Friday, July 31, 2020

31st July 2020 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter


 

 

The Uncle Roger controversy: Why people are outraged by a video about cooking rice

By Analysis by Jessie Yeung, CNN

Posted: Jul 30, 2020 1:00 PM

Updated: Jul 31, 2020 8:20 AM

Description: http://media.heartlandtv.com/designimages/640x380px.png

On July 8, Malaysian comedian Nigel Ng uploaded to YouTube a video titled "DISGUSTED by this Egg Fried Rice Video," under his comedic persona "Uncle Roger."

In the video, Ng slammed BBC Food presenter Hersha Patel's unconventional way of cooking Chinese-style egg-fried rice, which included draining the rice through a strainer after boiling.

"What she doing? Oh my god. You're killing me, woman. Drain the -- she's draining rice with colander! How can you drain rice with colander? This is not pasta!" he exclaimed.

Shortly afterward, he groaned, "You're ruining the rice," as Patel used tap water to wash it of starch.

What Ng intended to be a comedic video sparked a firestorm of dismay and disbelief as it ricocheted around the internet, gaining more than 7 million views on YouTube and nearly 40 million on Twitter.

Many viewers, including Asian-American celebrities such as writer Jenny Yang, derided Patel's methods for departing from how Chinese egg-fried rice is traditionally made. Patel hadn't washed the rice before boiling it. She had added too much water. She should have used day-old rice. The scrambled egg was overcooked instead of runny.

"THIS RICE COOKING IS A HATE CRIME," Yang joked on Twitter.

Ng, who is based in London, tried to defuse the situation by filming a short clip with Patel announcing they are planning a collaboration. "While this guy's blown up like nobody's business, I've been trolled," Patel said in the video, claiming she had been simply presenting the BBC's recipe and that "I know how to cook rice."

The BBC has not publicly commented on Ng's or Patel's remarks.

Rice is a staple ingredient in Asia, and has been adopted by cuisines globally since it was first domesticated in China more than 9,400 years ago, according to Chinese researchers. There are countless ways to prepare rice -- you can steam it, fry it, simmer it slowly in broth like Italian risotto or scorch it to develop a crispy crust like Iranian tahdig.

But the issue at hand goes beyond a difference in opinion on the varying methods of cooking rice.

The controversy over the BBC Food clip, and the reaction it provoked within certain Asian communities, speaks to a broader, long-standing debate about the intersection of food, ethnicity and culture -- the fundamental question of who is allowed to cook what food.

Appropriating and whitewashing food

Countless White chefs in recent years have been accused of cultural appropriation by creating food from other ethnic groups using methods and phrases that are deemed "unauthentic," disrespectful, and sometimes outright racist.

Last year, for instance, an Asian food critic accused celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay of tokenism, after he launched a restaurant described in promotional material as "an authentic Asian eating house."

The restaurant didn't differentiate between wildly different and unique types of Asian cuisines, lumping them all together as generically Asian. And at the time of the opening, it did not appear to have any Asian chefs.

"Japanese? Chinese? It's all Asian, who cares," wrote the critic, Angela Hui, in a scathing Instagram story.

CNN reached out to Ramsay's restaurant group for comment after the initial controversy.

Tokenism is when racial, ethnic, or cultural diversity is emphasized only on a symbolic level, without much substantial effort to understand that culture -- in Ramsay's case, labeling a restaurant "Asian" without taking the time to differentiate between these individual nuanced cuisines.

Food is not just sustenance, it carries history and heritage, which is why many people are deeply offended when these traditional methods of cooking are cast aside.

Sometimes chefs don't just change up cooking methods, they blatantly insult the cuisine and culture of origin.

One notorious example is the Chinese-inspired restaurant Lucky Lee's in New York. When it opened in 2019, the White owner said it would serve "clean" food that wouldn't make people feel "bloated and icky" afterwards -- the implication being that regular Chinese food was somehow unhealthy. That sparked uproar and the restaurant closed eight months later.

And then there are chefs who fail to acknowledge a dish's ethnic origins at all -- the equivalent of whitewashing food.

The New York Times food columnist Alison Roman, also a White woman, gained internet fame for her recipe for a "Spiced Chickpea Stew with Coconut and Turmeric" -- which sounds an awful lot like an Indian or Jamaican curry. But in an interview with Jezebel, she said: "I'm like y'all, this is not a curry ... I've never made a curry." Roman's refusal to call it a curry and her denial of its ethnic background prompted critic Roxana Hadadi to call it "colonialism as cuisine."

In response to the backlash, NYT eventually added a line in Roman's recipe on their website, saying it "evokes stews found in South India and parts of the Caribbean."

But some people have pushed back against the idea of cultural appropriation.

Gatekeeping food prevents innovation, some say: for instance, fusion foods are born from chefs experimenting with different cuisines. Many also point out that food is meant to be shared, and its power is often directly tied to the communal eating experience.

Setting boundaries around food -- for example, saying only Chinese people can cook Chinese food, or Chinese food can only be cooked a certain way, as those reacting to Ng's video posit -- seems like the antithesis of this sharing spirit in our globalized world.

But sharing is different from appropriating without respect, especially when the chefs who do it profit from portraying those foods.

