Arsenic and old rice, keeping the pair
apart
Rice is the most widely consumed staple food, accounting for 20
percent of the world’s dietary energy supply.So recent studies that purport to
show high levels of the known human carcinogen arsenic in both domestic and
international crops – as well as foods that contain rice – have raised health
concerns and even some warnings to avoid the grain altogether.Whether the
levels of arsenic found in rice poses an actual health risk to U.S. consumers
remains the subject of intense debate among scientists, regulators and the food
industry.
But
a team of University of Delaware researchers say they have isolated a strain of
bacteria that could someday render that argument moot.“Our work is still in the
early stages, but what we’ve already seen this bug do is very exciting and very
promising,” said Harsh Bais, an associate professor of plant and soil science
at UD’s Delaware Biotechnology Institute. “The best part is that this is a
microbe that is already present in rice paddy fields, so we know it is safe.”Bais
and five other university scientists published a research paper last week that
shows the bacteria they call EA106 is capable of reducing arsenic uptake in two
species of rice plants by 80 to 90 percent.The bacteria is able to accomplish
the task by forming what is essentially an iron shield around the roots of the
plants, which effectively holds arsenic at bay.“Arsenic has very unique
chemistry and it competes with iron all the time,” Bais said.
“The
bacteria that we isolated actually moves iron through the soil, so by getting
high concentrations to colonize around the roots, it creates an iron plaque
that creates a physical impediment that blocks the arsenic from reaching the
plants.”The research team isolated the bacteria from soil samples taken from
rice fields in California. The group was then able to use a large drum to coat
rice seeds with the microbe before growing the plants in a controlled
environment.“It’s not a very high-tech process,” Bais said. “But that’s a good
thing because it means this could be a very low-cost method that can be
replicated by rice farmers around the world.”An international agriculture
company already has an option to license the bacteria and develop it on a
commercial scale, Bais said.But before that can happen, the team of researchers
must complete additional studies to show the bacteria will be universally
effective.
“So
far, what we’ve been able to show is a reduction of arsenic in the shoots,
which is important because that straw is used as livestock feed, which can be
another source for arsenic to get into the food chain,” Bais said. “Now, we
need to prove this method will keep arsenic out of the actual grain and that it
can be used across a wide variety of rice species.”Arsenic is a colorless,
odorless and tasteless element that is naturally present in soil and
groundwater, as well as pesticides, animal feed additives and other products.
High
levels of arsenic contamination in groundwater is an acute issue in South
America and Southeast Asia, which produces most of the world’s rice – a crop
that requires large amounts of water and also absorbs arsenic more readily than
other grains.Short-term exposure to high doses can cause nausea, vomiting and
diarrhea, while long-term exposure can result in higher risk of cancer, liver
and kidney damage and other health issues, according to the American Cancer
Society.A 2012 report released by Consumer Reports found “worrisome” levels of
arsenic in rice sold in the United States. Higher levels were detected in brown
rice, but white rice produced in Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Texas –
which account for three-quarters of domestic production – showed higher
concentrations than similar products grown elsewhere, according to the report.Arsenic
also was found in products made with rice, including cereal, pasta and baby
foods.
The
USA Rice Federation, which represents producers, millers and allied businesses,
insists there is no evidence of any health risks related to rice.“There are no
scientific studies that have linked U.S. rice consumption to adverse health
effects, nor have arsenic-related health effects been reported among
populations with high rice consumption,” the organization’s website states.After
analyzing 1,300 samples of rice and rice products, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration reported that arsenic levels “were too low to cause any
immediate or short-term adverse health effects.
”The
agency recommends eating a variety of grains. It has not set a maximum level of
arsenic for rice and foods that contain the grain.“There is a lot of
scaremongering out there and outcry over what people know and what they don’t
know,” Bais said. “One thing is certain, and that is arsenic is a toxic
element. The goal of our research is to find a cost-effective way to eliminate
it from rice altogether.”
