2017/19 Leadership Development
Program Class Announced
MEMPHIS, TN -- Members of the
2017/19 Rice Leadership Development Program class were announced last week
during the annual Rice Awards Luncheon at the 2016 USA Rice Outlook
Conference. The class is comprised of five rice producers and two
industry-related professionals selected by a committee of agribusiness
leaders.
"The rice industry enjoys
strong leadership, and the Rice Leadership Development Program continues to
select and develop young leaders to keep that tradition going strong. This
program plays a critical role thanks to the intensive training and the high
caliber participants," said Rice Foundation Chairman Charley Mathews.
Mathews went on to thank everyone who applied to the program and encouraged
those not selected this time to apply again to the program next year.
In addition to numerous alumni serving on various local, state and national
boards and committees, the USA Rice Federation, USA Rice Farmers, USA Rice
Council and The Rice Foundation are chaired by Rice Leadership Program
alumni.
The new rice-producer class
members are Scott Franklin, Monroe, LA; Kim Gallagher, Davis, CA; Alan
Lawson, Crowley, LA; David Martin, Bernie, MO; and Ross Thibodeaux, Midland,
LA. The new industry-related class members are Brian Greathouse, Sutter, CA
with Bunge Milling, Inc., and Dr. Jarrod Hardke, Hazen, AR with University of
Arkansas Extension Service.
The Rice Leadership Development
Program gives young men and women a comprehensive understanding of the U.S.
rice industry, with an emphasis on personal development and communication
training. During a two-year period, class members attend four one-week
sessions that are designed to strengthen their leadership skills.
You can follow this and other
Rice Leadership Classes on Twitter by looking for, and using, #RiceLeads.
John Deere Company, RiceTec,
Inc., and American Commodity Company are sponsors of the Rice Leadership
Development Program through a grant to The Rice Foundation, and USA Rice
manages the program.
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National Indicators Report:
U.S. Rice Bolsters Sustainability Claims
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Last week,
Field to Market published their highly anticipated 2016 National Indicators
Report outlining improvements made to on-farm sustainability metrics made
from 1980 through this year.
The Report evaluates ten crops using eight environmental
indicators: biodiversity, energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, irrigation
water use, land use, soil carbon, soil conservation, and water quality. Rice
has been one of the original crops analyzed since the Report was first
published ten years ago and has seen vast improvements over the 35-year
period of the study.
During the last ten years of the study, the largest
accomplishment has been increased soil conservation with substantially less
soil erosion taking place on rice farming operations.
The Report states, "On a per-acre basis, rice consistently
demonstrates the lowest per-acre soil erosion of all six crops
examined." The claim is backed by the highly adopted use of flood
irrigation and land-leveling practices employed by the industry. Energy
reduction and greenhouse gas emissions seen on rice farms are also credited
to productivity gains by the industry according to the Report.
Jennifer James, Arkansas rice
farmer, chairwoman of the USA Rice Sustainability Committee, and USA Rice
Board Member for Field to Market shared her thoughts on the Report.
"While the scores for rice within the various metrics has fluctuated
over the years, we have not stopped improving overall from where we were in
1980. We can't look at a snapshot of our records to determine where we are
for the long-haul, it's important to look at the big picture to see just how
far we've come," she said.
James added, "This Report is
great for us to show to our buyers and export markets but it's nothing we
didn't already know. U.S. rice farmers are sustainable and we know that, this
is just another tool in our toolbox to help us tell our story and prove our
point."
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Illegal Food Import in Border Areas Reaches 2,500 Tons
FRIDAY, 16 DECEMBER, 2016 | 17:24 WIB
TEMPO.CO, Jakarta -The Agriculture Ministry's
Quarantine Agency recorded that the volume of illegally imported food in border
areas reached approximately 2.5 million kilograms or 2,500 tons in 2016.The
agency's chief, Banun Harpini, said that food items that were imported
illegally include 1.66 million kilograms of shallots, 723,700 kilograms of
rice, 160,269 kilograms of beef, 3,100 kilograms duck meat, and other crops;
with an economic value of Rp96 billion. The agency also recorded 102
attempts of illegal shallot imports, 9 attempts of illegal rice imports, and 14
attempts for illegal beef imports."What needs attention is illegal import
of shallots, as the goods entered via a number of Sumatra's east coasts, such as
Tanjung Balai Asahan, Belawan, Medan, Tanjung Balai Karimun, and Banda
Aceh," Banun said in a press conference held at the Agriculture Ministry's
complex in Jakarta, Friday, December 16.
Plenty of the goods from these illegal import activities, he said,
entered Jakarta's markets as well through some 200 small ports that are not
thoroughly monitored by quarantine officers or the security forces.The
Quarantine Agency recorded that 5,068 times of their quarantine measures in
2016 were done in cooperation with the TNI, Polri, and customs institution.
This is an increase of 56.86 percent compared to 2015's 3,231 collaborations.From
the 5,068 quarantine acts, the agencies recorded 2,374 confiscations, 1,214
rejections, and 1,480 destructions.
Banun said that joint-supervisions are being improved in various
places along the east coast of Sumatra and border areas in Kalimantan, Papua,
and East Nusa Tenggara."This indicates that Indonesia is still a market,
and a place to smuggle agricultural products that don’t meet the terms and
conditions of our animals and plants quarantine system," Banun said
http://en.tempo.co/read/news/2016/12/16/056828406/Illegal-Food-Import-in-Border-Areas-Reaches-2500-Tons
Indonesia has opportunity to
export rice to Malaysia: Minister
Jumat, 16 Desember 2016 18:58 WIB
Jakarta (ANTARA News) -
Agriculture Minister Amran Sulaiman said the opportunity is open for Indonesia
to export rice to Malaysia especially regions closer to Malaysia such as
Central Kalimantan.
The minister, who was on a visit to Central Kalimantan on Friday said Malaysia imports around 1.2 million tons of rice every year.
"Indonesia should grab the market opportunity," he said when attending the symbolic planting of hybrid rice seeds over a 250 hectares of rice fields in the village of Terusan Karya, regency of Kapuas in the province.
Attending the symbolic planting of the hybrid rice seed variety include Central Kalimantan Governor Sugianto Sabra, lawmaker Hamdani of the Commission IV of the Haouse of Representatives, Kapuas Regent Ben Brahim, Special staff of the Army Chief of Staff Brig.Gen. M. Afifuddin, and chief of staff of the regional military command of Tanjung Pura, Brig.Gen.Ahmad Sukryadi.
The minister encouraged the local farmers to continue to contribute to the national food security program by increasing production of rice, corn and chili.
"We want Central Kalimantan self sufficient in food as the province has more than sufficient land for farming," he said.
Central Kalimantan is even expected to have surplus to be exported such as to Malaysia, he added.
The agriculture ministry allocate Rp380 billion for agricultural development in Central Kalimantan for 2016 , up from Rp200 billion in 2015.
Central Kalimantan Governor Sugianto Sabran said the province has a surplus of 196,500 tons of unmilled rice in 2016.
"We support the government program for food self sufficiency. With advanced farming we could control the world," he said.
Lawmaker Hamdani said the Commission IV of the House of Representatives supports the government decision to stop rice imports.(*
The minister, who was on a visit to Central Kalimantan on Friday said Malaysia imports around 1.2 million tons of rice every year.