A reckoning in food media

The Uncle Roger video is the latest in a string of incidents that have drawn attention to issues surrounding food and culture. This summer has seen the reckoning on race and racism, embodied by the Black Lives Matter movement, spread from the streets to newsrooms and companies.

Within food media, Bon Appetit -- owned by Conde Nast -- is the best-known example. Current staffers, including assistant food editor Sohla El-Waylly, accused the company of underpaying and exploiting employees of color, and viewers called out the brand for numerous instances of food appropriation.

For instance, irate viewers pointed to the time Bon Appetit had a White chef demonstrate how to cook Vietnamese pho, with the title "PSA: This Is How You Should Be Eating Pho." There was also the time they "reinvented" the Filipino dessert Halo-halo by stuffing it with gummy bears and popcorn, spurring scorn from readers.

Each time, the brand would issue an apology and a promise to do better -- but it has been happening for years.

After this summer's explosive allegations, the company released a statement in June, acknowledging that "BA's recipes for Vietnamese pho, mumbo sauce, flaky bread, and White-guy kimchi all erased these recipes' origins or, worse, lampooned them."

"In all these cases and more, BA has been called out for appropriation, for decontextualizing recipes from non-White cultures, and for knighting 'experts' without considering if that person should, in fact, claim mastery of a cuisine that isn't theirs," wrote Joey Hernandez, BA's research director, in the statement.

The Bon Appetit debacle also prompted other questions about biases within established institutions. Who chooses what dishes get more coverage? Why do publications continue to use language that frames "ethnic" food as occasionally bizarre and often incomprehensible -- for example, Bloomberg calling tofu a "white, chewy and bland" food people are "learning to love?" Bloomberg eventually removed these phrases from their article after international backlash.

And why are "ethnic" chefs -- a euphemism for non-Whites -- often paid less? Bon Appetit fans were further outraged when Somali chef Hawa Hassan revealed last month that she was only paid $400 per video, and El-Waylly blasted Bon Appetit for only paying her $50,000 to "assist mostly white editors with significantly less experience than me."

These themes sound abstract at times -- but they're linked to and help perpetuate broader real-life inequalities such as workplace discrimination, pay inequity, power imbalances and prevailing Whiteness in the food world.

Ng and Patel may not have intended for their respective videos, and upcoming collaboration, to raise these questions.

But viewers' frustrations are inherently tied to the idea that there is an authentic way to cook fried rice, and that Patel's errors are made worse by the fact she is a non-Chinese chef presenting herself as an authority on the dish.

"FOR ANYONE WHO IS TRYING TO SAY THERE ARE MULTIPLE WAYS OF COOKING RICE, WELL OF COURSE THERE ARE. AND I LOVE THEM ALL," tweeted Yang, the Asian American writer. "BUT THIS IS *NOT* HOW YOU MAKE DELICIOUS FRIED RICE, THE DISH OF MY PEOPLES, THE SUBJECT OF THIS VIDEO."

    

https://www.wlfi.com/templates/AMP?contentID=571957792

 

Agricultural scientists from KVK stress biological pest control strategies When the entire world is challenged with the great threat of environmental pollution, agricultural

 scientists from By : Sentinel Digital Desk  |  30 July 2020 9:27 AM STAFF CORRESPONDENT DIBRUGARH: When the entire world is challenged with the great threat of environmental pollution, agricultural scientists from Krishi Vigyan Kendra Dibrugarh under Agricultural University Assam - Hemchandra Saikia, Sanghamitra Sharma and Tilok Malaka were seen in the fields of farmers, demonstrating the environment-friendly biological pest control of rice pests at No.2 Charaihabi gaon under Barbaruah Block in Dibrugarh district. Addressing the participant farmers of several villages, Hemchandra Saikia, an expert in Agricultural Economics, reminded that health was wealth and this would need pollution-free environment and food stuff. "Hence, while continuing our crop cultivation to fulfill food security and economic development, effective steps should be taken at the right time and place to minimize the use of pesticides and chemicals," he said. "The injudicious use of chemicals and pesticides over the years has been contributing to environmental pollution, causing hardship to mankind," he added. He further stated that injudicious use of pesticides might convert a minor pest to a major form of pest to crops, besides polluting the ecosystem and food chain and also killing the beneficial insect pests, which ultimately would hamper both agricultural output and sound human health. As there is a growing demand for organically produce output of agricultural crops in the entire world, KVK scientist Saikia stressed biological control of pests affecting crop cultivation Sanghamitra Sharma, who is expert in entomology, demonstrated how to use biological pest control strategies against rice pests like rice stem borer and leaf folder with the use of pheromone trap and use of neem oil spray. The scientists also explained other means of eco-friendly rice pest control measures like use of 'T' shaped bamboo technology through which various birds used to eat various pests of rice by sitting in the T fitted in the rice field. They also urged farmers to go for multiple crop cultivation to enhance their total farm income in order to lead a respectable standard of living. Also Watch: Protests Against CAA Picking Up; AASU Protest In Doomdooma

https://www.sentinelassam.com/north-east-india-news/assam-news/agricultural-scientists-from-kvk-stress-biological-pest-control-strategies-492024

China objects to US retaliation over grain subsidies

By Bill Tomson

KEYWORDS CHINA DAVID ORDEN GRAIN SUBSIDIES RETALIATION RICE RICE SUBSIDIES WHEAT WHEAT SUBSIDIES WTO DISPUTE

China Wednesday officially rejected U.S. claims that China has failed to comply with a 2019 World Trade Organization ruling against China’s price supports for its wheat and rice farmers — subsidies that U.S. farmers say hurt international trade.

