global appetites that are bigger than those in the U.S.
“The U.S. produces more rice than we eat,” said Kennedy. “I hope that that changes in my lifetime.”
‘Improved Rice Production’
What is gradually changing is how the industry is thinking and talking about
its environmental impact. Last year, USA Rice, which represents the industry,
published a 64-page sustainability
report. And this week, it announced new sustainability goals, pledging to
reduce both water use and greenhouse gas emissions by 13 percent by 2030.Most rice in the U.S. is produced on thousands of acres that are flooded for the entire season. Flooding controls weeds and serves other purposes, like making nutrients in the soil available to the plant. But it requires a lot of water, and microbes that live in the soil beneath flooded fields produce methane, which is then released by the plants.
In the Southern U.S., a growing number of farmers are using a method called alternate wetting and drying (AWD). Studies have found that depending on how often and for how long farmers drain their fields, the practice can reduce methane emissions by as much as 65 or even 90 percent. AWD is not widespread, though, and it’s not yet clear how it affects yields.
Kennedy said other methods of water conservation like furrow irrigation (also called row rice) and tailwater recovery, which allows farmers to reuse water multiple times, are more popular.
There is also evidence that some rice farmers are tilling their soil less, another approach that reduces emissions. According to USA Rice’s report, a study out of Louisiana found that the number of rice farmers using low- or no-till methods increased from 26 to 41 percent between 2000 and 2011.
Breeding new strains of rice can also help farmers implement these practices and has the potential to directly reduce emissions. Anna McClung has been researching rice varieties since 1991 and is the director of the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center in Arkansas.
Her team uses a sophisticated form of traditional breeding that tracks existing genes within plants. Researchers in other countries have used genetic modification to modify rice for resistance to climate change, but there is currently no GMO rice approved for production in the U.S.
“Our current research plan is 80 percent focused on … climate change,” McClung told Civil Eats. Drought and extreme heat threaten rice crops, and her team is looking at traits and varieties that can withstand those conditions while supporting new farming methods. “Water is being used to control weeds, but it also provides this uniform growing environment so the plant can do its best,” she explained. “If you go to a system where you’re not keeping the field flooded, but all of your varieties have been optimized for flooding, that’s not going to work.”
McClung’s team has also compared methane is production based on the variety of rice grown. “We saw big differences in the amount of methane. Rondo has about 2.5 times the methane released as the next variety, Jupiter. And about 5 times the methane released as the other three rice cultivars,” she said. “The question is: why?” More research on that front may yield discoveries that allow farmers to plant low-methane rice varieties.
More growers are choosing to grow rice using organic practices. USDA data show a 5,000-acre increase between 2008 and 2016, and USA Rice’s report says organic production has “increased six fold in the past 20 years.” But there is little research on how organic systems compare in terms of emissions.
At Lundberg Family Farms in California, Bryce Lundberg’s parents were growing organic rice before there was a national organic standard. His family started milling its own rice in 1969, and he started farming with his brother in 1985. Today, the family grows about half of the rice they sell and sources the rest from other farmers, the vast majority of whom are nearby.
Eighty percent of the rice they sell is organic; the rest meets a standard they call eco-farmed. “There’s no burning of rice straw, there’s a requirement for rotation. There’s only one insecticide approved…and several herbicides, but none of them can be in the danger [category],” he said. “It can’t be a carcinogen. It can’t be a mutagen. It can’t be on PAN’s ‘bad actor’ list. It can’t be a broad-based killer that would affect frogs, snakes, fish. It can’t persist in water.”
The approach his parents took, he adds, was based on their “wanting to work closely with nature, and not poison the place where they farm or the place where they live.”
On organic rice farms, skipping synthetic fertilizers and herbicides (which are widespread in conventional rice farming) is a strategy that can result in healthier soil, which may hold more carbon. Without weed killers, however, flooding becomes even more important. Lundberg controls weeds by flooding fields to kill grasses and then drying fields out for months to kill aquatic weeds. The system ends up looking like a version of AWD, and Lundberg said U.C. Davis has been working with the company on research that shows it does reduce methane emissions because the plants and soil spend less time immersed in water. They hope to release the study by the end of this year.
System of Rice
Intensification
To Norman Uphoff, all of these improvements are small compared to the
benefits of a revolutionary system called System of Rice Intensification (SRI).Uphoff is the senior advisor for SRI-Rice, an international network and resource center out of Cornell University, where he has taught since 1970. SRI was developed in Madagascar in the 1990s as a method for smallholder farmers to feed themselves using fewer resources.
Unlike in conventional systems which involves “broadcasting” seeds (basically, dropping them from a plane) all over a flooded field, farmers using the SRI system plant rice seedlings in a grid pattern in dry soil, with space between them. They spread compost to build soil health (although some also use synthetic fertilizers) and then use an alternating wet-dry irrigation system instead of flooded fields. They control weeds with rotary weeders or by hand, rather than use herbicides.
A number of studies over the years have shown SRI can produce high yields—usually from 20 to 50 percent higher—compared to traditional flooded paddy systems, while saving money on inputs. A meta-analysis done in 2013 found SRI management resulted in 22 percent less water use. Several studies have also shown that SRI leads to significant reductions in methane emissions, and while it does increase emissions of nitrous oxide, another powerful greenhouse gas, the net greenhouse effect is still positive.
Uphoff said farmers in 60 countries are using SRI today, with about 20 countries leading the charge. “We estimate that at least 20 million farmers are using these ideas in full or in part—enough so that they’re getting improvements in their crop performance,” he said. Most U.S. farmers, however, have shied away from the practice.
“Our primary concern has been for farmers in poor countries. U.S. rice production is highly capitalized and subsidized,” he explained. The idea of cutting a plant population by 80 or 90 percent, isn’t likely to be popular here, he adds. “The people who make their livelihood on…seeds, fertilizers, and herbicides don’t want to hear about this.”
There are a few examples of small American farms using some of SRI’s principles to grow “dryland” rice. Blue Moon Acres in New Jersey is well known in the Northeast, and Next Step Produce and Purple Mountain Organics are pioneering their own processes in the Mid-Atlantic. California-based Lotus Foods also sells rice produced by smallholder farmers around the world using SRI.
But for the vast majority of rice production—which is large-scale—sources said farmers brush SRI off as impractical, especially because it tends to be labor-intensive. Uphoff said the missing piece is specialized equipment, and if that mechanization existed, there would be no reason not to apply it on a larger scale.
Project Drawdown, for its part, presents the two approaches—promoting SRI among smallholder farmers around the world while using other techniques on large-scale farms—as complementary solutions with real potential. In other words, with so much rice in the world and a rapidly changing climate, all efforts to shrink this important grain’s footprint are worth the effort.