Tuesday, June 30, 2015

29th June (Monday),2015 DailyGlobal Rice E-Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine

Unisame demands immediate closure of QRC

The Union of Small and Medium Enterprises ( UNISAME ) has invited the attention of the ministry of commerce  ( MINCOM ) to the difficulties being faced by the SME rice exporters due to the one week delay in the closure of the Quality Review Committee ( QRC ) and urged the      federal commerce minister engineer Khurram Dastagir to keep his promise of disbanding the futile committee and to close it immediately as every single day matters for closure of this troublesome body.President UNISAME Zulfikar Thaver said it was finally  decided by the MINCOM to close the QRC as it was unanimously agreed that QRC has become futile and the committee as pointed out by all stakeholders is not serving any purpose. The buyers prefer to import rice in their own or selected brands of blended rice.

 In fact it is an impediment as the majority of rice being exported is non basmati. The QRC was entrusted to protect the basmati label and make sure the basmati rice exported was not mixed with contrast varieties. The global demand is for 1121 which is non basmati rice and 386 rice which is also not basmati rice. Many  buyers demand blended rice of different varieties with basmati rice as basmati rice has aroma and when mixed with 1121 and 386 makes it aromatic.> It is pertinent to note that 1121 is the most expensive rice. It is in great demand all over the gulf and middle east countries but is not classified as basmati rice. The demand for basmati rice is very little as compared to 1121 and 386. QRC is not required any more and its presence as an inspection cell is more an hurdle than a monitor because it is issuing certificates for non basmati rice as basmati rice under pressure to keep business going. The big rice exporters are obliged but the SMES are facing difficulties.
Besides the concept of inspection is for third party inspection and always the prerogative of the buyer. In the last several meetings it was decided to disband the QRC and the government had indicated it's closure by 30th June 2015 positively which is also the end of the fiscal year. Unfortunately no intimation has been received till close of business today and a meeting has been ummoned on 6th July 2015 to work out the final modalities and examination of the audit report.  The requirements of returning the properties purchased by the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan ( REAP ) to the government is perhaps  bothering REAP and it is presumed that are influencing it's delay. It was also suggested to use the premises for the Pakistan Rice Board (PRB) which would be another mistake as the PRB would be another white elephant.

Source: UNISAME







Rice exports: Vietnam fails with low-price export strategy
VietNamNet Bridge - Though Vietnam offered the lowest bidding price among three tenders, it was not chosen as the supplier by the Filipino National Food Authority (NFA).

Description: Vietnam, rice export, the Philippines, G2G contract
Thoi Bao Kinh Te Sai Gon quoted the director of a rice export company as saying that all three exporters lost the bid to provide 100,000 tons of 25 percent broken rice to the Philippines.The three exporters attending the bid on June 16 included Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. The problem was that they all offered prices higher than the price level fixed by NFA at $408.14 per ton.Vietnam offered $417 per ton, and Thailand and Cambodia $418 and $464 per ton, respectively.At previous bids, if NFA did not choose suppliers after the first bid, it allowed bidders to lower the bid. However, the principle was not applied this time.An analyst said that Vietnam fails with its low-price strategy. He said the Philippines recently tried to force the prices down because it anticipated that Vietnamese exporters, once losing the bids, would lower prices to obtain the right to supply rice.As a result, farmers have to sell rice to exporters at prices which cannot bring profits.“Vietnamese farmers cannot make reasonable profits though they have been working hard on rice fields,” the analyst said.
Professor Vo Tong Xuan repeatedly warned that the monopoly enjoyed by Vinafood 1 (the Northern Food Corporation) and Vinafood 2 (Southern Food Corporation) is the biggest hurdle that prevents private businesses to join the rice market. Taking full advantage of the monopoly, the two corporations can control the rice prices at which they collect rice from farmers.Former late Deputy PM Nguyen Cong Tan also noted that Vinafood 1 and Vinafood 2 are the exclusive buyers, while the Vietnam Food Association enjoyed the right to grant quotas for export.Farmers thus do not have opportunities to contact other enterprises and partners to sell rice at better prices.In related news, Nguyen Ngoc De from the Can Tho University warned that Myanmar has emerged as a strong rival to Vietnam in rice exports.The country wants to become one of the three largest rice exporters in the world in the near future.It not only exports low-cost rice, but also high-quality fragrant rice which mostly targets the EU market. According to the Myanmar Rice Federation, the country plans to export 200,000 tons of rice to the EU this year, double the export volume to the market last year.

Dat Viet

As their fields dry up, farmers face the threat of financial ruin
Pratch Rujivanarom
The Nation
Pathum Thani June 29, 2015 1:00 am
TO RICE FARMERS, ongoing drought is an imminent financial crisis. Their paddy fields remain parched this year as authorities warn locals against sowing seeds or planting seedlings on their farmland.Now, my rented fields are empty. I hope the government will provide some help to ease my woes," said Suree Kansomngam, a farmer in the province's Nong Suea district.Description: Despite the ongoing rainy season,drought is so serious that a resident can easlly walk across the dry Ping River in Kamphaneng Phet's Muang district yesterday.
She said without any yield from the field, her family would definitely have difficulty covering its daily expenses, let alone repaying debts to the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives.She said in addition to the drought, the problem also lay in falling rice prices."We have to sell our crops from the last farming season at a very low price. I can sell the rice for only Bt6,000 per two cubic metres - while the cost for growing one rai of rice paddy is already up to Bt5,000," Suree lamented.She added that now authorities have told rice farmers in the Chao Phraya River Basin to postpone growing rice.Suree is not alone in her plight. So many rice farmers in the area are sharing the same fate.Even those who have grown rice ahead of the authorities' warning are struggling in their own way. They have now had to pray that their paddy fields will get adequate water until they are ready for harvest. Their yield is also facing hungry rats.
Anan Bunsongsri who has 30 rai of rice paddy in Khlong Luang district said around half the rice in his fields, which were the crop from dry season and not yet ready to harvest, were eaten by the hordes of rats."Up to 30 cubic metres of rice have already damaged. This is the highest damaged crop as far as I can remember. I trap many rats everyday but they are still coming," Anan said. "I think it is because there is not much grown rice paddy left in the area, so they all come to find food in my fields."He demanded authorities take more action to help the farmers because not only were their crops damaged by the drought and pests, the selling price of rice was low too."I have invested Bt70,000 in this crop. I don't know how much I'll gain after harvesting the rice in the next two weeks," he said.
Parts of Pathum Thani and Ayutthaya are being hit by the drought as well as many regions of the country. The water level in Raphiphat Canal and many other branch canals dried up to only few centimetres late on Friday.This year's drought situation was more severe than the previous years. Arun Pholti has had to postpone the rainy season rice plantation until late July because of water shortage even though his paddy fields were at the head of a local irrigation canal."Normally, I plant the rainy season crop around the beginning of June but this year I still can't grow a new crop even if I’ve already harvested last year's crop," said Arun.The drought has led to not only a water shortage but rat infestation here too - another major factor that could destroy the rice yield.

According to Arun, many farmers have had to abandon their fields and find a new job in the city because of the crop destruction and financial problems."I am luckier than many other farmers because my land is very near the irrigation canal, so my paddy field access to the water before many farmers downstream. I also run a small restaurant, so I have other sources of income. I have heard that some farmers down there have had to sell their land and move away," he said.Images: Despite the ongoing rainy season,drought is so serious that a resident can easlly walk across the dry Ping River in Kamphaneng Phet's Muang district yesterday.

Rice Export Goals Quietly Fall
Sunday, 28 June 2015; News by Khmer Times/T. Mohan and Muny Sithyna

Description: http://www.khmertimeskh.com/files/news/12698/1435495980-t.jpg
Workers tend to rice in the fields of Siem Reap province. Photo: ND Strupler

PHNOM PENH (Khmer Times) – Cambodia’s ambitious goal of exporting one million tons of rice this year has been quietly dropped. A follow-up export goal of 600,000 tons also is falling by the wayside.Undermining these goals is the reality of the rice paddies: labor emigration to Thailand, high costs for milling, and spreading bankruptcies among small rice farmers. This is the view of two experts affiliated with the Cambodia Rice Federation, the leading industry group.
Instead of an expected great leap forward for Cambodian milled rice exports last year, final numbers showed that exports only grew by 2.2 percent, to 387,061 tons in 2014.

Late Rains, Low Rice Harvest

Now, with June rains delayed in many parts of the Kingdom, a checkerboard drought pattern is expected to suppress further growth.“Now the rice industry is in dire straits and may be insolvent by the year end,” warns a new internal report from the Rice Federation. Some millers and exporters have incurred tremendous losses and may be forced to shut down.David Van, a former Senior Advisor to the Federation confirmed the report and gave his own analysis.“Farmers have long gone bankrupt, but nobody noticed it because they had left the country [to Thailand] to avoid paying arrears to micro finance institutions,” he said.  “Europe’s ‘Everything But Arms’ policy is meant to improve our farmers’ livelihood. But farmers are getting scarcer in Cambodia. In some provinces 70 percent of the farmers have deserted the paddy fields.” Agreement over a silent crisis in the rice paddies came from Song Saran, president of AMRU Rice (Cambodia) and board member of the Rice Federation.

Men Desert Paddies for Jobs in Thailand

“Within the last two or three years, many of our farmers have turned away from farming,” Mr. Saran said. “From what I see in the villages I have gone to, the male workforce has gone. In Preah Vihear, mostly women do the farming. Only 10 to 20 percent are men, since the farmers left to work in Thailand. If we don’t motivate them, the paddy stock that we expect cannot be achieved.”Last year, a World Bank report calculated that Cambodia’s high fuel and electricity costs make milling rice here 30 percent more expensive than in Vietnam and Thailand. Cambodia’s milling capacity has increased seven-fold over the last decade.

