Rice News
Headlines...
·
Rouses Proudly Supports
America's Rice Farmers
·
National Rice Month
Promotional Item of the Week
·
Crop Progress: 2015 Crop 55 Percent Harvested
·
CME Group/Closing Rough
Rice Futures
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Secret Unlocked to Rice Seed
Survival When Underwater
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EAC looking into Ugandan
VAT on Tanzanian rice
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My State Can Supply
Nigeria's Rice Needs - Oshiomhole
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Storms rage on in parts
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Green Super Rice Project
Funded by the Chinese Government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Selects Affymetrix Axiom® Genotyping Platform for Developing New Rice Varieties
·
Adani eyes 5 MT sales from
agro biz; to expand portfolio
·
Amarinder seeks adequate
compensation for Basmati growers
·
Climate change-resilient
varieties for VisMin
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Partnerships, investment
key to stronger rice R&D
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Punjab, Haryana to procure
over 17 million tonnes paddy
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PR evaluates Prime
Minister’s Agriculture Relief Package
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IPR report evaluates PM’s
agriculture relief package
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Punjab all set to start
Paddy procurement from October 1
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September rains improve
Rabi outlook
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Indonesia likely to import
rice after El Nino affects harvest
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September rains improve
Rabi outlook
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Monsoon surge cracks open
new front over East, N-E
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Rice harvest begins across
Northern California
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Indonesia crop failure
blamed on El Nino
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Vietnam aims to export
high-end, quality rice
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Vietnam rice loses to
Thailand and Cambodia
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Drought exposes cracks in
Australia's acclaimed water market
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Government to ease permits
required for exports, imports
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Mekong Delta rice fields
hit by heavy rains
·
Vietnamese exporters
undercut as global rivals benefit more from currency effects
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Myanmar lifts temporary
rice export ban, claims self-sufficiency
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Egypt Transfers Expertise
in Rice Cultivation Techniques to 15 African States
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Festive period likely to
boost rice prices
·
Arkansas Farm Bureau Daily
Commodity Report
·
Trichogramma Wasps Used as
Biocontrol Agents in the Greater Mekong Region
·
Cash support won’t help
rice, cotton farmers meet losses fully
News Detail...
Rouses Proudly Supports America's Rice Farmers
Rouses kicked off NRM with an in-store radio
announcement touting America's rice farmers and the benefits of U.S.-grown
rice that played every thirty minutes in thirty-seven locations. Store
windows display a healthy eating poster with a prominent image of brown rice,
and a full-page NRM advertisement is featured in the September/October issue
of My
Rouses Everyday, a publication available in stores and online.
"Shoppers also have the opportunity to 'think
rice' with Rouses' Chef Nino by taking part in two in-store cooking classes
in honor of NRM," said Katie Maher, USA Rice director of domestic
promotion. "The cooking class menu features three U.S. rice
recipes: USA Rice's Curried Chicken Lime Rice Bowl, Wild Rice Mushroom
Pilaf, and Ginger Pork Stir-Fry. Each recipe is also accompanied by a rice
nutrition fact."
On September 8, Chef Nino made an appearance on This
Morning New Orleans, a local TV segment reaching more than 3,000
viewers, where he called out NRM and cooked a recipe featuring U.S.-grown
basmati rice. Rouses is also conducting NRM promotional
activities online. Earlier this month, a promotional e-mail entitled
"Eat Local for Labor Day" was sent to more than 17,000 subscribers
and highlighted U.S.-grown rice messaging and the NRM logo. Rouses is
planning at least four NRM focused social media posts this month and has
already shared USA Rice's recipes and new promotional video.
"Rouses is a great retail partner for U.S.
rice and they are clearly demonstrating their commitment to supporting
America's rice farmers," said Maher. "Rouses even expanded on
our planned NRM promotions, incorporating bonus activities at many
locations. They are a strong advocate for our industry and we thank
them for their support."
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National Rice Month Promotional Item of the Week
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Order this trendy Think Rice apron
and other promotional items at the USA Rice Online Store or print
and mail the item order form.
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Crop Progress: 2015 Crop
55 Percent Harvested
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WASHINGTON, DC --
Fifty-five percent of the nation's 2015 rice acreage is harvested, according
to today's U.S. Department of Agriculture's Crop Progress Report .
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CME
Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures
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Secret Unlocked to Rice Seed
Survival When Underwater
UC Riverside geneticists are
members of international research team that identified AG1, a gene that
controls sugar availability
Julia Bailey-Serres is a professor of genetics and the director of
the Center for Plant Cell Biology at UC Riverside.PHOTO CREDIT: L. DUKA.
Original draft by Paula Bianca Ferrer, IRRI.
This process regulated by this new gene is opposite of that
regulated by the SUB1A gene that was discovered previously to
enable rice plants to survive complete submergence due to a seasonable flood.
Bailey-Serres, who has worked extensively on the mechanism of submergence
tolerance, commented, “Plants with SUB1A essentially hibernate when they are underwater;
a situation where energy reserves are safeguarded.”
