Efforts Underway To Modernize Agriculture; Boost Per Acre Yield
FPCCI holds session on food security
By News
desk
June
26, 2020
Staff
Reporter Karachi
Almost 37 percent of our population is food insecure despite the fact that Pakistan is self-sufficient in major staples at present and the main problem is access and affordability to food, this was stated by Shaikh Sultan Rehman Vice President of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) in an interactive seminar on Food Security in Pakistan held at Federation House Karachi, Regional Office Lahore and Capital Office Islamabad via zoom video link.
While welcoming the participants, Shaikh Sultan Rehman Vice President FPCCI emphasized on the food security in Pakistan which has high linkage with human capital and strong economic implications. While highlighting the facts and figure of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN, he added that high rate of malnutrition can cost to an economy around 3-4 percent of GDP which mainly affects our young generation mainly due to rising of death rate, malnutrition, low future productivity.
Moreover, rising of population and climate changes are other challenges which may risk food security in future. He informed that globally Pakistan ranked 8th in production of wheat, tenth in rice, 5th in sugarcane and 4th in milk production, despite this Pakistan faces occasionally shortage of these products which affects their prices.
He added that hoarding and smuggling are other issues also create food shortage in Pakistan. He underscored the need for implementation of National Food Security Policy announced in 2018.
Merle
Anders Honored as a Field to Market Trusted Advisor
By Lydia Holmes
MEMPHIS,
TN -- Dr. Merle Anders was honored this week as part of Field to Market's 2020
Trusted Adviser Spotlight Series, recognizing his outstanding leadership in
implementing innovative approaches to scale sustainable agriculture.
Through his role with the USA Rice/Ducks Unlimited Rice Stewardship Partnership
and his work as an independent crop consultant, Anders supports rice farmers
across Arkansas in scaling their adoption of sustainable practices to improve
sustainability outcomes.
His early research in rice irrigation, fertility management, rotation, and tillage have been pivotal in developing recent advances in sustainable rice production practices, particularly Alternate Wetting and Drying (AWD) and fertility management. Anders couches all his research in economic analyses, which provides a net-profit component, ensuring rice producers have accurate cost versus benefit analyses when implementing new practices.
"The legacy I want to leave behind is a number of farmers that are utilizing sustainable practices and are going to continue to build on those practices," he said.
USA Rice and the Rice Stewardship Partnership are dedicated to connecting farmers with trusted advisers to advance continuous improvements in sustainable outcomes. Anders's expertise in irrigation management and his way of communicating is invaluable to rice farmers in the Mid-South.
"Dr. Anders not only has the knowledge of an amazing scientist, but also has a way of taking scientific information and presenting it in a way that is understandable and relates to the everyday farmer," said Arkansas farmer Mike Sullivan.
USA Rice congratulates Dr. Anders on being recognized for his accomplishments in delivering sustainable outcomes for the U.S. rice industry
His early research in rice irrigation, fertility management, rotation, and tillage have been pivotal in developing recent advances in sustainable rice production practices, particularly Alternate Wetting and Drying (AWD) and fertility management. Anders couches all his research in economic analyses, which provides a net-profit component, ensuring rice producers have accurate cost versus benefit analyses when implementing new practices.
"The legacy I want to leave behind is a number of farmers that are utilizing sustainable practices and are going to continue to build on those practices," he said.
USA Rice and the Rice Stewardship Partnership are dedicated to connecting farmers with trusted advisers to advance continuous improvements in sustainable outcomes. Anders's expertise in irrigation management and his way of communicating is invaluable to rice farmers in the Mid-South.
"Dr. Anders not only has the knowledge of an amazing scientist, but also has a way of taking scientific information and presenting it in a way that is understandable and relates to the everyday farmer," said Arkansas farmer Mike Sullivan.
USA Rice congratulates Dr. Anders on being recognized for his accomplishments in delivering sustainable outcomes for the U.S. rice industry
Govt to achieve tax
target of Rs4.96tr, Hammad assures NA
Share:
June 26, 2020
ISLAMABAD
- Minister for Industries and Production Hammad Azhar,
concluding debate on budget 2020-21, in Thursday’s national assembly said that
PTI’s government was fully optimistic to achieve the FBR tax collection of
Rs4.96 trillion set for the fiscal budget 2020-21.
Minister shared with the house the tax
collection was increasing at a rate of 17 percent compared to last year due to
the Corona crisis.
The minister pointed out that the present
government inherited a weak economy but due to its concerted efforts, the
government succeeded in stabilizing the economy.”All the international
financial institutions are praising Pakistan government performance on economic
front prior to outbreak of the pandemic,” he said , mentioning that the
COVID-19 had affected the whole world and the world economy was projected to be
slowed down causing loss of US$12 trillion.
Minister said normally tax collection during
last quarter of the financial year remained highest as compared to the first
three quarters but unfortunately outbreak of the pandemic dented the overall
economy and revised tax target of Rs 4.8 trillion could not be achieved.
The minister said that incumbent government
reduced the current account deficit by 73 percent, trade deficit 31 percent and
fiscal deficit by 3.8 percent in the first nine months of current fiscal year.
He said Foreign Direct Investment also doubled from $1 billion to $2 billion
and refunds of Rs 250 billion were also made to the businesses.
The minister said that Rs75 billion were
allocated for bulk purchases of personal protective equipment’.
Sharing the main points of the budget, the
minister said that no new tax had been imposed rather several taxes had been
waived off.
The minister categorically stated that the
federal government had not withheld the amounts of the provinces under the
National Finance Commission and an additional amount of Rs.88 billion had been
given to Balochistan.
Earlier, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi
assured that all resources would be utilized to cope with the challenge posed
by locusts.
He said a comprehensive plan in this regard has
also been prepared. He said a coordinated effort is required to deal with the
issue. He said we are thankful to the Armed Forces of Pakistan for extending
cooperation in the fight against locusts.
Minister for National Food Security and
Research Syed Fakhar Imam expressed the commitment to develop the agriculture
sector on scientific lines in order to enhance yield of major crops including
wheat, cotton and rice.
Fakhar Imam said Pakistan would not require
loans from IMF and Asian Development Bank if the cotton production was doubled
in the country. PML-N’s Ahsan Iqbal said a national effort was required to
revive the economy as no single party can tackle the current challenges.
Parliamentary Secretary for National Health
Services Dr Nausheen Hamid lauded the government for giving importance to the
health sector in the budget. She said there were currently 129 laboratories
across the country where the testing capacity for Coronavirus had significantly
been enhanced.
Business community welcomes 100bps cut in policy rate
Businessmen laud govt’s economic policies, seek
further reduction in policy rate to spur growth
By Hassan Naqvi
June
25, 2020
Talking to Profit on Thursday, All Pakistan Textile Mills Association Patron-in-Chief Gohar Ejaz lauded the prime minister and his economic team for bringing down the rate of inflation in the country, which helped reduce the interest rate from 13.25pc to 7pc in the last 90 days.
“The biggest beneficiary is the government with 75pc of the money or Rs15 trillion in the banking sector being invested in government securities. The domestic commerce and production industry, which has borrowed Rs4 trillion, would be next, followed by exports with Rs1 trillion borrowing,” Ejaz said.
He, however, stressed the need for Pakistan to become regionally competitive in all aspects to exports.
Ejaz maintained that controlled energy prices, interest rates and the reimposition of the zero-rating regime for export sectors were necessary steps to ensure exports’ enhancement. “Regional interest rate [on average] is 4pc and we have to bring it down to the same levels by next quarter.”
Meanwhile, Chainstore Association of Pakistan (CAP) Vice Chairman Wasif Butt said that continuous reduction in policy rate over the past few months was a “positive and necessary step” taken by the SBP to facilitate businesses suffering from the Covid-led crisis.