The U.S. recently requested WTO authorization to hit China with “countermeasures” worth $1.3 billion, and China railed against the request during the Wednesday meeting of the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body.

“China took note of the US request and said it disagreed with the U.S. allegation that China has failed to bring its measures into compliance with its WTO obligations,” according to a Geneva trade official.

It’s still unclear whether or not the WTO would agree that China is not complying with the original ruling handed down last year. Under more normal circumstances, the disagreement would be handed over to a WTO compliance panel, which can be appealed. But the WTO’s appellate body has been effectively shut down because the U.S. refuses to approve new appeals court judges.

Another potential route is for both sides to ask for an arbitration panel, which could issue a final ruling that can’t be appealed.

A WTO dispute panel ruled in 2019 that China was unfairly calculating its support prices for wheat and rice farmers, pushing subsidies far higher than it was allowed in 2012 through 2015. China did not appeal the ruling and the U.S. accepted the win the case that it began in 2016.

Related Articles

Interested in more coverage and insights? Receive a free month of Agri-Pulse West.

But China’s newly proposed way of making the calculations is just as unfair as the old method, U.S. government and industry sources tell Agri-Pulse. China says the fact that it has set new procurement limits on how much wheat and rice it can buy solves the dispute. The U.S. argues that the new limits are far above what China buys, making them meaningless.

The Chinese proposal, while potentially complying with WTO precedent, is basically “sleight of hand,” says David Orden, a professor at Virginia Tech University’s Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics. “By announcing these limits, China is saying it is now in compliance. The limit is more than the expected procurement, so it’s not going to have any real effect on what they procure.”

For more news, go to www.Agri-Pulse.com.

Bill Tomson

https://www.agri-pulse.com/articles/14166-china-objects-to-us-retaliation-over-grain-subsidies?utm_source=Registered+Users+%26+Extended+Trial+Promotion+list&utm_campaign=95bd5e4212-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_07_30_06_39&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_fe19cb9d17-95bd5e4212-49144037

Iran runs out dollars, India's basmati rice exports may fall 20%

Islamic Republic ordered nearly 30 per cent of India's basmati rice exports in financial year 2019-20, buying 1.3 million tonnes

Topics
Basmati rice | Iran | India

Dilip Kumar Jha  |  Mumbai Last Updated at July 30, 2020 11:51 IST

Follow us on Description: https://bsmedia.business-standard.com/_media/bs/data/general-file-upload/2020-07/google-news1.jpg

Indian exporters said they have cut shipments to Iran because of delay in payments linked to the Islamic nation running out of dollars

India’s basmati rice exports to Iran may decline 20 per cent this financial year as the West Asian nation fails to make payment due to US economic sanctions, said a study.

Iran ordered nearly 30 per cent of India’s total basmati rice exports in financial year 2019-20, buying 1.3 million tonnes. The US economic sanctions have paralysed business in Iran, which is battling the crisis for a year now.

Indian exporters said they have cut shipments to Iran because of delay in payments linked to the Islamic nation running out of dollars.

“Iran, which imports around 1.3 million tonne annually, is expected to register 20 per cent lower volume from India as payment-related issues continue from last fiscal because of US sanctions,” said a Crisil study.

Data compiled by the Agricultural and Processed Food Export Development Authority (Apeda) showed India exported 4.45 million tonnes basmati rice (worth $4.33 billion) in financial year 2019-20 as compared to 4.41 million tonnes ($4.72 billion) the year before. India recorded 4.01 million tonnes (worth $4.17 billion) for the financial year 2017-18.

“Exports to Iran is currently on halt due to delay in payment receivables. Owing to economic sanctions, dolalr availability remained scarce. But, Iran market is set to open very soon,” said Gurnam Arora, Joint Managing Director of Kohinoor Foods Ltd, the producer and exporter of Kohinoor brand basmati rice.

Indian rice exporters are exploring opportunities in South East Asia and South America to compensate for exports to Iran. Demand from European Union, the Middle East, South East Asia and the South American countries has increased.

“There will be no impact of decline in export volume to Iran on India’s overall shipment of basmati rice as demand from other markets has increased,” Ashwini Arora, Director, L T Foods, the producer of Daawat brand basmati rice, had said in a recent interaction with Business Standard.

Demand for basmati remained strong in nationwide lockdowns to contain the coronavirus outbreak, prompting rice companies to accept orders by seeking higher advances or letters of credit. They plan to use the advance monies to cut working capital debt. The aromatic rice demand from the US, the UK and the Middle East (excluding Iran), which account for more than half of India’s annual basmati export, has increased because these countries are building food security buffers amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Crisil report said the average export realisation at Rs 63 per kg this fiscal compared with Rs 69 per kg in the last fiscal. Realisation from the domestic market, accounting for 2 million tonne sales annually, is seen stable at Rs 52 per kg on strong retail demand.

https://www.business-standard.com/article/markets/iran-runs-out-dollars-india-s-basmati-rice-exports-may-fall-20-120073000562_1.html

 

Packs of rice urgently recalled because they might contain glass

The Food Standards Agency said the possible presence of glass makes the products "unsafe to eat"xBottom of Form

Description: https://i2-prod.getsurrey.co.uk/news/article13745224.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/Food-Standards-Agency-generic.jpgThe Food Standards Agency (FSA) offices in London (Image: Bruno Vincent/Getty

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A number of Uncle Ben's rice packets are being urgently recalled because they might contain glass.

