Wednesday, February 12, 2020

12th February,2020 Daily Global Regional Rice E-Newseltter

Hafeez Sheikh rejects reports about decrease of auto sale  


Description: Abdul-Hafeez-Shaikh
ISLAMABAD: Adviser to Prime Minister on Finance Abdul Hafeez Sheikh has said that economy has stabilised as a result of historic steps taken by the present government.
Speaking on a motion regarding economic condition in the National Assembly on Wednesday, he said the confidence of the world stands restored in Pakistan. World institutions including the IMF, Bloomberg, World Bank, Asian Development Bank and Moody’s are recognising government’s economic performance. The adviser said the stock exchange stands stabilsed and exports are increasing which witnessed zero growth during the five year of the previous government.
He said the taxes also witnessed a growth of 16.5 percent during the first seven months of current fiscal year. Hafeez Sheikh said the current account deficit has been reduced from 20 billion dollars to two billion dollars whilst the fiscal deficit has also been cut.
The adviser said the government is not only focusing to enhance tax collection but also non tax revenue. He said we have targeted to fetch one thousand and five hundred billion rupees through non tax revenue during the current fiscal year. Hafeez Sheikh said the foreign direct investment has doubled whilst the portfolio investment has fetched three billion dollars in the first seven months of the current fiscal year. He said tourism has also doubled during this period. The adviser on finance said despite constraints, a serious effort is being made to bring down the prices of essential commodities. He expressed the confidence that the inflation will come down in next one to two months. 
A big relief package has been announced through the Utility Stores Corporation to provide essential items such as flour, rice, pulses and sugar to the people at discounted rates. He said we are planning to enhance the network of utility stores from four thousand to six thousand in the next few months.
The adviser said that a ration scheme will also be launched before Ramadan under which the deserving people will be provided with essential items at 25 percent reduced rates through the utility stores. Hafeez Sheikh said the government has increased the funding for social safety nets from Rs 100 billion  to Rs 192 billion , which is an unprecedented increase.
He said steps such as tightening monetary policy and non-borrowing from State Bank of Pakistan have been taken to keep the prices under check. Hafeez Sheikh said 72 percent consumers are getting subsidized power including the exporters and those consuming less than three hundred units. He said we are also trying to check power pilferage to reduce the prices of power.  He said the circular debt was increasing Rs 38 billion on monthly basis and we have brought it down to Rs 12 billion.
The adviser also rejected the impression that auto sale is on the decline. He said different companies have registered increase in the sale of their vehicles. The adviser reminded that the country was at the verge of bankruptcy when the present government assumed power. 
He said we inherited a loan of thirty thousand billion rupees and we had to return five thousand billion rupees in the first two years. He said the current account deficit was at the history’s highest level whilst fiscal deficit was also on an upward trajectory. Foreign exchange reserves had nosedived due to the policy of the previous government.
The adviser said the bilateral assistance from the friendly countries amounting to eight billion dollars and the IMF financing of six billion dollars on easy terms as well reduction in our expenditures helped avert the crisis.

Prime Minister Approves Multi-pronged Strategy To Control Price Hike: Dr Firdous

 
Description: Prime Minister approves multi-pronged strategy to control price hike: Dr Firdous


Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Information and Broadcasting Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan on Tuesday said Prime Minister Imran Khan, in the cabinet meeting, had approved multi-pronged strategy to control the fresh wave of price hike in the country

ISLAMABAD, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 11th Feb, 2020 ) :Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Information and Broadcasting Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan on Tuesday said Prime Minister Imran Khan, in the cabinet meeting, had approved multi-pronged strategy to control the fresh wave of price hike in the country.
In a briefing to media about cabinet's decision, she said he had pledged to go an extra mile to break the nexus of sugar cartels and mafia.
The special assistant said the government had given an opportunity to sugar mafia to bring their stored stalk in the market, otherwise the market would be flooded with sugar and the cartels would have to face a huge loss, adding whosoever would challenge the writ of the government be dealt with iron hands.
She said the prime minister's economic team along with institutions concerned briefed him in detail about the recent wave of price hike.
She said prime minster had approved relief package of Rs10 billion to stabilize the price of basic commodities as well as constituted a team to regularly monitor and control the prevailing inflation.
According to the relief package, the government would provide Rs2 billion per month to the Utility Stores Corporation (USC) for the next five months to provide subsidy on wheat, sugar, rice, grains and edible ghee. 20 kg pack of flour would be provided at Rs800, sugar Rs70, and edible ghee Rs175, she said adding 15 to 20 percent prices of rice and grains would be reduced.
With the support of the USC, 2,000 Youth Stores would be opened across the country, the SAPM said adding, these stores would open under the umbrella of "Kamyab Jawan Youth Programme".
This initiative of the government would provide direct employment to 400,000 youth whereas indirectly 800,000 people would be beneficiary, she said.
Through "Kamyab Jawan Programme" working capital in the shape of interest-free loans would be provided to the youth and apart from that the USC's 12 cash and carry would be opened in the biggest cities.
It was also decided in the cabinet meeting that the USC would provide basic commodities of day to day use at the subsidized rates to "NanBais" and small tuck shops, she said adding five free-zones would be built alongside the Afghan border to stop illegal smuggling of the basic commodities.
Rashan Cards would be issued before the holy month of Ramazan to help the poor and deserving people to buy commodities of day to day use at 25 to 30 percent cheaper rates than the market price, she said.
She said to stabilize the sugar prices the ban on sugar import had been lifted whereas export of sugar had been embargoed, however, to eliminate the regulatory duty on sugar a comprehensive strategy had been ordered by the prime minister and the economic team was tasked to review taxes on the imports of grains.
She said under the Ehsas Kifalat programme Rs2,000 stipend was being paid to 4.3 million poor women in the country and Ehsas assets programme was going to be launched on 21st of this month.
She said 20,000 women would be benefited with the Ehsas Nutrition programme whereas 100 more langer khanas would be opened during 2020.
She said the prime minister had expressed dissatisfaction on the inquiry report of wheat crises in the country and returned the same with some observation and questionnaire to resubmit the report in fortnight.
She said the prices of electricity and gas were increased due to flawed policies of the previous government and the prime minister had ordered to prepare a report to bring down the prices of electrify and gas which would be made public.
SAPM on health Dr Zafar Mirza updated the prime minister on coronavirus and the situation of Pakistani students strangled in China.

Pakistan Market Monitor Report - November 2019

REPORT
Published on 12 Feb 2020

HIGHLIGHTS
·       Description: previewIn October 2019, the average retail price of wheat slightly increased by 2.4% while price of wheat flour negligibly increased by 0.5% from September 2019; the price of rice Irri-6 negligibly decreased by 0.4% while price of rice Basmati negligibly increased by 0.1% in October 2019 when compared to the previous month;
·       Headline inflation based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased in October 2019 by 1.82% over September 2019 and increased by 11.04% over October 2018;
·       The prices of staple cereals experienced negligible to slight fluctuations and most of non-cereal food commodities in October 2019 also experienced negligible to slight fluctuations when compared to the previous month’s prices;
·       In October 2019, the average ToT negligibly decreased by 0.5% from previous month;
·       In November 2019, the total global wheat production for 2019/20 is projected at 765.55 million MT, indicating an increase of 0.3 million MT compared to the projection made in October 2019.

Hafizabad profiteers, hoarders taken to task

 

RY WAHEED

February 12, 2020
HAFIZABAD-The district administration has warned that a stern action will be taken against profiteers and hoarders.
The assistant commissioner has sealed godowns of wholesalers Zahir Khan, Shoaib Sethi, Sheikh Abdul Salam and Sheikh Muhammad Javed on charges of hoarding huge quantity of sugar and vegetable ghee.
On a tip off, the assistant commissioner raided the godowns and found 620 bags of sugar and 1,300 cartons of vegetable ghee and sealed godowns on charges of unlawfully hoarding essential items.
The district administration has advised the wholesalers and retailers to ensure provision of consumer items at fixed prices otherwise strict legal action would be taken against them.
The deputy commissioner said there was no shortage of sugar and flour in the district and anyone found creating artificial scarcity of essential items would be shown zero tolerance.

Six held for killing youth
The police have solved murder mystery of a youth of Sukheke following recovery of his dead body from Kot Nakka Canal Bridge and arrested six people including a woman.
According to police, Ali Sher son of Manzoor Hussain of Mohallah Barkat Shah Sukheke had disappeared mysteriously about 12 days ago and despite hectic search by his parents and police, the deceased could not be traced. However, his body was found in canal by some villagers which was later identified as Ali Sher. The body was shifted to morgue in Hafizabad and according to police the deceased was abducted and badly thrashed and shot dead by the accused who later threw the dead body in the canal. The deceased had contracted marriage about 18 months ago. The exact motive of the offence could not be ascertained as yet. However, the Sukheke police have apprehended six suspects including a women and started interrogation.
Alhaj Muhammad Ishaq Sheikh, former Central President Pakistan Rice Exporters Association (PREA) and President TB Association Hafizabad, passed away after protracted illness. He was 86. He was laid to rest in local graveyard. The funeral was attended by large number of businessmen, rice dealers and renowned personalities across the province.
Matco Foods Limited