Contact Scott Goss at (302)
324-2281, sgoss@delawareonline.com or on Twitter @ScottGossDel.
http://www.delawareonline.com/story/money/business/2015/06/14/arenic-old-rice-keeping-pair-apart/71222228/
PHL reissues tender for 100,000-MT rice
imports
THE NATIONAL Food Authority (NFA) said yesterday it has reissued
a tender to import an additional 100,000 metric tons (MT) of rice as it seeks
to boost its buffer stock ahead of the lean harvest season in the country
beginning July.
The
tender is again open only to the governments of Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia,
with sealed bids to be opened on June 16, the NFA said in a statement.It comes
after June 5 bidding that saw the NFA agreeing to buy 150,000 MT of rice, with
Vietnam winning the deal against Thailand. Cambodia did not submit a bid. The
NFA had planned to import as much as 250,000 MT of 25% broken white rice via
the June 5 tender, but the initial price offers were higher than its budget.
Vietnam had agreed to revise its bid but for only 150,000 MT while Thailand had
backed out in the second round of bidding.Vietnam, the Philippines’ traditional
main supplier, last week cut its export price floor for 25% broken rice by 2.9%
to $340/MT amid a lack of fresh buying demand.Dry weather brought by the
current El Niño weather episode has prompted the Philippines, one of the
world’s top rice importers, to further cut its estimated output of the staple
grain in the second quarter. The NFA already has government approval to buy
another 250,000 MT later this year if drought brought on by El Niño hurts its
harvest. -- Reuters
http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=TopStory&title=phl-reissues-tender-for-100000-mt-rice-imports&id=109660
Pangasinan traders sell
rice at a loss
Philippine Daily Inquirer
06:42 AM June
15th, 2015
ROSALES, Pangasinan—Rice traders
and millers from eastern Pangasinan are selling their stocks at a loss just to
dispose of their warehouse supplies.The market supply had been stable but rice
prices had plunged way below the amount traders spent to buy their stocks,
according to Ramon Cuaresma, National Food Authority (NFA) manager for eastern
Pangasinan.“They really have a problem,” Cuaresma said, because most traders
and millers bought palay at P22 to P23.50 a kilo during the peak of harvest
from September to December last year.But prices plummeted to P18 to P19 per
kilo in January.
“Even NFA is not meeting its distribution targets as the consumers
prefer the commercial rice over NFA rice, although the quality is almost the
same,” he said.He cited a rice mill owner from San Jacinto town, who has
200,000 bags of palay in his warehouse. “He is slowly selling even at losing
prices just so he could turn the palay into cash,” he said.Another miller from
Tayug town has more than 100,000 bags of palay.Roger Tan, a rice mill owner
from Rosales town, said there are more than 10 big millers and 30 small millers
in eastern Pangasinan.Big traders have warehouses that can store up to 1,000
bags while small traders have facilities that house up to 500 bags.
“We have 15,000 bags of palay which I bought at P22 to P23.50 a
kilo. These now cost P19 a kilo. We are losing P3 to P4 each kilo,” Tan said.“We
should be selling milled rice at P2,000 per 50-kilo bag. But with the drop of
prices, [sales are] down to P1,500 to P1,600 per bag,” he said.He said some
traders decided to wait a little longer for a slight increase in prices before
they dispose of their stocks. “It’s up to fate. We just hope to recoup our
capital,” he said.But traders have another problem: Stocked palay has turned
into “laon” (old grains). Fresh grains can last until six months.Laon are grain
stocks that are eight months old and would require more water when cooked. But
consumers shun laon rice and prefer the newly harvested kind, so the prices drop
further, Tan said.