Mars Food UK is recalling Uncle Ben's Brown Basmati ready to heat rice pouches as a precaution due to the "possibility of the presence of glass". It's not been stated how glass may have got into the packets.

A notice issued by the Food Standards Agency on Monday (July 27) said certain batches of the product are unsafe to eat.

The 250g Uncle Ben's Brown Basmati pouches which have been affected, including their best before dates, are listed below:

·         November 17, 2020

·         December 8, 2020

·         December 9, 2020

·         January 8, 2021

·         January 18, 2021

·         January 19, 2021

·         March 2, 2021

·         March 16, 2021

·         March 20, 2021

·         May 24, 2021

·         June 14, 2021

·         June 15, 2021

·         July 3, 2021

·         July 19, 2021

The company says no other products or best before dates are affected by this recall.

Find out how you can get more news from SurreyLive straight to your inbox HERE.

Any customers who have purchased the above items should return them to the store from where they were bought or dispose of them and contact the Uncle Ben's consumer care line on 0800 952 1234 for a full refund.

Supermarkets urgently recall ice cream, lollies, cake, biscuits and moreCheck your cupboards, fridges and freezers for any of these

Rat poo and cockroaches found at filthy restaurant and shopBoth premises were closed after serious breaches of food safety regulations

 

Spain's Ebro sees profits rise as coronavirus pandemic boosts rice, pasta sales

 

MADRID (Reuters) - Spain’s Ebro Foods (EBRO.MC) said its net profit increased by 38% in the first half of the year as demand for its pasta and rice was driven higher by a change in consumer habits during the coronavirus pandemic.

The company, which says it is the world’s second-largest rice seller and maker of dry and fresh pasta, said on Wednesday its net profit rose to 102.8 million euros (93.11 million pounds) on sales that climbed 23% to 1.67 billion euros.

Ebro Foods’ operating costs also increased as it tried to keep pace with demand.

“The rice division’s sales could have been even stronger if some of our plants had not been close to full capacity,” Ebro said in an statement, noting that dry pasta demand had also risen.

Demand for staple foods increased in all countries affected by lockdowns as people stayed home, cooking their own food. Demand also benefited from panic buying when lockdowns were first announced as consumers feared running out of food.

Ebro Foods, which owns brands such as Garofalo in Italy, Panzani in France and Tilda in Britain, reported adjusted earnings before interest taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of 227.5 million, up 42.8%.

The company expects demand to stay strong, though closer to normal levels, in the second half of the year, as long as no lockdowns are imposed to fend off second-wave contagions.

Reporting by Emma Pinedo; Editing by Inti Landauro and Jan Harvey

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-ebrofoods-results/spains-ebro-sees-profits-rise-as-coronavirus-pandemic-boosts-rice-pasta-sales-idUKKCN24U2A9

 

 

Rice Prices

as on : 31-07-2020 03:51:33 PM

Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.

Arrivals

Price

Current

%
change

Season
cumulative

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Prev.
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Prev.Yr
%change

Rice

Wansi(UP)

1000.00

-

1303.00

2560

-

21.33

Bangalore(Kar)

837.00

-32.66

126579.00

4650

4650

3.33

Mandya(Kar)

418.00

422.5

5608.00

2850

2450

-

Sultanpur(UP)

200.00

NC

7707.00

2315

2325

-15.82

Varanasi(Grain)(UP)

120.00

20

2417.00

2700

2660

13.21

Gondal(UP)

114.50

4.09

8265.50

2420

2420

-1.22

Dadri(UP)

85.00

-15

2025.00

5950

5930

-

Hardoi(UP)

80.00

33.33

8632.80

2430

2440

-3.19

Kalipur(WB)

74.00

13.85

3124.00

2400

2400

6.67

Bindki(UP)

70.00

-22.22

5920.00

2550

2530

7.59

Kasimbazar(WB)

62.50

NC

1650.00

2680

2660

1.13

Sealdah Koley Market(WB)

55.80

-0.36

484.00

2700

2700

-

Kanpur(Grain)(UP)

50.00

11.11

5815.00

2300

2300

-6.12

Sahiyapur(UP)

50.00

66.67

2647.00

2560

2560

5.13

Kopaganj(UP)

49.00

-5.77

1824.00

2585

2580

5.73

Choubepur(UP)

48.00

95.92

2391.85

2600

2570

-2.80

Azamgarh(UP)

45.00

-10

5531.70

2565

2565

4.69

Aligarh(UP)

40.00

-20

4412.00

2550

2540

0.39

Ghaziabad(UP)

40.00

-33.33

2705.00

2850

2850

-2.73

Gorakhpur(UP)

40.00

-11.11

1104.70

2570

2560

-

Beldanga(WB)

40.00

14.29

1525.00

2700

2700

8.00

Lakhimpur(UP)