Matco Foods Limited (PSX: MFL) was established in 1964 as a private limited company under the Companies Ordinance 1984.
It is essentially in the business of processing and exporting rice, along with other related products. In 1967 it set up its first rice processing plant in Larkana, Sindh, after which it has continued to add to its production capacity and product portfolio. Some of its known brands include Falak, Amber and Bahar. In addition to rice and rice related products, the company has also ventured into the flour and spices segment which it sells under the brand name ‘Falak'.
Description: http://www.brecorder.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/1-23.jpg
Currently it has five rice processing and milling plants including vertically-integrated paddy drying, storage, husking and processing facilities in Punjab and Sindh. In 2018, it commenced a new plant for the production of Rice Glucose and Rice Protein; the plant has a capacity of producing 10,000MT rice glucose annually and 1000MT rice protein per year.
Apart from its presence in the domestic market, MFL also exports to countries such as the USA, Netherlands, Italy, Greece, Middle East, Australia and South Africa among others.
Description: http://www.brecorder.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/2-13.jpg
Shareholding pattern
Matco Foods has largely been owned by the directors, CEO and their spouses and children- about 60 percent. There have minor changes in ownership in the rest of the categories between FY18 and FY19. The next major shareholder is the foreign shareholder's category, which primarily includes the International Finance Corporation, owning about 15 percent of MFL.  The local general public has reduced its holding from 14 percent in FY18 to 11 percent in FY19. The remaining shares are distributed between the rest of the categories.
MFL: Pattern of shareholding as at June 30, 2019
Categories of shareholders
%
Directors, CEO, their spouses and children
60.38
Bank, DFIs, NBFCs
2.14
Insurance companies
4.9
Mutual funds
1.67
Foreign shareholders
15
General public:
Local
11.14
Foreign
0.91
Other
3.85
Total
100
Source: Company accounts
Historical operational performance
Matco Foods Limited has consistently been growing its topline. However, during FY15 and FY16 its topline declined but the company remained profitable, albeit lower than before. Profitability, on the other hand has been rather fluctuating, dipping FY14 and again in FY16, after which it peaked in FY17 and been stable since then.
The costs of production for Matco Foods have been above 80 percent of its topline through the years, of which the major constituents are the raw materials, salaries and electricity and power.
During FY18, the company's topline grew by 10 percent year on year which was largely driven by higher prices in the international market. The company's basmati per metric ton commanded an export price of USD 1,119.68 on average as compared to USD 849.83 in FY17. Moreover, the net exchange gain pushed the net margins upwards. Gross margins did not incline due to a corresponding elevation in costs of production for the year which consumed about 87 percent of the sales value.
Description: http://www.brecorder.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/3-5.jpg
In FY19, MFL's topline increased by nearly 17 percent year on year- the highest recorded in the last five years of operation, standing at Rs 7.8 billion as compared to previous year's Rs 6.7 billion. The increase was again governed by high export prices, although slightly lower than that of FY18.- USD 1045. FY19 was an overall a decent year for the rice industry, as Pakistan's rice exports increased by almost 10 percent in terms of value, according to the company's annual report for the year, whereas in volumetric terms it grew by around 19 percent. MFL's own export sales recorded volumetric growth of about 2.5 percent due to their focus on high margin basmati rice.
Recent results and future outlook
The recent result of the six months ended December 31, 2019 shows year on year growth by about 6 percent in the topline whereas the costs of production although have increased in value terms but as a percentage of sales, it has decreased marginally allowing gross profits to improve from Rs406 million in FY19 to Rs503 million in FY20.
MFL: Half yearly results for the six months ended December 31,2019
Rs (mn)
HY20
HY19
YoY
Net revenue- LHS
3,793
3,580
5.95%
Cost of sales
-3,290
-3,174
3.65%
Gross profit
503
406
23.89%
Distribution expenses
-95
-72
31.94%
Administrative expenses
-142
-120
18.33%
Other operating income
16
26
-38.46%
Operating profit
282
240
17.50%
Finance cost
-154
-120
28.33%
Net exchange gain/ (loss)
-13
63
-120.63%
Profit before taxation
115
183
-37.16%
Taxation
-37
-31
19.35%
Profit after taxation
78
152
-48.68%
EPS
0.64
1.24
Source: Company accounts
As has been the case across various sectors, the increase in the policy rate caused finance costs of many companies to escalate. Similarly, MFL also experienced a rise in its finance cost from Rs120 million in FY19 to Rs154 million in FY20. Moreover, the company also saw a net exchange loss in FY20 as opposed to a net exchange gain of Rs63 million in FY20. Collectively these factors caused net profit to nearly halve between the two periods.
As per MFL's annual report, the change in European law for pesticide MRLs has hindered Indian basmati exports which made way for Pakistani basmati exports to grow. The company expects this to continue. On the other hand, the company's exports to other countries have contracted due to low demand as a result of political disturbance in Middle East among other factors.
Considering the stringent economic policies adopted by the current government, and the dependence on external sources to support the economy stability, the company in the future plans to focus on cost controls, operational efficiencies, and portfolio diversification. With the government's focus to boost exports may also improve the financial performance of the company in the future.

PAK PM'S WAGE JUST ISN’T EVEN VALUE OPERATING A HOME

Written By Jeremy Spirogis 

Islamabad: The wage of the PM of Pakistan (Pakistan) just isn’t even value operating a home. Imran Khan is unable to bear the bills of his residence from his wage. Imran Khan mentioned this in a gathering with merchants. Actually Imran Khan was explaining to the merchants the necessity to pay taxes.
Let us inform you that WION News Channel has acquired the wage slip of Pakistan PM Imran Khan. In which it’s clearly written that Imran Khan will get a complete of two,01,574 Pakistani rupees within the type of gross wage in a month. In which Imran will get a complete of 1,96,979 Pakistanis after deduction of taxes and many others. Let it’s mentioned that Imran Khan accused the opposition leaders that he was getting cash by stealing tax. <! –
->
In truth, costs of vital issues are additionally skyrocketing attributable to inflation in Pakistan. The frequent man of Pakistan may be very upset by this. There has been an enormous scarcity of wheat in Pakistan, attributable to which consuming a bread in Pakistan has develop into very costly. After the autumn within the worth of Pak rupee, the costs of pulses and rice have additionally elevated quite a bit right here. Pulses and rice have been additionally severely poor in a number of Pakistani states.
Let us inform you that Pakistan's PM Imran Khan mentioned this to win the guts of the frequent man residing in Pakistan. Actually the frequent man of Pak just isn’t getting cash based on his requirement as a result of bread, lentils, rice and all issues of meals have develop into very costly. Imran simply needed to point out that the situation of the frequent man of Pakistan is identical. If you have a look at the essential wage of Imran, even a typical man's home can run comfortably, which is 1,07,280 Pakistani rupees.
Significantly, these days the situation of Pak economic system may be very poor. Due to the ever growing mortgage over Pakistan, Imran Khan himself goes to different nations and asks for mortgage for Pakistan.
According to a latest World Bank report, the worth of the Pakistani rupee has decreased by 20 p.c towards the greenback. The deficit in Pakistan's finances can also be growing steadily. It has additionally been advised on this report that there was an enormous discount within the income that the Pak authorities will get.
Vietnam sees rice export growth in January
09/02/2020    10:09 GMT+7
Vietnam exported 560,000 tonnes of rice in January 2020, earning US$270.3 million, an increase of 12 per cent in volume and 39 per cent in value month-on-month, according to the General Department of Customs.
Description: Vietnam sees rice export growth in January
Viet Nam posted strong growth in rice exports in January.
Exports rose by 28.1 per cent in volume and 38.4 per cent in value year-on-year.
Since the start of the winter-spring rice crop, domestic prices have remained stable while export volume has surged. Before the Tet festival, local businesses contracts to ship rice to the Philippines and Malaysia due to more competitive prices than other countries.
FOB (free on board) prices stand between $340 and $350 per tonne for five-per-cent-broken rice, falling $10-$20 for 15-per-cent broken rice and 25-per-cent broken rice.
This year, the Philippines is expected to maintain its import volume, while the African market is forecast to purchase 1 million tonnes, followed by Malaysia at 500,000 tonnes.
The nation also exports from 300,000 to 400,000 tonnes to Cuba each year, while Iraq buys about 300,000 tonnes. China plans to buy 400,000 tonnes of local rice every year.
Bui Thi Thanh Tam, general director of the Northern Food Corporation, said five years ago, China was the largest market for local rice but now Viet Nam had expanded its export markets. This meant the coronavirus epidemic would not take a big hit on Viet Nam's rice exports.
Do Ha Nam, vice chairman of the Viet Nam Food Association, said China would continue to tighten rice imports this year, so the rice import quota from Viet Nam would stay the same as last year.
However, Viet Nam has a chance to boost its rice exports to Japan this year because it wants to diversify its rice import sources by seeking other suppliers from countries that have signed the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), including Viet Nam. At present, Japan depends on US rice supplies.
The Import-Export Department under the Ministry of Industry and Trade also said, besides allocating a quota of 20,000 tonnes of rice to all members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) this year, South Korea had given a quota of 55,112 tonnes of rice for Viet Nam, according to a multilateral agreement between South Korea and five WTO partners, including Australia, the US, China and Thailand.
To take this export opportunity, local exporters were looking for more information about the Korean market and the tariff quota mechanism to develop their production and business plans.