Traders are also wary about the arrival of imported rice next
month.Cuaresma said shipments of NFA rice from Vietnam are scheduled to arrive
on July 15, part of the 150,000 metric tons of rice from Vietnam and the
250,000 metric tons to be imported by NFA this year.Cuaresma said he had not
been informed as to how much volume would be allocated to Pangasinan, which has
NFA offices in Binalonan town (with a stock of 140,000 bags as of June 11) and
in Lingayen town (200,000 bags).Because of the low market costs, however,
private importers have adopted a wait-and-see attitude, Cuaresma said.“Perhaps
if they won’t lose, they would import. Otherwise, if the prices are higher
abroad than the local prices and there is sufficient supply, they wouldn’t
import,” he said.–Yolanda Sotelo, Inquirer Northern Luzon
Low price for summer paddy
makes Pilibhit farmers fume
PILIBHIT: Farmers who have suffered crop damage
caused by untimely rain and hailstorm in March are now facing a slump in the
summer paddy market. Unprecedented low prices of summer paddy this year has
come as a blow to farmers who are cannot recover even cost of production. While
farmers are terming this as an outcome of monopolistic trade practices, paddy
traders claim it is a fallout of curbs imposed on export of rice to Gulf
countries. On their part, rice millers say they cannot store summer paddy for long
due to its low sustainability. Subodh
Chandra Barul from Kanja Harraiya village, Dharmendra Singh of Pachpeda
village, Indarjeet Singh, a resident of village Jara Koti and Prem Pal Singh
Gangwar, belonging to Bilsanda, are among those farmers who had sowed summer
paddy this year.
They said harvesting of summer paddy was in progress. However,
they said summer paddy was selling at as low as Rs 750 to Rs 800 a quintal at
Krashi Utpadan Mandi Samiti, which is Rs 450 to Rs 500 less than its usual
selling price.. They alleged that
because the administration was not reviewing the marketing trends of summer
paddy, the paddy traders were calling the shots. They said the administrative
and marketing officials outright declined to monitor the monopolistic trade practices
of paddy traders, stating that the summer paddy was not recommended for the
Tarai region.
The farmers said because this crop was not a part of
government's procurement system, they were being openly harassed by traders. When asked about the reason of low
market price of summer paddy this year, former president of Grain Traders'
Association Vijay Pal Singh said the present union government had restricted
export of rice to Gulf countries. Due to this barrier, the rice stock which had
been processed out of normal paddy crop, which is grown in July and is
harvested in October, was available in abundance in the market.
As the market price fluctuates in accordance with the gap in
supply and demand, the already available stock of rice did not leave any room
for summer paddy prices to go up, he added. Ashwini
Agrawal, a rice miller, told TOI that the rate of summer paddy was bound to
remain low due to its increased moisture percentage. He said this crop was not
sustainable if stored for a long period in expectation of price hike. Rice
processed from summer paddy was susceptible to discolouring if stored for more
than two months.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bareilly/Low-price-for-summer-paddy-makes-Pilibhit-farmers-fume/articleshow/47667607.cms
RDA seeks rice board’s
revival
June 15, 2015
HAFIZABAD
The Rice Dealers Association (RDA) has called upon the Federal government to revive Rice Board to steer out rice trade from crisis and earn precious foreign exchange for the country.
Addressing a press conference, Rice Dealers Association (RDA) Punjab president Haji Sheikh Muhammad Ishaq said that superior-quality rice of Pakistan used to export and earn billion of rupees as foreign exchange every year in the past. But due to abolition of Rice Board and unrealistic policies, the rice stock of last two years has been rotting in warehouses owing to which rice rates in the current season has plummet to the prices of paddy. This scenario has caused multiple problems for all the stakeholders and inflicted huge financial losses on cultivators, rice dealers, millers and exporters alike, he regretted.
He urged the government to ensure
export of coarse rice to China and Super Basmati to Iran. He further said that rice
millers were unable to even pay mark-up to banks. He called upon the government
to take appropriate steps for the export of rice to save
dealers/millers/exporters from further losses. He also demanded prompt support
prices for different verities of paddy so as to provide incentives to the paddy
growers. CITIZENS OPPOSE
BAZAAR: The TMA and District Administration have decided to arrange Ramazan
Bazaar in front of TMA Office near Fawara Chowk. Scores of local, political,
social and commercial organisations have disapproved the decision to arrange
Ramazan Bazaar in one of the busiest roads near Fawara Chowk and have called
upon the authorities to review its decision for smooth flow of traffic on this
busiest road. They
suggested to arrange the Ramazan Bazar in old Sabzi Mandi which were lying
deserted and is a safe place for the proposed bazaar.