China Wants Cambodia as a Supplier

On the up side, China is loaning Cambodia $300 million to build 10 modern rice warehouses. At the same time, the nation’s road network is gradually improving, due in part to Chinese aid.
China’s goal is to turn Cambodia into a reliable rice supplier. This is all the more urgent given the often rocky relations between China and Vietnam.“Exporting to China is positive as it is increasing, compared to the previous year, so it reflects them recognizing our rice quality and price,” said Mr. Saran of AMRU.On a further positive note, Cambodians’ growing purchasing power means that more and more of the nation’s annual 9 million ton rice harvest is simply eaten at home. This helps explain why the nation’s paddy rice harvest has doubled in a decade, but exports have been stagnant over the last two years.

Cambodia Loses to Vietnam

Indeed, despite these improvements, Cambodia lost to Vietnam two weeks ago a 100,000-ton tender to export rice to the Philippines.“We also face competition in the region, and it is hard for us to make profits,” Mr. Saran said. “We export, but gain very little profit because the regional climate among the rice exporters is not very good, especially with Thailand.  Thailand can sell at a lower price and has the capacity to produce more rice since they have better techniques and skills.“Our millers have low rice drying capacity, they face problems with storage and financing,” he continued. “Farmers need funds to pay their debts. They cannot wait to sell their paddy at a more profitable time. After the harvest, they need to sell it right away. We should support our farmers to be able to sell their paddy at a high price.”

No Laissez Faire for Rice

Mr. Van, a longtime rice expert, said rice farming, once the economic mainstay of the nation, cannot thrive if the government follows a hands off “laissez faire policy.”“The commodity market of a country cannot survive without adequate government strategy and policy,” he said. Agreement came from Mr. Saran, whose company has been buying rice in Cambodia since 1982.“The Cambodia Rice Federation, as well as my company, try to deal directly with the farmers themselves to prevent them from losing their money planting something we do not want to export,” he said in an interview. “We should give farmers the motivation to grow rice by reducing their costs, offering low interest rates and helping farmers purchase fertilizers and equipment in bulk and at affordable prices,” he continued. “Because from what I see, farmers usually go on credit with their equipment and fertilizer suppliers and this exposes them to the exploitation of their suppliers.”

http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/12698/rice-export-goals-quietly-fall/

Commerce Ministry to hold meet over low domestic rice price

PETCHANET PRATRUANGKRAI
THE NATION June 29, 2015 1:00 am
THE Commerce Ministry will this week call for a meeting with rice exporters, millers, and traders to try and solve the problem of the rice price falling domestically despite the higher export price for rice and stronger demand globally due to drought including in Thailand.Commerce Minister General Chatchai Sarikulya said the domestic rice price should increase soon because of the widespread drought."The price of rice domestically |should reflect the export price, with |the price of white rice increasing |gradually from higher demand amid drought in many countries, mainly in Thailand, China, and Vietnam," said Chatchai.He said that the ministry would ask traders to buy rice from farmers at a fair price and one that reflects market demand.
Chatchai added that with lower rice supplies in the world market, Beijing has urged Thailand to accelerate the supply of rice to China under a government-to-government agreement."Thailand should be able to export 10 million tonnes of rice this year as more orders will come from drought-hit nations," he said.The Thai Rice Exporters Association reported that Thailand shipped 3.77 million tonnes of rice in the first five months of the year, down 1.4 per cent on the same period last year, while the value dropped 2.7 per cent year-on-year to Bt61.36 billion.However, shipments in May were up by 7.3 per cent in volume to 945,597 tonnes, while the value rose 2.3 per cent to Bt14.11 billion.
As of June 24, the export price for 5 per cent white rice was US$380 (Bt1,284) a tonne, up from $373 a tonne the previous week.Last week, the price of 5 per cent white Vietnamese rice was $355, and Indian rice was $370 a tonne.The Thai Rice Millers Association reported that the price of white paddy rice was between Bt7, 500-Bt8,000 a tonne last week.
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Commerce-Ministry-to-hold-meet-over-low-domestic-r-30263301.html

Monsoon enters lull phase; Pacific typhoon may revive it from weekend

VINSON KURIAN
Description: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/multimedia/dynamic/02456/weather_2456127f.jpg
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, JUNE 29:  
The monsoon has entered a subdued phase and is likely to lie low for the first 15 days in July except along the foothills of Himalayas and parts of east India.The India Met Department said that the monsoon was vigorous (marked by heavy rain) over east Uttar Pradesh, east Madhya Pradesh and Arunachal Pradesh during the 24 hours ending on Monday morning.The Met has already predicted that July is likely to deliver below normal rainfall (at 92 per cent of long-period average) this year.
Weather systems

The two main rain-driving systems are a low-pressure area (erstwhile deep depression from the Arabian Sea) over east Uttar Pradesh and a truncated offshore trough from Maharashtra to Kerala.The ‘low’ will continue to loiter in the region for a couple of days and then weaken and merge with the land-based monsoon trough extending from north-west to south-east (northwest India to Bay of Bengal). But indications are that a fresh low-pressure area may form over the head end of the Bay of Bengal (northernmost part of the Bay) by the weekend.This would happen as the monsoon flows get energised from ‘pull’ exerted by a projected typhoon in the west Pacific, southeast of Philippines and heading towards east China according to initial assessments.The revived flows are expected to touch off activity in the Arabian Sea, peninsular India and the Bay of Bengal from Friday/Saturday.US models predict that the initial west-northwest movement of the typhoon would trigger the formation of a ‘low’ in South China Sea that lies next to the east.
Fresh bay ‘low’

The Pacific and South China Sea teaming up in this manner has sent its own ‘pulse’ into the Bay of Bengal which is the next big sea body that is located further east in a straight line.No wonder models point to the ‘sweet spot’ in the head Bay where they expect a fresh ‘low’ to materialise. It would most possibly take the path along foothills and keep the monsoon in full flow in that region only.This promises another round of heavy to very rainfall and suspected landslides in northeast and east India from the weekend.Meanwhile, the offshore trough has been delivering good rainfall over Kerala and adjoining region in the south peninsula over the past couple of days.It is now a feeble formation and will cause rainfall over isolated places over Kerala and coastal Karnataka during the next couple of days.
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/agri-biz/monsoon-enters-lull-phase-pacific-typhoon-may-revive-it-from-weekend/article7367546.ece


Myanmar to export more aromatic rice to Singapore, U.S.


Xinhua News Agency
 on Jun 29, 2015 @ 4:55 PM
Myanmar to export more aromatic rice to Singapore, U.S.YANGON, June 29 (Xinhua) -- Myanmar will export greater volume of aromatic rice Paw San to Singapore and the United States, according to sources with the Myanmar Rice Federation (MRF) Monday.The production of Paw San rice is low as it can only be cultivated in Ayeyawady Delta and Bago and some parts of Sagaing Regions in monsoon, said the federation.In previous fiscal year, only around 20 tons of Paw San rice were exported to the United States.At present, Paw San rice is priced at around 900 U.S. dollars per ton in its export.Meanwhile, the European Union is seeking import deal of two types of aromatic rice -- Lone Thwal Hmwe and Paw San as demand in Europe is on rise.Officials of the MRF said Myanmar can grow both short and long grain aromatic rice to meet EU demand through the country's contract farming system, pointing out that exporting to Europe would enable Myanmar growers to diversify their markets.

Paw San was regarded as the world's best rice at the World Rice Conference in 2011.Myanmar official statistics indicate that the country's rice export reached nearly 2 million tons in the fiscal year 2014-15 which ended in March, up 40 percent from the previous yearThis article was produced by the Xinhua News Agency, the official press agency of the People's Republic of China. Xinhua describes itself as the "information organ of the central government." Given China’s size and importance, GlobalPost publishes Xinhua’s press feed as a resource for its readers and makes no claims as to journalistic accuracy.

http://www.globalpost.com/article/6598057/2015/06/29/myanmar-export-more-aromatic-rice-singapore-us

Commerce Ministry plans 4th rice auction with hope of greater attention from bidders

Sunday, 28 June 2015By  NNT
BANGKOK, 26 June 2015 – The Commerce Ministry plans the fourth auction of 1.39 million tonnes of both fragrant and white rice in different grades kept in the government stockpiles nationwide, Banjongjit Angsusingh, deputy director-general of the Foreign Trade Department said on Friday.The grains are from 156 government stockpiles, 107 warehouses under the Public Warehouse Organization and 49 Marketing Organization for Farmers warehouses in 32 provinces across Thailand.There are fourteen types of rice to be sold this time and 56,000 tonnes of the amount are White Rice 5% and Jasmine Rice 100%.Banjongjit was confident the fourth auction could draw greater attention from private bidders as the ministry was successful in the latest auction in which 70% of stockpiled rice was sold.She believed “demand in the rice markets remains high. So the auction comes at the right time and it seems to have no negative impact on the whole rice market”.