Nam said this year, Viet Nam was forecast to export the same volume as 2019 or a slight increase.
However, drought and saline intrusion were likely to reduce
rice output this year.
In addition, prices were also expected to decline due to lower demand on the world market, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. Many countries have been restructuring their agriculture sectors to move towards self-sufficiency.
Meanwhile, Viet Nam now faces difficulties finding new rice markets.
Last year, Viet Nam experienced a fall in rice export value of 10 per cent to $2.76 billion but a surge of 3 per cent in export volume to nearly 6.3 million tonnes. The main reason was falling global prices.
The Philippines was the largest export market for Vietnamese rice with a value of $885 million, a year-on-year rise of 92.58 per cent, according to the General Department of Customs.
Markets with strong growth in rice export value included Senegal (98 per cent), Ivory Coast (78.6 per cent), Taiwan (31 per cent), Hong Kong (28.3 per cent) and Tanzania (26.6 per cent).
Viet Nam’s rice has been exported to 150 countries and territories around the world. — VNS


'We have nothing to keep the sea out': The struggle to save Spain's Ebro Delta

·        Raül Arqués

Still no word about EBA but rice likely unaffected

Khorn Savi | Publication date 10 February 2020 | 23:11 ICT

Description: Content image - Phnom Penh Post
Garment workers at a factory in Phnom Penh. The Kingdom exported $10 billion worth of apparel to the EU last year. Hong Menea
Officials on Monday said the government had not received an official statement regarding the EU’s potential withdrawal of Cambodia’s Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme.
The EU launched the EBA withdrawal procedure on February 12, citing “a deterioration of democracy [and] respect for human rights” in the Kingdom.
It completed its report in November after a three-month investigation and gave the government three months to respond. Its final decision is officially due on Wednesday.
But on February 5, a document purportedly revealing details of the EU’s decision was uploaded on the European Parliament’s website.
The document was said to have been submitted by Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Danilo Oscar Lancini, who is also on the MEP’s Committee of International Trade.
While it did not specify which products were included in the possible withdrawal, rice was apparently excluded.
The commission “decided through a delegated act to withdraw Cambodia’s EBA status on some products” but “rice is not listed among these products,” said the document, which was cited by the Japanese financial daily Nikkei Asian Review.
Government spokesman Phay Siphan and Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation spokesman Koy Kuong declined to comment on Monday, saying only that the government had not been briefed on the EU’ final decision.
Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training spokesman Heng Sour told The Post on Monday that while he too had not seen its official response, the government had laid out measures to boost the Kingdom’s economy in the absence of the EBA scheme.
“We are not aware of it. But whatever decision the EU makes, Cambodia is prepared to act flexibly and has already outlined measures to spur its economic growth,” he stressed.
Sour said the Kingdom may see some garment factories close in March and lay-off workers, but such closures would be the result of supply disruption by manufacturers in China, and not because of the possible EBA withdrawal.
He said some garment factories in the Kingdom are facing shortages of materials after Chinese manufacturers closed their factories indefinitely since before the Lunar New Year holiday amid the 2019 Novel Coronavirus outbreak, which has claimed over 900 lives.
Description: Content image - Phnom Penh Post
The EU is the main buyer of garments from the Kingdom. Hong Menea
Citing media reports, Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union president Ath Thorn said the EU is set to withdraw the scheme either temporarily or in part on some of the Kingdom’s main exports.
He said though the final decision on EBA is due on Wednesday, the EU may give the government more time to reconsider fulfilling its requirements.
He said the EU is the main buyer of garments imported from the Kingdom. Losing the EBA status, he said, will take a heavy toll on the sector.
Thorn stressed that of the $10 billion worth of apparel exports to the EU last year, Cambodia gained only around $4 billion from labour and tax exemption, while the remaining went to Chinese manufacturers who brought materials to be produced in the Kingdom for export.
“For employers and buyers, they are waiting to see whether the EBA will be withdrawn before planning their investments. Most factories are waiting on the EU’s decision,” he said.
Economic analyst Hong Vannak agreed that the government seemed to be prepared to offset the losses from the EBA’s withdrawal.
He said the government had begun public finance reforms by enforcing tax collection, restricting the use of funds by state institutions, diversifying sources of revenues such as the sale of personalised number plates and the first phase of oil extraction in the foreseeable future.
“Furthermore, the Ministry of Tourism can improve services to attract more tourists. Through this diversification, the national budget will not decrease too much. It can help in the absence of the EBA scheme,” he said.
Vannak said while the possible EBA withdrawal will force some factories out of business and leave workers unemployed, it remains to be seen how it will affect the sector.
The Post could not reach Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia secretary-general Kaing Monika for comment on Monday.
Cambodia ships 50,450 tonnes of rice worth 39 million USD to foreign markets in January. (Photo: phnompenhpost.com)
Cambodia’s rice exports fall 15.39 percent in January
By
 VNA
February 12, 2020Description: https://english.cambodiadaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/rice_exports.jpg
Cambodia shipped 50,450 tonnes of rice worth 39 million USD to foreign markets in January, a year-on-year decline of 15.39 percent, according to the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF).
CRF secretary-general Lun Yeng said that exports to the European market, the largest importer of Cambodian rice, in the month fell 22 percent year on year to 5,269 tonnes since the EU Commission introduced safeguard measures last year on rice imports from the country.
However, Lun Yeng said rice exports to the European market are set to increase in the coming months, thanks to a drop in taxes on rice imports from 175 EUR (190.99 USD) per tonne last year to 150 EUR this year.

Rice Prices

as on : 11-02-2020 03:34:08 PM

Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
Price
Current
%
change
Season
cumulative
Modal
Prev.
Modal
Prev.Yr
%change
Rice
Manjeri(Ker)
290.00
NC
6090.00
3500
3500
NC
Lakhimpur(UP)
35.00
40
1100.00
2450
2480
5.60
Kishunpur(UP)
31.00
-
62.00
1800
-
-5.26
Sehjanwa(UP)
20.00
33.33
1405.00
2545
2555
17.82
Badayoun(UP)
17.00
-5.56
811.50
2600
2600
7.22
Soharatgarh(UP)
16.00
6.67
1168.50
2520
2535
7.92
Karvi(UP)
9.00
-21.74
328.00
2320
2320
3.57
Vilthararoad(UP)
7.00
288.89
33.80
2100
2100
-
Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)
5.50
-21.43
143.30
2600
2600
-1.89
Ruperdeeha(UP)
5.00
NC
146.00
2250
2250
2.27
Jahangirabad(UP)
4.00
NC
116.00
2600
2625
-2.26
Achalda(UP)
4.00
-20
113.10
2600
2600
17.65
Anandnagar(UP)
2.70
3.85
123.90
2545
2560
15.68
Jambusar(Kaavi)(Guj)
1.00
-
39.00
3300
-
57.14
Alibagh(Mah)
1.00
NC
55.00
4200
4200
-41.67

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https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/rice-prices/article30789867.ece Canada, Bangladesh agree to cooperate in agriculture

Staff Correspondent | Published: 00:16, Feb 12,2020
The Global Institute for Food Security at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada and the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Council have agreed to cooperate on multidisciplinary research, training and development partnership to ensure sustainable food security.
On Monday, a memorandum of understanding was signed between the institute and the council under the agriculture ministry at a city hotel in Dhaka in presence of agriculture minister Muhammad Abdur Razzaque and the Canadian province Saskatchewan’s agriculture minister David Marit, according to a press release.
The MoU work-plan includes establishing  a Bangabandhu Chair at GIFS, linked to a similar position at BARC, in recognition of the invaluable contribution of the Father of the Nation of Bangladesh, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in striving for food security for a newborn Bangladesh; and also establishing an agricultural technology centre named ‘Bangabandhu – Pierre Elliot Trudeau Agricultural Technology Centre’ in Bangladesh in joint collaboration to reflect Canada’s support during the war of Independence of Bangladesh and the strong, longstanding bilateral relationship.
While speaking as the chief guest, Razzaque said that the country had made progress in agriculture despite decreasing land and water resources, increasing natural hazards and climate change vulnerability.
He expressed his hope that the partnership with the Canadian institute would support our government’s plans to achieve food security, and would strengthen Bangladesh’s relationship with Saskatchewan and Canada.
Saskatchewan minister David Marit said, ‘I am happy to see that relationship extended to our research communities, so we can further strengthen our ties to work towards an agricultural future that can provide food security for billions.’
The five-year memorandum with the provision for further extension aims at advancing knowledge and technologies for agricultural research and development in Bangladesh. A consortium will jointly be led by the institute and the council, which coordinates the National Agricultural Research System in Bangladesh.
The consortium will work with partners in Canada and Bangladesh to deliver programmes focused on enhancing farmer incomes, addressing the adverse impacts of climate change in Bangladesh, and strengthening the country’s delivery of the sustainable development goals.
A 16-member delegation of the Canadian institute arrived in Dhaka on February 4. As part of the memo signing programme with the council, the delegates attended a workshop on February 6 and a joint meeting on agricultural cooperation was held on February 8 at the council.
The delegation visited Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute and Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University in Gazipur on February 9. The senior scientists and heads of the agricultural research institutes and university professors also attended these programmes from Bangladesh side.
The Canadian province of Saskatchewan is a leading agri-food exporter, with $ 12.9 billion in sales in 2019. Canada’s major agricultural exports are lentils, wheat, peas and potash fertilizer.

Researchers Find Contemporary Arsenic Compounds In Rice Fields

Description: Researchers-Find-Contemporary-Arsenic-Compounds-In-Rice-Fields
Researchers find contemporary arsenic compounds in rice fields. University of Bayreuth researchers in conjunction with scientists from Italy and China have elementally precisely probed under which circumstance and to what expanse sulfur entailing arsenic compounds are constituted in rice-growing soils. Up till now, these thioarsenates have not been considered in the evaluation of the health influence of rice intake. The scientists recognize the pressing requirement for research with a perspective of safeguarding consumers from health probabilities.
Th research team spearheaded by the Bayreuth environmental geochemist professor Britta Planer Friedrich has advanced an estimating method by indications of which thioarsenates in rice soils can be decisively discovered. Till now the procedures generally utilized to observe arsenic in rice fields have not been enough for this motive. This is because they are unable to recognize sulfur entailing arsenic compounds as such or to differentiate them from oxygen entailing arsenic compounds. The defect is extremely troublesome in the context of probable health issues.
At least one organic sulfur entailing arsenic compound detected in rice fields is already familiar to be carcinogenic. This renders it equally vital to particularly detect organic sulfur entailing arsenic compounds and to probe them for their toxicity. Supposedly these compounds have been demented with harmless organic oxygenated arsenic compounds till now in the course of deficient calculative processes.
Planer Friedrich describes that the back answer of the differing thioarsenates in rice plants and the probable likelihood to human health emanating from them demanding need additional research.

Bayreuth researchers discover new arsenic compounds in rice fields

Risk or opportunity for rice cultivation?