"Indonesia should grab the market opportunity," he said when attending the symbolic planting of hybrid rice seeds over a 250 hectares of rice fields in the village of Terusan Karya, regency of Kapuas in the province.
Attending the symbolic planting of the hybrid rice seed variety include Central Kalimantan Governor Sugianto Sabra, lawmaker Hamdani of the Commission IV of the Haouse of Representatives, Kapuas Regent Ben Brahim, Special staff of the Army Chief of Staff Brig.Gen. M. Afifuddin, and chief of staff of the regional military command of Tanjung Pura, Brig.Gen.Ahmad Sukryadi.
The minister encouraged the local farmers to continue to contribute to the national food security program by increasing production of rice, corn and chili.
"We want Central Kalimantan self sufficient in food as the province has more than sufficient land for farming," he said.
Central Kalimantan is even expected to have surplus to be exported such as to Malaysia, he added.
The agriculture ministry allocate Rp380 billion for agricultural development in Central Kalimantan for 2016 , up from Rp200 billion in 2015.
Central Kalimantan Governor Sugianto Sabran said the province has a surplus of 196,500 tons of unmilled rice in 2016.
"We support the government program for food self sufficiency. With advanced farming we could control the world," he said.
Lawmaker Hamdani said the Commission IV of the House of Representatives supports the government decision to stop rice imports.(*
http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/108447/indonesia-has-opportunity-to-export-rice-to-malaysia-minister
Trade officials on the alert for
fake rice
“The Prices and Consumer Affairs
Division, our officers there have been asked to be on the lookout as they do
their daily inspections. My permanent secretary has been instructed to alert Customs of those developments and to start the conversation to ensure
that they, too, are on the lookout,” Greene said.Trade officers in the Ministry
of Trade were also briefed on the development, which is being widely reported
in the international press.
Reports are that the rice is produced with potatoes, sweet
potatoes and poisonous plastic.It is shaped like regular rice grains, but
remains hard after cooking and can cause serious health issues.The rice in
question is China’s Wuchang rice. The rice is very popular because the
real Wuchang rice is famous for its smell, and it costs more for its quality
(almost double the price), according to Blue Ocean Network (BON) TV
report, a popular English Channel in China
http://antiguaobserver.com/trade-officials-on-the-alert-for-fake-rice/
Sowing of winter
crops complete in 81% area so far
Sowing of wheat , the main winter
or rabi crop, 0.9% lower than the normal area of 25.8 million hectares; rice
sowing lagging by 33%
New Delhi: Sowing of winter crops is 81% complete and overall planting is
close to the normal acreage for this time of the year, shows data released by
the farm ministry on Friday. Sowing of rice has been affected due to a deficit
in the north-east monsoon in southern states, the data shows. Rice sowing is
lagging by 33% compared to the normal or five-year average area. Last week, the
difference was 20%. The area sown under rice is 29% less than in the previous
year.
So far, only 0.8 million hectares have been sown with rice, which
is just 18% of the normal area. In the southern states, even rainfall as a
consequence of cyclone Vardah has not made a big difference.The area sown under
coarse cereals is 4.9 million hectares, which is 3% lower than the normal area
of 5 million hectares. Barring rice and coarse cereals, all other crops show
normal sowing.
In the case of wheat, the main winter or rabi crop, so far around
25.6 million hectares has been sown. This is only 0.9% lower than the normal
area of 25.8 million hectares. A week ago, the gap was 2%.
Pulses like gram and lentils have been planted in 13.2 million
hectares, 9% more than the normal area and 13% higher than the area planted by
this time last year. The seasonal area under winter pulses is 14 million
hectares.
Overall, winter crops have been planted in 52 million hectares,
marginally higher than the five-year average area of 51.7 million hectares
planted by this time of the year.
Normally, rabi crops are planted in about 63.8 million hectares,
sowing for which begins in October and the harvest from March onwards.
The progress in planting of crops this year is nearly 6% more than
last year, when a crippling drought had delayed sowing.
Although there were fears of a cash crunch in rural areas
affecting the plantation of winter crops after demonetization, sowing has
picked up pace over the past few weeks.
http://www.livemint.com/Politics/KAa8izgdz6J6atG3YhpaoK/Wheat-sowing-up-7-rice-cereals-acreage-down.html
CPEC to make Pakistan pivot of regional
prosperity: expert
December 15, 2016
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank’s
presentation during 32nd annual general meeting of PIDE on Tuesday displayed
Azad Jammu & Kashmir as well as Gilgit Baltistan (GB) as part of India in
map. When a journalist raised this point during the PIDE conference, the
WB official said that there was no official map from the World Bank. Later on,
the Chief Economist Planning Commission Nadeem Javed made disclaimer and said
that Pakistan would launch formal protest with World Bank’s office here in
Islamabad for making this map as part of presentation for this
conference. The IMF’s Resident Chief in Pakistan Tokhir Mizroev said that
Pakistan would have to increase its exports by 15 percent every year till
2020-21 in order to pay back CPEC related obligations. He said that Pakistan
remained unable to boost regional trade as empirical evidence showed that Carec
countries were trading more with US and EU but their trade with themselves was
negligible. The main challenge for Pakistan will be increasing its exports
under CPEC initiative, he added.
Earlier, Vincent Palmade, Lead Economist, PFSG, African Region,
the World Bank, made a presentation on the World Bank’s book titled, “South
Asia’s Turn: Policies to Boost Competitiveness and Create the Next Export
Powerhouse”. Presenting the salient features of the book, Palmade said that it
discusses what the South Asian region needs to gain from competitiveness. He
said that South Asia has the potential to change and Pakistan can play a
pivotal role in boosting growth as it has a large market and have immense
potential. However, he said that the productivity of Pakistani firms is quite
low, especially of the SMEs.
The skill intensity of Pakistani exports is low and although the
ICT and tourism sectors are doing well, much more needs to be done. Similarly,
productivity of the Chinese firms is quite high as compared to that of the
Pakistani firms. At the same time, he stressed, there is a great
potential in Pakistan and the conditions are favourable. For example, Pakistan
has excellence in the production of Basmati rice but market regulations are
restrictive. Similarly, Pakistan’s sporting goods, surgical instruments, and
leather apparel industries have the potential but the business environment is
not conducive. He said that there are four policy levers that should be taken
into account. These are improvement in business environment, connecting global
value chain, leveraging agglomeration economies, and strengthening firm
capabilities. Palmade said that the services sector is expected to grow and
boost productivity. He said that the World Bank is also trying to help Pakistan
to boost trade and regional integration.
According to press statement issued by PIDE stating that the
presentation by Vincent Palmade of the World Bank showed an erroneous map of
Pakistan. It must be reiterated that the map, however, was not part of the
report that was submitted to the organisers by the World Bank. The map was
strongly repudiated by the Conference organisers, Pakistan Institute of
Development Economics, Pakistan Society of Development Economists, and the
Ministry of Planning, Development, and Reform.
Earlier, while delivering the Allama Iqbal lectureon “Role of
Productivity, Quality, and Innovations in Making CPEC Work for Pakistan”, Mark
Goh of the National University of Singapore, said that to make CPEC successful,
every province must have an industrial park for manufacturing and exporting
products. He reiterated the fact that politics must be left behind to focus on
the wellbeing of everyone. Discussing the role of connectivity, Prof Goh said
that connectivity is of two kinds, which are hard connectivity and soft connectivity.