37.00

5.71

2856.00

2440

2450

4.72

Saharanpur(UP)

37.00

27.59

2699.50

2750

2750

-5.82

Teliamura(Tri)

35.00

NC

524.00

2900

2900

NC

Faizabad(UP)

35.00

2.94

1574.00

2430

2430

2.32

Basti(UP)

34.00

6.25

1732.00

2570

2560

6.20

Meerut(UP)

34.00

-2.86

959.50

2810

2810

-5.39

Firozabad(UP)

33.00

13.79

1712.60

2575

2590

-

Hapur(UP)

30.00

-14.29

1247.00

2670

2670

-10.40

Khalilabad(UP)

30.00

-14.29

1835.00

2550

2550

13.33

Muradabad(UP)

30.00

-14.29

1677.00

2620

2600

2.34

Madhoganj(UP)

30.00

20

3708.50

2430

2435

8.00

Memari(WB)

30.00

100

144.00

2500

2450

11.11

Mathura(UP)

29.00

11.54

3088.50

2540

2560

-1.17

Bidar(Kar)

28.00

21.74

167.00

2400

2400

-4.00

Bankura Sadar(WB)

28.00

16.67

2281.00

2600

2600

8.33

Paliakala(UP)

27.50

57.14

710.00

2420

2430

7.08

Mainpuri(UP)

26.00

-3.7

4054.50

2610

2600

-0.76

Agra(UP)

25.00

25

3496.50

2610

2630

0.38

Shamli(UP)

25.00

11.11

1256.90

2785

2785

0.91

Asansol(WB)

24.00

1.87

1247.01

3100

3100

9.15

Durgapur(WB)

23.50

-2.08

1204.25

2700

2760

2.66

Muzzafarnagar(UP)

23.00

53.33

4539.00

2785

2785

-5.75

Kolaghat(WB)

23.00

NC

252.00

2400

2450

-4.00

Tamluk (Medinipur E)(WB)

23.00

-4.17

282.00

2400

2450

-4.00

Utraula(UP)

22.50

7.14

565.70

2420

2420

-

Champadanga(WB)

22.00

22.22

738.00

3200

3200

14.29

Vilaspur(UP)

21.00

-4.55

1684.20

2640

2640

5.18

Egra/contai(WB)

21.00

16.67

575.00

2600

2600

13.04

Sehjanwa(UP)

20.00

-33.33

2538.50

2580

2560

19.44

Jaunpur(UP)

19.00

-38.71

1577.50

2600

2600

10.17

Etawah(UP)

18.00

50

2600.50

2500

2535

-5.30

Farukhabad(UP)

18.00

38.46

1195.00

2480

2500

-6.42

Medinipur(West)(WB)

18.00

20

143.00

2900

2900

1.75

Rampur(UP)

16.00

14.29

695.50

2630

2630

2.73

Tundla(UP)

16.00

255.56

297.50

2600

2630

0.58

Unnao(UP)

15.50

3.33

30.50

6675

6650

96.32

Badayoun(UP)

15.00

36.36

1102.50

2620

2600

4.38

Gazipur(UP)

15.00

-3.23

2200.50

3250

3250

0.62

Banda(UP)

12.00

100

365.50

2430

2455

3.18

Etah(UP)

12.00

71.43

449.50

2570

2580

-0.77

Bharthna(UP)

12.00

-14.29

2352.00

2550

2540

-3.77

Jangipura(UP)

12.00

-14.29

680.00

2580

2600

10.26

Partaval(UP)

11.50

-36.11

803.00

2515

2550

10.07

Bahraich(UP)

11.00

46.67

1126.50

2380

2400

-2.06

Robertsganj(UP)

11.00

-21.43

322.60

2500

2490

7.07

Jhijhank(UP)

10.00

100

401.50

2500

2530

-

Raath(UP)

9.00

50

255.60

2350

2350

-

Barhaj(UP)

9.00

-91

10305.00

2580

2580

7.50

Mohamadabad(UP)

8.00

14.29

867.80

2500

2480

-

Kayamganj(UP)

8.00

-20

1997.00

2510

2520

-5.28

Devariya(UP)

8.00

-11.11

1088.50

2570

2565

6.20

Ajuha(UP)

8.00

14.29

409.00

2500

2500

2.04

Rasda(UP)

8.00

-27.27

535.00

2625

2630

1093.18

Naugarh(UP)

7.50

-25

3758.50

2550

2555

5.15

Raibareilly(UP)

7.50

-11.76

1639.50

2465

2465

12.56

Karvi(UP)

7.50

-16.67

646.00

2430

2420

2.75

Fatehpur(UP)

7.30

12.31

2302.00

2515

2520

7.02

Atarra(UP)

6.00

-14.29

860.50

2425

2450

4.30

Mawana(UP)

6.00

-14.29

284.20

2800

2790

-

Chandoli(UP)

5.00

66.67

90.70

2600

2585

11.83

Kasganj(UP)

5.00

25

498.50

2600

2590

1.96

Nadia(WB)

5.00

NC

270.00

3800

3800

NC

Indus(Bankura Sadar)(WB)

5.00

-16.67

1182.00

2800

2800

1.82

Mirzapur(UP)

4.50

12.5

307.00

2645

2660

9.52

Auraiya(UP)