IMAGE: PROF. DR. BRITTA PLANER-FRIEDRICH, DR. CAROLIN KERL, AND JIAJIA WANG M.SC. (FROM LEFT TO RIGHT) IN FRONT OF THE MASS SPECTROMETER IN BAYREUTH, WHICH WAS USED TO DETECT THIOARSENATES IN... view more 
CREDIT: PHOTO: JOSÉ MIGUEL LEON NININ.
University of Bayreuth researchers, together with scientists from Italy and China, have for the first time systematically investigated under which conditions, and to what extent, sulphur-containing arsenic compounds are formed in rice-growing soils. To date, these thioarsenates have not been taken into account in assessments of the health effects of rice consumption. In the journal Nature Geoscience the scientists present their results and identify the urgent need for research with a view to protecting consumers from health risks.
A new measuring method for thioarsenates
The research team, headed by the Bayreuth environmental geochemist Prof. Dr. Britta Planer-Friedrich, has developed a measuring method by means of which thioarsenates in rice soils can be reliably detected. Up to now, the methods routinely used to monitor arsenic in rice fields have not been sufficient for this purpose. This is because they are not able to identify sulphur-containing arsenic compounds as such, or to distinguish them from oxygen-containing arsenic compounds. This shortcoming is highly problematic in terms of possible health risks. At least one organic sulphur-containing arsenic compound discovered in rice fields is already known to be carcinogenic. This makes it all the more important to specifically detect organic sulphur-containing arsenic compounds, and to examine them for their toxicity. Presumably, these compounds have been confused with non-toxic organic oxygenated arsenic compounds up to now due to inadequate measurement procedures.
Limit monitoring for all toxic arsenic compounds
"The uptake of the various thioarsenates in rice plants and the potential risks to human health arising from them urgently require further research. Rice is the world's most important foodstuff and secures the basis of life for more than one half of the world's population," explains Planer-Friedrich, and calls for legally defined limits to be set for all toxic arsenic compounds in future. "Analytical procedures for limit monitoring, which correctly detect all of these compounds, must become routine", says the Bayreuth scientist. At the moment, there is only a legal limit for inorganic oxygenated arsenic compounds, while organic oxygenated arsenic compounds are still categorized as non-toxic.
New approaches for forecasting methods
With their new measuring method, the researchers have observed the formation of sulphur-containing arsenic compounds over long periods of time in rice fields in Italy and China. It turns out the amounts of thioarsenates occurring are linked significantly to the pH-values of the soils and other easily measurable parameters. "These findings contain valuable starting points for the development of forecasting methods. If in future we could predict, without great technical effort, on which rice fields particularly large or only small amounts of sulphur-containing arsenic compounds are to be expected, it would be an important contribution to the assessment of health risks", says the Bayreuth PhD student and first author of the study, Jiajia Wang MSc.
Urgent need for research on opportunities and risks
The authors of the new study consider further research to be indispensable in order to be able to scientifically assess the health risks posed by thioarsenates. For example, the exact transport routes with which these arsenic compounds are transferred from the rice fields to the rice grains, and to what extent, must be clarified. Studies in Bayreuth laboratories have already confirmed that sulphur-containing arsenic compounds can enter the rice plant and even reach the rice grain. However, based on our current state of knowledge, it cannot be ruled out that the total arsenic contamination of rice harvests could even decrease if sulphur-containing instead of oxygen-containing arsenic compounds are formed in the soil. This would be the case if sulphur-containing arsenic compounds were largely retained in the soil, or if rice plants were less able to take up these compounds.
At the University of Bayreuth, these relationships are being investigated in the research groups of Prof. Dr. Britta Planer-Friedrich and of plant physiologist Prof. Dr. Stephan Clemens. The German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) are supporting these interdisciplinary research projects. "Our further studies will show whether thioarsenates as a whole represent a risk or an opportunity for the production of rice containing the lowest possible amounts of arsenic, which is hazardous to health. Only then can further directives for water or soil management in rice fields and the targeted breeding of new rice varieties be developed," says Planer-Friedrich.

Central Asian Atlantis who lived on the site of the Aral sea

Description: Central Asian Atlantis who lived on the site of the Aral sea
History 11/02/20 commons.wikimedia.orderedness Atlantis who lived on the site of the Aral sea
Historical discovery was made in 2000 in the Kazakh part once one of the Aral sea. According to the stories of scientists, the ruins of the first settlement saw the inhabitants of the village Karateren engaged in hunting near the island Barsakelmes, which is located approximately 300 km North-West of the city of Kyzylorda.
by the Way, the name of the island translates from the Kazakh language is very scary “‘ll not return.” The hunters told about the seen representatives of local government, and in 2001 we began excavations, which were attended by the staff of the Kyzylorda state University and other scientific institutions.
Discovered the city archaeologists called “Aral-Asar,” which means “the Aral trail.” Area the settlement occupied about 6 hectares and pottery found here dates from the XIV century. Near the mound were two mausoleums, which subsequently received the name “Kerderi I” and “Kerderi II”.
“for the First time being in this place, we couldn’t believe our eyes. Imagine: at the bottom, strewn with white salt could be seen the outlines of the ancient city, clearly distinguished from the remains of mausoleums and necropolises. A first even jokingly said that Kazakhstan found the lost Atlantis,” – said the head of the Department for conservation and archaeological documentation of the Institute of archaeology named after A. Kh. Margulan of the Ministry of education and science of Kazakhstan Dmitriy Voyakin.
I Wonder what the inhabitants of the village Karateren rumor has it that saw at least another two similar settlements, previously hidden by the waters of the Aral sea. That is, it is possible that we are talking about a culture previously unknown to scientists.
judging by the found instruments of agricultural production and millstone, it turns out that the inhabitants of the Aral-Asarand mostly engaged in agriculture. They grew rice and milled it into flour. This is surprising because previously it was thought that in XIII-XIV centuries Central Asia was inhabited by mainly nomadic pastoralists. However, the huge warehouses and around the city of rice plantation with a typical irrigation system say that local farmers could be supplying flour for export along the silk road.
Director of the Institute of archaeology named after A. Kh. Margulan, Karl Baipakov noted that the ancient city was built the capital. This meant that people were not planning to leave this place for a long time. In the center was a residential building, which on one side abuts the industrial zone, and the necropolis with mausoleums.
scientists maintain that the Aral-Asar was inhabited by the descendants of the Oguz and the Kipchaks. The first are the probable ancestors of the Azerbaijani Turks and the Turkmens, and the second participated in the ethnogenesis of modern Kazakhs, Bashkirs, Karachay and some other people.
according to graves, the inhabitants of the Aral-Asar professed Islam. But found in one of the crypts gold earrings in the form of bars, biting its own tail, indicate that the population was still strong traditions of paganism.
Researchers believe that in the early thirteenth century, Mongol invaders destroyed the irrigation system in the lower reaches of the Amu Darya, after which the sea almost completely dried up. To this land came the people began to grow rice. But then nature has recovered, the river carried its waters to the sea. The farmers had to leave their homes to relocate.
Although it is possible that the shallowing of the sea has nothing to do with the activities of the Mongol invaders, and happens periodically for natural reasons.
the journalist of the newspaper “Kyzylorda news”, Kazybek Botev, in the article “Discovering the secrets of the Aral sea” (dated 5 December 2017) noted that recent studies conducted by researchers in the dried bottom of the Aral sea, support the hypothesis of the founder of Kazakhstan school of archaeology Alkey Margulan (1904-1985 gg.). The academician suggested that in ancient times in this territory there was a developed culture containing about 40 cities and settlements.
At the time the scientific world was skeptical of the idea of A. H. Margulan, because then among historians was dominated by the theory of the irreconcilable enmity that existed between the nomadic pastoralists and settled cultivators. It was thought that in the middle Ages the Aral sea was a bare steppe, because of the warlike tribes of breeders for its regular attacks are just not allowed to develop there agricultural culture.
“currently Kazakhstan scientists completely refute a pre-existing opinion on the separate existence of the cultures of the nomads and the people who have moved to a settled way of life at an early stage of development of society. Close communication between the nomads and residents of cities contributed to the formation of some steppe culture. It proves a variety of everyday objects, found during excavations of the ancient settlement Aral-Asar,” wrote Kazybek Botev, referring to the opinion of the scientific employee of a state institution for protection of monuments of history and culture of Kyzylorda region Erkebulan Eleuova.
the Fact that the Aral sea was periodically filled with water or dry up, you can see even by the works of Greek scientists. For example, the famous historian Herodotus (484-425 BC) claimed that the Caspian sea and the Aral sea are a single body of water. Perhaps in its time it was. But the Byzantine author of the VI century Menander Protector in his essay “History” told more about the sea, but of a system of lakes, on the banks of which was located the whole city.
More gold archaeologists, as you know, appreciate the broken pots. The ancient settlement Aral-Asar is a great material for research, which is still in progress. Here scientists found a variety of ceramic tiles, grinding stones, remnants of a brick plant, copper coins, various domestic utensils, jewelry, etc.
Professor of the Kyzylorda statetion of the University Ablay (Ablai) of Aydosov noticed that the Foundation of the mausoleum “Kerderi” was built of stone slabs and was a very solid construction, and the walls of the building were made of baked bricks. Moreover, their thickness is over a meter. The facade of the medieval builders was decorated with glazed tiles, and the entrance to the mausoleum housed the inscriptions in Golden letters in the Arabic language.
analysis of the burials revealed that among the inhabitants of the Aral-Asar was a marked social stratification, burial of aristocrats easily distinguished by massive tombstones and General decoration.
it is Noteworthy that in the mausoleum, someone from the farmers hid a big jug with tools resembling modern axes. As suggested by the researchers, the man was hoping to use them after I do the water and he will return to his native land, but his plans were never realized.
Origanum Tanatarova