“With the demand-led inflation a memory of the distant past and retail sales plunging across all sectors except for essential goods, inflation will fall further in the coming days, which will provide more room for the SBP to reduce the policy rate to below 5pc.”
He claimed that SBP was the only government entity that was providing support to businesses during the Covid-19 crisis.
“However, as 90pc of the retail sector does not have any access to formal financing, the entire sector is looking towards the government for support through fiscal, taxation and policy measures, which have all been grossly lacking,” he stated. “Unless there is equally aggressive progress on these fronts in the near future, the retail sector, which has already started facing defaults and bankruptcies, may collapse completely.”
Butt stated that although the retail sector was the second-largest employer in the country after agriculture, it has very little access to formal financing. “The sector sees SBP’s rate cut decision as positive, but it is insufficient for the retail sector’s revival,” he remarked.
Among other business leaders, Pakistan Association of Large Steel Producers (PALSP) Secretary General Syed Wajid Iqbal Bukhari said that the move was in the right direction “but ideally it should have been reduced to 5pc”.
Shahjahan Malik, Chairman of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP), said that the policy cut was expected as the GDP growth was negative. “The central bank’s decision to cut the policy rate by 1pc is good for everyone (all sectors) as it reduces the cost of doing business. It will also encourage businessmen to take risks and initiate new projects,” he added.
Maple Leaf Cement Factory Limited Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Sayeed Tariq Saigol said the industry “greatly welcomes this timely reduction in the interest rate”, adding that it was a much-needed initiative to spur demand and give businesses some breathing space in the wake of Covid-19.
“I’m personally impressed by the data-driven approach of the central bank and I am optimistic that they will continue to take prudent measures in the face of the current economic challenges,” Saigol said.
Moreover, Pak Suzuki Motor Company Limited (PSMCL) spokesperson Shafiq Ahmed Shaikh said the decision would help the country’s economy and businesses to sustain the virus-led slowdown. “It would have been better if they (govt) had locked the interest rate at 4pc for at least the next 12 months.”
37% of Pakistan's population faces food insecurity
Published: June 26, 2020
PHOTO: REUTERS
KARACHI: At least
one in three people is affected by food insecurity, even though the country has
abundant staple food crops but their inadequate distribution complicates the
situation.“Almost 37% of Pakistan’s population is food insecure, even though Pakistan is self-sufficient in major staples, and the main problem is access and affordability of food,” remarked Shaikh Sultan Rehman, Vice President of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI), in an interactive seminar on food security.
Per capita consumption of food products that had a high nutritional value like beef, chicken, fish, milk, vegetables and fruits was almost 6 to 10 times lower than that in developed countries, which affected labour productivity and young population, said Asma Khalid, Senior Economist at the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP).
Pakistan is ranked 106th among 119 countries in the Global Hunger Index and has been characterised as facing a “serious” level of hunger due to malnourishment, micronutrient (iron, calcium and Vitamin A) deficiencies and deficit of safe drinking water.
Under-five malnutrition costs around $7.5 billion every year, which is equivalent to 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) and the cost comprises loss of future labour force, high under-five mortality rate, low labour productivity emanating from stunting, anaemia or iodine deficiencies in childhood, and prevalence of chronic weakness and fatigue, etc, she said.
The senior economist emphasised the need for introducing support price for all crops and providing agricultural insurance to support the farmers. “Growing population and climate change will create food security challenges for Pakistan,” she said.
“Food security in Pakistan is linked with human capital and strong economic implications,” Rehman said.
Referring to statistics of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations, he added that a high rate of malnutrition could cost the economy around 3-4% of GDP, which affected the young generation mainly due to increase in death rate, malnutrition and low future productivity.
Moreover, the growing population and climate change were other challenges, which may pose risk to food security in future, he said.
Globally, Pakistan is ranked eighth in the production of wheat, 10th in rice, fifth in sugarcane and fourth in milk. Despite this, it faces a shortage of these products which affects their prices.
“Hoarding and smuggling are the issues that create food shortage in Pakistan,” he said. “We need implementation of the National Food Security Policy announced in 2018.”
Agriculture Policy Institute Director-General Dr Rafique Ahmed Chandio underlined the need for strong coordination between the federal and provincial governments and the private sector, adding that Covid-19 increased poverty and unemployment and may create food insecurity in Pakistan. Moreover, global economic policies of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), an unfair trade regime and tariff rationalisation are hurting agricultural investment in Pakistan.
Crop Protection Association of Pakistan Chairman Jamshed Iqbal Cheema stressed that there was high food insecurity in Balochistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, followed by Sindh, due to rising poverty, unemployment and low income of people.
He called for changing eating habits towards those crops that had a high potential like potato, maize, cow milk, etc and had better nutrition compared to traditional food, which would help to reduce malnutrition and improve labour productivity.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 26th, 2020.
Photos: Chinese farmers create stunning art in paddy fields
Murals
created by planting rice of various types and colours
Published: June
25, 2020 14:39 Gulf News report
This aerial photo taken on June 24, 2020 shows an image of US
iconic actress Marilyn Monroe created using different varieties of rice in a
paddy in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
This aerial photo taken on June 24, 2020 shows an image of actor
Rowan Atkinson as character Mr. Bean created using different varieties of rice
in a paddy in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
This aerial photo taken on June 24, 2020 shows an image from the
animated movie "Ne Zha" created using different varieties of rice in
a paddy in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
This aerial photo taken on June 24,
2020 shows an image of a train created using different varieties of rice in a
paddy in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
This aerial photo taken on June 24, 2020 shows an image with the
words "Love You 10,000 years" created using different varieties of
rice in a paddy in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
This aerial photo taken on June 24, 2020 shows an image of a train
created using different varieties of rice in a paddy in Shenyang in China's
northeastern Liaoning province. Image Credit: AFP
Photos: Taiwan's dragon boat races among few to be held this year
Although
the race went ahead in Taipei, supporters were not allowed to attend
Published: June
27, 2020 12:44 AP
Teams compete during the Dragon Boat
Festival in Taipei. Taiwan became one of the few places to hold a boat race,
thanks to no local transmissions of the coronavirus being reported on the
island in over two months. Image Credit: REUTERS
Can a rice cooker disinfect an N95 mask?
- By Susan Miller
- Jun 26, 2020
With the rise in the number of COVID-19 cases
likely triggering a demand surge for even more personal protective equipment,
scientists have devised some creative ways to safely decontaminate used masks
so they can be reused. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cites ultraviolet germicidal irradiation, vaporous
hydrogen peroxide and moist heat as the decontamination methods that have shown
the most promise, but there are some DIY options.
One of the most
widespread methods comes from Battelle, which offers a free vaporous hydrogen
peroxide decontamination service for N95 masks worn by health care workers.
Hospitals and health facilities collect, label and ship the used PPE to a
decontamination center – now set up in approximately 50 cities -- using a
commercial carrier such as Cardinal Health and FedEx, which provide free
end-to-end logistics support to organizations enrolled in Battelle’s program.
Once the
shipment arrives at the center, the masks are logged in and barcoded so
Battelle can ensure a chain of custody and monitor the number of times each
mask has been decontaminated. The masks are loaded into a decontamination
chamber, where up 5,000 can be processed, and the chamber is flooded with an
Environmental Protection Agency-registered sterilant. On completion, Battelle
verifies masks are free of the virus and packages them for return.
The program is
funded by a contract from the Defense Logistics Agency on behalf of the
Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency.
Sandia National
Laboratories, meanwhile, is researching how to safely decontaminate and reuse
respirators or masks to address shortages in critical personal protective
equipment.
One study
examines the impact of repeated decontamination cycles on N95 masks’
filtration, fit and mechanical integrity. Another investigates the use of
supercritical carbon dioxide -- an eco-friendly solvent for dry-cleaning -- to
sterilize N95 masks and other critical medical supplies for reuse. If found to
be appropriate and effective, the sterilization process could be rapidly
deployed at hospitals nationwide because it is already used in commercial dry
cleaning, lab officials said.