Hard connectivity is infrastructure development, including roads, ports and ICT
structures, whereas soft connectivity is knowledge sharing and institution
building. He highlighted that CPEC aims to improve infrastructure as 46 billion
dollars have been dedicated to build 2,442 kilometer long road to link Kashgar
to Gwadar.
Prof. Goh stressed the need to keep five factors in
consideration while selecting the corridors. These factors are current traffic
volume of people and cargo; prospects of economic and traffic growth; capacity
to increase connectivity between countries and people; potential to mitigate
delays and other hindrances; and economic and financial sustainability. The
speaker stressed the need to create new processes that are time and cost effective
and for that Pakistan need to create business houses that can deal directly
with the already established Chinese business houses as this would reduce both
cost and time. Thus, there is a need to develop business-to-business trade
instead of business-to-consumer trade.
Another aim of CPEC is to transport oil and gas from the Persian
Gulf to Xinjiang. The emphasis is on infrastructure to reduce the cost incurred
by transportation. CPEC would ensure that there is no congestion from Shanghai
to Gwadar and the vehicles move at a minimum speed of 60
kilometer-per-hour.
This would mean completing the distance in 41 hours, which is a
reduction by 82 percent in the total time consumed. Prof Goh emphasised that by
2020 CPEC will reduce the trade cost to Central Asia by 11.5 percent and to
Indonesia by 25.3 percent. A one-day loss in transportation decreases the value
of exports by one percent. Similarly, trade-improving transparency can result
in 7.5 percent increase in trade
University researchers: Rice farmers can get same yield with one-third
less water
By The Associated Press
This article was published December 16, 2016 at 7:37 a.m.
STARKVILLE, Miss. — Mississippi
State University researchers say that some rice farmers can use much less water
and get the same yield by flooding their fields at the start and end of the
season, and letting them dry out a bit in between.
Irrigation specialist Jason Krutz
said that's a radical change from recommendations across the Rice Belt to keep
2 to 4 inches of water in the fields. Instead, he recommends letting fields dry
until water is 4 inches below the soil surface, then re-flooding them.
He said that can cut water use 30
percent without hurting yield.
Krutz said MSU's tests were on
high-clay soils, which probably make up about half of Mississippi rice fields.
He said he believes Arkansas
researchers will study its use in silt-loam soils like those in Arkansas and
south Louisiana
http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2016/dec/16/msu-rice-farmers-can-get-same-yield-13-less-water/
Sri Lanka rice crop to shrivel in record drought
Dec 17, 2016 11:05 AM
ECONOMYNEXT - Sri Lanka is heading
for a sharp drop in rice production in the main cultivation season with only a
third of the area sown so far amid the worst drought in at least 5 years, with
import restrictions already pushing rice prices up.By early December only 30
percent of the 830,000 hectares of paddy that can potentially be grown during
main Maha main rice cultivation season has been sown, B V R Punyawardena,
agro-climatologist at Sri Lanka's Department of Agriculture said.
Bad Season
"During my career of 20
years, I have not experienced this kind of bad season," Punyawardena said.
"There was a drought in 2012
also. It was not so bad."
He was speaking at a forum
organized by the United Nations Development Program which has started a program
to improve the ability of over 700,000 people living in the Malwatu Oya, Yan
Oya and Mi Oya river basins to overcome weather changes.
At 73 larger reservoirs operated
by Sri Lanka's irrigation department there was only enough water to maintain
crops in about 30 percent of the usual extent.
At a network of about 14,500
minor tanks, water was enough for about 10 percent of the cultivation,
Punyawardena said.
Sri Lanka's Yala, minor irrigation season which
has just ended, where about 500,000 hectares of crop can be grown, only around
394,000 hectares were sown this year, according to official data.
Due to a weak crop, carry over
stores of rice had also diminished, Punyawardena said. After March there rice
stocks will tighten.
Market Signals
Growing less rice - a water
intensive crop grown in inundation conditions - is the correct market response
to a drought by farmers, economists say.
Already rice prices have moved
up, with the market responding quickly to tighter supply conditions and the expected
future outlook.
In a country where citizens are
free, are markets are allowed to work, spiking rice prices can conserve
domestic stocks, prompt imports and also move more people into alternative
cereals like wheat or potatoes, automatically nipping in the bud any 'food
crisis'.
In Sri Lanka, due to economic
nationalism there is no free trade in rice.
Imports of close substitutes like
wheat are also taxed to force people to eat rice in a vicious nationalist
policy, undermining the food freedoms of the poorest, and making the hungry
subservient to the farming and rice milling lobby, liberty advocates have
pointed out.
Maize is also protected with
taxes to increase profits of vested interests, pushing up chicken prices and
worsening protein malnutrition among kids of poor families, critics say. Milk
prices are also high due to a self-sufficiency drive. Cheese is a super luxury
good.
There is also a land-owner lobby
who rent land to growers, who are constantly pushing for higher potato import
taxes.
Weather Signals
Punyawardena said agricultural
officers warned farmers early in the season to sow short maturing varieties and
to switch to alternative crops that require less water.
But farmers do not always listen.
Farmers some rice to keep in their houses as 'food security'. Due to long
standing attitudes they do not trust modern weather warnings.
Punyawardena said farmers
continue to believe that rains will come.
However at the moment authorities
were grappling with supplying sufficient drinking water which was a priority,
and there were even doubts whether water could be supplied to crops that were
already sown.
Ravi Chandrapala, head of Sri
Lanka's Meteorological Department said, unless there was a cyclone near Sri
Lanka in the next two weeks, dry weather would continue.
Statistically, about 85 percent
of the time, rains came for the Maha season, Chandrapala said, showing why
farmers may also have faith in the rains based on probability.
Weather conditions related to a
weak 'La Nina' conditions have also hit rice production in Vietnam, where
exports are down 26 percent in the first 11 months of the year.
Rainfall had become more erratic
in recent years in Sri Lanka with large volumes coming in a short time leaving
longer periods with little or no rain creating droughts through annual total
rainfall has not diminished, Chandrapala said.
This has been linked to man-made
'climate change' earlier known as 'global warming' which has been linked to
emission of carbon dioxide, a gas that makes plants grow and sustains life on
earth. The label changed over the years an apparent 'hiatus' in global warming
over the last decade or so.
Self-Sufficiency and Food Crisis
A crop failure which should only
create a financial crisis for farmers in a free country. But in a country like
Sri Lanka it can lead to a 'food crisis' unless rulers relax economic
nationalism and allow the hungry to import food at reasonable prices.
"We have a serious problem
in the agriculture," Punyawardena said. "We will have a food crisis,
unless we import."
Sri Lanka's government has said
it will import some rice as domestic prices spiked. International prices could
also move up, with variable La Nina conditions.
In a free country, the decision
on whether to import a particular food is not made by the state and rulers but
by citizens who signal to importers through higher prices.
In Sri Lanka with restrictions on
rice imports, state agencies which are hit by regular corruption scandals like
Lanka Sathosa (previously the Co-operative Wholesale Establishment) import rice
with special privileges in some case, leaving room for irregularities.