http://nation.com.pk/national/15-Jun-2015/rda-seeks-rice-board-s-revival
Healthy
meals in a hurry: We put three food delivery services to the test (+graphic)
1:00 PM
Saturday Jun 13, 2015
Call it the television celebrity chef effect or the steady rise
of online food shopping - or maybe both. Whatever the reason, cook-at-home food
delivery services are booming as time-poor Kiwis try to save themselves a trip
to the supermarket or time planning what to cook for dinner each night.The
market has jumped from almost nothing a few years ago to 70,000 households who
last month ordered gourmet meals, recipes and ingredients for home delivery,
according to Nielsen's Consumer Media Index Survey. That's about 4 per cent of
all households, and the figure is expected to grow.But are the meals easy to
cook, good to eat and affordable for the average shopper on a budget?
The Herald trialled three services from Farro Foodkits, My Food
Bag and FoodBox - asking a family of four to judge meals based on
affordability, time, easiness and flavour - before talking to experts about why
the services are on the increase, and whether they're a healthy option for busy
families.
The first, Farro Foodkits, is a spin-off of its parent company,
upmarket supermarket Farro Fresh. Ingredients to cook individual meals - like
"northern Chinese roasted spiced lamb with coriander tomato salsa, pita
bread and greens" - are ordered online and delivered on the customer's day
of choice.My Food Bag enables the consumers to order four or five days' worth
of food. Ingredients are delivered weekly with recipes to cook dinner meals,
like "pan-fried fish with pea and lemon risotto".Both businesses
launched in the last two years, and are affiliated with celebrity chefs. My
Food Bag - which has grown to more than 18,000 subscribers in two years and is
worth an estimated $15 million (the other two would not give out customer
numbers) - is fronted by former MasterChef winner and nutritionist Nadia Lim.
Farro Foodkits provides new recipes designed by MasterChef judge Ray McVinnie,
who now works as a food consultant for the Herald's Bite magazine.
Another, slightly different service - Foodbox.co.nz - was
established in 2009. The company allows users to order boxes of food like fruit
and vegetables, meats and other goods, online, and tailor them to their tastes.
Meals are not set and still need to be planned, but Foodbox allows consumers to
avoid much of their grocery shopping.Professor of nutrition at the AUT
University Elaine Rush, said all of the options were fairly well priced,
healthy, and took a lot of the thinking out of preparing meals."If you can
afford it, and it means you have more time to spend with your family, then do
it. If you're stuck in traffic and you get home and you've got a healthy meal
organised, what a stress relief," she said.
It was also positive that the meals taught people to cook.
"These meals are certainly creative recipes that are taking people out of
their comfort zones. And unlike takeaways, you know what's in them."Though
the Farro Food Kits and My Food Bag services trialled only provided dinner
meals, she said they could be stretched - and sometimes leftovers could be
eaten for lunch the following day.The downside, said Rush, was that home food
services like these were not affordable for many Kiwi families.She said at the
other end of the scale, organisations like Pacific Heartbeat helped families
buy groceries to feed a family of six with three meals a day for $25 a day -
something they were finding more difficult every time, because of rising costs."It's
the reality of the amount of money that many families do have to spend on food.
"Home food delivery services can look expensive when
compared to regular meal budgets. Based on Otago University nutrition
department's annual food basket survey for last year, the weekly cost of
feeding the Weekend Herald's trial family - two
adult women, and two children - would be $191 for all meals in the
"basic" category (most commonly eaten fruits and vegetables; meat,
fish and poultry; and dairy and cereals).The cost rises to $254 in the
"moderate" category (a variety of meats, fish, fruits and vegetables
and some convenience foods) and $305 in the "liberal" category
(convenience and imported foods, out of season fruits and vegetables, higher
priced cuts of meat and some specialty foods).In comparison, for five dinner
meals only, Farro Food Kits cost $262 and My Food Bag $162.50.