A researcher
at George Washington University is working on a "plasma brush" that could help decontaminate protective
masks, gloves and other necessary gear for reuse.
Plasmas
typically exist at extremely high temperatures, but a "cold"
atmospheric plasma method, devised by medical engineering professor Michael
Keidar, requires only the gas's electrons to be at an elevated temperature,
making this form of plasma safe for use on and near humans. Additionally,
atmospheric cold plasma differs doesn't use a liquid agent, making it safe for
use on damage-prone surfaces, university officials said. The proposed
"brush" system is expected to be "very fast -- you can just scan
the surface one time and that's it," Keidar said.
Researchers at
the University of Michigan are developing tiny wireless sensors that could verify, in real time, whether masks
are being exposed to proper decontamination conditions.
While several
studies have demonstrated that certain combinations of temperature and humidity
can effectively decontaminate N95 masks without damaging their performance or
fit, cold or dry spots in the ovens could create too much or too little
intensity and make a mask unsafe for repeated use.
The batteryless
sensors are designed to provide more accurate and less cumbersome monitoring
during the decontamination process. To ensure the accuracy of temperature and
humidity, ovens currently use many wired sensors, creating a coils of cables
that are so unwieldy that they’re often removed after the unit has been
initially calibrated.
This project
proposes replacing this set up with small, wireless, energy-harvesting chips
that can be sprinkled in each cubby hole of the decontamination units and
monitored with an adjacent device. The chips can remain in place to allow
ongoing monitoring of the oven’s calibration and allow for potential future
features such as real-time feedback on the oven’s temperature.
For individuals
looking to contaminate their own N95 masks, there are some DIY options.
Researchers studying moist heat decontamination used rice cookers
or other kitchen steamers. Although they did not examine the efficacy of the
mask performance after decontamination, they found “that a short cycle of steam
treatment applied via a commonly used kitchen rice cooker-steamer can be very
effective for decontamination of face masks and N95 respirators.” Dry
heat was less effective than moist heat or microwave-generated steam for
deactivating viruses. They also found “the short cycle of steam treatment
was substantially more effective than ultraviolet light treatment for N95
decontamination and nearly as effective as aerosolized peracetic acid and
hydrogen peroxide.”
In a similar
vein, the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate
has posted instructions for DIY decontamination by using moist heat
from a programmable multicooker, such as an Instant Pot or pressure cooker.
“Given the
significance of this outbreak and importance of respiratory protection for
first responders and medical professionals, we’re investigating simple,
low-cost means to sanitize potentially contaminated N95 respirators,” said Dr.
Lloyd Hough, lead for S&T’s Hazard Awareness and Characterization
Technology Center. “We hope front line personnel who need to use them can take
advantage of this approach to extend the life of their limited supply of this
critical piece of PPE.”
“S&T is
thinking creatively during this nationwide crisis,” said William N. Bryan, dhs
senior official performing the duties of the under secretary for Science &
Technology. “We understand that PPE is not always readily available and are
working tirelessly to provide Americans with simple methods to extend the life
of this important equipment.”
About the
Author
Susan Miller is
executive editor at GCN.
Over a career
spent in tech media, Miller has worked in editorial, print production and
online, starting on the copy desk at IDG’s ComputerWorld, moving to print
production for Federal Computer Week and later helping launch websites and
email newsletter delivery for FCW. After a turn at Virginia’s Center for
Innovative Technology, where she worked to promote technology-based economic
development, she rejoined what was to become 1105 Media in 2004, eventually
managing content and production for all the company's government-focused
websites. Miller shifted back to editorial in 2012, when she began working with
GCN.
Miller has a BA
and MA from West Chester University and did Ph.D. work in English at the
University of Delaware.
Researchers genetically modified rice to replace blood pressure drugs
Brittany A. Roston -
Jun 24, 2020, 2:08 pm CDT
Imagine
eating food that is not only nutritious and filling, but also carefully
engineered to address certain health issues. That’s the reality detailed in a
recent study from the American Chemical Society, which details a type of
genetically-modified rice that can potentially be used to lower one’s blood
pressure. In an effort to bring around this reality, researchers have
engineered a type of transgenic rice with blood-pressure-lowering peptides. The
study was recently published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Before you get too excited, know this: the rice isn’t yet something you can
purchase and the study involved rats, not humans. The research paves the way
for a future with foods that are engineered to feature specific
health-promoting benefits, however. High blood pressure remains a big public health concern; if left untreated, it can cause a large number of health problems ranging from vision problems to heart disease, kidney disease, and more. The common treatment for this condition is a type of medication called ACE inhibitors — synthetic inhibitors are used in medications, but natural varieties are found in certain foods, too.
Because the natural version of these inhibitors may have fewer side effects than their synthetic counterparts, researchers engineered a type of rice that features nine ACE inhibitor peptides and peptides that relax blood vessels. The plants were found to produce high levels of these compounds.
The study involved feeding lab rats flour made from this rice for five weeks, during which time the rats experienced a drop in blood pressure with no obvious unwanted side effects. The equivalent dose of this rice in a 150lbs human would be only half a teaspoon, according to the study.
Criteria for academic
promotion in medicine
BMJ 2020; 369
doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m2253 (Published 25 June 2020) Cite this as: BMJ
2020;369:m2253
- Correspondence to H C Sox hsox@comcast.net
Can and should
good citizenship in the research community be a criterion for promotion?
Job promotion
in academia is meant to reflect the quality of previous work and an expectation
of continued success. With promotion come prestige, institutional responsibilities,
and, in some schools, the promise of continued employment. In academic
medicine, the journey from instructor to full professor and beyond affords the
opportunity to educate generations of physicians and biomedical scientists.
Rewards tend to influence behaviors. Given that, Rice and colleagues describe
in a linked study (doi:10.1136/bmj.l5214) the promotion criteria used by
medical schools and recommend broadening the criteria to encourage behaviors
they believe will enhance the quality of science.1
Although
accomplishment in research has long been the principal standard for promotion,
medical schools have recently developed promotion criteria to reward excellence
in medical education,2 clinical innovation,3 and other areas.4 We will focus on
the promotion of faculty whose primary activity is research, although most also
have responsibilities for teaching, clinical care if a clinician, and other
academic service.
Rice and
colleagues investigated criteria for promotion in an international sample of
170 institutions; 146 had faculties of biomedical sciences, with 92 having
accessible criteria. They created two categories of criteria: “traditional”
(importance of research as measured by number of publications, journal impact
factors, place in …
Intensify research on
immunity boosting crops: Governor
HYDERABAD, June
25, 2020 19:59 IST
Updated: June
26, 2020 10:26 IST
Dr. Tamilisai
Soundararajan interacted with the functionaries of Prof. Jayashankar Telangana
State Agricultural University through a video-conference on Thursday.
Tamilisai interacts with agriculture varsity
scientists
Governor
Tamilisai Soundararajan has exhorted the agricultural scientists to intensify
research on immunity-boosting crops.
The Governor
recalled how the older generations ate rice and lived longer and said younger
generation is however distancing itself from rice consumption claiming it to be
diabetic-prone food. Scientists need to come up with new varieties of rice that
are low on sugar and maintain our traditions in south India associated with
rice.
Dr.
Soundararajan made these comments during an interaction with the functionaries
of Prof. Jayashankar Telangana State Agricultural University through a
video-conference on Thursday. She stressed the need for research on improvised
fine quality rice varieties like Telangana Sona, considered to be a low sugar
variety crop.
Palm trees
The scientists
at the same time should carry out more intensive research on palm trees (thadi
chettu) as every part of the tree is useful, she said adding the palm tree
was made official tree of Tamil Nadu, given its traditional importance
She said
efforts should be made to protect palm trees from diseases and they should be
grown in large numbers to enable processing of different parts of the tree that
is known for its medicinal and nutritional value. Neera, the tender palm water,
is one such product that is highly nutritious and there is need to come up with
technology enabling preservation of Neera for longer periods and for its
packaged selling.