4.00

14.29

260.10

2520

2530

-4.18

Jahangirabad(UP)

3.50

-22.22

256.00

2650

2650

-0.93

Tulsipur(UP)

3.50

16.67

98.60

2420

2420

-

Akbarpur(UP)

3.50

16.67

408.60

2450

2450

0.82

Kalyani(WB)

3.50

NC

91.00

3450

3450

1.47

Chhibramau(Kannuj)(UP)

3.40

-2.86

614.20

2500

2460

-3.85

Jayas(UP)

3.30

17.86

726.90

2300

2300

12.20

Mothkur(UP)

3.00

7.14

17.60

2480

2490

-

Fatehpur Sikri(UP)

3.00

-11.76

151.30

2585

2560

0.98

Mahoba(UP)

3.00

-14.29

470.60

2470

2460

9.05

Achalda(UP)

3.00

-25

352.90

2500

2520

13.12

Kosikalan(UP)

2.90

11.54

251.70

2540

2550

0.40

Naanpara(UP)

2.80

-33.33

675.00

2400

2400

2.13

Uluberia(WB)

2.80

3.7

61.10

2700

2700

-6.90

Chitwadagaon(UP)

2.50

25

478.10

2620

2640

24.76

Baberu(UP)

2.20

46.67

91.60

2420

2420

8.76

Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)

2.10

5

202.70

2600

2600

NC

Khurja(UP)

2.00

-20

213.60

2633

2660

-2.48

Buland Shahr(UP)

2.00

-33.33

162.90

2630

2685

-2.59

Muskara(UP)

2.00

25

81.70

2400

2450

3.23

Safdarganj(UP)

2.00

NC

91.50

2400

2400

-

Khatra(WB)

2.00

100

106.50

2600

2550

NC

Charra(UP)

1.90

-5

124.80

2550

2550

0.99

Mugrabaadshahpur(UP)

1.80

NC

75.50

2510

2515

12.05

Bareilly(UP)

1.50

-80

1999.50

2600

2585

3.59

Shikohabad(UP)

1.50

-40

270.00

1526

2600

-48.27

Wazirganj(UP)

1.50

NC

52.50

2610

2580

-

Panichowki(Kumarghat)(Tri)

1.40

7.69

59.60

2950

2950

-

Jhansi(UP)

1.40

-12.5

151.20

2485

2480

4.63

Bharuasumerpur(UP)

1.20

-33.33

31.10

2500

2500

28.21

Alibagh(Mah)

1.00

NC

92.00

4200

4200

90.91

Murud(Mah)

1.00

NC

91.00

4200

4200

90.91

Melaghar(Tri)

1.00

NC

65.70

3000

2800

11.11

Lalganj(UP)

1.00

-33.33

276.50

2350

2350

-

Anandnagar(UP)

0.90

-18.18

218.60

2540

2555

5.83

Gurusarai(UP)

0.90

NC

25.00

2485

2485

7.58

Dahod(Guj)

0.80

-66.67

1035.90

4200

4200

5.00

Atrauli(UP)

0.70

16.67

8.00

2550

2560

-

Maudaha(UP)

0.70

16.67

34.50

2350

2360

0.43

Achnera(UP)

0.60

-14.29

41.60

2610

2580

1.95

 

 

RPT-Asia Rice-Virus slows Indian exports; heavy flooding hits Bangladesh

Harshith Aranya

 

(Repeats story published on July 30 with no changes to text)

 

* Nearly 50,000 hectares of paddy fields in Bangladesh submerged

 

* Thailand prices rise to $465-$483/t from last week’s $450–$482

 

* Vietnam’s Jan-July rice exports seen down 1.4%

 

By Harshith Aranya

 

BENGALURU, July 30 (Reuters) - India’s rice export prices rose this week as the worsening coronavirus crisis in the country caused logistical snags, while widespread flooding in Bangladesh severely damaged crops.

 

India’s 5-percent broken parboiled variety RI-INBKN5-P1 was quoted at $380-$385 per tonne this week, up from last week’s $377-$382 per tonne.

 

Rice exporters in India are struggling to fulfil orders due to limited availability of containers and workers at mills and the biggest handling port Kakinada on the east coast.

 

Rice loadings have slowed down as the Kakinada port could load around 8,000 tonnes of rice a day for only five vessels, with others forced to wait in anchorage, said B.V. Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters Association.

 

In neighbouring Bangladesh, heavy floods have submerged nearly 50,000 hectares of paddy fields, the country’s agriculture ministry officials said.

 

Thailand’s benchmark 5-percent broken rice RI-THBKN5-P1 prices rose to $465-$483 on Thursday, from $450–$482 quoted last week.

 

Traders say prices increased slightly as the baht strengthened against the U.S. dollar.

 

“The market is expecting a new batch of off-season rice next month, and if the output is good then the prices could drop... but at the moment, supply remains a concern,” a Bangkok-based trader said.

 

In Vietnam, rates for 5-percent broken rice RI-VNBKN5-P1 stayed unchanged from a week earlier in the $440-$450 per tonne range.

 

“Domestic paddy price, however, has risen significantly over the recent days as traders are hoarding the grain in anticipation of higher prices due to the return of COVID-19 to Vietnam,” a trader based in the Mekong Delta province of An Giang province said.