Sri Lanka's rice crop is failing
after a bumper harvest in the 2015/2016 cropping season when some farmers found
it difficult to sell rice at a good profit.
Due to long-running autarkic
polices aimed at self-sufficiency, prices collapse in Sri Lanka when there is a
bumper harvest leaving farmers in trouble, whereas in a country that had an
internationalist outward looking farming community, it would boost foreign
exchange earnings.
In countries like Vietnam,
Pakistan or Thailand, export go up when there are bumper harvests giving extra
or stable income for farmers, but in Sri Lanka farmers get into financial
difficulties even when there is favourable or unfavourable weather, as a result
of economic nationalism.
Years of autarky has resulted in
farmers growing rice varieties which cannot be traded internationally and
processing by millers is below par, and leaving a bad odour when cooked.
Due to years of protectionism,
cost of rice production in many areas is also higher than in some rice
producing countries where yields are higher. In the East of Sri Lanka, rice
production is more efficient.
Similar problems exist with
potato and large onion cultivation in Sri Lanka, which also cannot be exported
during harvests due to high-cost coming from years of protection and pursuit of
self-sufficiency. (Colombo/Dec17/2016
http://www.economynext.com/Sri_Lanka_rice_crop_to_shrivel_in_drought-3-6884.html
China says will deal with U.S. WTO grain dispute 'appropriately'
A farmer drives a combine harvester in fields to collect wheat
in Zaozhuang, Shandong Province, China, June 2, 2016. China Daily/via REUTERS
China's Ministry of Commerce said
on Friday it will deal with a dispute over its rice, wheat and corn import
quotas through official channels at the World Trade Organization.In a
statement, it said it regretted the U.S. decision to challenge the nation's
quotas at the World Trade Organization and it would deal with the move
"appropriately".(Reporting by Beijing newsroom and Josephine Mason;
Editing by Richard Pullin)
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-usa-trade-idUSKBN1450BE
U.S. challenges China's grain import quotas at WTO
FILE PHOTO - A man loads rice onto a cart for a rice-buying
agent in Tay Mo village, outside Hanoi November 27, 2012. REUTERS/Kham
The United States on Thursday launched a challenge to China's
use of tariff-rate quotas (TRQs) for rice, wheat and corn at the World Trade
Organization, charging that Beijing's administration of the program breached
its WTO commitments and hurt U.S. farm exports.The USTR said global prices for the three commodities were lower
than China's domestic prices, yet the country did not maximize its use of TRQs,
which offer lower duties on a certain volume of imported grains every year. The
USTR said that limited market access for shipments from the United States, the
world's largest grain exporter, and other countries.The TRQs for the three
commodities were worth more than $7 billion in 2015, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. China would have imported up to $3.5 billion more of
the crops last year if the quotas had been fully used, the Office of the U.S.
Trade Representative said on Thursday."The United States will aggressively
pursue this challenge on behalf of American rice, wheat, and corn farmers,"
U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman said in a statement.It was the second
challenge to China's agricultural policies by the U.S. Trade Representative
since September and the latest in a series of trade disputes between the
world's largest economies.China on Monday launched a complaint at the WTO
against the United States and Europe after they failed to treat China as a
market economy and ease their calculations of anti-dumping duties on Chinese
goods.The United States in September charged that China's domestic grain price
supports exceeded agreed upon limits when Beijing joined the WTO in 2001. The
USTR has since requested that the WTO launch a dispute settlement panel to
investigate the matter.Industry groups said Thursday's action would benefit all
global grain exporters that have struggled recently with low prices and
historically large supplies."This troublesome administration of China's
wheat TRQ is restraining export opportunities for U.S. wheat farmers and
farmers from Canada, Australia and other wheat exporting countries to the
detriment of Chinese consumers," said Alan Tracy, president of the trade
promoting group U.S. Wheat Associates.
MSU: Rice
farmers can get same yield with 1/3 less water
by ASSOCIATED PRESS
Friday, December 16th 2016
Mississippi State University researchers say that some rice
farmers can use much less water and get the same yield by flooding their fields
at the start and end of the season, and letting them dry out a bit in between.
(KATV photo)
Irrigation specialist Jason Krutz
says that's a radical change from recommendations across the Rice Belt to keep
two to four inches of water in the fields. Instead, he recommends letting
fields dry until water is 4 inches below the soil surface, then re-flooding
them.
He says that can cut water use 30
percent without hurting yield.
Krutz says MSU's tests were on
high-clay soils, which probably make up about half of Mississippi rice fields.
He says he believes Arkansas
researchers will study its use in silt-loam soils like those in Arkansas and
south Louisiana
http://katv.com/news/local/msu-rice-farmers-can-get-same-yield-with-13-less-water
SunRice profit dips to $20.8m
after lean harvest and price drop
A shortage of locally-grown rice to supply SunRice’s regular
buyers overseas has compounded export revenue problems caused by poor global
markets, but the company's domestic rice foods business posted a 351 per cent
lift in pre-tax profit.This year’s small Australian rice
harvest and tumbling international prices have hit
SunRice’s half-year after-tax
profits, down 13 per cent on last year to $20.8 million.The farmer-owned
marketer and processing group lost $15.6m after buying the 2016 crop at $415 a
tonne for medium grain (Reiziq), having locked in price guarantees to encourage
production through last summer’s hot, water-scarce growing season.
Unusually
good seasonal conditions since have also been problematic, hurting the
company’s stockfeed division sales.
The
six month trading period to October 13 saw the southern NSW-based SunRice
report an 11.5pc drop in consolidated revenue to $568.3m.SunRice said its
profit was still in line with projections given challenging global and domestic
conditions.Globally rice markets had been oversupplied and under significant
price pressure, while weaker economies in several key markets,
particularly Papua New Guinea, (PNG) have hurt export earnings, too.Hearteningly
however, the company’s international rice segment traded greater volumes
in the past six months and posted a 4pc lift in pre-tax profit as US
division, SunFoods, returned to profitability on the back of a recovery in
the Californian crop’s size.Impressive pre-tax profit growth of 351pc was
also achieved by the rice foods business after 9pc revenue growth and
manufacturing efficiencies, particularly in rice cake production.A
shortage of locally-grown rice to supply SunRice’s regular buyers overseas
has compounded export revenue problems caused by poor global markets.
The autumn harvest in the NSW Riverina delivered just 244,000 tonnes because of
last summer’s irrigation water shortages.That compared to the region’s more
typical harvests of around 800,000 to 1 million tonnes.Sunrice’s balance sheet
has, however, been helped by “one-off” items related to provision and
impairment reversals which were deducted from the after tax net profit result.Chief
executive officer, Rob Gordon, said global medium grain rice prices fell almost
50pc in the past year.“We disclosed to the market at the AGM in August
that this financial year was going to be challenging for SunRice,” he said.“It’s
primarily a case of global rice oversupply continuing to negatively impact on
prices.“Additionally, deteriorating economic conditions in some of SunRice’s
key export markets across the Middle East and the Pacific have been a
challenge.
“A
steep volume decline in the Riverina harvest from 690,000t in the prior year
resulted in a 28pc reduction in rice pool business revenue during the first
half of 2016-17.”Headwinds were also faced by some complementary businesses,
notably CopRice, which was hurt by faltering stockfeed demand due to depressed
dairy industry earnings and good pasture conditions.However, Mr Gordon
said despite some exceptional trading circumstances, there were
“persistent signals our strategy to build a resilient and diversified business
is succeeding”.