There is also
need for research on the part of the agriculture and horticultural scientists
to come out with special crops that would give healthy oil as several health
issues emanate out of the excessive use of unhealthy oils, said an official
release.
Accelerating adoption of climate risk management strategies by Odisha Farmers
June
26, 2020
A survey by IRRI in 2018 found that several farmers in Odisha resorted to seasonal migration, selling assets, and acquiring credit as strategies to cope with agricultural risks. Although the Indian government has been implementing a mega crop insurance program called “Pradhan Mantri Fasal Beema Yojana (PMFBY)” since 2016 which offers up to 60-70% of subsidy on premium, only 30% of the farmers had heard of PMFBY. Among the farmers who were aware, only 9% have registered in PMFBY. Odisha government data indicates that only 8-9% of the total farmers in Odisha have registered in PMFBY. This highlights the low awareness among Odisha farmers to adopt crop insurance as a risk mitigation strategy.
Dr. PrakashanChellattanVeettil, Agricultural Economist at IRRI says “Farmers feel that the crop insurance information is complex. Comprehensive understanding of such information plays a vital role in their adoption decision”.Given the structure of current crop insurance which covers yield loss at GramaPanchayath level, Dr. Veettilbelieves that there are two key things the farmers must understand with respect to crop insurance. First, cost of insurance in the form of premium has to be bornewhethereclimatic risk is certain or not. Second, the occurrence of climatic shocks, as well as benefits from crop insurance in the form of claims, are uncertainin nature. Therefore, crop insurance might not be beneficial to all farmers in all circumstances. This makes it difficult to craft a thumb rule of advice for farmers during the crop insurance information campaign. Effective and innovative extension messages and informationthatenhancesfarmers’insurance literacy is the need of the hour to scale up the adoption of PMFBY.
IRRI scientists have designed and testedinnovative educational training on holistic agricultural risk management in Odisha. The training program includes information about crop insurance (PMFBY) and stress-tolerant rice varieties (STRVs) which are tolerant to low-medium intensity flood and drought conditions.
Educational training includesthree forms i) Classroom training, where farmers are trained for a day by a professional on crop insurance and STRVs; ii) Video Edutainment, a theatre-based video consisting crop insurance and STRV information is shown to farmers and, iii) Crop simulations app, which provides a virtual decision-making experience to farmers about alternative risk management options. Along with training, the experiences of farmers who have adoptedcrop insurance or STRV was shared to boost farmer motivation andpeer-assistedlearning.
Preliminary results of the impact of educational training haveshown an increase of 30% in farmers’ insurance awareness and literacy. About 60% of the farmers who have attended the training have registered in PMFBY during Kharif 2019. Dr. Veettil adds, “Effective communication is a keyinstrument in scaling up micro insurance in agriculture. Evidence from our intervention is encouraging. We are still waiting for more data to ascertain the long run and livelihood impact of training and the adoption of insurance. The government and insurance companiesshould leverage these innovative training methods which target to improve farmers’insurance literacy, sofarmers can make a conscious decision about the adoption of insurance”.
Authors by: Dr. Yashoda: Senior Specialist-Behavioral Economics, IRRI, Ms. Deepti Saksena: Specialist- Communications, IRRI, Dr. Ranjitha Puskur: Research Leader-Livelihoods, Gender and Nutrition, IRRI-
Cameroon estimates 2020 rice deficit at 436,239
tons
-
Friday, 26 June 2020 15:06
(Business in Cameroon) - The Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development (MINADER) recently provided data on rice
production and demand in Cameroon for the 2020 financial year. The data shows
that domestic demand is estimated at 576,949 tons of rice for an average
national production estimated at 140,710 tons, i.e. a deficit of 436,239 tons.
To make up the
deficit, the Minader offers technical and financial support to cooperatives and
agro-industries for the production of quality seeds, the vulgarization of
modern rice production technics and the improvement of harvesting and
post-harvest techniques through various projects.
The ministry
informs that it is also implementing a program aimed at developing an
additional 35,700 hectares of the hydro-agricultural perimeter. Thanks to this
programme, at least 350,000 tons of milled rice can be marketed by 2023.
The deficit will then be reduced to 86,239 tonnes of rice if demand does not
increase. Between 2015 and 2018, Cameroon's rice imports amounted to CFAF 652.6
billion, representing an average of CFAF163 billion per year.
PITC scraps plan to import 300,000 MT of rice
By CNN Philippines Staff
Published Jun 26, 2020 10:36:01 PM
Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said in a statement on Friday that this was based on Vietnam’s decision to lift its rice export ban, thus we can expect “more comfortable buffer stock levels moving forward.”
PITC is an attached corporation of the Department of Trade and Industry.
The Agriculture department added that their recent projections also showed that the country will have enough supply of the staple grain.
Agriculture Secretary William Dar said that since the private sector import rice under the Rice Tariffication Law, this would mean more tariff revenues to fund the P10-billion Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund.
In May, Vietnam assured long-term supply of rice to the Philippines amid challenges caused by the pandemic, ensuring stable supply of rice in the country. Vietnam, one of the world's largest rice exporter, imposed a ban on rice exportation last March to ensure its food supply amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The DA noted that Vietnam accounts for over 90% of the Philippines’ imports, making it the country's top importer.
Earlier reports showed that the country has imported about 1.086 million MT of rice from January to May, with more than 968,000 coming from Vietnam.
The DTI through the PITC planned the importation of 300,000 MT of rice through a government-to-government importation plan. It has reached out to Myanmar, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, and India regarding the matter.
These were initially expected to arrive July and August, the country’s lean months.
The Rice Tariffication Law permits G2G importation as an emergency measure to ensure enough supply of rice during a national emergency.
UCO Bank eyes non-oil
imports from Iran to sustain rupee-rial trade
Lender posts turnaround in Q4, awaits PCA exit
Namrata Acharya | Kolkata Last Updated at
June 27, 2020 02:20 IST
A K Goel, MD
and CEO of UCO Bank, said the lender hopes to exit PCA soon
With India no longer importing oil
from Iran, UCO Bank is looking at other avenues to keep the rupee payment
mechanism with Iran alive.
According to A K Goel, MD and CEO of
UCO Bank, the lender is in talks with importers to use the mechanism for other
imports. “In the last few months, there has been no fresh inflow into the
payments account. We are exploring the opportunity to import other commodities,
such as fresh fruits, under the mechanism. Our role here is not only
settlement, but also to facilitate trade between India and Iran,” said Goel.
In the wake of US sanctions on Iran,
India cannot engage in dollar-denominated trade with Iran. Hence, a special
rupee-rial trade mechanism has been put in place. Under this, oil refineries
from India deposit funds into designated banks to import oil from Iran. These
rupee funds are then used to clear dues of traders that export from India to
Iran. UCO Bank and IDBI Bank are the two banks that support this payment
mechanism, and such deposits make up for a bulk of low-cost deposits for the
lenders.
However, even as oil imports have
dried up, exports have not fallen as much.
According to government data,
imports from Iran stood at nearly $13 billion in 2018-19, which came down to
nearly $1.35 billion between April and January in 2019-20. In contrast, the
fall in exports was much less. Exports to Iran stood at $3.5 billion in
2018-19, which fell to $2.80 billion between April and January of this
financial year.
ALSO READ: Govt savings bonds to
offer higher rate of interest than small savings
Rice, tea, sugar and pharmaceutical
products are key items India exports to Iran, with rice accounting for the
largest share.
Awaits PCA exit
The Kolkata-headquartered bank on
Friday reported a standalone pre-tax profit of Rs 16.78 crore in the March
quarter, on the back of good treasury income and recoveries. It had posted a
pre-tax loss of Rs 1,552.02 crore in the corresponding period a year ago.