Nigeria: CBN Explains Denial of Foreign Exchange to Rice Importers

By Bassey Udo

The Central Bank of Nigeria on Friday explained its new policy of making public lists of goods and services items barred from for accessingFOREIGN EXCHANGEDescription: http://cdncache-a.akamaihd.net/items/it/img/arrow-10x10.png in the Nigerian market for their imports.The Bank's Director of Trade and Exchange department, Olakanmi Gbadamosi, said the new policy was part of efforts at stabilising the foreignEXCHANGE MARKETDescription: http://cdncache-a.akamaihd.net/items/it/img/arrow-10x10.png and stimulating local production of goods and services."It has become imperative to exclude importers of some goods and services from accessing foreign exchange at the Nigerian foreignEXCHANGE MARKETSDescription: http://cdncache-a.akamaihd.net/items/it/img/arrow-10x10.png in order to encourage local production of these items," Mr. Gbadamosi said.
"The implementation of the policy will help conserve foreign reserves as well as facilitate the resuscitation of domestic industries and employment generation," he added.Some of the affected items included rice, cement, margarine, palm kernel, palm oil products, vegetable oils, meat and processed meat products, vegetables and process vegetable products, poultry (chicken, eggs, turkey), tomatoes/tomato paste, soap and cosmetics and clothes.Other items included private airplanes/jets, Indian incense, tinned fish in sauce (Geisha/sardines, cold rolled steel sheets, galvanized steel sheets, roofing sheets, wheelbarrows, head pans, metal boxes/containers, enamelware, steel drums and pipes, wire mesh, steel nails, wood particle boards and panels.
http://allafrica.com/stories/201506290166.html


El Nino threatens to disrupt rice trading

The potential impact of El Nino on paddy farmlands worldwide is changing rice trading patterns, triggering importers' fears that lower rice supply from drought caused by the weather phenomenon could translate into higher prices.Chookiat Ophaswongse, honorary president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said the dry spell had now started to affect the world's rice trade psychologically. Importers are increasingly aware the dry weather may worsen to the extent that it hits global rice production."The world's rice trading environment is now changing," he said. "Buyers who had been reluctant to purchase rice and keep it in their stockpiles in recent years are now doing just that for fear global rice prices will rise."
Mr Chookiat said the market for parboiled rice had become active again, with higher purchase orders from Nigeria and Benin resuming, leading Thailand's overall May rice exports to surpass 900,000 tonnes from an average of 700,000 tonnes in previous months.Strong exports are also anticipated next month if Thailand can win a rice import tender from the Philippines. That country is expected to invite tenders from Thailand and Vietnam to supply 250,000 tonnes of rice in July to boost its buffer stocks as well as prevent rice price increases.
The Philippines, one of the world's biggest rice importers, last month said it could buy more if the drought-inducing El Nino intensified, as its government hoped to avert a potential surge in food prices due to possible supply disruptions that could be caused by El Nino, which Japan earlier confirmed had set in.Last year, the Philippines imported more than 1.8 million tonnes of rice to replenish rice stocks and control price rises.Higher demand from that country would be good news for regional rice markets that have been flagging this year due to oversupply.Mr Chookiat said the psychological impact was now clearer, as indicated by higher free-on-board prices for 5% white rice, which rose by US$10 a tonne last week to $385 a tonne.
Local milled rice prices also increased accordingly to 11,500 baht a tonne from 11,120 baht, while paddy prices rose to between 8,000 and 8,200 baht a tonne from 7,700 baht.However, Mr Chookiat said despite the impact being clearly visible in India and Pakistan and lower-than-expected rainfall in Thailand, it remained unclear whether and how far global rice production would drop. India's monsoon season, due to start in July or August, will have to be closely monitored.Nonetheless, he said the unusually low rainfall in Thailand was expected to shave production of the second crop by 40-50% from 8-9 million tonnes of paddy this year.
Charoen Laothamatas, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said the main factors dictating prospects for global rice prices were likely to be rice production levels in China and India and how much these countries were affected by drought.Prospects are expected to be clearly evident around August, when their main crops start being harvested, he said.Mr Charoen said rice exporters expected Thailand would ship no fewer than 9 million tonnes this year.As of June 15, Thailand had shipped 3.9 million tonnes of rice this year, fetching 64.2 billion baht, down by 8% from the same period last year.

link:http://www.bangkokpost.com/business/news/606668/el-nino-threatens-to-disrupt-rice-trading

19 plead innocent in G2G rice-corruption case

Former commerce minister Boonsong Teriyapirom and 18 others pleaded innocent in the government-to-government rice-sales corruption case Monday.Two others charged in the case -- Weerawut Wajjanapukka, former secretary to Mr Boonsong, and Suthee Luanthaisong -- failed to appear and never have applied for bail. The court issued arrest warrants for the pair.
Mr Boonsong and other defendants are allowed to submit written testimony to the court by Aug 31, and the court set Sept 29 for the first examination of evidence.The 21 individuals were indicted March 17 on charges of committing and supporting malfeasance in violation of the Criminal Code and competitive-bidding and anti-corruption laws.Prosecutors alleged they colluded to help two Chinese firms not authorised by the Chinese government to undertake G2G deals with the Thai government to buy rice from stockpiles generated by the Yingluck Shinawatra administration's pledging scheme.Each in the group, which comprises three politicians in the Yingluck government, three civil servants and 15 authorised directors of companies and juristic persons, faces a maximum punishment of life imprisonment and combined fines of 35 billion baht.

link:http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/politics/607496/19-plead-innocent-in-g2g-rice-corruption-case. View our policies at http://goo.gl/9HgTd and http://goo.gl/ou6Ip. © Post Publishing PCL. All rights reserved.

USA Rice Co-Sponsors Cooking Seminars in Colombia                
Chef Bernardo cooks for a packed house
BOGOTA, COLOMBIA -- USA Rice recently hosted a seminar here, conducted by Executive Chef Bernardo Gomez Cortazar, focusing on the high quality and benefits of utilizing U.S. rice dishes and poultry products in food service.  More than 60 participants from the hotel and foodservice sector attended the interactive activity which took place at the prestigious Mario Moreno culinary academy, one of the best culinary schools in Latin America.The seminars were sponsored by USA Rice, the USA Poultry & Egg Export Council, and the United Soybean Board.  Similar seminars were conducted in Cali and Medellin.
"U.S. rice exports to Colombia have skyrocketed this year, making Colombia our number one export market on a milled rice basis," said Jim Guinn, USA Rice vice president of international promotion. In the first four months of 2015, the U.S. has exported nearly 240,000 MT of rice, which is nearly 150,000 MT above the tariff rate quota (TRQ) for 2015.  Just four years ago, Colombia was our 51st largest export destination bringing in less than 5,000 MT of U.S. rice.

Guinn added, "After the successful conclusion of the Free Trade Agreement with Colombia and the establishment of an Export Trading Company to manage the licenses to import U.S. rice into Colombia under the TRQ, Colombia has been one of our top export markets."
Contact:  Sarah Moran (703) 236-1457
Crop Progress:   2015 Crop 16 Percent Headed   
WASHINGTON, DC -- Sixteen percent of the nation's 2015 rice acreage is headed, according to today's U.S. Department of Agriculture's Crop Progress Report

Rice Headed, Selected States 
Week Ending
State
June 28, 2014  
June 21, 2015  
June 28, 2015
2010-2014 average
Percent
Arkansas
4
-- 
5
California
3
10 
15
1
Louisiana
28 
22
51
37
Mississippi
2
11
17
5
Missouri
2
--
--
Texas
11
2
26 
21
Six States
6
16
9

CME Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures   
CME Group (Preliminary):  Closing Rough Rice Futures for June 29
Month
Price
Net Change

July 2015
$9.790
- $0.170
September 2015
$10.085
- $0.160
November 2015
$10.360
- $0.155
January 2016
$10.625
- $0.155
March 2016
$10.830
- $0.155
May 2016
$10.830
- $0.155
July 2016
$10.830
- $0.155

COURTESY: USA RICE FEDERATION

APEDA News  (India)
Price on: 26-06-2015
Product
Benchmark Indicators Name
Price
Garlic
1
Chinese first grade granules, CFR NW Europe (USD/t)
2100
2
Chinese Grade A dehydrated flakes, CFR NW Europe (USD/t)
2000
3
Chinese powdered, CFR NW Europe (USD/t)
1800
Ginger
1
Chinese sliced, CIF NW Europe (USD/t)
4600
2
Chinese whole, CIF NW Europe (USD/t)
5100
3
Indian Cochin, CIF NW Europe (USD/t)
3000
Guar Gum Powder
1
Indian 100 mesh 3500 cps, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
4530 
2
Indian 200 mesh 3500 cps basis, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
1950
3
Indian 200 mesh 5000 cps, FOB Kandla (USD/t)
3050
Source:agra-net
For more info
Market Watch
Commodity-wise, Market-wise Daily Price on 29-06-2015
Domestic Prices
Unit Price : Rs per Qty
Product
Market Center
Variety
Min Price
Max Price
Rice
1
Bargarh (Orissa)
Other
2200
2400
2
Dhekiajuli (Assam)
Fine
2340
2670
3
Khatra (West Bengal)
Other
2150
2300
Wheat
1
Amirgadh (Gujarat)
Other
1300
1400
2
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
1450
1600
3
Gumla (Jharkhand)
Other
2100
2600
Mousambi
1
Batala (Punjab)
Other
2700
3500
2
Sitapur (Uttar Pradesh)
Other
2250
2450
3
Mechua (West Bengal)
Other
2400
2900
Cucumbar
1
Chala (Kerala)
Other
1700
1750
2
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
2000
3000
3
Satara (Maharashtra)
Other
800
1200
Source:agra-net
For more info
Egg
Rs per 100 No
Price on 27-06-2015
Product
Market Center
Price
1
Pune
395
2
Nagapur
350
3
Hyderabad
370
Source: e2necc.com
Other International Prices
Unit Price : US$ per package
Price on 26-06-2015
Product
Market Center
Origin
Variety
Low
High
Onions Dry
Package: 50 lb sacks
1
Atlanta
Mexico
Yellow
23
24
2
Baltimore
Canada
Yellow
19
19
3
Detroit
California
Yellow
21.50
23.50
Carrots
Package: 20 1-lb film bags
1
Atlanta
California
Baby Peeled
18.50
20.50
2
Dallas
Arizona
Baby Peeled
20
20
3
Detroit
California
Baby Peeled
17
17.50
Apples
Package: cartons tray pack
1
Atlanta
Virginia
Red Delicious 
19
19
2
Dallas
Washington 
Red Delicious 
21.25
21.25
3
Detroit
Washington
Red Delicious 
23.50
25.50
Source:USDA