He
forecast a full-year after-tax net profit of about $40m, but warned the next
six months would depend on global rice market trends, with “many of our markets
remaining volatile”.PNG was one of those uncertain and volatile factors.A
weak economy and devalued PNG currency (down almost 10pc against the Australian
dollar since October 2015) has undermined SunRice’s traditional pricing power
and attracted competition from Asian long grain rice exports.“We continue to
maintain a close watch on PNG issues, including the risk of sudden further kina
devaluations which would considerably reduce trading margins,” Mr Gordon said.SunRice
is also worried about the possible implementation of an import quota by the PNG
government and political pressure for local rice production self-sufficiency.
http://www.stockandland.com.au/story/4361182/sunrice-profit-dips-to-208m-after-lean-harvest-and-price-drop/?cs=4584
Smuggled rice
worth $28 million seized in China
By nine.com.au staff
Chinese
authorities have seized an unprecedented 29,000 tonnes of black market rice
being smuggled into the country.
Customs officials in southwest China have confiscated 29,000
tonnes of smuggled rice which has a staggering street value of $28 million.Black
market rice is a burgeoning industry in China due to government policies which
allow farmers to sell their rice at pre-fixed rates if market prices fall.
It is unlikely the policy will be rolled back any time soon due to
political sensitivity for rural communities, according to The
Wall Street Journal.
Authorities have not released where the seized rice originated
from, but customs authorities have seized more than 218,500 tonnes so far this
year. It is believed the lion's share has been smuggled from Vietnam and the
Philippines.
China is by far the largest importer of rice in the world and are
the eleventh largest rice exporter, behind Australia who come in at tenth.
China is also the second-largest rice producer, but are unable to
produce enough to meet demand.
In August and October this year, customs police in central China
seized 28,700 tonnes of smuggled rice worth close to $33 million and detained
18 people.
In November, southwest Chinese customs authorities seized 32,500
tonnes of rice worth $26 million and detained 19 people
http://www.9news.com.au/world/2016/12/16/16/20/smuggled-rice-worth-28-million-seized-in-china#6Dmfg5IVCEgK5FtS.99
Rice exports
rise to Africa and EU
Submitted by Eleven on Fri,
12/16/2016 - 17:51
Writer: Nilar
Helped by the weak kyat,
Myanmar is increasingly exporting rice to the EU and Africa, where around 60,000 tonnes is sold every month, according to the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF)."Under
current market prices in the EU and Africa, we can export rice and make sales
contracts," said a rice merchant. Lu Maw Myint, joint secretary
of MRF, said this year's rice exports to Africa far exceeded those
of the previous year.
"We didn't sell to African
markets for many years and Pakistan and India were the main suppliers. But this
year, the exchange rate is good for exporters, so they can sell rice at reduced
prices. We
can compete with other countries. Prices between our country and others are
similar. In
the past, we had high production costs so we could not compete," said Lu
Min Myint. From
April 1 to November 25 this financial year, more than 670,000 tonnes of rice
and broken rice were exported, earning over US$230 million, according to the Ministry of Commerce
http://www.elevenmyanmar.com/business/7065
Christmas:
Lagos to sell N13,000 rice next week
The Lagos State Government on Friday said it could not commence
the sale of its Lake Rice on December 15 as earlier planned to ensure that
plots to hijack the project was averted.The Special Adviser on Food Security to
Governor Akinwumi Ambode, Mr. Sanni Okanlawan, said that the rice would now be
on sale as from next week.The government had planned to sell the rice at N13,000 per
50kg bag at the 57
Local Government and Local Council Development area headquarters from Dec. 15.
Okanlawon said the government was installing mechanisms for Lagosians to
celebrate the best Yuletide without hiccups posed by money bags.
He said, “We are working out the modalities to make sure that
what the government intends to sell at N13,000 was not hijacked and sold to
Lagosians at N15,000, that is what we do not want.
“From all indications, hopefully, by next week Lake Rice will
be out, so, we want everything to be in place before it is out.”
LASG had on December 8 promised that it was ready to roll out
Lake Rice on December 15 to Lagosians at N13,000 per 50 kg towards the Yuletide
celebrations.The Special Adviser made the disclosure during the Lagos Chamber
of Commerce and Industry National Agriculture Stakeholders Summit.
He said, “Lake Rice is the acronym of both Lagos and Kebbi
States joint product which will be out to the public on Dec. 15 at a cost of
N13,000 per 50kg bag as it is already subsidised by the government.“To make it
more available, the rice will be sold at the 57 LGA’s and LCDA’s for easy
accessibility and to guard against unwanted persons diverting the product, the
state has put in place a committee.”Lagos State had in March signed an MoU with
the Kebbi State Government to produce rice paddy to be milled and packaged in
Lagos State
http://dailypost.ng/2016/12/16/christmas-lagos-sell-n13000-rice-next-week/
Thai farmers can now sell rice
directly to consumers online
Adrian M.
Reodique | Dec. 15, 2016
"The Ministry of Commerce
has been rolling out a series of programmes aimed at helping the local farmers
and one such initiative is this collaboration with DHL
eCommerce Thailand to help farmers sell their produce online,"
said Apiradi Tantraporn, Minister of Commerce at the Royal Thai Government, in
a press release.
"We have been working
together in the past three weeks to onboard these farmers onto the e-commerce
platform so that domestic consumers can place orders and have DHL eCommerce
deliver to their doorsteps," she added.
Addressing the
oversupply of rice
Meanwhile, for farmer co-ops like
Ban Um-sang Rice Community, the partnership allowed them to manage the
oversupply of their rice, and at the same time tap onto the opportunities of
e-commerce."The internet has opened up more possibilities for us farmers
to do business. We can communicate and connect with customers directly, which
is impossible with traditional methods. We don't have to worry about organising
our deliveries too, as they are taken care of by experienced logistics
specialists. By giving us more options, e-commerce makes us less affected by
existing market forces and gives us the freedom to improve our sales in new
ways," said the Community
http://www.mis-asia.com/resource/mobile/thai-farmers-can-now-sell-rice-directly-to-consumers-online/
How Ebonyi is fighting recession
through rice production
Senator Onwe
ON DECEMBER 17, 201612:40 AMIN NEWS, POLITICSCOMMENTS •With
profound planning we can have rice glut in Nigeria By Clifford Ndujihe and
Elizabeth Uwandu Senator Emmanuel Onwe, a lawyer, human rights activist and
former newspaper columnist is the Ebonyi State Commissioner for Information. He
had an engaging interaction with Vanguard’s editors during a visit to the Lagos
headquarters of Vanguard Newspapers, recently. He spoke on the emergence of the
home grown Ebonyi Rice as a better alternative to foreign brand and how to
ensure food sufficiency in the country and wriggle out of recession among others.
Ebonyi rice game plan: *Funding 171 co-operative societies *Gave N214,000 each
to 4275 farmers to cultivate 1hectare each *Cultivated 30,000 hectares of rice
farms this year (wet season) *Budgeted N4 billion to expand to 60,000 hectares
*Supported 15,000 small scale farmers with FADAMA and IFAD’s help *Has 3 mega
1000 metric tons a day processing mills *Mega processing mills to have
parboiling equipment by January, 2017 *Sets aside N250,000 billion for any
Ebonyi Diaspora street trader willing to farm On why he visited Vanguard I want
to talk about something tangible and something that Ebonyi State is proud to
expose to other Nigerians.