Foodbox was $146 for a week's supply of meat, fruit and
vegetables (though our trial family felt they should have bought more fruit and
vegetables).The family were able to eat left-overs from some of the meals for
lunch the next day and snacked on fruit from the Foodbox during the day.New
Zealand is following a trend well established in other countries, where
cook-at-home food delivery services have become almost commonplace in recent
years. Company Hello Fresh, which launched in Britain in 2012, is now available
in Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Australia and the United States.
Hello Fresh's founder, English lawyer-turned-cook Patrick Drake,
told The Guardian the rise of the celebrity chef had opened up the opportunity
for companies like his.Dr Vicki Little, who began her career in advertising and
corporate marketing but now teaches marketing at the University of Auckland,
said the companies took on the "running around and thinking" part of
organising a meal, and seemed to have done well for that reason.Having recently
returned to New Zealand after four years in Asia, she said she was astonished
by how much Kiwis had embraced cook-at-home food delivery services that were
ordered online.
"When I left New Zealand it was just online shopping and a
desultory nod to convenience through the likes of [Grey Lynn delicatessen]
Ripe, however now it seems we feel we're up against it time-wise, and must produce
gourmet quality meals from our designer kitchens."She said for that
reason, the companies seemed to have done well.She said different services
would appeal to different people depending on their food skills, propensity to
cook and the size of the meals and, most mportantly, their cost. "Social
equity has worsened big time in the past four years. Putting it bluntly, at one
end we have people having posh food delivered to their door, and at the other
end we have hungry, malnourished children. It's just not right."My Food
Bag's chief executive, Cecilia Robinson, said the popularity of these services
was due to a number of factors.
"Consumers are time-poor, but conscious about wanting to
feed themselves and their families a healthy and delicious diet. In conjunction
with this, the online food segment is only in its infancy and therefore growth
in the category is natural."Farro Fresh spokeswoman Bridget Munn said the
services reflected a "360-degree turn" to a focus on "caring
about what we put into our bodies and wanting our families to eat really great
quality, healthy meals free of nasty and hidden ingredients".
Foodbox's Peter Smith said the increase in his business'
patronage since it started in 2009 was partly to do with a changing attitude to
shopping online. When the the business was established, online payment
platforms were new to New Zealand, and iPads didn't exist. "The idea of
buying something online was a bit scary back then - but we've seen a
fundamental shift in people's behaviour."He said customers also liked the
convenience of having fresh food and other groceries delivered to their doors,
and they liked the surprise of getting different things each week. "If you
go into the supermarket you tend to buy the same things over and over."
Family puts food kits to the test
The Morunga-Edwards family live at their home in Mt Wellington.
Hannah Edwards, 41, works as a librarian in Otahuhu and Petrina Morunga, 40, is
a full-time mother. They have two boys - Paul, 7, who goes to Sylvia Park School
and John, 3, who goes to Te Arapeta Kohanga Reo in Panmure. Petrina cooks
dinner and the family have a healthy and varied diet - making meals from
scratch and avoiding processed foods.Although they've always eaten a lot of
fruit and vegetables, many which are grown in their garden, they started eating
even more when Petrina was diagnosed with breast cancer in September 2013.Hannah
said the family typically spent $200 to $300 a week on groceries - most of
which was food. She also often did an extra shop at the weekend.
The Weekend Herald organised for the Morunga-Edwards
family to test out three cook-at-home food delivery services over three weeks,
during which time Petrina kept a diary, noting how they rated by taste, portion
size, time to cook and easiness. The family also noted whether they'd use the
service again, and whether it was affordable for them.
Rice
exporters urge SBP to extend EFS performance period
June
12, 2015
RECORDER REPORT
Rice exporters have urged the State
Bank of Pakistan for extension in Export Finance Scheme (EFS) performance
period as Pakistani basmati rice exports have experienced a sharp decline of 20
percent in fiscal year 2014-2015 in term of value compared to last year. Jawed Ali Ghori, former chairman Rice
Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP) said that cheaper varieties from India
have flooded the traditional Middle Eastern export markets of Pakistan creating
a crisis like situation in the Basmati rice industry of Pakistan.