EAC states impose common external tariffs to protect paddy farmers

BY CORRESPONDENT
29th June 2015

The East Africa Community (EAC)
Description: http://www.ippmedia.com/media/picture/large/15.pngThe East Africa Community (EAC) partner states have imposed Common External Tariff to help traders and farmers in the community to benefit from what they grow and protect rice smuggling that destroy small scale farmers engaged in paddy production in the region. A report from Rice Council of Tanzania (RCT) issued by the Rice Council Executive Director, Winnie Bashagi say that the EAC has decided to imposed the common external tariffs after it identified that right now Tanzania and other EAC rice industry is under the threat of imported rice from Thailand and Pakistan.She said across Tanzania, and the rice value chain, farmers, millers and traders are bitter about the high volumes of cheap Asian rice that somehow makes its way into the country and region duty free.
 In a national market assessment in March and April, the Rice Council found Chapa Africa Thai rice and Kasuku Pakistan rice in every region visited. If you look at the wholesale price and what it should cost to import with the EAC rice tariff paid,” says Winnie Bashagi, “it is clear that the tariff was not paid. If the tariff had been paid, the importers would be losing on every kilogramme they sold,” she said.lso in late 2014, the Ministry of Agriculture declared Tanzania to have produced a 700,000-tonne rice surplus.This surplus was trapped in the country as, in June 2013, Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda imposed the Common External Tariff of the East African Community on all Tanzanians in reaction to some 80,000 tonnes of duty-free rice officially allowed into Tanzania in early 2013, according to the Council’s Position Paper.  
When the 2013 duty-free rice began entering the EAC partner states, often blended with Tanzania rice, the partner states imposed the EAC tariff on all Tanzania rice. The trapped surplus in Tanzania led to two years of wholesale prices too low for smallholders to breakeven on their production. Only since Uganda lifted the tariff on Tanzania has the wholesale rice price begun to improve. Rwanda has yet to lift the tariff.In Morogoro Municipality and in Kahama, the council witnessed large lorries unloading Chapa Africa Thai rice and large quantities being blended with Tanzanian rice. The blending of this smuggled rice with Tanzania rice for export to Uganda led Uganda to re-impose the EAC tariff on all Tanzania rice. 
Cutting off the surplus from Uganda would depress the wholesale price again, further damaging the livelihoods of at least 500,000 smallholder rice farmers and the 2 million family members who depend on them.On the other hand a trader from Kahama noted that the imported rice is killing my business,” said a trader in Kahama, whose business is selling Tanzania rice to Rwanda and Uganda, who wishes to remain anonymous for fear of physical harm. One big shot brought in three thousand tonnes for DR Congo. He paid duties on a bit to cover his tracks, but all of it he sold to local warehouses.  It never went to DR Congo.” The trader says it’s impossible for Tanzanians to compete with cheap Asian rice.In Morogoro, local millers complain that imported Asian rice is selling in shops for less than they can pay farmers for unmilled paddy.“Smuggled rice appears to enter Tanzania in two ways,” says Rice Council Chairman Julius Wambura.
“Zanzibar does not enforce the 75 percent EAC tariff and imports enough rice to the extent that, the study by SERA 2013 quoted FAO food balance sheet of fifty kilogrammes of rice per person per day! This rice doesn’t stay on the island but comes by dhow to the pirate ports along the coast.”The second way, according to the Council, appears to be tens of thousands of tonnes imported as transit goods to the DRC that are dumped in Tanzania.“The only people making money in the rice industry right now are the traders who are smuggling rice,” says Wambura. “Everyone else has been losing money for two years.
The large-scale smuggling threatens to ruin the industry. We are calling on the government to put a stop to the smuggling and to enforce the rule of law and the EAC treaty commitments.”Through smallholder apex associations, the Rice Council of Tanzania represents some 500,000 of the smallholder rice farmers across the country who in total number are about a million. The Council also represents commercial farms, agri-input suppliers, traders, millers and packagers of Tanzania rice, and banks that lend to the industry. “If the government wants to reach its Big Results Now and National Rice Development Strategy goals of doubling rice production for food security and regional export by 2018,” said Council Chairman Wambura, “The first step is to put an end, once and for all, to the large-scale organised rice smuggling. Otherwise, the rice industry will not go forward but backward.”
News Shared by PhilRice
DA-PhilRice, IRRI develop climate-resilient varieties
To mitigate the impacts of climate change on rice production and food security, the Department of Agriculture (DA)-PhilRice and the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) are developing varieties that could withstand multiple biotic and abiotic stresses. The collaborative project titled, ‘Accelerating the development and adoption of next-generation (NextGen) rice varieties for major ecosystems in the Philippines’ aims to fast-track  the introduction and adoption of higher yielding inbred and hybrid rice varieties resistant to major pests and diseases and tolerant to adverse environments.
To help the country achieve food security, the project targets to produce higher yields by more than 5% of previous varieties, using marker-assisted breeding and selection, multi-location testing, increased breeder/foundation seed production and dissemination.Conventionally, it takes 6 years of breeding work, 3 years of testing, and 2 years of commercial seed production before farmers can plant a new variety.“The project would help shorten the breeding time to produce new varieties faster and make them accessible to rice farmers,” said Thelma F. Padolina, senior research fellow at PhilRice.
Multi-location trials are done in all major irrigated and rainfed rice-growing regions in the country under the supervision of DA-RFOs and state colleges and universities. Adaption trials are being done in farmer-partners’ fields.“Yield trials in farmers’ fields will help them (farmers) see how improved varieties perform in their (farmers) area,” said Padolina.In its recent assessment and planning workshop held in Subic Zambales, 7-11 June, Dr. Georgina Vergara, IRRI scientist, reported that as of 2014, the project has nominated 766 entries for multi-location environment testing (MET). Among the nominated entries, 206 lines were PhilRice-bred, 488 IRRI lines and 72 GSR lines compared with eight check varieties.The Rice Technical Working Group (RTWG) also approved 24 new promising inbreds and hybrids developed by the project.According to Dr. Vergara, more than 2,000 lines were screened for submergence, 12,000 for salinity, and 80 lines for drought in 2014.The project is an initiative under the Food Staples Sufficiency Program of DA being implemented jointly with PhilRice and IRRI in partnership with UP Los Baños, DA RFOs, state colleges and universities, LGUs, and rice farmers.
AgRiDOC training starts for Vis-Min participants
Continuing its objective of enabling the next generation of rice extensionists, Project IPaD welcomed participants from Visayas and Mindanao to its second batch of training program titled “Enabling the AgRiDOC: a new breed of rice extensionists.” The Improving Technology Promotion and Delivery through Capability Enhancement of the Next Generation of Rice Extension Professionals and Intermediaries or IPaD is one of the seven projects under the flagship of the DA’s Food Staples Sufficiency Program. Being funded by the National Rice Program through the DA-Bureau of Agricultural Research, it is the only project that deals directly with improving the agricultural extension system in the Philippines.
A new training program designed for rice extensionists is one of the ways by which Project IPaD is helping revitalize the Philippine agricultural extension system. The program’s foundation is now farm community transformation, not just technology transmission.During the opening program, Mr. Julian Lapitan, interim head of IRRI partnerships office and lead of Project IPaD at IRRI said to the trainees: “As extension workers, your work should not only be limited to transmission, but it should go toward transformation. And you cannot transform if you yourself are not transformed.”Director Edmund J. Sana of the National Rice Program challenged the future AgRiDOCs (Agricultural Development Officers of the Community) to maximize the opportunity to learn from the training.
“You are here to get more, to increase your capacity, and be motivated to enjoy your work so that you can deliver,” he said.Director Sana was instrumental in the realization of the Project IPaD.“The moment you give justice to your job, that’s when you start to enjoy it; and it will not be a work anymore if you enjoy it,” he told the participants.“You (extension workers) have to put it in your hearts to serve our farmers, our community, and our country,” said Emelita Flores, municipal agriculturist of Sto. Domingo, Nueva Ecija. Flores is a three-time Rice Achiever awardee for outstanding performance in extension. The training has a diverse pool of 25 participants. They are young, age range is 22-41 years old, agricultural technicians, extension workers, college instructors, staff members of the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), and staff members of PhilRice branch stations. The trainees will undergo 4 months of intensive training that aims to strengthen their technical competence, nurture values relevant to development work, and sharpen their leadership, communication, and entrepreneurial skills.Guiding the program is the curriculum, which was piloted last season with the Luzon batch. The curriculum is a strong mix of engaging and experiential learning designed to heighten trainees’ understanding and appreciation of rice-based farming system and the development processes in farming communities.The training curriculum consists of six modules: BeTransformed, AgRiCool, AgRiSurvivors, PalaYcheck and PalaYamanan v2.0, Rise with Rice, and Be RICEponsible. “I expect to learn many things about rice production and agriculture in general from this training, so I can better assist our farmers,” said Jun Rey Samillano, AgRiDOC trainee from ATI-RTC Region 12.The training runs from 16 June to– 23 October, 2015. Upon graduation, the AgRiDOCs are expected to help raise the bar of performance in extension in the Philippines, increase productivity to secure food self-sufficiency, and help catalyze farm community transformation.Plans for outscaling the project beyond 2015 are being laid out.
Study identifies most stable varieties