The bank’s net profit stood at Rs
6.78 crore, against a net loss of Rs 1,552.02 crore in the year-ago period.
Goel said the bank has complied with
all key parameters required to come out of the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA)
framework — by bringing down its net NPA to 5.45 per cent, maintaining a
capital adequacy ratio of 11.70 per cent, having a leverage ratio of 3.57 per
cent and posting a positive return on asset in Q4.
“It (exiting PCA) is a call the
regulator has to take but we may discuss or even write to the RBI on it,” Goel
told the media in an e-interaction.
ALSO READ: HC queries Centre, RBI on
treatment to PMC Bank depositors from YES Bank
The bank hopes its overseas branches
— one each in Hong Kong and Singapore — will also come out of restrictions
imposed by the regulators in the two countries.
The bank made a treasury profit of
Rs 244 crore in Q4 compared to Rs 67 crore in the corresponding period last
year. The recovery from written-off accounts during the quarter was Rs 237
crore, against Rs 85 crore.
The bank is expecting 8-10 per cent
growth in credit this financial year, primarily backed by demand coming in from
agriculture, MSME and retail sectors.
Planned gov’t-to-gov’t rice importation shelved
Philippine Daily Inquirer /
04:34 AM June 27, 2020
The country
has dropped its plan to import 300,000 metric tons (MT) of rice through a
government-to-government (G2G) deal, after the Philippines’ top source of
imported rice lifted its export ban, according to the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI).In a statement, the DTI yesterday said that its attached agency, the Philippine International Trading Center (PITC), would no longer proceed with the planned G2G importation, which was supposed to arrive in July and August.
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PITC was
supposed to import 300,000 MT of rice under a G2G arrangement when earlier
computations showed that the country’s rice buffer might be at risk because
Vietnam had imposed an export ban on rice.“It will be recalled that the G2G importation plan was a result of the potential threat to maintaining a good buffer stock of rice for the country,” Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said.
“Earlier computations from [the Department of Agriculture] showed a threat to the targeted level of buffer stock following the imposed ban of rice exportation of Vietnam,” he added.
Vietnam, the world’s third largest rice exporter and the largest source of Philippine rice imports, banned rice exports in March and only made limited shipments in April to make sure the country has sufficient food during the coronavirus pandemic, according to a Reuters report.
Later, however, Vietnam Industry and Trade Minister Tran Tuan Anh had informed Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III in a letter that rice exports to the Philippines and other countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations would resume on May 1.
Historically, Vietnam accounted for over 90 percent of the Philippines’ rice imports. The country imports about 7 to 14 percent of its total rice requirement, the DTI said.
“With the lifting of the rice export ban of Vietnam, we can expect more comfortable buffer stock levels moving forward,” Lopez said
Fertilizer scam,
pandemic edition
Farming in the
Philippines has been synonymous to landlessness, debt and drought. Government
has always placed agriculture at the bottom of the country’s priorities. But
the pandemic showed that in order to survive a lockdown, accessing and securing
food is essential. It is ironic then, how a country relying on its farmers for
survival neglects its food security frontliners.
This lockdown
has exposed the government’s capitalist agenda. Its resistance to mass testing,
despite the billions of loans from Asian Development Bank and World Bank, the
thousands of “violators” arrested and discriminatory guidelines for Social
Amelioration Program, have left Filipinos imprisoned, jobless and hungry. The
funds and loans for COVID-19 response, according to the president, has been
depleted. The number of COVID-19 cases, however, continue to rise.
As if this is
not enough, the Department of Agriculture used the emergency funds for COVID-19
response to procure 1.811 million bags of overpriced urea fertilizers, which
could have been purchased at a much lower, wholesale price.
According to
farmer groups, these fertilizers may be bought for P850 per bag. Since they are
engaging in wholesale purchase, clearly a much lower price could be negotiated?
As a government employee myself, the policy has always been to prioritize the
lowest bidder. Of course, there are cases when this rule may be altered but if
the farmers can produce receipts from three different stores proving that the
said fertilizers can be indeed bought at P850, shouldn’t we be alarmed?
Peasant
organizations and rice watch groups are right to call this move a scam. It is
under the Ahon Lahat, Pagkaing Sapat (ALPAS) Kontra COVID-19. If anything, the
fertilizers must be distributed for free to assist farmers who suffered from
the restrictions implemented by the local government units.
Despite the
Inter-Agency Task Force’s food resiliency protocol, millions of farmers were
still prohibited from farming, harvesting and transporting their produce to the
market because of transportation suspension and other restrictions. The
difference of P150 per bag amounts to P517 million in kickbacks, which could
have been used to assist millions of agricultural workers in the country.
Before the
pandemic, farmers have suffered the repercussions of RA 11203 or Rice
Liberalization Law. It amended existing restrictions against importation,
streamlining the process of acquiring import permits and removing the
regulatory functions of the National Food Authority. This only benefits big
businesses that ships cheap imported rice in massive amount. Because of this,
we were hailed as the biggest rice importer of the year, thereby securing the
death of the local rice industry. The price of palay plummeted to P7 to P12 per
kilo.
As we have
barely recovered from the lockdown, and the devastation brought upon by typhoon
Ambo in Eastern Samar, this centralized corruption mocks our ailing farmers.
Instead of heeding the call for cash assistance and production subsidy for
farmers, the Department of Agriculture procures overpriced urea fertilizer.
Using the said fertilizer during the wet season could also weaken the palay. Promoting
chemical-based fertilizer instead of organic farming, is also not beneficial to
farmers in the long run as it acidifies the soil.
The pandemic
has exposed what the government is capable of. It is capable of mass arrest and
corruption, in a time when urban and rural poor families are in dire need of
socio-economic support. It is capable of a Voltes V-themed party complete with
catering, while relief volunteers are being arrested for distributing food
packs and organizing community kitchens.
Its ability to
dismiss the demands for mass testing in order for community quarantine to work
sends a clear message: We are on our own. The health workers and frontliners
risking their lives every day despite the lack of personal protective equipment
will never be fairly compensated; the stranded Filipinos outside the airports
and near bus terminals will never be assisted if not for the viral death of one
mother. Millions of public school students who will not be able to enroll this
school year because the four modalities being offered by the Deparment of
Education dismiss the democratic and comprehensive demands of teachers for a
safe, quality and accessible education.
We have been on
our own for the past months, collectively feeding communities, resisting and
demanding for better, medical solutions. This fertilizer scam is a repeat of
countless agricultural fund scams. The people will collectively rise against
these blatant neglect and betrayal. We know better. (davaotoday.com)
Rae Rival writes and does volunteer work for Gantala
Press and Rural Women Advocates. She is a teacher and a mother. Her stories,
poems and essays have appeared in CNN Philippines, Rappler, Voice and Verse
Poetry Magazine (Hong Kong), Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, university presses
and do-it-yourself zines.
Time to develop
agriculture
Agriculture is one of the promising
sectors in Nigeria which can diversify the Nigerian economy and provide job
opportunities for the unemployed youths of the nation.The sector which was
neglected had since 2016 become an option for diversification owing to its vast
potential to drive a more sustainable economic growth in Africa’s most populous
nation in terms of job creation and revenue generation. Nigeria was one of the
most promising agricultural producers in the world before the coming of
oil. But that is history with the
majority of our youths and graduates blinded by the promise of a white-collar
job and abandoning the endless opportunities in agriculture.
The agricultural sector has the
potential to make our youths and graduates self-employed and make them
billionaires in the future. The president of the Africa Development Bank, Mr
Adewumi Adesina, said “Future millionaires and billionaires of Africa will not
come from oil and gas but from agriculture. Adesina also stressed that the size
of agribusiness in the continent would be worth $1 trillion by 2030. This is a
testament to the opportunities in agriculture in Nigeria and Africa. Nigeria
closed its borders in August 2019 with a main objective of curbing smuggling of
goods such as rice, tomatoes and poultry to bolster agricultural sector. This
move has immensely contributed to improving the agricultural sector and
attracting investors. The move has also boosted the confidence in local
farmers. Also, it made farmers and millers ramp up production especially for
rice and poultry to meet the ever-growing demand for food in the country.