Now Rajama-rice threatened with corona virus

BY JACK "OLE" PITSU ON FEBRUARY 11, 2020
Description: Biggest coverage of ZEE NEWS on Delhi elections, get instant updates from 70 reporters on 70 seats

new Delhi. Countries around the world are worried about the corona virus. In China, the number of people who die due to this virus is increasing. In China, the death toll due to corona virus has crossed 1 thousand.
Infection of this virus is spreading in many countries of the world. Worry is not just because of illness. Corona virus has been affected in many ways. Business from China has also been affected.
Countries around the world do business with China. India is also one of them. We import many things from China and also sell many items. Those businesses have been affected by the Corona virus. <! –
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                 Its prices in India have been affected due to the impact on imports and exports.
Rajma prices have increased in the last 10 days due to the corona virus spreading in China. Rajma prices in India have increased by 8 percent in the last 10 days. However, it has not had much effect yet.
But if the lock-down situation in China prolongs due to the Corona virus and because of that imports from there are affected, then its effect will increase further.
India imports 50 per cent of its requirement from Rajma from China. Rajma is one of the main food items imported from China. In the last 10 days, prices of Rajma have reached $ 1100 per ton in the global market. This is an increase of about 8 percent.
Import-export work has stopped at Dalian Port in China. Due to the shutdown, 300 containers of Rajma coming to India are kept at the port.
But importing them is not possible right now. These containers contain about 24 tonnes of kidney beans. Experts are telling that this shipment will still take about a month to reach India. By then the prices of Rajma will become more expensive.
WASDE: Soy Ending Stocks Down on Increased China Purchases
From USDA - February 11 WASDE Report
WHEAT:  The outlook for 2019/20 U.S. wheat is for stable supplies, increased exports, and decreased ending stocks.  The only supply or use category that was changed this month was a 25 million bushel increase in exports reflecting growing competitiveness in international markets.  Ending stocks are cut by a corresponding amount and are now forecast to total 940 million bushels, a five-year low.  
Global wheat supplies are lowered fractionally on small and mostly offsetting changes to beginning stocks and production.  World exports are increased 1.8 million tons led by a 1.0-million-ton increase for the EU on strong shipments and more competitive prices.  Kazakhstan is raised 0.8 million tons, also on a fast export pace.  United States is increased 0.7 million tons and is projected to have the largest exports in three years.  Partly offsetting are export reductions of 0.5 million tons for Canada and 0.3 million tons for Pakistan.  World imports for 2019/20 are raised 1.9 million tons led by a 0.8-million-ton increase for China and a 0.7-million-ton increase for Turkey, both on a strong pace to date.  There are also several historical revisions for trade, consumption, and ending stocks reflecting updated export data, particularly for Pakistan.  For the 2019/20 market year, global consumption and ending stocks are lowered fractionally though world ending stocks remain record large.  
COARSE GRAINS:  This month’s 2019/20 U.S. corn outlook is little changed relative to last month, with offsetting changes to exports and corn used for ethanol.  Exports are lowered 50 million bushels, reflecting the slow pace of shipments through January.  Offsetting is a 50 million bushel increase in corn used for ethanol, based on Grain Crushings and Co-Products Production data through December and the robust pace of weekly ethanol production data as reported by the Energy Information Administration during the month of January.  With no other use changes, U.S. corn ending stocks are unchanged from last month.  The season-average corn price received by producers is also unchanged at $3.85 per bushel. 
Global coarse grain production for 2019/20 is projected 0.9 million tons higher to 1,402.7 million.  This month’s foreign coarse grain outlook is for larger production and consumption, and lower stocks relative to last month.  Global corn production is raised 0.8 million tons, with increases for South Africa, Moldova, and Ukraine more than offsetting a reduction for Vietnam.  For South Africa, production is higher as timely rainfall during the month of January improves yield prospects. 
Major global trade changes for 2019/20 include higher projected corn exports for South Africa, Ukraine, and the EU, with a largely offsetting reduction for the United States.  Corn imports are raised for Turkey and Brazil, with the latter reflecting larger-than-expected shipments to livestock production areas in the southern part of the country.  Foreign corn ending stocks are down from last month, mostly reflecting reductions for Vietnam, Brazil, Paraguay, and the EU.  Global corn ending stocks, at 296.8 million tons, are down 1.0 million from last month.   
RICE: This month’s outlook for 2019/20 U.S. rice is for increased imports, higher exports, and larger ending stocks.  All rice imports are raised 2.4 million cwt to a record 32.5 million on an extremely fast pace so far in the market year.  Long-grain imports are raised 1.5 million cwt consisting largely of fragrant varieties from Asia.  Combined medium- and short-grain imports are raised 0.9 million cwt on continued imports from China.  Total rice exports are raised 1.0 million cwt (all long-grain) reflecting a strong pace of shipments so far in the market year and an abnormally large outstanding sales balance.  All rice ending stocks are raised 1.4 million cwt to 30.0 million and the season-average farm price is lowered $0.20 per cwt to $13.00, still the highest price in 5 years.  
Global 2019/20 rice supplies are raised fractionally with higher beginning stocks mostly offset by lower production.  Global exports are lowered 0.8 million tons led by a 0.6-million-ton decrease for India reflecting a slowing pace.  Global imports are down 0.4 million tons and world consumption is down 0.9 million; both reflecting several downward revisions.  With supplies higher and consumption lower, global ending stocks are raised 1.0 million tons to a record high 178.1 million.
OILSEEDS:  This month’s 2019/20 U.S. soybean outlook is for increased exports and lower ending stocks.  Soybean exports for 2019/20 are projected at 1.825 billion bushels, up 50 million from last month partly reflecting increased imports for China.  With soybean crush unchanged, soybean ending stocks are reduced 50 million bushels to 425 million.
The U.S. season-average soybean price for 2019/20 is forecast at $8.75 per bushel, down 25 cents reflecting reported prices to date.  The soybean oil price forecast is lowered 0.5 cents to 33.5 cents per pound.  The soybean meal price forecast is unchanged at $305.00 per short ton.  
This month’s 2019/20 global oilseed outlook includes higher production, trade, and stocks relative to last month.  Global oilseed production is raised 2.2 million tons to 576.8 million, with higher soybean, sunflowerseed, and cottonseed production.  Partly offsetting is lower palm kernel production.  Soybean production for Brazil is increased 2 million tons to 125 million due to favorable weather in Mato Grosso as well as improved rainfall in southern and northeastern soybean areas.  Sunflowerseed production is increased for Ukraine on a higher yield.  Palm kernel and palm oil production are reduced for Malaysia and Indonesia on current production to date and dry weather conditions throughout the past year.
Global 2019/20 oilseed exports are raised mainly on a 2.4-million-ton increase to soybean trade.  China’s soybean imports are increased 3 million tons to 88 million reflecting higher soybean crush.  Correspondingly, soybean exports are increased for the United States, Brazil, and Ukraine.  Global soybean ending stocks are 2.2 million tons higher than last month, with higher stocks for China and Brazil.
SUGAR:  Mexico sugar production for 2019/20 is projected at 5.672 million metric tons (MT), a reduction of 99,994 from last month.  This forecast matches the survey-based estimate made by CONADESUCA on February 5.  Imports and domestic deliveries are unchanged.  Ending stocks are increased slightly to reflect 2.5 months of forecast domestic sugar use before the start of the 2020/21 sugarcane harvest.  These changes of 101,388 MT flow through to a reduction of forecast exports.  Exports outside of those shipments under license to the United States are reduced to 32,951 MT, an amount estimated by CONADESUCA that is equal to exports through January 26.  Exports to the United States are reduced by 94,296 MT to 1.469 million.  
Total U.S. supply for 2019/20 is reduced by 33,694 short tons, raw value (STRV) on lower forecast imports.  Imports from Mexico are reduced 110,180 STRV to 1.717 million.  TRQ imports are increased by 70,486 STRV to 1.674 million.  This increase reflects the USTR reallocation of unused country-specific quota allocations for the fiscal year 2019/20 WTO raw sugar TRQ announced on February 6.  The resulting raw sugar WTO shortfall is projected at 40,000 STRV.  There are no changes to use.  Ending stocks are projected at 1.516 million STRV, implying an ending stocks-to-use ratio of 12.36 percent, down from 12.69 percent last month.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY, AND DAIRY:  The 2020 forecast for total red meat and poultry production is raised from last month on higher forecast beef, pork, and broiler production.  The beef production forecast is raised from the previous month on higher cattle slaughter and heavier cattle weights in the first half of the year.  However, the forecasts for second half beef production is reduced on lower anticipated steer and heifer slaughter in the second half of the year.  This reflects a smaller number of cattle outside feedlots implied by the January 1 Cattle report which results in lower placements during 2020.  Pork production is raised on higher expected hog slaughter and heavier carcass weights.  Broiler production is raised on recent hatchery data which shows continued growth in the laying flock.  The turkey production forecast is decreased as hatchery data points toward slower expected production growth.  Forecast egg production is increased.  Estimates of 2019 red meat, poultry, and egg production are adjusted to reflect December data. 
For 2020, the beef export forecast is lowered slightly reflecting weakness in several markets, but no change is made to the beef import forecast.  The pork export forecast is raised from last month on expected robust global demand.  The turkey export forecast is reduced from last month.  Broiler and egg trade forecasts are unchanged for 2020.  Livestock, poultry and egg trade estimates for 2019 are adjusted to reflect December trade data.
Fed-cattle prices for the first quarter of 2020 are lowered from last month on recent prices.  Hog price forecasts are reduced from last month on increased production.  Broiler, turkey, and egg price forecasts are raised from the previous month as demand remains strong. 
The milk production forecast for 2020 is unchanged from last month.  The 2020 fat basis export and import forecasts are unchanged from the previous month.  On a skim-solids basis, the import forecast is unchanged while the export forecast is raised on the strength of international demand for nonfat dry milk/skim milk powder.  Dairy supply and use estimates for 2019 are adjusted to reflect December data.
Annual product price forecasts for cheese and butter are lowered from the previous month as demand remains relatively weak.  The 2020 nonfat dry milk forecast is unchanged while the whey price forecast is raised from last month.  The Class III price is reduced on the lower cheese price forecast while the Class IV price is reduced, reflecting a lower butter price forecast.  The 2020 all milk price forecast is reduced to $18.85 per cwt. 
COTTON:  The U.S. cotton estimates for 2019/20 are unchanged, except for a 1 cent-per-pound reduction in the season-average upland farm price, to 62 cents, 8.3 cents lower than in 2018/19.
The 2019/20 world cotton forecasts include a 2.5-million-bale increase in ending stocks, driven by both larger production and lower consumption.  A 1-million-bale decline in China’s expected consumption is the largest single change this month:  consumption is lower despite the positive impact of the U.S.-China trade agreement, due in part to the negative economic effects of the novel coronavirus outbreak.  Consumption is also projected lower in Vietnam but higher in Pakistan and Turkey.  Production in Brazil in 2018/19 is revised upward by 480,000 bales reflecting higher production in Mato Grosso.  Pakistan, Brazil, and Tanzania production in 2019/20 is revised upward.  Total production changes this month come to a 1.3-million-bale global increase, while total consumption changes net to a 1.2-million-bale reduction.