To identify appropriate varieties with wider or location-specific adaptation, the project titled Accelerating the development and adoption of next-generation (Next Gen) rice varieties for major ecosystem in the Philippines conducted the initial participatory varietal selection (PVS) in selected sites across 16 regions of the country. PVS entries were composed of new varieties developed under the DA’s Rice Self-sufficiency Program implemented in 2009 to 2013 and serving as start-up materials in the new Food Staples Sufficiency Program under Next Gen.Next Gen aims to use recent advances in plant breeding and improved computational power to make the country’s rice breeding program more efficient.PVS is part of Next Gen’s component 2 that aims to accelerate the adoption of high-yielding rice varieties through a new multi-environment testing strategy and production of high quality seeds.“Through PVS, yield trials in farmers’ fields will help them see how improved varieties perform in their area,” said Thelma F. Padolina, senior fellow at PhilRice.In the recent assessment and planning workshop held in Subic, Zambales on 7-11 June 2015, Next Gen identified the preferred varieties by the farmers after 131 seed kits were deployed across 16 regions in 2014 wet season.Out of the 86 trials established, 63 sites have valid data and were then analyzed by Next Gen researchers.According to Dr. Mary Jean Du of the International Rice Research institute (IRRI), after analyzing data from regional clusters 1, 2 and 3 (composed of Luzon and Visayas regions), the most stable varieties across sites are the following: NSIC Rc302, inbred variety for irrigated lowland; RAELINE 3 for rainfed and drought; PSB Rc68 for submergence; and NSIC Rc330 for saline.In regional cluster 4 (Mindanao), Du reported that the most stable varieties across sites are the following: NSIC Rc300 (performed best in Lanao Del Norte and Zamboanga Sibugay), NSIC Rc222 and NSIC Rc298 (performed best in Bukidnon and Misamis Oriental) for irrigated lowland; NSIC Rc192 and NSIC Rc348 for rainfed; NSIC Rc226 for saline; and PR40146 for submergence.Varieties RAELINE 3 and PR40146, however, have not been released commercially.Preference analysis and sensory evaluation of PVS test entries and field day activities were done as observed during monitoring visits of the Next Gen team to different PVS sites in 16 regions.The Next Gen project is an initiative under the Food Staples Sufficiency Program of DA being implemented jointly with PhilRice and IRRI in partnership with UP Los Baños, DA RFOs, Bureau of Plant Industry, state colleges and universities, LGUs and rice farmers.

Download/View On-Line the above News in pdf format,just click the following link




Desi Scientists Turn to Crop Gene Editing

By C Shivakumar
Published: 29th June 2015 04:35 AM
Last Updated: 29th June 2015 04:35 AM
CHENNAI: With their ambitious plans to undertake genetic modification of crops failing to take off as the debate on the suitability of GM crops remaining inconclusive in the country, scientists here are looking at ‘gene editing’ to tweak the crop without attracting the ire of sceptics.
Speaking to Express, Ajay Parida, executive director of M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, said the Department of Biotechnology was paving the way for research on gene editing as it entailed lesser regulations unlike the transgenic crops. “Here, the genes of a plant variety is edited. This is a non-transgenic method, done without importing genes from another crop,” he said.
Scientists working on it said that by editing the genes of rice varieties, they could raise high-yielding disease resistant and nutritious crops.
Through editing, the gene of rice plant could be tinkered to improve the biomass-grain output ratio, said Parida. For instance, if a crop has a biomass of 70 per cent and grains 30 per cent, gene editing would be carried out to increase the yield to about 35-40 per cent, he said.
While this won’t have much difference on the plant, it requires extensive tests to study variations in culinary characteristics of the variety.
As it does not entail introducing new, foreign traits to a plant as is the case with a transgenic plant, gene editing would not have to undergo the stringent checks and regulations like the GM crops, he said. Unlike transgenic crops, which require antibiotic marker, gene editing process does not require any such tests.
Gene sequencing of 1,500 plant varieties have been completed so far, Parida said.
http://www.delta-homes.com/?type=sc&ts=1437000073&z=051f247619355c7a9aa3a7egfzccfocb0t9waz8bfm&from=wpm052932&uid=WDCXWD800BJKT-75F4T0_WD-WX60A694383343833

Monday, June 29, 2015

29th June (Monday),2015 Daily Global Rice E-Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine

Fake rice allegation was untrue, baseless

BY HASHINI KAVISHTRI KANNAN - 27 JUNE 2015 @ 6:43 PM PUTRAJAYA: Health Ministry clarified allegations that a rice producing factory in Kedah produces fake rice was untrue and baseless. "Based on our checks in the factory, we found that allegations on the factory is untrue," said the ministry's director-general Datuk Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah. With the clarification, he advised the public not to be worried as monitoring and enforcement of food safety activities were constantly being carried out to ensure food sold in the market was safe. "If consumers are worried and uncertain about the safety status of food in the market, consumers can make a complaint to the Ministry of Health through state health departments and offices or make an online complaint at http://fsq.moh.gov.my or health ministry's official Facebook page," he added.
Dr Noor Hisham said the ministry takes serious of any allegation in regards of food safety and now the alleged fake rice from China which has gone viral on social networking sites. Adding further, he said the issue has already been clarified by PadiBeras Nasional Berhad (Bernas) and the ministry has issued a statement last May 21 that a majority rice import were from Vietnam, Thailand and Pakistan. "Rice import from China is very small, less than 0.01 per cent compared to 800,000 tonnes of rice a year. "Rice from China is usually on request for use in Japanense and Koren food restaurant in Malaysia," he added
http://www.nst.com.my/node/89936

Alapala, Buhler receive GRAPAS awards at conference


6/26/2015 - by World Grain Staff
COLOGNE, GERMANY – Buhler AG and Alapala were joint recipients of the GRAPAS innovation award at the 2015 FIAPP/VICTAM/GRAPAS International exhibition and conference June 8-11 in Cologne, Germany. The companies received the award for innovations in the flour milling industry which were on display at the VICTAM trade show. Other innovation award winners at the conference were Tovalia Intelscan, France, which received the Aquafeed Innovation Award, and Adifo, Belgium, which was given the FIAPP Animal Nutrition Award. Thousands of visitors came through the doors of the KoelnMesse Exhibition Centre for the conference, held every four years in Cologne. Attendees came from as far away as Australia and every continent was represented at the event, which targets the animal feed, flour and rice milling, grain processing and biomass pelleting industries. 
The 276 exhibitors at the trade show were busy with serious trade enquiries and discussions, and there was much to see for the trade professionals as a wide range of new products that were launched at the show. Conferences held during the event were the FIAAP Conference, Aquafeed Horizons, AEBIOM Pellet Workshop, Petfood Forum Europe 2015, GMP+International Feed Safety Assurance certificate, the IFF Feed Conference and the Global Milling Conference with GRAPAS International 2015. For the first time ever, FEFAC (the European Feed Manufacturers Federation) held its Annual General Meeting during the event and their members joined the exhibition as well. Additionally Victam arranged for free tours to the Vitelia feed mill and the newly opened Feed Design Lab in the Netherlands. 

Victam celebrated its 50th Anniversary with a celebration dinner and an evening of entertainment for 500 guests at the Flora and botanical gardens in Cologne. During this dinner the president of the Victam Foundation, Andre Oosterveld, thanked the guests for their continued support of the exhibitions and especially praised the exhibitors for their professional and innovative stands, as well as, the enormous and varied amount of products on display. Earlier in the day at a press conference, Henk van de Bunt, general manager of Victam International BV, announced that Victam, in conjunction with some of their conference organizers, will shortly be launching a new venture.
 They will organize a series of industry conferences at a venue near Cologne in early summer of 2017. There will also be an additional area where companies will be able to have table-top exhibits. Van de Bunt also announced that FIAAP, VICTAM & GRAPAS Asia 2016 will take place from March 29-31, 2016 in Bangkok, Thailand. It will once again be held at the Bangkok International Trade and Exhibition Centre (BITEC). Over half of the available exhibition space for the show is already reserved. Victam will also celebrate its 25th year since it first organized a show in Southeast Asia. The exhibitions and conferences will cover animal feed ingredients and additives, aqua feed ingredients and production, biomass pelleting technology, petfood ingredients and production and flour and rice milling & grain processing. There will be the 2nd meeting of the ASEAN Feed Associations as well as the 2nd edition of the ASEAN Feed and Rice Symposium.
These will bring together members of the milling associations from throughout Asia with acknowledged industry experts. Van de Bunt said there will be some changes within the Victam organization. New members will be appointed to the Board from within the feed, flour and grain industries. This will bring new ideas and experience to its Board. Van de Bunt announced that he will retire on July 1, 2016. He will, however, still be the general manager for the next event in Bangkok. Van de Bunt said it is the intention of the Board to appoint a new general manager to succeed him and that hopefully either he or she will be in Bangkok for the next show so as to be introduced to the industry.