The idea that we have an economy that is not just stagnant but
also in one of the worst recessions since the eighties is a cause for serious
concern. Ebonyi has taken the rigorous way knowing that we do not have a means
of survival as a state. The allocation coming to Ebonyi from the Federal
Government is one of the least in the country. Our Internally Generated Revenue,
IGR last September was only about N7m to N8 m and allocation to the state was
just N1.750billion. So, it is a dire situation.
That was why in June when
the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN was initiating the Anchor Borrowers’
programme, we keyed in very seriously and borrowed about N2b from that and
bought tractors, machines, pesticides and insecticides, etc. We funded
cooperative societies in every ward of the state and each cooperative society
has about 25 farmers. We gave them N214,000 which is the CBN estimated cost of
production per a hectare of land. So, when the Minister of Agriculture came
recently, alone side the governor of the CBN, and Chairman of the presidential
task force for rice production, who is also the governor of Kebbi state and
visited some of the farms in Ebonyi, suddenly the news exploded that a bag of
rice in the state now sells for N8,000. This is one of the reasons I am here.
What really is going for Ebonyi rice is, it is not as chemicalised as rice
coming from elsewhere. I have had the experience of visiting farms in India and
Thailand where they use about 10 bags of NPK fertiliser and four bags of urea,
etc per hectare. That is terrible.
Abakaliki rice is noted for having much stones. Have you done
anything to address that? Yes, we have. If it had remained the same quality, I
wouldn’t have been here. I would have been too embarrassed to be here. The days
of Ebonyi rice being filled with stones are gone. There is de-stoning machinery
in place now. We polish the rice but not to the extent of imported rice. We
polish to make sure that the film that attaches the husk of the rice to the
grain is removed to some degree but of course, the nutrients and value of the
rice remains. We know we are coming from a very negative background in terms of
reputation of the rice, we have done a huge amount to remove that. I have not
eaten anything other than Ebonyi rice in the last five years. Talking about
value chain, how many rice processing firms do you have now? Ebonyi has put
30,000 hectares of rice farms under cultivation this year, wet season. And in
every ward, we have a cooperative society.
Each cooperative society has 25 members. There are 171 wards in
the state. We built up individual small scale farmers up to 15,000 with help
from FADAMA and IFAD and in each of the three senatorial districts we have
massive large scale processing mills installed by the previous administration.
What this administration is doing is to incorporate parboiling equipment into
them. Beyond that, in most communities, we have small rice clusters with small
milling machines that probably will mill only about 100 kilogrammes of rice per
day.
Are you able to supply enough paddy for the mills? No yet Where
do you get supplements from? We don’t get paddy from any where except Ebonyi
How many people have you taken off the streets with this programme? Ebonyi has
a negative reputation in terms of the number of street hawkers in Lagos, Abuja,
Port Harcourt and other places. There is now a cooperative process going on
between Ebonyi state government and Lagos state government. The secretary to
Ebonyi government came to Lagos in March this year and again in August to see
his counterpart. What was done was to hold a summit where all these people were
invited and a data base was created. In all the cities we have done that. Going
back home, all the Government technical colleges have spaces reserved for them
and at the same time, there is available N250,000 for each of them who wants to
cultivate a hectare of land. Based on the CBN estimate, you need N214,000 to
cultivate a hectare but of course, the maintenance of the hectare will take
between N30,000 to N40,000. That is in terms of Diaspora hawkers.
Those at home, the unemployed youths and women have a much
larger programme. In this budget year, Ebonyi provided N4 billion specifically
to expand from 30,000 hectares to 60,000 and to target women and unemployed
people. The data base is being compiled as we speak because we recognise that
there is no escape. The augmenting element of the economy we would have had
from NIGERCEM is taking time. There was this lock jam between the previous
administration and Ibeto. But that has been resolved, the cases have been taken
out of court, a new MoU has been signed so that Ibeto will properly take over NIGERCEM
but before that is done Ebonyi rice is the only escape route. On neglect of
agriculture The neglect of agriculture in the past is criminal. In each of the
six geo-political zones, the federal government built strategic grain reserves,
silos that would contain 100 metric tons of grains of whatever variety – rice,
beans, maize, etc.
The one that was built in
Ezeilo, Ebonyi was built in 1979. Not one single grain has gone into those
silos till today. Now, the capacity of the one in Abakaliki could meet any food
emergency for at least 18 months in the whole of the South- East and
South-South geo-political zones. Nobody cared about it. The previous
administration in Ebonyi spent N3.3 billion rehabilitating it but the facility
is unused. When the minister of Agriculture visited the state in September, the
governor passionately appealed for those silos to be handed over to state
governments, we know what to do with them. The food emergency that has hit the
internally displaced people in North-Eastern part of Nigeria would have been
addressed by these facilities without anybody going cap in hand to beg for food
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/12/ebonyi-fighting-recession-rice-production-senator-onwe/
Global Organic Rice Market Share,Supply And Consumption
2016 To 2021 Market Research Report
Friday, December 16th, 2016 -
WiseGuyReports
Request a Sample Report @ https://www.wiseguyreports.com/sample-request/825980-global-organic-rice-market-forecast-to-2021
Organic farming is defined as a
production system which largely excludes or avoids the use of fertilizers,
pesticides, growth regulators, preservatives and livestock feed additives and
totally rely on crop residues, animal manures, legumes, green manures, off-farm
wastes, mechanical cultivation, mineral nutrient bearing rocks and biological
pest control to maintain soil health, supply plant nutrients and minimize
insects, weeds and other pests.
Scope of the Report:
This report focuses on the Organic Rice in Global market, especially in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific, South America, Middle East and Africa. This report categorizes the market based on manufacturers, regions, type and application.
This report focuses on the Organic Rice in Global market, especially in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific, South America, Middle East and Africa. This report categorizes the market based on manufacturers, regions, type and application.