Kirinyaga rice farmers welcome Sh85 price for kilogramme

President Uhuru Kenyatta made the announcement during a visit to the region last week.

In Summary
• The farmers previously sold unprocessed rice to brokers at Sh60 per Kilogramme.
• Poor prices have been blamed on cheap imports that saturate the local market.
Description: Governor Ann Waiguru (5th R) during in a rice mill in Wang'uru town on Monday
Governor Ann Waiguru (5th R) during in a rice mill in Wang'uru town on Monday
Image: Alice Waithera
Description: Governor Ann Waiguru in a rice mill in Wang'uru town.
Governor Ann Waiguru in a rice mill in Wang'uru town.
Image: Alice Waithera
Mwea rice farmers are pleased by the government’s announcement that it will buy their unprocessed rice for Sh85 a kilogramme.
President Uhuru Kenyatta made the announcement during a visit to the region last week. The president ordered the Ministry of Agriculture to act swiftly. He said the government had set up a Sh500 million revolving fund that will be used to buy rice from farmers.
Uhuru added that the Kenya National Trading Cooperation would buy rice directly and sell it to public institutions such as schools, prisons, the police and army barracks, which have been instructed to consume locally grown rice. Farmers will receive their payments through their cooperative societies.
The news came as a sigh of relief following complaints about exploitation by unscrupulous middlemen who have been buying for Sh60. Governor Ann Waiguru had called for the government’s intervention, saying farmers had been selling their produce at a throwaway price. She expressed fears that many farmers would abandon rice farming because of poor prices.
On Monday, Governor Waiguru said the interventions announced by the government would alleviate poverty. She visited a rice mill at Wang’uru. Waiguru said the measures will help control cheap rice imports that have been saturating the local market and occasioning losses to farmers. She said the cheap imports are of low quality.
"The offer by the government to buy rice from farmers comes as a great relief to them after suffering losses for a long time," she said.
The governor urged the government to impose more levies on imported rice to discourage importation and create a bigger demand for local rice. She expressed confidence that private millers will be compelled to increase their prices after the government fixes the prices at Sh85. Farmers will also benefit from subsidised fertilisers, which, previously, only reached a few.
"Genuine farmers have been missing out on the subsidised fertiliser as it was bought by unscrupulous people who then sold it to farmers at exorbitant prices," Waiguru said.
She asked the Agriculture ministry to ensure the fertiliser is sold to farmers according to their acreage. 
Wang’uru town, whose main economic activity is rice trade, will also benefit from the tarmacking of 30 kilometres of roads. Construction works are expected to start in April. The enhanced road network will boost the movement of people and goods, hence enabling rice business to boom.
The county government is also upgrading 230km roads that cut through the Mwea irrigation scheme. Waiguru said 15km will be upgraded every day. The county road construction machinery will focus on the project.
The devolved unit also plans to build a rice husk factory that will make boards out of the husks that normally go to waste. The boards will be used to make furniture, among other things. This is part of the value addition programme meant to ensure farmers boost their incomes.

Researchers discover new arsenic compounds in rice fields

Description: Bayreuth researchers discover new arsenic compounds in rice fieldsProf. Dr. Britta Planer-Friedrich, Dr. Carolin Kerl, and Jiajia Wang M.Sc. (from left to right) in front of the mass spectrometer in Bayreuth, which was used to detect thioarsenates in rice soils. Credit: José Miguel Leon Ninin.
University of Bayreuth researchers, together with scientists from Italy and China, have for the first time systematically investigated under which conditions, and to what extent, sulphur-containing arsenic compounds are formed in rice-growing soils. To date, these thioarsenates have not been taken into account in assessments of the health effects of rice consumption. In the journal Nature Geoscience the scientists present their results and identify the urgent need for research with a view to protecting consumers from health risks.
A new measuring method for thioarsenates
The research team, headed by the Bayreuth environmental geochemist Prof. Dr. Britta Planer-Friedrich, has developed a measuring method by means of which thioarsenates in rice soils can be reliably detected. Up to now, the methods routinely used to monitor arsenic in rice fields have not been sufficient for this purpose. This is because they are not able to identify sulphur-containing arsenic compounds as such, or to distinguish them from oxygen-containing arsenic compounds. This shortcoming is highly problematic in terms of possible health risks. At least one organic sulphur-containing arsenic compound discovered in rice fields is already known to be carcinogenic. This makes it all the more important to specifically detect organic sulphur-containing arsenic compounds, and to examine them for their toxicity. Presumably, these compounds have been confused with non-toxic organic oxygenated arsenic compounds up to now due to inadequate measurement procedures.
Limit monitoring for all toxic arsenic compounds
"The uptake of the various thioarsenates in rice plants and the potential risks to human health arising from them urgently require further research. Rice is the world's most important foodstuff and secures the basis of life for more than one half of the world's population," explains Planer-Friedrich, and calls for legally defined limits to be set for all toxic arsenic compounds in future. "Analytical procedures for limit monitoring, which correctly detect all of these compounds, must become routine", says the Bayreuth scientist. At the moment, there is only a legal limit for inorganic oxygenated arsenic compounds, while organic oxygenated arsenic compounds are still categorized as non-toxic.
New approaches for forecasting methods
With their new measuring method, the researchers have observed the formation of sulphur-containing arsenic compounds over long periods of time in rice fields in Italy and China. It turns out the amounts of thioarsenates occurring are linked significantly to the pH-values of the soils and other easily measurable parameters. "These findings contain valuable starting points for the development of forecasting methods. If in future we could predict, without great technical effort, on which rice fields particularly large or only small amounts of sulphur-containing arsenic compounds are to be expected, it would be an important contribution to the assessment of health risks", says the Bayreuth Ph.D. student and first author of the study, Jiajia Wang MSc.
Urgent need for research on opportunities and risks
The authors of the new study consider further research to be indispensable in order to be able to scientifically assess the health risks posed by thioarsenates. For example, the exact transport routes with which these arsenic compounds are transferred from the rice fields to the rice grains, and to what extent, must be clarified. Studies in Bayreuth laboratories have already confirmed that sulphur-containing arsenic compounds can enter the rice plant and even reach the rice grain. However, based on our current state of knowledge, it cannot be ruled out that the total arsenic contamination of rice harvests could even decrease if sulphur-containing instead of oxygen-containing arsenic compounds are formed in the soil. This would be the case if sulphur-containing arsenic compounds were largely retained in the soil, or if rice plants were less able to take up these compounds.
At the University of Bayreuth, these relationships are being investigated in the research groups of Prof. Dr. Britta Planer-Friedrich and of plant physiologist Prof. Dr. Stephan Clemens. The German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) are supporting these interdisciplinary research projects. "Our further studies will show whether thioarsenates as a whole represent a risk or an opportunity for the production of rice containing the lowest possible amounts of arsenic, which is hazardous to health. Only then can further directives for water or soil management in rice fields and the targeted breeding of new rice varieties be developed," says Planer-Friedrich.
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How to make the best fried rice, according to physics

Scientists have analyzed motions that chefs use to toss the food into the air during cooking


Physicists have revealed how chefs in Chinese restaurants move their woks to launch rice in the air, preventing burning.
SERGE_BERTASIUS/ISTOCK /GETTY IMAGES PLUS

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To make fried rice like a pro, use physics.
Chefs typically toss fried rice from their woks into the air before catching it again. Launching the rice and its fixings allows the food to cook at a high temperature without burning, essential for creating the tastiest stir-fried fare. Now, using video of five chefs in Chinese restaurants, physicists have analyzed the repetitive movements used to toss the rice.
These chefs made a specific set of motions that repeated about three times a second, the researchers report February 12 in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. Each repetition includes sliding the wok back and forth while simultaneously rocking it to and fro, using the rim of the stovetop as a fulcrum.
Cooking fried rice like a pro requires tossing it in the air to avoid burning. Physicists analyzed details of chefs’ movements and report that sliding and rocking motions repeat about three times a second, launching the food from a wok. Blue lines track the edges of the pan, with the left side moving clockwise and the right side counterclockwise. The red line notes the motion of the wok’s center.
Similarly complex maneuvers come into play when cooking other foods: Tilting and rotating the pan is necessary to get smooth, flat crepes, for example (SN: 6/19/19).
By simulating the trajectories of rice in a wok, the researchers hit on some key culinary tips. The rocking and sliding motions shouldn’t be totally in sync, otherwise the rice won’t mix well and could burn. And the wok’s movements should repeat rapidly. Moving the wok even faster could launch the rice higher, and might allow cooking at higher temperatures, and perhaps a quicker meal.
But faster shaking may be difficult for chefs to achieve. According to previous studies, chefs at Chinese restaurants can struggle with shoulder pain, and rapidly shaking a wok could be part of the problem. The researchers suggest that a stir-frying robot could be built based on these results, taking the weight off chefs’ shoulders.

CITATIONS

H. Ko and D.L. Hu. The physics of tossing fried rice.Journal of the Royal Society Interface. Published online February 12, 2020. doi:10.1098/rsif.2019.0622.

Manila Water Foundation honors 4 engineers for social-impact inventions

Published February 11, 2020, 10:00 PM
Description: Engr. Alexis T. Belonio, an agricultural engineer, was awarded for his rice husk gasifier stove design which he shares for free in order to cut costs and help save the environment by using rice husk and other biowastes.
Engr. Alexis T. Belonio, an agricultural engineer, was awarded for his rice husk gasifier stove design which he shares for free in order to cut costs and help save the environment by using rice husk and other biowastes.