CBN explains denial of foreign exchange to rice importers

The Central Bank of Nigeria on Friday explained its new policy of making public lists of goods and services items barred from for accessing foreign exchange in the Nigerian market for their imports.The Bank’s Director of Trade and Exchange department, Olakanmi Gbadamosi, said the new policy was part of efforts at stabilising the foreign exchange market and stimulating local production of goods and services.“It has become imperative to exclude importers of some goods and services from accessing foreign exchange at the Nigerian foreign exchange markets in order to encourage local production of these items,” Mr. Gbadamosi said.“The implementation of the policy will help conserve foreign reserves as well as facilitate the resuscitation of domestic industries and employment generation,” he added.
Some of the affected items included rice, cement, margarine, palm kernel, palm oil products, vegetable oils, meat and processed meat products, vegetables and process vegetable products, poultry (chicken, eggs, turkey), tomatoes/tomato paste, soap and cosmetics and clothes.Other items included private airplanes/jets, Indian incense, tinned fish in sauce (Geisha/sardines, cold rolled steel sheets, galvanized steel sheets, roofing sheets, wheelbarrows, head pans, metal boxes/containers, enamelware, steel drums and pipes, wire mesh, steel nails, wood particle boards and panels.
The policy also covers security and razor wire, wood particle boards and panels, wood fibre Board and panels, Wood fibre Boards and panels, wooden doors, furnitures, toothpicks, glass/glassware, kitchen utensils, tableware, tiles (vitrified, ceramics), textiles, wooden fabrics, plastic/rubber products (polypropylene granules, cellophane wrappers, euro bond/foreign currency bond/share purchases.Since the announcement of the new policy on Wednesday, speculations have been rife that the CBN had banned the importation of these items.But in a statement Friday, the CBN clarified that the policy could not be misconstrued to mean the decision to ban the importation of these items.“These items are not banned,” Mr. Gbadamosi declared. “Thus, importers desirous of importing these items shall do so using their own funds without any recourse to the Nigerian foreign exchange markets.”Urging authorised dealers on these goods and services to ensure strict compliance, the director warned that defaulters would be sanctioned in line with the regulatory powers of the Bank.
http://www.premiumtimesng.com/business/manufacturing/185715-cbn-explains-denial-of-foreign-exchange-to-rice-importers.html

Civil Supplies chief suspends official

 June 28,2015, 02.18 AM  IST | | THE HANS INDIA
 
Nizamabad: The Telangana State Civil Supplies Commissioner Rajat Kumar placed  the  Assistant Grain Purchasing Officer (AGPO) Srinivas under suspension on Saturday and directed the district-level officials to conduct an inquiry into the ‘custom milling of rice scandal’.  
According to reliable sources, the Civil Supplies Commissioner took action against  AGPO Srinivas, on charges  that he was favoring some rice millers in paddy procurement violating rules and guidelines. He was found to have wasted time in collecting the required quantities of rice from millers and allotted the paddy to the non-working rice mills. During the 2014-15 Kharif season, the Civil Supplies Department issued 2,42,278.688 metric tonnes of paddy to the 340 rice mills for ‘custom milling of rice’. The millers collected the paddy from the Civil Supplies department and procured 68 percent -   1,62,787.775 metric tonnes of rice from the department. However, many millers have defaulted and they owe dues to the tune of Rs 29 crore to the Civil Supplies department on 11,757 metric tonnes of rice .  

Though the department officials issued notices to defaulter millers  they have not responded to the notices. Finally, the District Collector and Joint Collector also held meetings with millers several times and gave warnings. But they failed to respond to the notices, warnings and, remained indifferent. 
Consequently, the State Civil Supplies Commissioner and state-level officers constituted a committee under the supervision of Karimnagar District Supplies Officer Chandra Prakash and conducted raids with 12 teams on 38 rice mills in various places in the district. The teams found out that the AGPO Srinivas connived with the rice millers and allotted  the paddy to closed and defunct  rice mills; of these rice mills, a few of them were defaulters.  Finally, the Commissioner took action against AGPO Srinivas on the basis of a report submitted by the Karimnagar DSO team. 
http://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/2015-06-28/Civil-Supplies-chief-suspends-official-159970

BOC files smuggling raps vs. traders over P130-M rice shipment

By MARK MERUEÑAS,GMA News June 26, 2015 4:48pm

   

 

Tags: Bureau of Customs

 

BoC files smuggling raps vs. broker, rice trader. Customs Commissioner Alberto Lina (right) files smuggling-related complaints against the owners and customs brokers of Malingas Multi-purpose Cooperative and RMJR Grains Center Corp. before the Department of Justice for alleged illegal entry of over 4.2 million kilograms of rice worth P72.4 million through the Manila International Container Port. Benjie Castro

 

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) on Friday filed criminal complaints with the Department of Justice against the owners and customs brokers of two rice trading companies for allegedly smuggling into the country some 4.2 million kilograms of rice with a street value of P130 million.

 

According to the BOC, Malingas Multi-Purpose Cooperative and RMJR Grains Center Corp shipped the smuggled the rice cargo from Thailand through the Manila International Container Port. The shipment's street value is over P130 million, but its total dutiable value is over P72.4 million.

 

The BOC said the two rice trading firms misdeclared the quantity and weight of their rice importations which constitutes technical smuggling, in violation of Sections 3601 and 3602 of the Tariff and Customs Code of the Philippines (TCCP); Section 29 of Presidential Decree No. 4; and Article 172 in relation to 171 and Article 183 of the Revised Penal Code of the Philippines.  

An investigation showed that Malingas' four shipments of rice arrived from Thailand on Nov. 6, 13 and 28, 2013;while RMJR's five shipments arrived in the country on Nov. 3 and 5, 2013.The BOC said the shipments exceeded the total allowable import volume of 3,562 metric tons indicated in their import permits, or an excess of 644 metric tons or 644,000 kilos of rice.

Description: BoC files smuggling raps vs. broker, rice trader 

"Any rice shipment in excess of the maximum quantity allowed under specific National Food Authority Import Permit is no longer covered by the said NFA Import Permit, and thus in violation of NFA Memorandum Circular No. AO-2K13-03-003 and considered unlawful importation penalized under Section 3601 in relation to Section 101 of the TCCP," said the BOC.The NFA is authorized by law to to regulate rice imports through quotas, to prevent excessive and unquantifiable amounts of rice, to ensure fair competition and viability of the local rice industry. “We strongly advise all rice importers to not exceed within the approved quantity or Minimum Access Volume set by the National Food Authority indicated in their NFA Import Permit in importing rice," said Customs Commissioner Alberto Lina.

 

"Any excess in volume not approved by the NFA would be considered smuggling. If you do that we will go after you,” he added.The BOC chief added: "Rice is a regulated commodity not only because it is our staple food but also a source of livelihood for millions of farming households. Any sudden increase in imported rice would have devastating consequences for our rice industry.According to the Department of Agriculture In 2014, the Philippine rice industry performed well, reaching a national production all-time high of 18.97 million metric tons. The 2.87% production growth exceeded the previous year’s record by 528,406 million tons. — RSJ, GMA News

 

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/511158/economy/finance/boc-files-smuggling-raps-vs-traders-over-p130-m-rice-shipment

CRRI indicates rice production to increase on current pace of monsoon

By Sutanuka Ghosal, ET Bureau | 27 Jun, 2015, 03.59PM IST
Last year the rice production went down to 102.54 million tonnes due to late arrival of monsoons in June 2014.KOLKATA: Central Rice Research Institute (CRRI) has indicated that rice production may go up to 105-106 million tonnes if monsoon continues in the current pace. Last year the rice production went down to 102.54 million tonnes due to late arrival of monsoons in June 2014 delaying the kharif main rice crop planting process in many key rice growing areas. Talking to ET, Trilochon Mohapatra, director, CRRI said "The monsoon has gathered momentum across most parts of India. If this continues during July also we are hopeful that rice production will go up to 105 -106 million tonnes."The CRRI director said that sowing has begun in most parts of the country and transplantation of the saplings will begin in first week of July. "Farmers require good rains during July for transplantation. In regions where rains will be less farmers can use short duration paddy variety." Agriculture officials in West Bengal, the largest rice producing state in the country said that nursery preparation for paddy has picked up in south Bengal as rains have picked up. "Generally nursery preparation begins in third week of June in Bengal. Monsoon has picked up in the state and nursery preparation is in full swing now. The sowing will start from first week of July," they said.

Butter Biryani


Jun 26 2015  
Ingredients

Basmati rice - 1 cup
Green peas - 1/2 cup
Butter - 3 tsp
Cumin - 1/2 tsp
Pepper powder - 1/4 tsp
Cardamom - 1
Clove - 1
Salt - as needed
Ghee - 2 tsp

Mehod

1. Wash basmati rice, drain water, set aside for 15 minutes.
2. Melt ghee in a frying pan.
3. Add basmati rice, fry , set aside.
4. Melt butter in a pressure cooker.
5. Add clove, cardamom, cumin.
6. When they splutter, add green peas, fry for a few minutes.
7. Add basmati rice, pepper powder, salt, 2 cups of water, cover with a lid, cook till cooker whistles once

Download/View On-Line the above News in pdf format,just click the following link

9th June (Monday),2015 Daily Exclusive ORYZA Rice E-Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine

Philippines Advises Rice Farmers to Begin Planting, Taking Advantage of Recent Rains

Jun 26, 2015
The Philippines Department of Agriculture (DA) has advised farmers to begin rice planting for the 2015 main crop in order to take advantage of the current intermittent rains in the country, according to a news release on the government website.“If you start planting now, by July, when it is expected to rain the most, your rice crops would have passed its flowering stage, thus there is a better chance that harvests will be maximized,” The Agriculture Secretary was quoted as saying during a media interaction.He noted that farmers in the rain fed areas can be benefitted from the intermittent rains but cautioned them that the current rains may not signify the end of El Nino weather pattern.
The Agri Secretary said the dry spell is expected to start weak in July this year and grow moderate by August, persist till December and again start weakening until early 2016. He said the government is taking measures to help farmers adapt to climate changes and to minimize the impact of adverse weather conditions on their output.“We are ready to schedule cloud seeding operations in case there is a need to induce rains during long dry seasons,” he was quoted. He assured that the Agriculture Department will install water pumps and solar water pumps in some regions which need an increase in water supplies.
Weather agencies have been warning of a dry weather condition due to El Nino from July this year. In the second week of June, the Philippines Statistics Authority (PSA) estimated Philippines's 2015 second quarter (April - June) production to decline by about 4.3% to around 3.898 million tons from last year's 4.073 million tons due to a decline in harvest area prompted by dry spell and insufficient water supply as well as incidence of pests and diseases in some rice growing areas.