 

“Exporting activities are quiet this week because many traders hesitate to sign new export contracts, fearing they cannot purchase enough rice to fulfil the contracts,” the trader added.

 

Rice exports in the first seven months of 2020 from Vietnam were forecast to drop 1.4% from a year earlier, government data released on Wednesday showed. (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok; Additional reporting by Swati Verma; Editing by Ramakrishnan M.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SunRice says this season's rice price still 'very high' despite 40 per cent drop

ABC Riverina

By Verity Gorman and Cara Jeffery

Description: A large industrial shed with two signs in front.

SunRice said it's had positive feedback from growers about this season's rice price.(ABC Rural: Cara Jeffery)

Australia's largest rice processing company insists the price it has offered farmers to grow rice this season is "very high", despite an almost 40 per cent drop on last season's price.

Key points:

·         SunRice has reduced the contract price for a medium grain rice variety to $475 a tonne, down from $750 a tonne last season

·         CEO Rob Gordon said the price is still "very high"

·         Rice growers said there is optimism about the season ahead

Last year SunRice put a record fixed-price contract on the table of $750 a tonne for medium grain variety Reisiq in an effort to encourage more growers to plant the crop.

But this year the company reduced the contract price to $475 a tonne for the same variety.

SunRice chief executive Rob Gordon said despite the drop he's had positive feedback from growers.

"Last year's $750 was in reality a price we needed to pay in the midst of a drought when water prices were extraordinarily high," Mr Gordon said.

"This $475 price reflects a return to normal with water levels starting to be at a more normal level in the Riverina." 

The price drop comes at a time when the general security water allocation in the Murray River is at just 2 per cent.

Hope for a better season ahead

"We're still early in the season and the Bureau of Meteorology is calling a wetter-than-average winter and spring so we are hopeful the allocation will build," Mr Gordon added.

"The outlook at the last allocation was there should be a half reasonable allocation by November on the basis of a dry to average set of inflows."

Low water allocations and tough seasonal conditions resulted in the 2020 rice crop being the second lowest on record at just 45,000 tonnes.

·          

Mr Gordon said contract signing started with growers this week and there had already been a good level of interest from farmers eager to return to growing rice.

"A number of people who went to other crops in recent years haven't necessarily had the best experiences," he said.

"This year pricing on cotton and corn is well off and this price is highly competitive for growers' water."

President of the Ricegrowers' Association of Australia Rob Massina farms in the southern Riverina and agreed there is optimism about the season ahead.

"It's all about the availability of water at the end of the day," Mr Massina said.

"If the predicted rainfall comes to fruition that will be the positive kick that the rice industry needs to make sure we can continue to provide Australian rice on Australian shelves."

Posted Yesterday

https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2020-07-30/sunrice-says-price-still-very-high-despite-40-per-cent-drop/12502852

 

 

 

China objects to US retaliation over grain subsidies

By Bill Tomson

KEYWORDS CHINA DAVID ORDEN GRAIN SUBSIDIES RETALIATION RICE RICE SUBSIDIES WHEAT WHEAT SUBSIDIES WTO DISPUTE

China Wednesday officially rejected U.S. claims that China has failed to comply with a 2019 World Trade Organization ruling against China’s price supports for its wheat and rice farmers — subsidies that U.S. farmers say hurt international trade.

The U.S. recently requested WTO authorization to hit China with “countermeasures” worth $1.3 billion, and China railed against the request during the Wednesday meeting of the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Body.

“China took note of the US request and said it disagreed with the U.S. allegation that China has failed to bring its measures into compliance with its WTO obligations,” according to a Geneva trade official.

It’s still unclear whether or not the WTO would agree that China is not complying with the original ruling handed down last year. Under more normal circumstances, the disagreement would be handed over to a WTO compliance panel, which can be appealed. But the WTO’s appellate body has been effectively shut down because the U.S. refuses to approve new appeals court judges.

Another potential route is for both sides to ask for an arbitration panel, which could issue a final ruling that can’t be appealed.

A WTO dispute panel ruled in 2019 that China was unfairly calculating its support prices for wheat and rice farmers, pushing subsidies far higher than it was allowed in 2012 through 2015. China did not appeal the ruling and the U.S. accepted the win the case that it began in 2016.

Interested in more coverage and insights? Receive a free month of Agri-Pulse West.

But China’s newly proposed way of making the calculations is just as unfair as the old method, U.S. government and industry sources tell Agri-Pulse. China says the fact that it has set new procurement limits on how much wheat and rice it can buy solves the dispute. The U.S. argues that the new limits are far above what China buys, making them meaningless.

The Chinese proposal, while potentially complying with WTO precedent, is basically “sleight of hand,” says David Orden, a professor at Virginia Tech University’s Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics. “By announcing these limits, China is saying it is now in compliance. The limit is more than the expected procurement, so it’s not going to have any real effect on what they procure.”

https://www.agri-pulse.com/articles/14166-china-objects-to-us-retaliation-over-grain-subsidies

 

 

 

 

 

India’s support price for rice under WTO lens as US, EU question ‘peace clause’

Amiti Sen  New Delhi | Updated on July 30, 2020  Published on July 30, 2020

Description: https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/wnjc06/article31970577.ece/alternates/WIDE_615/BL03THINKPDS1

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Six countries ask India 25 questions on additional notification obligation, trade impact

India’s minimum support programme (MSP) for rice is under scrutiny at the World Trade Organisation with the US and the EU challenging the increase in subsidies beyond ceiling (de minimis) limits in the marketing year 2018-19.