Manila Water Foundation (MWF) honored four Filipino engineers who made significant social impact at the MWF Prize for Engineering Excellence Awarding Ceremony on February 3 at Seda Hotel Vertis North in Quezon City.
The Manila Water Foundation Prize for Engineering Excellence (The Prize) is the only recognizing body in the Philippines that honors engineers who made notable contributions in solving development problems in the areas of water, sanitation, environment, and sustainability.
In partnership with the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and the Philippine Technological Council (PTC),the umbrella organization of the thirteen professional engineering organizations in the Philippines, The Prize honored four awardees this year – Engr. Alexis T. Belonio, Dr. Michael A. Gragasin, Dr.Ruel M. Mojica, and Dr. Francis Aldrine A. Uy.
Engr. Belonio,an agricultural engineer, is the man behind the rice husk gasifier stove. His technology allows people to have a more affordable alternative to LPG by using rice husk, a common bio-waste from rice production, as its main source of fuel. Through this invention, more Filipino families can now allot additional budget for food and other important items as each sack of rice husk can be purchased for only P10 and is already sufficient for one-week use. For the same invention, Engr. Belonio has received the Rolex Award for Enterprise for turning his technology into open source, making its fabrication cost more affordable.
Also an agricultural engineer, Dr. Gragasin worked on making milling machines more accessible to farmers. Through his inventions, the compact corn mill and impeller rice mill ,farmers can now process their own crops and won’t need to rely on commercial millers or sell their produce at a low price to traders.
With these machines and the capacity-building activities Dr.Gragasin spearheads, farmers can now increase their income from ₱5 per kilo to around ₱14 to ₱25per kilo. Production costs for corn and rice, which are staple food in the country, are also maintained at a low cost making these grains more affordable for each Filipino.
Dr. Mojica, another agricultural engineer, has a vision to empower low-income coffee farmers to increase their financial viability by involving them in value-adding activities such as roasting. To make this happen, he invented the Bravura Coffee Roasting Machine and has partnered with a local manufacturer to help him fabricate the machine at the lowest possible cost. Compared to imported and commercially available roasters, his machine is at least 50% cheaper and offers local support to farmers such as trainings on coffee science, business operation, and marketing. Now, more coffee farmers reap the benefits of being able to turn their green coffee into roasted coffee beans as their profit increases by at least 50%.
Lastly, Dr. Uy, a civil engineer, commits to make our communities less vulnerable to the adverse effects of earthquakes. Taking his profession to heart, he invented the Universal Structural Health Evaluation and Recording (USHER) System, a device which can be used to continuously gather data and monitor the structural health and integrity of buildings and other structures.
The data gathered from his invention will allow structural engineers to have better basis for assessment if it is safe to go back in a building after an earthquake which can prevent injuries and possible loss of lives.
Now on in its third run, MWF, PTC, and DOST conduct a biennial nationwide search for extraordinary Filipino engineers to recognize their contributions, help them achieve a wider reach and help promote their technologies to contribute to national progress.
Manila Water Foundation Chairman Rene Almendras shared, “I hope that we will be able to continue this partnership not only to recognize the greatness of Filipino engineers, but more importantly, to help promote positive change for marginalized communities through the innovations our engineers make.”

Related Posts

What is the body clock?

11 February 2020

Part of the show Eat, Sleep, Repeat: Body Clock Science


ALARM CLOCK

CC0, via Pixabay
What exactly is the body clock? Megan McGregor has been finding out...
Megan - How do we know when to wake up without an alarm? Why don’t we just keep sleeping? For that we have our body clock to thank. It's our body’s way of keeping track of time to coordinate vital functions like metabolism, when we eat and when we grow and repair our tissues.
The body clock is powered by a cluster of nerve cells called the supra-chiasmatic nucleus, or SCN. This rice grain sized structure sits in the brain's hypothalamus.
The SCN "ticks" like a genetic domino effect: a series of genes turn on and off in sequence, producing proteins that turn on the next gene and turn off the first one. The whole process takes about 24 hours to complete the genetic cycle.
The clock's time is updated by signals sent from the retina, which uses daylight to reset the system. This is how we adapt to jet lag.
The SCN transmits the time signal to the rest of the brain through connections to other nerve cells, and to the rest of the body by controlling the release of the hormone cortisol from the pituitary gland.
The cortisol signal is carried through the bloodstream to pass on the time signal to every cell in the body. This means that literally every one of our organs knows what time it is, and metabolism is efficiently synced up in all of them, helping us to perform at our best each day...

Rice shipments seen below 10m tonnes

PUBLISHED : 12 FEB 2020 AT 07:21
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
Thailand is expected to ship 7.5 million tonnes of rice this year, a drop below 10 million tonnes for the second straight year, due to the strong baht, decreasing competitiveness and low supply because of widespread drought.Keerati Rushchano, director-general of the Foreign Trade Department, said 3.17 million tonnes of the total will be white rice, shipped primarily to the Philippines, Angola, Benin, Cameroon and China, with parboiled rice making up 2.23 million tonnes and Thai hom mali rice 1.1 million tonnes. The remainder is glutinous rice and other types of grains.
Export value is estimated at 131 billion baht this year.
The department said yesterday that Thailand shipped 7.58 million tonnes in 2019, fetching 131 billion baht, down 32% and 25% respectively.
The biggest export market was Benin, which imported 1.07 million tonnes of Thai rice, followed by South Africa at 730,000 tonnes and the US at 560,000 tonnes.
Mr Keerati said the sharp drop in exports last year stemmed from the strong baht, which made Thai rice prices higher than competitors' rates.
China also turned from an importer to a rice exporter, draining its huge stocks of 120 million tonnes and reducing the Thai market share in Africa.
Mr Keerati said Thailand lacks diversity in rice varieties to compete in the world market. The government has set up a panel that includes representatives from the Rice Department, the Thai Rice Exporters Association, the Thai Rice Millers Association and farmers to develop soft-textured rice varieties that are popular in the global market.
Because customers' tastes have changed, the government wants to develop soft-textured grains such as Kor Khor 79 with good quality and high yield. Officials also want rice to compete in the lower-priced segment.
"The development plan will be concluded as soon as possible, hopefully around May," Mr Keerati said.
Charoen Laothamatas, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said Thailand has shipped the same rice varieties for 30 years and needs a more diverse selection to deal with changing market demand and consumer behaviour.
Description: https://static.bangkokpost.com/media/content/20200212/3523464.jpg

https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/1855469/rice-shipments-seen-below-10m-tonnes


Canada, Bangladesh agree to cooperate in agriculture

Staff Correspondent | Published: 00:16, Feb 12,2020
      


The Global Institute for Food Security at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada and the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Council have agreed to cooperate on multidisciplinary research, training and development partnership to ensure sustainable food security.
On Monday, a memorandum of understanding was signed between the institute and the council under the agriculture ministry at a city hotel in Dhaka in presence of agriculture minister Muhammad Abdur Razzaque and the Canadian province Saskatchewan’s agriculture minister David Marit, according to a press release.
The MoU work-plan includes establishing  a Bangabandhu Chair at GIFS, linked to a similar position at BARC, in recognition of the invaluable contribution of the Father of the Nation of Bangladesh, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in striving for food security for a newborn Bangladesh; and also establishing an agricultural technology centre named ‘Bangabandhu – Pierre Elliot Trudeau Agricultural Technology Centre’ in Bangladesh in joint collaboration to reflect Canada’s support during the war of Independence of Bangladesh and the strong, longstanding bilateral relationship.
While speaking as the chief guest, Razzaque said that the country had made progress in agriculture despite decreasing land and water resources, increasing natural hazards and climate change vulnerability.
He expressed his hope that the partnership with the Canadian institute would support our government’s plans to achieve food security, and would strengthen Bangladesh’s relationship with Saskatchewan and Canada.
Saskatchewan minister David Marit said, ‘I am happy to see that relationship extended to our research communities, so we can further strengthen our ties to work towards an agricultural future that can provide food security for billions.’
The five-year memorandum with the provision for further extension aims at advancing knowledge and technologies for agricultural research and development in Bangladesh. A consortium will jointly be led by the institute and the council, which coordinates the National Agricultural Research System in Bangladesh.
The consortium will work with partners in Canada and Bangladesh to deliver programmes focused on enhancing farmer incomes, addressing the adverse impacts of climate change in Bangladesh, and strengthening the country’s delivery of the sustainable development goals.
A 16-member delegation of the Canadian institute arrived in Dhaka on February 4. As part of the memo signing programme with the council, the delegates attended a workshop on February 6 and a joint meeting on agricultural cooperation was held on February 8 at the council.
The delegation visited Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute and Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University in Gazipur on February 9. The senior scientists and heads of the agricultural research institutes and university professors also attended these programmes from Bangladesh side.
The Canadian province of Saskatchewan is a leading agri-food exporter, with $ 12.9 billion in sales in 2019. Canada’s major agricultural exports are lentils, wheat, peas and potash fertilizer.

Japan grants N55m to Ekiti rice farmers By Raphael Ogbonnaiye, Ado-Ekiti 
Published Date Feb 12, 2020 5:01 AM

 A grant of $148,209 (N55 million) to facilitate provision of modern equipment for local rice farmers in Ekiti State has been made to the government for rice production. Agreement for the grant was signed by the Ambassador of Japan in Nigeria, Mr. Kikuta Yutaka, and New Initiative for Social Development (NISD) Programme Manager, Mr. Martins Ogunlade, representing the civil society body facilitators of the grant. It is to assist rice farmers from Gbonyin LGA with farming equipment such as power tillers and combined harvesters. The state government was represented at the signing ceremony by the Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr. Folorunso Olabode; Special Adviser to the Governor on Development Partnerships, Mrs Margaret Fagboyo; and Special Assistant to the Governor on Civil Society Matters, Biodun Oyeleye. The scheme was floated under the Japanese Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects. Speaking at the ceremony, Ambassador Yutaka expressed confidence that the public-private-partnership assistance would boost rice production in Ekiti State, adding that the Japanese Embassy in Nigeria would monitor the project and ensure it was implemented to the letter. The envoy said the project would be implemented in collaboration with Toyota Tsusho Corporation which would provide agricultural equipment from Yanmar Company Limited and Mahindra Agricultural Machinery Company Limited. The NISD Programme Manager on his part described the project as “a boost to food security not only in Ekiti but in Nigeria.”