Oryza Afternoon Recap - Chicago Rough Rice Futures Pull back below $10.000 per cwt despite Massive Gains in Wheat and Corn

Jun 26, 2015
Chicago rough rice futures for Sep delivery settled 8 cent per cwt (about $2 per ton) lower at $10.245 per cwt (about $226 per ton). The other grains continued their rally today, led by huge gains in wheat; Soybeans closed about 0.2% higher at $10.0200 per bushel; wheat finished about 5.7% higher at $5.6225 per bushel, and corn finished the day about 2.3% higher at $3.8500 per bushel.U.S. stocks traded mixed on Friday as investors digested earnings and the latest headlines on the Greece debt crisis. The major indices are on track for their first weekly loss in three. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras called an urgent cabinet meeting on Friday evening to discuss a bailout deal, a government minister told Reuters.
The country's finance minister Yanis Varoufakis said in a Reuters report that Saturday's meeting with the euro group of finance leaders will try to converge on a deal that includes debt and funding. He added that Greece has made concessions and that Athens rejects a 5-month funding proposal from lenders. Earlier, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said in a Reuters report he was "quite optimistic but not over-optimistic" of a deal with Greece on a cash-for-reform deal at a crucial meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Saturday. European stocks edged out a mostly higher close amid hopes of resolution on Greece. Chinese stocks plunged on Friday, with the Shanghai Composite tumbling more than 7%, its biggest one-day loss in five months.
The only U.S. economic data out Friday was the Michigan Consumer Sentiment, which posted a final read of 96.1 for June. On Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average gained 47 points, or 0.26%, at 17,936. The S&P 500 traded 2 points lower, or 0.10%, at 2,100, with utilities leading five sectors higher and information technology the greatest decliner. The Nasdaq fell 35 points, or 0.70%, at 5,076. Gold is trading about 0.1% lower, crude oil is seen trading about 0.2% lower, and the U.S. dollar is seen trading at about 0.3% higher at about  1:00pm Chicago time.Thursday, there were 1,703 contracts traded, down from 1,738 contracts traded on Wednesday. Open interest – the number of contracts outstanding – on Thursday increased by 117 contracts to 9,933.

Oryza Weekly: Thailand Prepares for Another Rice Auction; India Monitors Potential El Nino Impact

Jun 26, 2015
The Oryza White Rice Index (WRI), a weighted average of global white rice export quotes, ended the week at about $404 per ton, down about $6 per ton from a week ago, down about $3 per ton from a month ago and down about $57 per ton from a year ago.
Thailand
Thailand 5% broken rice is today shown at about $370 per ton, up about $5 per ton from a week ago, down about $5 per ton from a month ago and down about $15 per ton from a year ago.
Thailand exported around 945,597 tons of rice in May 2015, up about 7% from around 883,736 tons in May 2014, according to Bloomberg.
The government of Thailand has requested farmers in the Central region to further delay rice planting till August, when it expects rains to resume, from the earlier set July as 22 of the 76 provinces are still fighting drought conditions.
The government has not agreed to honor the farmers' demands to pay a compensation of about 1,000 baht per rai (around $185 per hectare) to suspend rice planting. But the Agriculture Minister said he would propose a package of measures to assist farmers in the economic cabinet meeting next week.
The Commerce Ministry plans to auction about 1.395 million tons of rice on July 7.
The drought in Thailand and subsequent anticipated reduction in paddy output from the 2015 main rice crop will not affect shipments to Malaysia, according to the Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Deputy Minister.
Thailand's Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives is planning to improve the output and quality of Thai sticky rice as it is plagued with inefficient production systems and farmers lack requisite technological knowledge and support.
India
India 5% broken rice is today shown at about $390 per ton, up about $20 per ton from a week ago, up about $15 per ton from month ago, and down about $45 per ton from a year ago.
The pace of India's 2015-16 Kharif (main) rice crop (June - December) which began on May 8, reached around 2.328 million hectares as of June 26,below last year's level of around 2.5 million hectares, according to preliminary data released by the Indian Agriculture Ministry.
El Nino and the Indian Ocean Dipole are being watched closely but so far there has been no adverse affect on production expectations. Separately, an Indian grains analyst has warned that India’s absence in global rice trade could lead to extreme volatility and exorbitant prices.
A new study finds that Indian paddy yields are becoming resilient to droughts.
The state purchasing agency in Mauritius has purchased 6,000 tons of long-grain white rice from India in a tender that closed June 3.
The government is considering increasing production of oilseeds and pulses in some states that are covered under the Bringing Green Revolution to Eastern India scheme, with hopes it will reduce dependence on imports.
Vietnam
Vietnam 5% broken rice is today shown at about $350 per ton, unchanged from a week, down $5 from a month ago and down about $60 per ton from a year ago.
Vietnam has exported around 641,000 Tons of rice in June 2015, up about 13% from last month and about 18% from last year. Vietnam's rice export in the first six months of this year declined about 6.2% y/y to around 3.06 million tons, Bloomberg quoted data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.
The paddy output from Vietnam's 2015 winter-spring crop has declined slightly by about 0.7% to around 20.7 million tons from around 22.25 million tons last year due to lower yields, according to Reuters.
Agricultural experts in the country have noted that various rice farming technologies are outdated and urged the government to facilitate restructuring of the rice industry and total agricultural mechanization in the country.
Pakistan
Pakistan 5% broken rice is today shown at about $380 per ton, unchanged from a week ago, down about $30 per ton from a month ago and down about $65 per ton from a year ago.
Members of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan are seeking a special package from the government to help alleviate the problems of rice growers and exporters.
The President of the Union of Small and Medium Enterprises (UNISAME) has suggested that the government should consider the pros and cons of setting up a Rice Board, especially how it would impact the rice industry and its stakeholders, according to a statement by the group. He also noted that the government should know the intentions of the stakeholders who are demanding such as Board.
Central & South America
Brazil 5% broken rice is today shown at about $550 per ton, unchanged from a week and a month ago and down about $115 per ton from a year ago.
The Brazilian paddy rice index maintained by CEPEA reached around 33.69 real per 50 kilograms as of June 22, 2015, down about 0.06% from around 33.71 real per 50 kilograms recorded on June 15, 2015. In terms of USD per ton, the index reached around $219 per ton on June 22, 2015, up about 1% from around $217 per ton recorded on June 15, 2015.
Five percent broken rice from Uruguay and Argentina is today shown at about $565 per ton, unchanged from a week and a month ago, and down about $10 per ton from a year ago.
U.S.
The U.S. 4% broken rice is today shown at about $455 per ton, unchanged from a week ago, down about $15 per ton from a  month ago and down about $120 per ton from a year ago.
Other Markets
The government of Indonesia is looking to redesign its rice-for-the-poor program after finding irregularities in the implementation of the program.
Cambodia, which offered a relatively higher bid in the recent Filipino tender, is working to offer a more competitive bid in the next Filipino rice tender.
Rice farmers associations in Nigeria have requested the Federal government to relax rules related to accessing credit in order to boost rice production and ensure food security in the country.
The National Food Authority of the Philippines will meet in the first week of July to discuss supply and the import of an additional 250,000 tons.
The Philippines weather agency anticipates the onset of the rainy season within the next few days. The Philippines Department of Agriculture (DA) has advised farmers to begin rice planting for the 2015 main crop in order to take advantage of the current intermittent rains in the country
The Philippines Rice Research Institute, along with the Department of Agriculture and the International Rice Research Institute, are developing rice varieties that can withstand adverse weather conditions and are resistant to pests and diseases.  The Philippines hopes to achieve rice sufficiency with NextGen varieties.
The EU farm Ministers Council has reached an understanding over the EU organic legislation.
Basmati rice imports by EU nations declined to around 223,549 tons during the period of September 1-June 18, a decrease of about 27% from the same period last year.
The government of Liberia needs to empower rice farmers to increase production, according to the Chairperson of the House of Representatives Committee on Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries.
Bangladesh rice farmers are looking forward to using new saline-tolerant rice varieties, as salinity in recent years has left some rice acreage to lie fallow.
Bangladesh rice science researcher Dr.Md.Nazmul Haque has developed 850 new high-yielding rice varieties with a new method called "Transgressive Sagreegant Breeding" (TSB), according to local sources.TSB produces rice varieties that are superior in characters to the parent plants.
The researcher used a local rice variety called 'Dola Aman Dhan' to create several hybrid varieties with various indica rice varieties that have life span of about 105-145 days and are suitable to grow in adverse climate and yield about 33-40 maund per bigha (around 8.25 - 10 tons per hectare).
Myanmar currently exports milled rice to the EU at zero percent duty under the Everything But Arms agreement, but Myanmar exporters are struggling to meet European rice standards.
The chairman of the Rice Council of Tanzania has urged the government to settle the rice export issue with the East African Community, as Kenya and Uganda have banned rice imports from Tanzania due to its rice shipments being mixed up with low quality Indian and Pakistani rice.
The government of Togo has distributed 300 tons of improved rice seeds to farmers in efforts to increase rice production in the country.
The Central Bank of Nigeria has stopped the sale of U.S. dollars to importers of 40 items, including rice, as part of its efforts to protect foreign reserves, which have declined significantly, and to reduce pressure on the naira.
The Country Program Manager of Eastern Africa Grain Council has warned that Rwanda and Uganda have decided to levy a 75% tax on Tanzania rice imports mixed with cheap Asian rice.
South Korea’s state-run Agro Fisheries & Food Trade Corporation is looking to buy about 59,104 tons of non-glutinous rice in international tenders for delivery between October 15 and December 15.