The beauty of the agricultural
sector is that it has various stages in which graduates can venture into it.
This includes rice and poultry farming,
processing such as rice milling, distribution and marketing of processed
product. Others include; warehousing, packaging, plantation management,
equipment leasing, equipment sales and servicing.
Agribusiness is good business. But
most people, especially young people, jump into agriculture without the right
knowledge, mentality and attitude, thereby losing their capital.Agriculture is
a long term investment. Apart from being a source of employment, Investing in
agriculture is also a hidden gold mine as there are many untapped segments.
Identifying a niche agricultural segment would make a lot of people
millionaires before others realise it’s already happening. Also, the Nigerian
government needs youths to invest in agriculture to improve food security and
provide jobs for others.
Investing in agriculture is clearly
a wise idea but it also comes with its challenges. Lack of land access,
insufficient capital, poor access to finance, limited market access are major
reasons why youths don’t want to go into agriculture. High cost of inputs and
equipment, infrastructural deficit, climate change and environmental
challenges, limited support from the government are other reasons. The
government of President Muhammadu Buhari deserves applause for its various
initiatives in the sector. They include; Anchor Borrowers Programme, Youth Farm
Lab, Fertilizer Initiative, among others. These initiatives are proving that
the administration remains greatly committed to improving agriculture. lf the government of Nigeria and our youths
remain committed to improving and investing in agriculture. It will be one of
the most effective tools of fighting poverty, food shortage, hunger and unemployment.
Abubakar Idris,
Bayero University,Kano
https://www.blueprint.ng/time-to-develop-agriculture/
Asia Rice-Quality concerns hit Vietnam rates; India's demand improves
6/25/2020
*
Vietnamese prices may fall further in coming weeks-traders* Thai rates firm on supply crunch, stronger baht
* Indian rates at $373-$378/tonne vs last week's $366-$372
By Eileen Soreng
BENGALURU, June 25 (Reuters) - Vietnamese rice export prices eased this week, hurt by falling purchases and quality concerns as the harvest progresses, while India rates rose from an over two-month low hit last week as demand picked up from Africa.
In Vietnam, rates for 5% broken rice <RI-VNBKN5-P1> slipped to a range of $405-$450 per tonne on Thursday from $450 per tonne a week earlier.
The winter-spring rice is offered at $450 per tonne, while the ongoing summer-autumn harvest is being offered at $405-$410 per tonne, traders said.
"The quality of the summer-autumn rice is low due to heavy rains during the harvest," a trader based in the Mekong Delta province of An Giang said, adding the harvest is expected to last till end-July.
Adding further pressure on the rates was weak demand from foreign buyers and cheaper Indian rice, traders said, adding prices may fall further over the coming weeks.
Top exporter India's 5 percent broken parboiled variety <RI-INBKN5-P1> was quoted $373-$378 per tonne this week, up from last week's $366-$372.
Rising cases of coronavirus have prompted some buyers in Africa to raise purchases, an exporter based at Kakinada in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh said.
Thailand's benchmark 5-percent broken rice <RI-THBKN5-P1> prices were quoted at $514-$520 on Thursday, versus last week's $505-$525.
Thai export rates have been high mainly due to drought-induced low supply and a stronger Thai baht, while demand has been muted, traders said.
"Concerns over supply persist in the market which is likely to continue until August, when new crops are expected," a Bangkok-based trader said.
In Bangladesh domestic rice prices gained this week, which market insiders blamed on stockpiling by traders and millers. Medium quality rice was being sold at around 50 taka ($0.5896) a kilogram.
Panic buying driven by the coronavirus outbreak had boosted domestic rice prices to a two-year high in April. ($1 = 84.8000 taka) (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
London-based economic and
financial consulting firm HPS International Consulting, founded in London by
Cameroonian Prosper H. Sugewe (photo) and...
For the 2020 financial year, the
Cameroonian road fund allocated a budget of CFAF39 billion for road
maintenance. Nevertheless, despite the rise in its...
Cameroon’s overall trade volume
dropped by 16% during the first half of 2020, because of the coronavirus
pandemic. This was revealed by Minister of...
The Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development (MINADER) recently provided data on rice production and
demand in Cameroon for the 2020 financial year....
Kharif
sowing jumps by more than 100% to 316 lakh hectares
Our Bureau New
Delhi | Updated on June 26, 2020 Published
on June 26, 2020
There was a nearly 2 per cent drop in rice transplanting. File
Photo - The Hindu
As the South-West monsoon covers
the entire country 12 days prior to normal date, farmers planted a whopping
315.63 lakh hectares (lh), more than double of the 154.53 lh covered in the
corresponding week last year, according to kharif sowing data released by the
Agriculture Ministry on Friday.
Highest increase was recorded in
oilseeds and pulses planting. While the area under oilseeds increased to 83.31
lh, more than five times than 13.32 lh covered in the same week in the previous
season, the pulses acreage more than tripled to 19.40 lh in the same period.
Among oilseeds, at 63.26 lh, soyabean registered a 23-fold
increase in area against 2.66 lh planted in the corresponding week last year.
And the area under arhar is 9.87 lh, which is five times more than the acreage
reported in the same period. Even the area under groundnut, too, almost doubled
to 18.45 lh as compared the same week last year. While much of the increase in
oilseeds area was from Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra accounted for most of the
increase in pulses cultivation.
Similarly,
there is a substantial increase in cotton planting as well. As compared to 27
lh planted in the corresponding week last year, the area under the fibre went
up by 165 per cent to 71.69 lh till end of the current week.
Triple
digit growth in both maize and bajra area helped increase the coarse cereals
acreage to 47.96 lh (24.48 lh). Both Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra are
responsible for the increase.
The area
under rice planting went up by nearly 10 lh to 37.71 lh in the current week.
Published
on June 26, 2020
Rice Prices
as on : 26-06-2020 11:00:15 AM
Arrivals in tonnes;prices in
Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
|
Price
|
|||||
Current
|
%
change |
Season
cumulative |
Modal
|
Prev.
Modal |
Prev.Yr
%change |
|
Rice
|
||||||
Naugarh(UP)
|
23.00
|
27.78
|
3606.00
|
2570
|
2565
|
7.08
|
Bharwari(UP)
|
10.00
|
NC
|
90.50
|
1950
|
2030
|
-
|
Achalda(UP)
|
3.80
|
26.67
|
293.90
|
2600
|
2600
|
17.65
|
Safdarganj(UP)
|
3.00
|
NC
|
44.00
|
2450
|
2450
|
-
|
Mawana(UP)
|
2.00
|
NC
|
135.20
|
2730
|
2660
|
-
|
Alibagh(Mah)
|
1.00
|
NC
|
78.00
|
4200
|
4200
|
NC
|
Murud(Mah)
|
1.00
|
NC
|
77.00
|
4200
|
4200
|
NC
|
Achnera(UP)
|
0.80
|
NC
|
31.80
|
2550
|
2050
|
0.39
|
Published
on June 26, 2020
Coarse rice continues uptrend
YASIR
WARDAD | Published: June 26, 2020
09:42:16 | Updated: June 26, 2020 21:05:14
Coarse rice
prices have continued to trend higher even during this harvest season, adding
to the woes of the low-income group amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Coarse rice
varieties such as swarna, BR-11 and hybrid were selling at Tk 42-48 a kg at the
retail level on Thursday, up from Tk 38-45 a kg seven days ago.
The prices
rose for the second time in the last two and a half weeks, according to
sources.
The
state-run Trading Corporation of Bangladesh (TCB) recorded a 4.0 per cent hike
on an average in a week while the figure was 10-14 per cent for the last two
weeks.