Invocation of the ‘peace clause’ by India to justify the subsidies was also questioned by the opposing members who posed several queries on the various conditions, including notification requirements, that are to be met for the purpose as decided at the Bali Ministerial meet, a Geneva-based official told BusinessLine.

“The main challengers of the invocation of the ‘peace clause’ were the US, EU, Canada, Brazil, Japan and Paraguay who registered a total of 25 questions in relation to India’s additional notification obligations, reporting methodologies and the trade impact of the support,” the official said.

Earlier this year, India had informed the WTO that it had breached the subsidy limit fixed at 10 per cent of the value of food production for developing countries (under the Agreement on Agriculture) for rice in 2018-19. It had provided subsidies worth $5 billion to rice farmers against rice production worth $43.67 billion in the period.

Peace clause

New Delhi invoked the ‘peace clause’ of the WTO agreed to at the Bali Ministerial meeting in December 2013 while breaching the subsidy limits. As per the ‘peace clause’, no action will be taken against India, or other developing countries, in case the subsidies on their food procurement programmes breached the ceiling of 10 per cent of value of production.

While the peace clause is supposed to remain in perpetuity till a permanent solution on public stockholding for food security is mutually agreed to by members, it comes with a series of conditions related to notification obligations and ensuring food security of other countries.

India, in its defence, said the breach of de minimis limits for rice was covered by the ‘peace clause’, and it has submitted full information in line with the specific notification requirements of the decisions, some members were not convinced.

New Delhi’s stance

New Delhi maintained that the marketing year 2018-2019 was the only year that it exceeded the de minimis support for rice. It clarified that although India’s public stockholding programmes covered rice, wheat, coarse grains and pulses, only the support on rice breached given limits, the official said. “India also stated that the 850,000 tonnes of rice stocks subsequently sold on the domestic market were not allowed for export, preventing the risk of distorting global markets,” he added.

India also said that it will give the full-detailed responses in the Agriculture Information Management System (AGIMS) on the WTO in due course and that it is open for bilateral consultations with members with further questions.

The EU said that more evidence was needed on how India ensured the rice stocks are not dumped on the global market. It also said that all the information on the products covered by the public stockholding programme should be provided in order to tell for sure that only rice support exceeded the limits.

Other countries said that they would go through India’s responses carefully before discussing future action.

https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/indias-support-price-for-rice-under-wto-lens-as-us-eu-question-peace-clause/article32229771.ece

 

https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/rice-prices/article32239318.ece#

 

 

 

 

Myanmar govt raises minimum rice price; exports risky but promising

Chan Mya HtweAung Loon 30 Jul 2020

Photo: Mar Naw

Myanmar govt raises minimum rice price; exports risky but promising

The government has raised this year’s floor price for rice in view of higher agricultural and production costs, said U Soe Tun, executive committee member of the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF).

For the 2020 monsoon and summer 2021, the price has been set at K520,000 for every 100 baskets, according to the committee for protecting rights and enhancing economic welfare of farmers last week. One basket weighs 46lb or 20.86kg.

 

In fiscal 2018-19, the minimum rice price was set at K500,000 for every 100 baskets. “The rice floor price is calculated based on cost. Now it is revised as costs have increased,” U Soe Tun said.

But the higher prices also implies more export revenue for Myanmar in the year ahead. Export prices are already rising, and are now up by about US$10-$15 per tonne compared to earlier in the year, according to the MRF.

Notably, Myanmar can now officially export broken rice to China after the two governments agreed to include in this year's export contract. “In the past, China bought broken rice from Vietnam only. Now it can also buy from Myanmar so the export market looks more promising,” said U Soe Tun.

 

According to MRF projections, Myanmar is expected to export between 2.5 million and 3 million tonnes of rice and broken rice next year. China is the main buyer of rice from Myanmar, followed by Malaysia and the Philippines as well as countries in Africa and the EU.

Between October 1, 2019 and July 10, rice export volumes rose to 2.2 million tonnes worth more than US$666 million, up by 360,000 tonnes and $100 million year-on-year, respectively, according to the MRF.

There are risks to these forecast though. Two weeks ago, Thai imports of Myanmar broken rice collapsed due to a sudden drop in demand, traders said.

"The Thais have stopped importing due to falling prices at home. Now, there is hardly any demand," U Maung Myint Oo of Klohtoo Wah Co, a local trading house.

Prior to the collapse, Myanmar exported about 500 tonnes of broken rice a week to Thailand. “It also doesn’t work for the Thais that we have increased our export duties from 32pc to 52pc. The quality of Myanmar broken rice is not good enough because traders mix it with lower quality products. Therefore, the Thais are reluctant to buy it too,” said Ko Kyaw Thu, a local trader.

Despite better overall export numbers, there are also risks of a further drop in trade with China at the border. Between October 1, 2019 and July 10, border rice exports fell to just $93.6 million, which is down by $171 million in the previous period last year, according to the MRF.

This is due to China clamping down on illegal trade, and, more recently, additional precautionary measures taken to control the spread of COVID-19. - Translated

 


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