Market Segment by Manufacturers,
this report covers
Doguet’s Rice
Randallorganic
Sanjeevani Organics
Kahang Organic Rice
RiceSelect
Texas Best Organics
CAPITAL RICE
YINCHUAN
URMATT
Vien Phu
SUNRISE foodstuff JSC
KHAOKHO TALAYPU
BEIDAHUANG
Yanbiangaoli
Jinjian
HUICHUN FILED RICE
Dingxiang
Heilongjiang Taifeng
Heilongjiang Julong
Doguet’s Rice
Randallorganic
Sanjeevani Organics
Kahang Organic Rice
RiceSelect
Texas Best Organics
CAPITAL RICE
YINCHUAN
URMATT
Vien Phu
SUNRISE foodstuff JSC
KHAOKHO TALAYPU
BEIDAHUANG
Yanbiangaoli
Jinjian
HUICHUN FILED RICE
Dingxiang
Heilongjiang Taifeng
Heilongjiang Julong
Complete Report Details @ https://www.wiseguyreports.com/reports/825980-global-organic-rice-market-forecast-to-2021
Market Segment by Regions,
regional analysis covers
North America (USA, Canada and Mexico)
Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy)
Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia)
South America, Middle East and Africa
North America (USA, Canada and Mexico)
Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy)
Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia)
South America, Middle East and Africa
Market Segment by Type,
covers
Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
Indica(long-shaped rice)
Polished round-grained rice
Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
Indica(long-shaped rice)
Polished round-grained rice
Market Segment by Applications,
can be divided into
Direct edible
Deep processing
Direct edible
Deep processing
Table of Contents
Global Organic Rice Market by
Manufacturers, Regions, Type and Application, Forecast to 2021
1 Market Overview
1.1 Organic Rice Introduction
1.2 Market Analysis by Type
1.2.1 Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
1.2.2 Indica(long-shaped rice)
1.2.3 Polished round-grained rice
1.3 Market Analysis by Applications
1.3.1 Direct edible
1.3.2 Deep processing
1.3.3
1.4 Market Analysis by Regions
1.4.1 North America (USA, Canada and Mexico)
1.4.1.1 USA
1.4.1.2 Canada
1.4.1.3 Mexico
1.4.2 Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy)
1.4.2.1 Germany
1.4.2.2 France
1.4.2.3 UK
1.4.2.4 Russia
1.4.2.5 Italy
1.4.3 Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia)
1.4.3.1 China
1.4.3.2 Japan
1.4.3.3 Korea
1.4.3.4 India
1.4.3.5 Southeast Asia
1.4.4 South America, Middle East and Africa
1.4.4.1 Brazil
1.4.4.2 Egypt
1.4.4.3 Saudi Arabia
1.4.4.4 South Africa
1.4.4.5 Nigeria
1.5 Market Dynamics
1.5.1 Market Opportunities
1.5.2 Market Risk
1.5.3 Market Driving Force
1.1 Organic Rice Introduction
1.2 Market Analysis by Type
1.2.1 Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
1.2.2 Indica(long-shaped rice)
1.2.3 Polished round-grained rice
1.3 Market Analysis by Applications
1.3.1 Direct edible
1.3.2 Deep processing
1.3.3
1.4 Market Analysis by Regions
1.4.1 North America (USA, Canada and Mexico)
1.4.1.1 USA
1.4.1.2 Canada
1.4.1.3 Mexico
1.4.2 Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy)
1.4.2.1 Germany
1.4.2.2 France
1.4.2.3 UK
1.4.2.4 Russia
1.4.2.5 Italy
1.4.3 Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia)
1.4.3.1 China
1.4.3.2 Japan
1.4.3.3 Korea
1.4.3.4 India
1.4.3.5 Southeast Asia
1.4.4 South America, Middle East and Africa
1.4.4.1 Brazil
1.4.4.2 Egypt
1.4.4.3 Saudi Arabia
1.4.4.4 South Africa
1.4.4.5 Nigeria
1.5 Market Dynamics
1.5.1 Market Opportunities
1.5.2 Market Risk
1.5.3 Market Driving Force
2 Manufacturers Profiles
2.1 Doguet’s Rice
2.1.1 Business Overview
2.1.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.1.2.1 Type 1
2.1.2.2 Type 2
2.1.3 Doguet’s Rice Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.2 Randallorganic
2.2.1 Business Overview
2.2.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.2.2.1 Type 1
2.2.2.2 Type 2
2.2.3 Randallorganic Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.3 Sanjeevani Organics
2.3.1 Business Overview
2.3.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.3.2.1 Type 1
2.3.2.2 Type 2
2.3.3 Sanjeevani Organics Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.4 Kahang Organic Rice
2.4.1 Business Overview
2.4.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.4.2.1 Type 1
2.4.2.2 Type 2
2.4.3 Kahang Organic Rice Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.5 RiceSelect
2.5.1 Business Overview
2.5.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.5.2.1 Type 1
2.5.2.2 Type 2
2.1 Doguet’s Rice
2.1.1 Business Overview
2.1.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.1.2.1 Type 1
2.1.2.2 Type 2
2.1.3 Doguet’s Rice Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.2 Randallorganic
2.2.1 Business Overview
2.2.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.2.2.1 Type 1
2.2.2.2 Type 2
2.2.3 Randallorganic Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.3 Sanjeevani Organics
2.3.1 Business Overview
2.3.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.3.2.1 Type 1
2.3.2.2 Type 2
2.3.3 Sanjeevani Organics Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.4 Kahang Organic Rice
2.4.1 Business Overview
2.4.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.4.2.1 Type 1
2.4.2.2 Type 2
2.4.3 Kahang Organic Rice Organic Rice Sales, Price, Revenue, Gross Margin and Market Share
2.5 RiceSelect
2.5.1 Business Overview
2.5.2 Organic Rice Type and Applications
2.5.2.1 Type 1
2.5.2.2 Type 2
……….
3 Global Organic Rice Market
Competition, by Manufacturer
3.1 Global Organic Rice Sales and Market Share by Manufacturer
3.2 Global Organic Rice Revenue and Market Share by Manufacturer
3.3 Market Concentration Rate
3.3.1 Top 3 Organic Rice Manufacturer Market Share
3.3.2 Top 6 Organic Rice Manufacturer Market Share
3.4 Market Competition Trend
3.1 Global Organic Rice Sales and Market Share by Manufacturer
3.2 Global Organic Rice Revenue and Market Share by Manufacturer
3.3 Market Concentration Rate
3.3.1 Top 3 Organic Rice Manufacturer Market Share
3.3.2 Top 6 Organic Rice Manufacturer Market Share
3.4 Market Competition Trend
4 Global Organic Rice Market
Analysis by Regions
4.1 Global Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Regions
4.1.1 Global Organic Rice Sales by Regions (2011-2016)
4.1.2 Global Organic Rice Revenue by Regions (2011-2016)
4.2 North America Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.3 Europe Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.4 Asia-Pacific Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.5 South America Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.6 Middle East and Africa Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.1 Global Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Regions
4.1.1 Global Organic Rice Sales by Regions (2011-2016)
4.1.2 Global Organic Rice Revenue by Regions (2011-2016)
4.2 North America Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.3 Europe Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.4 Asia-Pacific Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.5 South America Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
4.6 Middle East and Africa Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5 North America Organic Rice by
Countries
5.1 North America Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Countries
5.1.1 North America Organic Rice Sales by Countries (2011-2016)
5.1.2 North America Organic Rice Revenue by Countries (2011-2016)
5.2 USA Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5.3 Canada Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5.4 Mexico Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5.1 North America Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Countries
5.1.1 North America Organic Rice Sales by Countries (2011-2016)
5.1.2 North America Organic Rice Revenue by Countries (2011-2016)
5.2 USA Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5.3 Canada Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
5.4 Mexico Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6 Europe Organic Rice by
Countries
6.1 Europe Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Countries
6.1.1 Europe Organic Rice Sales by Countries (2011-2016)
6.1.2 Europe Organic Rice Revenue by Countries (2011-2016)
6.2 Germany Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.3 UK Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.4 France Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.5 Russia Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.6 Italy Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.1 Europe Organic Rice Sales, Revenue and Market Share by Countries
6.1.1 Europe Organic Rice Sales by Countries (2011-2016)
6.1.2 Europe Organic Rice Revenue by Countries (2011-2016)
6.2 Germany Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.3 UK Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.4 France Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.5 Russia Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
6.6 Italy Organic Rice Sales and Growth (2011-2016)
..…..Continued
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Global Organic Rice Market-
Randallorganic, RiceSelect, Sanjeevani Organics, SUNRISE foodstuff JSC, Texas
Best Organics
TOPICS:Organic Rice Market
Organic Rice Market Report Details:
This report covers Organic Rice in
global market, mainly report includes North America Organic Rice market, Europe
Organic Rice market, Asia-Pacific Organic Rice market, Latin America Organic
Rice market, also covers Middle as well as Africa Organic Rice market. This
report divide Organic Rice market based on manufacturers, type, application and
Organic Rice market regions.