The
current price of coarse rice during this Boro harvesting season is 20 per cent
higher than in the last year, according to the TCB.
Boro
harvest is a major harvest season which provides 20 million tonnes of rice or
57 per cent of total rice output, according to the Bangladesh Bureau of
Statistics (BBS) data.
The rice
prices have been increasing at a time when harvest and primary trading of Boro
paddy and rice have been going on across the country, said agriculture
economist Prof Golam Hafeez Kennedy.
This is
not a good sign during these times of pandemic, as people's income has dropped
drastically, he added.
The
sudden hike in coarse rice prices means it would further hurt the poor who have
already been going through financial hardships caused by the pandemic, he
explained.
Prof
Golam Hafeez suggested that the government should procure at least 5.0 million
tonnes of rice and paddy this year to build a strategic food stock in order to
prevent any possible food shortage.
He also
pointed out that local governments such as Union Parishads have totally failed
to ensure proper distribution of food aid among the people.
So, the
civil administration should be given the responsibilities for food aid
distribution during this critical period, he said.
Contacted,
Chairman of Agrarian Research Foundation, Bangladesh (ARF) Prof Abdul Hamid
said many importers-cum-millers are keen to import rice from the international
market and that a lobby is active to make import easier so as to reap windfall
profits.
If rice
output totals 19-20 million tonnes during this Boro season, there is no need to
reduce the existing high duties on rice import, he said.
The
government agencies concerned should provide most authentic data about the food
production within this month so that policymakers could take necessary action
immediately based on their reports, he added.
And if
they could figure out that there is any possibility of rice shortage, the
government might rethink of import, he said.
Presently,
there is a total of 57 per cent duties on rice import.
The
government eyes 20.04 million tonnes of rice output from 4.75 million hectares
of land this Boro season.
The rice
production hit an all-time high at 20.03 million tonnes in the last Boro season
when the paddy was cultivated on 4.9 million hectares of land, according to the
Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE).
High
prices of coarse rice in the mainstream market, however, affected the public
food procurement.
The
government purchased 0.23 million tonnes of paddy and rice in the last two
months against its target of 1.95 million tonnes.
Presently,
public food warehouses have 0.88 million tonnes of rice, which was 13.5 million
tonnes two months ago, according to the Directorate General of Food.
Rice prices on rise despite bumper boro harvest
Staff Correspondent | Published: 23:41, Jun
25,2020
Rice prices on rise despite bumper boro harvest
Staff
Correspondent |
Published: 23:41, Jun 25,2020
The prices of rice continued to
rise in the city though there was a bumper production of the Boro paddy
recently in the country.
Despite a surplus production of
the crop against the government target of 2.04 crore tonnes, the increase in
the prices has pushed fixed-income people into difficulties amid loss of work
and income due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Experts termed the price hike of
the staple food ‘unusual’ at this time as the crop was harvested just a month
ago, saying that a dishonest quarter was involved in the manipulation.
Food minister Sadhan Chandra
Majumder accepted that a quarter was trying to manipulate the rice market, adding
that the government remained vigilant in this regard.
He also said that high prices of
the boro paddy might also be a reason for the increase in the rice prices.
The prices have gone up by Tk 3–5
a kilogram in last 10 days on the city market.
Retailers said that the prices of
all varieties of rice rose by Tk 100–200 per bag of 50 kg on the wholesale
market.
Wholesalers, in turn, said that
the prices were raised at the mill gate.
The prices of the coarse
varieties of the staple grain, consumed by the poor classes of people,
increased most — Tk 5 per kg — and the item was selling for Tk 40–48 a kg in
the city on Friday.
The standard variety of BR-28
rice was selling for Tk 48–50 a kg and the fine variety for Tk 50-54 a kg in
the capital on the day.
The fine variety of Miniket rice
was selling for Tk 56–65 a kg while Najirshail, another fine variety, was
retailing at Tk 60–65 a kg.
‘The rice price hike at this time
is completely unacceptable as the crop was harvested just a month ago in the
country,’ former president of Bangladesh Consumers Association Ghulam Rahman
told New Age on Thursday.
He viewed that it was an
organised manipulation and the government should identify the quarter involved
in the wrongdoing.
The food minister said that the
prices of rice increased a bit on the market as this year farmers received fair
prices for their produce.
‘Moreover, a quarter has remained
active in the market who are trying to manipulate the prices to make extra
money as the market monitoring is being hampered due to the COVID- 19
calamity,’ the minister said.
If necessary the government will
start a drive in the markets to keep the staple prices stable, he said.
Md Abul Khayer, the proprietor of
Sonar Tori Rice Agency at Mohammadpur Krishi Bazar in the capital, told New Age
that the prices of rice increased at the mills.
He said that the mill owners
increased the prices by Tk 50–100 in last 10 days.
Md. Mahmud Hasan Raju, advisor to
Bangladesh Auto Major and Husking Mill Owners Association, said that high paddy
prices were one of the reasons for the high prices of rice on the market.
He said that some government
decisions were also responsible for the price hike as a number of policies
created obstacles for hundreds of husking mill owners to continue their
business while a few businesses captured the rice market.
Mahmud Hasan is the owner of
National Rice Mills in Thakurgaon.
Agricultural practices in Thailand maximise rice
production and cultivation
June 26, 2020
©
Somkak Sarykunthot |
Open Access Government explores
Thailand’s Department of Agriculture, and how it is a centre of excellence
particularly regarding its research and development of rice cultivation
The Thailand Department of Agriculture (DOA) was established on October
1st 1972 and comprises of 15 pioneering units including the Office of the
Secretary, Finance Division, Personnel Division, Planning Division, Rice
Division, Field Crops Division, Horticulture Division, Sericulture Division,
Rubber Division, Agricultural Engineering Division, Plant Pathology Division,
Entomology and Zoology Division, and Agricultural Chemistry Division. A total
of 95 research centres, stations and plant quarantine stations have since been
established throughout the country, with offices and centres in 56 provinces.
It
is self-described as a “center of excellence in the field of crops research and
development and farm mechanisation, in harmony with international standards and
in adherence to the principles of natural resources conservation and
environment protection.” (1)
The
five current mandates of the DOA are as follows:
·
Conduct research and development
studies on various agricultural disciplines concerning crops and farm
mechanisation.
·
Provide services on the analysis,
inspection, quality certification and advice on soil, water, fertiliser, crops,
agricultural inputs production and products.
·
Enforcement of the six Regulatory
Acts under the Department’s jurisdiction; including the Quarantine Act B.E.
2551 (2008), and Plant Variety Protection Act B.E. 2542 (2009).
·
Transfer of agricultural
technology to concerned government officials, farmers, and the private sector.
·
Implementation of urgent programs
assigned to the Department of Agriculture by the Ministry of Agriculture.
The Rice Division
The
Department of Agriculture itself was originally formed by merging the former
Department of Agriculture and the Rice Department, to facilitate coordination
of departments and streamline mandate implementation. However, in 2006, the
former Rice Research Institute was re-established and upgraded as Rice
Department and was no longer under the Department of Agriculture.
This
new department is the main organisation in charge of improving rice production
in Thailand, including yield and quality, genetic conservation and protection
of rice varieties, seed production and distribution, as well as the promotion
of cultural and local wisdom related to rice, among others.
Thailand
has approximately 10 million hectares of rice plantations and had 3.7 million
farmer households. More than 30 million tonnes of paddy from wet season and dry
season can be produced annually. The Rice Department is aware of the importance
of high-quality seed, acceptable for both farmers and those associated with
farming. Therefore, the Department has produced and distributed this good-quality
seed for farmers by implementing the following; the development and improvement
of the Community Rice Centre, the Seed Bank Project, Seed Producing Villages,
building networks of seed producers and distributors and encouraging them to
maintain the same standards set under the Plant Variety Act, so that there are
sufficient high-quality seeds for the annual seed demand of farmers.