Nepal Tries Integrating Duck and Rice Production

Jun 26, 2015
Breeding ducks in rice farms has proved useful in increasing productivity, reducing pests and diseases and reducing fertilizers in countries such as Japan and China. Rice-Duck farming, as it is called, is based on the symbiotic relationship between paddy fields and ducks.
As ducks eat weeds, insects and other pests and their droppings serve as organic fertilizers and their swimming oxygenates the water and mixes the soil without hurting the rice plants. Pesticides and insects such as mosquito and drosophila are consumed by ducks easily.
Taking a cue from the countries, which are successfully using this method, rice farmers in Nepal began an integrated rice-duck farming and showed a significant increase in rice productivity and farmers' net income. Also farmers who have adopted this method in Nepal have stopped the use of chemical fertilizers and avoided expenses on pests. On the contrary, neighboring farmers cultivating by traditional method had used three times of fertilizers.
It is an appropriate technology to address the food insecurity and climate change as well.

India Rice Planting Slightly Behind Last Year While Monsoon Rains Remain Above Normal

Jun 26, 2015
The pace of India's 2015-16 Kharif (main) rice crop (June - December) which began on May 8, has been pretty good in the week June 19 – 26 due to above-average rainfall in most of the rice growing areas.However, as of June 26, the total area planted at around 2.328 million hectares is below last year's level of around 2.5 million hectares, according to preliminary data released by the Indian Agriculture Ministry.According to the Indian Meteorological Department, India received 28% above normal rainfall since June 1, providing required support to the kharif rice and other crop plantings.
A likely drought-inducing El Nino this year is expected to lower production prospects this year. In its second forecast for 2015, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has its estimate for this year's monsoon rains to 88% of normal, from a previous estimate of 93% due to reports of a strengthening El Nino. It is expecting rainfall to be 85% of the normal in the states of Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. The IMD expects the El Nino pattern to reach to moderate to a strong one during the monsoon season (June – September).The government of India, in its third advance estimates for major crops, has estimated India's rice production for 2014-15 marketing year (October 2014 - September 2015) at around 102.54 million tons, down about 4% from an estimated 106.65 million tons in 2013-14, according to a statement from the agriculture Ministry.
The total Kharif crop sown area stands at 16.6 million hectares as on June 26, 2015, up about 24% from around 13.4 million hectares during the same period last year, according to the Agriculture Ministry.

Indian Basmati Rice Exporters Foresee Bleak Year Ahead; Seek Export Subsidy from Government

Jun 26, 2015
Indian basmati rice exporters are foreseeing a bleak year ahead as export deal with Iran, India's biggest basmati buyer, getting delayed as well as low international rice prices, according to local sources.The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) data shows that India's basmati rice exports have declined marginally to around 3.7 million tons in FY 2014-15 (April - March) from around 3.76 million tons exported during the same period in FY 2013-14. The decline is largely attributed to fall in basmati rice shipments to Iran.
Iran, which accounts for more than a third of India's basmati rice exports temporarily banned rice imports in November 2014 citing excess stocks. India’s basmati rice exports to the Middle East nation in FY 2014-15declined about 35% to around 935,568 tons from around 1.44 million tons last year, according to APEDA.So far, there is no clue about the resumption of rice imports by Iran. Visit by a delegation from the Commerce Ministry did not yield any positive results. “The government of Iran takes a rice import decision based on the current paddy crop. Since September is the normal harvesting season, any decision on bilateral rice import will be taken only around that time. Normally, they reduce customs duty on import from the Most Favoured Nation. So, we will have to wait a couple of months for any purchase agreement to get signed with India,” the Director General of Federation of Indian Export Organizations (FIEO) was quoted as saying. He noted that demand for basmati also declined this year due to emergence of some competitors as well as some buyers using last year's stocks without ordering for new stocks.
Demand from other countries such as Saudi Arabia and the European markets supported India's basmati rice sales this year. Saudi Arabia remained largest buyer of India's basmati rice in 2014-15 with 966,931 tons, up about 17% from 2013-14. Global prices of rice have declined significantly and basmati rice prices are currently ruling near $1,000 per ton from around $1,400 - $1,500 per ton during the same time last year. The All India Rice Exporters Association (AIREA) President noted that basmati rice exporters had witnessed a loss of about 30% in 2014-15 due to increased production costs as well fall in prices. He noted that considering total production, procurement, storage and export costs of basmati rice, a sale price of about $1,800 per ton would help exporters breakeven, he says. But prices are currently much lower than this figure, leading to concerns that exporters may face losses for a second consecutive year.He urged the government to protect the interest of India's basmati exporters through some form of export subsidy.

Don't Just Eat Rice; Eat With Rice

Jun 26, 2015
A U.K.-based camping and outdoor equipment manufacturer is planning to launch a new range of eco-friendly tableware and kitchenware made with rice husk, according to a U.K. magazine.The range of products will include mugs, tumblers, plates cutlery, bowls, set of round or rectangular storage containers as well as other kitchen accessories. Items can be purchased as a set or individually.
The rice husk ware is made of discarded rice husk and are extremely eco-friendly and biodegradable as well as be safely be used in microwave also. The material looks like plastic but uses up to 70% less CO2 to make than conventional plastic. The products are certified by the German Institute of Standardization (DIN).The company is planning to release the rice husk ware in September 2015. The price would be in the range of £2.99 (around $3.15) for a tumbler, £34.99 (around $55) for a set of storage boxes and £58.99 (around $93) for a complete set.

Bangladesh Researcher Develops 850 High-Yielding Hybrid Rice Lines

Jun 26, 2015
Bangladesh rice science researcher Dr.Md.Nazmul Haque has developed 850 new high-yielding rice varieties with a new method called "Transgressive Sagreegant Breeding" (TSB), according to local sources.TSB produces rice varieties that are superior in characters to the parent plants.The researcher used a local rice variety called 'Dola Aman Dhan' to create several hybrid varieties with various indica rice varieties that have life span of about 105-145 days and are suitable to grow in adverse climate and yield about 33-40 maund per bigha (around 8.25 - 10 tons per hectare).
The new varieties consist of longer stem and biomass that give the rice plants additional strength during storms and strong winds. These varieties can be cultivated both at high and low lands and are suited to grow in areas with low temperature, saline soil, and water logged conditions throughout the year in Aus, Aman and Boro seasons. Also these varieties require less fertilizer and are highly pest and disease resistant.He also told that the new varieties contain high zinc and iron content than the traditional varieties. Zinc content can be increased up to 46.38 parts per million (ppm) in these varieties, while the highest content so far in Bangladesh in only 22 ppm (in BRRI Dhan 64).
The Dr.Haque has tried these varieties with some farmers in his district Bogra and obtained good results but the research needs to be promoted at the larger scale and rechecked before extension of the newly developed rice varieties, said the Deputy Director of the Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE), Bogra.The DAE Extension in Bogra found some promising rice lines which are suitable to release across the country.Dr.Haque urged the government to include the rice varieties to the national resource after patenting by genome sequencing. He expressed confidence that the research would help to promote future rice research in the country.

Vietnam Rice Exports Recover in June 2015, Reports MARD

Jun 26, 2015
Vietnam has exported around 641,000 Tons of rice in June 2015, up about 13% from last month and about 18% from last year. Vietnam's rice exports in the first six months of this year declined about 6.2% y/y to around 3.06 million tons, Bloomberg quoted data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.Meanwhile, the paddy output from Vietnam's 2015 winter-spring crop has declined slightly by about 0.7% to around 20.7 million tons from around 22.25 million tons last year due to lower yields, according to Reuters.Paddy output in the Mekong River Delta (MRD) accounted for around 13.48 million tons, while the northern region accounted for around 7.22 million tons. Most of the rice produced in MRD is exported.

Pakistan Rice Sellers Lower Some of Their Quotes; Other Asia Rice Quotes Unchanged Today

Jun 26, 2015
Pakistan rice sellers lowered their quotes for 25% broken rice by about  a $5 per ton to about $335-$345 per ton today. Other Asia rice sellers kept their quotes mostly unchanged today.                                                                                                                       
5% Broken Rice
Thailand 5% rice is indicated at around $365 - $375 per ton, about a $20 per ton premium on Vietnam 5% rice  shown at around $345 - $355 per ton.
India 5% rice is indicated at around $385 - $395 per ton, about $10 per ton premium on Pakistan 5% rice shown at around $375 - $385 per ton.
25% Broken Rice
Thailand 25% rice is shown at around $345 - $3505 per ton, about a $20 per ton premium on Vietnam 25% rice shown at around $325- $335 per ton.
India 25% rice is indicated at around $350 - $360, about $15 per ton premium on Pakistan 25% rice shown at around $335 - $345per ton, down about $5 per ton from yesterday.
Parboiled Rice
Thailand parboiled rice is indicated at around $365 - $375 per ton.
India parboiled rice is indicated at around $365 - $375 per ton, about a $30 per ton discount to Pakistan parboiled rice shown at around $395 - $405 per ton.              
100% Broken Rice
Thailand broken rice, A1 Super, is indicated at around $315 - $325 per ton, about $5 per ton premium on Vietnam 100% broken rice shown at around $310 - $320 per ton.
India's 100% broken rice is shown at around $280 - $290 per ton, about a $15 per ton discount to  Pakistan broken sortexed rice shown at around $295 - $305per ton.

Thailand Agriculture Ministry Plans to Improve Sticky Rice Output, Quality

Jun 26, 2015

Thailand's Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives is planning to improve the output and quality of Thai sticky rice, according to local sources.The Deputy Minister for Agriculture and Cooperatives told local sources that there is a need to overhaul the Thai sticky rice sector as it is plagued with inefficient production systems and farmers lack requisite technological knowledge and support.He noted that the government has assigned the Rice Department to introduce new technology to farmers under its Smart Farmer campaign in order to reduce their production costs and reduce dependency on chemical fertilizers.The Minister added that the campaign will be initiated in the provinces of Chiang Rai, Chiang Mai, Udon Thani and Khon Kaen during the rice farming season, then in 15 other provinces during the off-season farming period.

Download/View On-Line the above News in pdf for
mat,just click the following link