As a result Pakistani exporters who
are already in trouble are going to face severe penalties from SBP for not
meeting the export performance criteria of EFS Part II by the deadline of June
30, 2015. reviously, during the
crisis, the SBP has relaxed the export performance criteria for textile
exporters in certain years in order to facilitate the exporters. Rice exporters
are also asking similar relief measure from the SBP for their industry, he
added. e said the SBP has been
very proactive in supporting exporters by reducing the rate on the EFS
borrowing throughout the year, and added that however, "any relief that we
got from these measures will surely be removed by the penalty of the SBP for
not exporting double value of the amount of borrowing". Rice exporters
have urged the SBP to extend the shipment performance period by 90 days till
September 30, 2015, Ghori said.
Newton Fund UK-China-Philippines-Thailand-Vietnam call for
collaborative research proposals in rice research
12:10 AM June 13th, 2015
Pangasinan traders sell rice at a loss
Mindanao community projects hurdle obstacles
Bohol village tagged ‘Watermelon Country’
Aquino: 1 of 3 Iloilo dams to be finished by 2016
Laoag welcomes Chinese tourists
“TINAWON,” a variety of Ifugao
indigenous rice is planted only once a year at paddies in Nagacadan rice
terraces of Barangay Nagacadan in Ifugao’s Kiangan town. EV ESPIRITU/INQUIRER
NORTHERN LUZON
BAGUIO
CITY—Researchers developing a rice gene bank for the country have found 30 more
varieties of highland grains, three of which are nearly extinct and would need
to be preserved immediately.Over 300 indigenous rice varieties have been
genetically examined, documented and preserved by a team deployed by the
Department of Agriculture (DA), the Philippine Rice Research Institute and the
International Rice Research Institute, said Cameron Odsey, DA Cordillera
assistant director for research, during a June 11 news conference.Of the 30
highland varieties that have not been previously documented and collected, 16
are common to Mt. Province, Odsey said.
‘Nearly extinct’
He
said three of these varieties are extremely rare and classified as “nearly
extinct.” This meant that researchers would need to preserve as much genetic
material of the “near extinct” rice so it could be reproduced in the future, he
said.He did not identify these upland rice varieties pending the completion of
the gene bank project. But he said the sustenance and preservation of these
varieties have become a government priority.Rice consumers abroad have put a
high premium on organic grains grown only in upland farms. Heirloom rice
varieties like the Kalinga “unoy” and Ifugao “tinawon” grown on rice terraces
are considered too exotic and expensive, Odsey said.Vincent Cabreza, Inquirer
Northern Luzon
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/698096/30-more-highland-rice-types-found
USA Rice Attends Field to Market
Plenary Session
Jeff Durand
From Durand's field to your market
WASHINGTON,
DC-- Field to Market held its latest Plenary Session here this week with USA
Rice and Ducks Unlimited serving as co-sponsors. During the meeting, the future
of the organization was discussed. Specifically, attendees examined the proposed
business model that will move the organization forward with a modest financial
and staff growth while expanding its influence in the area of sustainability. The
Plenary kicked off with growers sharing ideas from each of their respective
commodities on innovative conservation and sustainability practices.Louisiana
rice grower Jeff Durand spoke on behalf of the rice industry and gave advice on
how to successfully integrate conservation practices on the farm. Durand also
shared his experiences with conservation efforts used in his operation
including the unique relationship between rice fields and migratory birds.
"We have
to make sure practices being put forward are well researched and can turn a
profit," he said.Field to Market is also moving forward with a
rice-specific Fieldprint Calculator and a greenhouse gas metric for rice field
outputs. USA Rice is a voting member of
Field to Market and has several rice industry experts participating on many of
the organization's workgroups. USA Rice plans to continue to be actively
engaged with Field to Market as it's rice-specific metrics come to fruition.
Contact: Steve Hensley (703) 236-144
CME Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures
CME Group (Prelim):
Closing Rough Rice Futures for June 12
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