The
Rice Departments overarching vision is “to be a leader in rice research
and development, to
enhance productivity, to provide farmers with excellent services, and to
sustainably empower farmers” (2) and they do this through their four core
values:
·
Responsibility.
·
Integrity.
·
Credibility.
·
Excellence.
Each
of these core values provides direction for future action in rice cultivation
to achieve their vision. Among future plans, the DOA aims to enhance research
and development on rice varieties and production technologies, breed high-yield
rice varieties, aiming at 9.4 tons/hectare for photo insensitive varieties,
promote modern technology and intensive rice production, and set up a system to
link up producers, traders and consumers.
Finally,
to continue empowering farmers in the future – one focus area taken very
seriously – the Rice Department is building up local technology transfer
centres and networks for rice production, promoting the development of local
farmers’ centres, promoting production risk insurance, and researching the
economic and social aspects of farmers’ needs to set up models for technology
transfer.
https://www.openaccessgovernment.org/agricultural-practices-in-thailand-maximise-rice-production-and-cultivation/89275/
PITC cancels G2G rice importation
Philippine
International Trading Corp. cancelled the planned government-to-government
importation of 300,000 metric tons of rice which are supposed to arrive in the
lean months of July and August.
PITC’s
decision will enable the private sector to proceed with rice imports under the
Rice Tariffication Law that liberalized the rice trade sector.
“Under
the Rice Tariffication Law, PITC is the agency tasked to merely implement any
directive from the Agriculture Department to import rice under a G2G
arrangement. The provisions of the RTL basically open up rice importation to
any private group,” said Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez. PITC is an attached
agency of the Department of Trade and Industry.
Lopez
said the initial decision for the proposed G2G importation by PITC was due to
the apparent insufficient local inventory in the rainy season. It also
reflected the government’s reaction to Vietnam’s announcement to stop rice
exports in April.
“It
will be recalled that the initial decision for the G2G importation plan was a
result of the potential threat to maintaining a good buffer supply of rice for
the country. Earlier computations from DA showed a threat to the targeted level
of buffer stock following the imposed ban of rice exportation of Vietnam in
April,” Lopez said.
Vietnam
is the top supplier of rice, accounting for over 90 percent of Philippines rice
imports. The Philippines imports around 7 percent to 14 percent of its total
rice requirement.
President
Rodrigo Duterte earlier asked the Vietnamese government through Prime Minister
Nguyen Xuan Phuc to lift its rice export ban. Vietnam then made a commitment
that it would contribute to securing a stable supply of food for the
Philippines.
“With
the lifting of the rice export ban of Vietnam, we can expect more comfortable
buffer stock levels moving forward,” Lopez said.
Agriculture
Secretary William Dar said with the rice imports handled by the private sector
traders as stipulated by the RTL, their purchase of rice imports will mean
generating greater tariff revenues for the government.
Under
the RTL, tariff revenues from rice imports will be used to fund the Rice
Competitiveness Enhancement Fund which is designed to boost productivity and
income of rice farmers.
Gov’t plan to import 300,000 MT of rice abandoned
June 26, 2020 | 9:26 pm
THE Philippine International
Trading Center (PITC), an arm of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI),
has abandoned plans to import 300,000 metric tons of rice via
government-to-government (G2G) deals, following talks with the Department of
Agriculture (DA).
The import plan was budgeted for
P7.45 billion and was intended to boost supply during the lean months of July
and August.
In a statement Friday, Trade
Secretary Ramon M. Lopez said that under Republic Act No. 11203 or the Rice Tariffication
Law (RTL), the PITC is tasked with carrying out any directive from the DA to
import rice on a G2G basis.
Mr. Lopez said the government’s
initial decision to import rice came after a negative assessment of available
supply after Vietnam banned rice imports.
“Earlier computations from the DA
showed a threat to the targeted level of buffer stock following the Vietnam ban
on rice exports in April,” Mr. Lopez said.
However, Vietnam Prime Minister
Nguyen Xuan Phuc lifted the ban and made a commitment to assist the Philippines
in securing its supply at the request of President Rodrigo R. Duterte.
Imports account for 7% to 14% of
the Philippines’ total rice requirement, with Vietnam supplying over 90% of
Philippine imports
“With the lifting of the rice export
ban of Vietnam, we can expect more comfortable buffer stock levels moving
forward,” Mr. Lopez said. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave
Philippines is canceling gov’t-to-gov’t import of 300,000 MT rice from Vietnam -DTI chief
Published June 26, 2020 8:01pm
By TED CORDERO, GMA News
The Philippines is no longer proceeding
with the planned government-to-government (G2G) importation of 300,000 metric
ton (MT) of rice from Vietnam after the Southeast Asian country lifted its ban
on rice exportation.
The move was announced by Trade
Secretary Ramon Lopez on Friday, citing official communication from Agriculture
Secretary William Dar.
Following the notice from Dar,
Lopez said the Department of Trade and Industry-attached agency Philippine
International Trading Center (PITC) abandoned the rice importation plan, which
was initially targeted to arrive during the lean months of July and
August.
The PITC is the agency tasked to
implement any directive from the Department of Agriculture to import rice under
a G2G arrangement, pursuant to the Rice Tariffication Law.
“The provisions of the RTL
basically opens up rice importation to any private group,” Lopez said.
“It will be recalled that the initial decision
for the G2G importation plan was a result of the potential threat to
maintaining a good buffer supply of rice for the country. Earlier computations
from DA showed a threat to the targeted level of buffer stock following the
imposed ban of rice exportation of Vietnam in April,” the Trade chief said.
Vietnam serves as a major import
source of the Philippines, accounting for over 90% of our country’s rice
imports.
The Philippines imports around 7%
to 14% of its total rice requirement.
Vietnam has initially banned
exporting rice to ensure food security amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Lopez said that upon intervention
of President Rodrigo Duterte, the Vietnamese government, through Prime Minister
Nguyen Xuan Phuc, agreed to lift its rice export ban policy making a commitment
to that “Vietnam will contribute to securing a stable supply of food in the
country.”
"With the lifting of the
rice export ban of Vietnam, we can expect more comfortable buffer stock levels
moving forward," the Trade chief said.
For his part, Dar said that with
the rice imports handled by the private sector traders as stipulated by the Ric
Tariffication Law, their purchase of rice imports will mean generating greater
tariff revenues for the government which will be used to fund the Rice
Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF).
“RCEF is meant to boost
productivity and income of the country’s rice farmers,” the Agriculture chief
said. -MDM,
GMA News
Papua New Guinea Defence Force members of Comrade Trustee Services Limited are the second largest shareholders of Paradise Foods Limited.
The PNGDF own nine per cent of the shares.
Paradise Foods Limited chief executive officer James Rice said members of the defence force are the second largest shareholders and getting a chance to meet them and sharing the business successes is a unique opportunity for both parties.
Mr Rice was at the trustee fund’s conference with its members in Lae yesterday for an opportunity to talk to their shareholders, which is proving to be successful.
“We are making this for our shareholders and this is a chance to come out and tell them about the business, our products and what we are doing.
When they reach for these products they are not only supporting jobs in PNG but also supporting their retirement funds,” said Mr Rice
He said it was a unique opportunity to share the business success stories with the shareholders and tell them about the products.
CTSL statutory manager Sitiveni Weleilakeba said it was also a privilege for the fund and its members to be supported by the investor.
The meeting was the largest conducted this year with 200 members from Igam Barracks, the biggest unit holder in the fund.
CTSL chief executive officer Charlie Gilichibi said it was a first conference with its members in Lae to inform them of the fund progress over the years.
The conference provided the members the avenue to have their quires answered and issues taken on board by the team on the ground.
Paradise Foods also distributed some of its products during the conference and bags of goodies were also distributed to the defence at Igam Barracks.