Read more: 
https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/japan-grants-n55m-to-ekiti-rice-farmers.html

TESDA, DA eye training of rice farmers

Published February 12, 2020, 11:09 AM
By Dhel Nazario
The Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (TESDA) and the Department of Agriculture (DA) are looking to train 104,808 rice farmers this year.
Description: Farmers affected by plunging palay prices in Iloilo province are set to benefit from a program of the provincial government. (Tara Yap/Manila Bulletin/File)
(Tara Yap/ MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)
Through the Rice Extension Services Program (RESP) under the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF), skills training is provided to farmers and their dependents listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in Agriculture (RSBSA).
Among the 104,808 listed, 73,425 scholarship slots are allotted for Farmer Field Schools (FFS); 15,648 for Rice Machinery Operations (RMO) NC II; 3,871 for Drying and Milling Plant Servicing NC III; 2,875 for Solar Powered Irrigation System Operation and Maintenance NC II; and 8,989 for Small Engine Servicing (Certificate of Competency).
The FFS covers 14 days of training in a span of 4-5 months, while Small Engine Servicing covers 18 days. RMO covers 29 days, and 32 days for Drying and Milling.
Currently, there are 1,010 municipalities in 57 priority provinces targeted for the RCEF program.
These municipalities were the identified rice-producing areas by DA-Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), except for those in the National Capital Region (NCR), which is a non-rice-producing Region.
Data from the TESDA Scholarships Management Division – Regional Operations Management Office (SMD-ROMO) shows that TESDA Eastern Visayas (Region VIII) has the biggest number of scholarships benefiting 3,363 rice farmers.
This is followed by Western Visayas (TESDA-Region VI) which has implemented skills training to 3,100 farmers while TESDA–Region II in Cagayan Valley has granted scholarships to 1,769 rice farmers.
All other concerned TESDA regional offices are currently implementing their respective skills training as provided under the RESP.
Last January 9 and 10, the DA and TESDA conducted a planning workshop to intensify the RCEF implementation.
“The fact that the law compels several agencies to join forces indicates the urgency of the situation,” said TESDA Secretary Isidro Lapeña.
The Rice Extension Services Program (RESP) of the RCEF is implemented by TESDA among other DA attached agencies to provide services such as skills training on rice crop production, modern rice farming techniques, seed production, farm mechanization, and knowledge/technology transfer through farm schools nationwide.

Fighting malnutrition: Golden Rice and the EU’s GMO conundrum

DISCLAIMER: All opinions in this column reflect the views of the author(s), not of EURACTIV.COM Ltd.
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The relative affordability of biofortified crops like Golden Rice may make a world of difference to households who are most in need and yet least able to afford nutritious food. [Shutterstock]
 “This rice could save a million kids a year”, read the July 2000 cover of Time Magazine, referring to a genetically modified rice, “Golden Rice”, that had been biofortified with life-saving nutrition.  But in the nearly two decades that have passed since then, the cultivation of genetically biofortified crops, such as Golden Rice, to help solve the global humanitarian crisis of “malnutrition” remains elusive.
One major reason for the delay has been the systematic opposition to all forms of GMOs and genetic engineering by radical interest groups including Greenpeace and many Green party politicians, particularly in Europe. On December 18th, 2019, the Philippines joined a growing list of countries granting a permit for Golden Rice as food and feed, and for processing – a major milestone in making it available to the people who need it most.
So, let’s consider the facts.
Over two billion people worldwide continue to suffer from hidden hunger, or the lack of essential micronutrients, which impairs the physical and cognitive development of children, productivity in adults, and quality of life for all. There is a case to be made here for agricultural biotechnology, specifically in the context of biofortification to improve the nutritional value of staple crops through various means, including transgenic biofortification and genome editing. Biofortification allows for the delivery of additional life-improving and life-saving nutrients without the need to change dietary choices or preferences, and at relatively low cost. The potential benefits are especially pronounced in developing countries like the Philippines and Bangladesh, which suffer from high rates of malnutrition[1].
The cost of malnutrition in all its forms is unacceptably high, at 3.5 trillion USD per year worldwide. In the Philippines, the projected annual national economic burden of malnutrition is more than 4.65 billion USD per year, of which 33 million USD is attributable to Vitamin A deficiency. The relative affordability of biofortified crops like Golden Rice may make a world of difference to households who are most in need and yet least able to afford nutritious food. In Bangladesh, which has an average daily per capita rice consumption of 367g, ultra-poor households spend three-quarters of their income, or 75 out of 100 taka, on rice. Oftentimes, fruits, vegetables, eggs are not only unaffordable but also unavailable on a regular basis in marginalized and hard-to-reach communities. When rice is all that a nutrition-deficient household can afford, it is unconscionable to push for the adoption of a nutritional intervention that will financially burden its target communities. Coupled with a relatively longer shelf life, Golden Rice is therefore an affordable complement to a diet when access to other vitamin A-rich foods is difficult or lacking.
Global public goods like Golden Rice are developed with a clear humanitarian purpose and in partnership with national research organizations in the countries where they are intended for adoption[2]. The nomer of “Golden Rice” does not refer to a single line or variety. Rather, it is the result of technology that has been extensively researched and introduced into local varieties that are most consumed by the communities that need it most in their respective countries. This ensures that the developed product meets the needs and preferences of its target communities, and that appropriate deployment mechanisms are established to sustain adoption. In the case of Golden Rice, consumer benefit is established: its beta-carotene content can provide up to 50% of the estimated average requirement for Vitamin A. Initial estimates are even higher, with beta-carotene content ranging from 357-561 μg/day for every 100 g of raw Golden Rice  But whether it is adopted or not depends entirely on farmer and consumer preference.
In addition to helping solve immense public health issues through biofortification, agricultural biotechnology also holds enormous potential to contribute more substantially to other Sustainable Development Goals. Already today, more than 14 million farmers grow GM cotton on smallholder farms in Asia (comprising the vast majority of farmers who have adopted GM crops globally) in order to increase yields and improve farm safety and sustainability by lowering the cost of and need for inputs.  Many other GM crops have also been developed around the world by public research institutions (see map here). Examples of biotech crops which have made it to market include virus resistant papaya (in Hawaii)[3] and insect resistant aubergines (in Bangladesh), which help to reduce the need for chemical control. A number of GM crops with health benefits also exist, such as soybeans to produce healthier oils, low acrylamide potatoes, and insect resistant maize, which significantly reduces naturally occurring mycotoxins that cause problems also in European maize harvests.
However, the majority of ag biotech innovations have unfortunately not had the immense financial resources needed to get safe GM crops through the regulatory process. In the EU, GM import approvals typically take six years and cost 11 to 16.7 million Euros. The costs and waiting times associated with such approvals are preventing public institutions from investing in ag biotech solutions to solve global challenges. The same EU predicament now also applies to genome edited crops, even if they do not have any ‘added’ genes[4]. With the EU’s stringent stance towards GMOs based largely on anti-corporate sentiment campaigns, and the false impression that GMOs are strictly the territory of profit-driven innovation, we tend to forget that these same technologies are also developing parts of the solution to help the poorest of the poor attain decent lives and livelihoods. Also, the majority of ag biotech solutions listed above are of course not available to European farmers, with the exception of one single type of insect resistant maize, which is available to Spanish and Portuguese farmers.
Those of us working and advocating for Golden Rice look forward to the day that regulatory approvals will allow us to respond to societal challenges. While the evaluation process has taken much longer than intended, this underscores the presence of regulatory protocol to independently assess the Golden Rice biosafety dossier which has already received food safety approvals in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
It is unfortunate then that regulatory delays in some parts of the world are held by critics, especially in Europe, as proof that the product is ineffective and unsafe. Yet any action taken to provide and assess the data needed to demonstrate its safety and benefits is viewed as an attempt to force feed Golden Rice to communities who need it the most. We sincerely hope that European decision makers will have the courage to listen to the science, given also that Europeans today are much less concerned with GMOs than they were a decade ago. After 25 years of millions of farmers growing GM crops, now on about 12% of the world’s fields, it would only be reasonable for Europe to look at the evidence surrounding the proven safety of GM crops, instead of demonising a technology which can and does provide multiple benefits.

About the authors
As the head of the Strategic Innovation Platform, Ajay Kohli leads a team primarily in the application of fundamental sciences such as genomics, genetics, and informatics instruments. His platform identifies genes and provides genetic materials and associated information that enables the institute’s rice breeders and physiologists to harness upstream research into translational research, through a highly interdisciplinary approach. Ajay also leads IRRI’s Plant Molecular Biology Group for the past 10 years. During this time, the group has gained recognition in gene discovery and characterization in environmental stress tolerance of rice, particularly in improving yield under drought condition. Ajay brings 27 years of experience in upstream research, innovation, and leadership in the agricultural sector.
Joanna Dupont-Inglis is the Secretary General of EuropaBio, where she has worked since 2009 in a variety of leadership positions. Prior to EuropaBio she worked for two leading Brussels-based consultancies on agriculture, healthcare, environment and energy policy together with a broad range of industries, international organisations, NGOs and with the EU Institutions. She has an academic background in environmental science and European studies and is a French-speaking UK/Irish national.

[1] See table 6 of Swamy et al (2019) for potential benefit of GR2E in the Philippines and Bangladesh. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6646955/
[3] GM papaya practically saved Hawaii’s fifth largest crop from decimation (http://www.vib.be/en/about-vib/Documents/Virus%20resistant%20papaya%20in%20Hawaii.pdf) and results of the genome sequence of the GM papaya were reported as a measure of transparency (Kohli and Christou, 2008, Stable transgenes bear fruit. Nature Biotechnology 26(6):653-4
DOI: 10.1038/nbt0608-653