Do Inquiry Before Purchasing Report Here: https://market.biz/report/global-organic-rice-market-gir/30750/#inquiry
Market Segment by Manufacturers, this report covers
1 BEIDAHUANG
2 CAPITAL RICE
3 Dingxiang
4 Doguet?s Rice
5 Heilongjiang Julong
6 Heilongjiang Taifeng
7 HUICHUN FILED RICE
8 Jinjian
9 Kahang Organic Rice
10 KHAOKHO TALAYPU
11 Randallorganic
12 RiceSelect
13 Sanjeevani Organics
14 SUNRISE foodstuff JSC
15 Texas Best Organics
16 URMATT
17 Vien Phu
18 Yanbiangaoli
19 YINCHUAN
1 BEIDAHUANG
2 CAPITAL RICE
3 Dingxiang
4 Doguet?s Rice
5 Heilongjiang Julong
6 Heilongjiang Taifeng
7 HUICHUN FILED RICE
8 Jinjian
9 Kahang Organic Rice
10 KHAOKHO TALAYPU
11 Randallorganic
12 RiceSelect
13 Sanjeevani Organics
14 SUNRISE foodstuff JSC
15 Texas Best Organics
16 URMATT
17 Vien Phu
18 Yanbiangaoli
19 YINCHUAN
Market Segment by Type, covers
1. Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
2. Indica(long-shaped rice)
3. Polished round-grained rice
1. Polished glutinous rice(sticky rice)
2. Indica(long-shaped rice)
3. Polished round-grained rice
Market Segment by Applications, can be divided into
1. Direct edible
2. Deep processing
Market Segment by Regions, regional analysis covers
1. (USA, Mexico and Canada) Organic Rice Market in North America .
2. (Germany, Italy, UK, Russia and France) Europe Organic Rice Market.
3. (China, South-east Asia, Japan, India and Korea) Organic Rice Market in Asia-Pacific .
4. (Middle and Africa) Latin America Organic Rice Market.
1. Direct edible
2. Deep processing
Market Segment by Regions, regional analysis covers
1. (USA, Mexico and Canada) Organic Rice Market in North America .
2. (Germany, Italy, UK, Russia and France) Europe Organic Rice Market.
3. (China, South-east Asia, Japan, India and Korea) Organic Rice Market in Asia-Pacific .
4. (Middle and Africa) Latin America Organic Rice Market.
Report also includes Organic Rice market growth
rate XXXX % during forecast period. Worldwide Organic Rice industry report
covers competitors/Manufacturers Profiles in Organic Rice market with their
Business Overview. Organic Rice Market report also includes Organic Rice market
by Type and Applications, Organic Rice Sales, Revenue, Price and Organic Rice
Industry Share. This research (Organic Rice Market Research) study also
includes worldwide Organic Rice Market Competition, by Manufacturer, by
Manufacturer. Worldwide Organic Rice Sales and Organic Rice Revenue by Regions
(2011-2016)
Purchase Report Here to Get Instant Access to
the Report: https://market.biz/report/global-organic-rice-market-gir/30750/
Report on (Organic Rice Market Report) mainly
covers 10 Section to deeply display the global Organic Rice Industry.
Section 1, to analyse the Organic Rice
industry’s top manufacturers, with sales, Organic Rice market revenue, and
price of Organic Rice in 2015 and 2016;
Section 2, to display the Organic Rice market’s
competitive situation among the top manufacturers, with Organic Rice market
sales, revenue and Organic Rice market share in 2015 and 2016;
Section 3, to show the global Organic Rice
market by regions, with sales, Organic Rice revenue and market share of Organic
Rice , for each region, from 2011 to 2016;
Section 4, 5, 6 and 7, to covers the key
regions, with Organic Rice market sales, revenue and share by key countries in
these regions Organic Rice industry scenario;
Section 8 and 9, to show the Organic Rice
industry by type and application, with sales Organic Rice market growth rate
and share by type, Organic Rice market application, from 2011 to 2016.
Section 10, Global Organic Rice market
forecast, by application, type, and regions, with Organic Rice market revenue
and sales, from 2016 to 2021.
Contact:
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Number 13/4/5.
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http://chollywood.info/global-organic-rice-market-randallorganic-riceselect-sanjeevani-organics-sunrise-foodstuff-jsc-texas-best-organics/
World Rice Seed Market Research
Report 2021
Press release from: ReportBazzar
ICRWorld’s Rice Seed market research report
provides the newest industry data and industry future trends, allowing you to
identify the products and end users driving revenue growth and profitability.
The industry report lists the leading
competitors and provides the insights strategic industry analysis of the key
factors influencing the market.
The report includes the forecasts, analysis and
discussion of important industry trends, market size, market share estimates
and profiles of the leading industry players.
Request Sample Report:
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Global Rice Seed Market: Application Segment
Analysis
Global Rice Seed Market: Regional Segment
Analysis
USA
Europe
Japan
China
India
The players mentioned in our report
DupontPionner
Hancock Farm & Seed Company
Kester’s Nursery
CP Seed
Syngenta
Nidera
Bayer
Longping High-tech
HEFEI FENGLE SEED
Gansu Dunhuang Seed
Grand Agriseeds Technology, Inc
China National Seed
Jiangsu Dahua
The Great Northern Wilderness Kenfeng seed Limited
by Share Ltd
Goldoctor
Grand Agriseeds
Winall Hi-tech Seed
Dabeinong
Zhongnongfa Seed
Browse report summery with TOC:
www.reportbazzar.com/product/world-rice-seed-market-resea...
Table of Content
Chapter 1 About the Rice Seed Industry
1.1 Industry Definition
1.1.1 Types of Rice Seed industry
1.2 Main Market Activities
1.3 Similar Industries
1.4 Industry at a Glance
Chapter 2 World Market Competition Lanscape
2.1 Rice Seed Markets by regions
2.1.1 USA
Market Revenue by types, Through 2021
Market overview
Major players Revenue in 2015
2.1.2 Europe
Market Revenue by types, Through 2021
Market overview
Major players Revenue in 2015
2.1.3 China
Market Revenue by types, Through 2021
Market overview
Major players Revenue in 2015
2.1.4 India
Market Revenue by types, Through 2021
Market overview
Major players Revenue in 2015
2.1.5 Japan
Market Revenue by types, Through 2021
Market overview
Major players Revenue in 2015
2.2 World Rice Seed Market by types
2.3 World Rice Seed Market by Applications
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most inclusive and informative assortment of market research reports designed
to empower you with the latest in industry information that translates to time
and cost savings for your business. We not only help you give wing to your
latent business ideas but also facilitate you in taking the best informed and
strategic decisions that guarantee success in your most promising business
endeavors.
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This release was published on openPR
http://www.openpr.com/news/397553/World-Rice-Seed-Market-Research-Report-2021.html