A surprising find
AG1 creates an ‘all or nothing’ escape mechanism that tricks the
seed into thinking that more sugar should be given to its shoot—the plant part
that grows into stems and leaves—so that the seed underwater is able to more
quickly grow and reach the surface of the water. The mechanism can work up to a
water depth of 10 cm and can get ‘activated’ as soon as the seed is sown
underwater.“The gene that allows the seed to escape a flood, the AG1 gene, is
one of a family of 13 genes in rice,” explained Bailey-Serres, the director of
UC Riverside’s Center for Plant Cell
Biology. “Other members of this family
recently have been shown by a team of university researchers and a plant
biotech group at Syngenta, to help the plant to move sugar from leaves to the
young developing seed in fertilized flowers. When and where to move and use
sugars is important. We think the important gene tells the cell that it does
not have enough sugar—keeping the tap open for more to be moved from the seed
to the growing shoot.”
Surviving under water
Rice survival under flooding is also important when it comes to
direct seeding, where seeds do not have to be pre-germinated and then
transplanted. With direct seeding, seeds can be directly sown or broadcasted
into the field, rather than painstakingly transplanted into the field. This is
highly desired by rice farmers.Moreover, one of the major limiting factors to
direct seeding is weeds because these can germinate well under air—although not
underwater without air—so if rice can germinate well underwater while none of
the weeds do, then rice will be able to out-compete the weeds.
Mystery of the missing gene
“One thing that I’ve noticed is that the Indica varieties, which are the ones
mostly grown in the tropical parts of Asia, are very much lacking in the trait
or ability to grow under flooded conditions,” said IRRI’s Tobias Kretzschmar,
the first author of the research paper. “But in Japonica, grown in the more temperate
regions of Asia, Australia or the United States, the trait is present. That’s
why these varieties have fewer problems with direct seeding.”
He explained that the missing trait is a problem, especially
with modern Indica varieties as traditional ones
have it, whereas modern ones do not.
Looking for an answer
“We looked at a third to a half of the IRRI released varieties,
but the gene is missing,” Kretzschmar said. “At first, we thought that maybe it
was actively bred out, meaning that it has some negative effect so the IRRI
breeders selected against it.”IRRI researcher Endang Septiningsih, who
initiated and led the project, looked for a yield penalty or negative effect on
the yield by AG1 but found none.“We actually think it got lost,” Kretzschmar
said. “And we knew where it got lost. The gene got lost at the stage when IR8,
the famous miracle rice variety, was bred because one of the parents had the
gene, while the other did not.”
Fitting pieces together
“I guess it was just never needed as a trait because almost
every time the varieties were transplanted, there was no pressure for it,”
Kretzschmar explained. “If they had direct seeded then they probably would have
retained that gene from the very beginning. But now that direct seeding is
becoming popular, we’ve realized that we need that gene in the breeding
program. So basically through the marker-assisted backcrossing approach, as it
was done with the SUB1A gene introgression, which significantly reduces the breeding
period, you can re-introduce the gene and then fix it within one and a half to
two and a half years.”
The way forward
With the unfolding of the ‘AG1 secret’ though, the research
team’s work is far from done.
“AG1 works well on moderate stress conditions. When we combined
it with the SUB1A gene in the same genetic backgrounds it worked well, although
they have opposing mechanisms. In severe stress conditions, however, AG1 alone
is not sufficient—additional quantitative trait loci (QTLs) or genes that
complement the AG1 mechanism will be needed. IRRI and partner universities are
working hard in that direction,” said Septiningsih, who recently joined the
Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University.
Another important question they are addressing is whether seed
that can be directly seeded underwater – requiring the escape strategy – can
also carry the SUB1A gene for submergence tolerance. This is a question that
Bailey-Serres has been investigating with Septiningsih and Bangladeshi student
Rejbana Alam, who contributed to the characterization of the role of AG1 during
seed germination.Bailey-Serres received funding from the U.S. National Science
Foundation for this project. Alam, the recipient of a Beachell Borlaug
International Scholar Fellowship, is a graduate student working in her
lab . IRRI was funded for this research by the German Federal Ministry of
Economic Cooperation and Development, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,
and the Global Rice Research Partnership.
http://ucrtoday.ucr.edu/31472
EAC looking into Ugandan VAT on
Tanzanian rice
BY CORRESPONDENT
22nd September 2015
EAC's
Director of Customs and Trade, Peter Kiguta
If it is established that the VAT imposition is discriminative
against Tanzanian rice the relevant provisions of the Customs Union Protocol will
be invoked,” said Mr Kiguta in a statement.If found guilty, Uganda will be
penalized accordingly, he noted in the statement responding to complaints from
local rice producers.And if the VAT is imposed across the board including
locally produced rice then the national law will be left to apply since there
will be no discrimination,” he noted.The Rice Council of Tanzania (RCT) has
been complaining against discrimination by authorities in Burundi, Rwanda and
Uganda against local rice exported to the three EAC countries under provisions
of the Customs Union Protocol.
RCT
Vice Chairman, Carter Coleman, said in a recent statement that local rice
exports are still facing tariff barriers in the three countries as it is
charged VAT and sometimes hiked import duty. Mr Coleman, who is also CEO of
Kilombero Plantation Limited, called on the Ugandan authorities to lift the
discriminatory taxes.“Please get your government to lift the tariff on Tanzania
rice as you are bankrupting local farmers,” Coleman said in the statement also
addressed to Ambassador Philip Idro, Chairman of Uganda Rice Millers
Association.
Idro
has argued that Uganda and the EAC need to protect their markets as cheap
Pakistan rice which enters the bloc’s through Kenya threatens rice farmers in
the region.“This is important because Africa as a whole wants to make farmers
grow more rice,” he argued recently while lobbying EAC governments to impose a
75 per cent duty on rice imports into the region. Idro also wants Kenya to
revoke its agreement with Pakistan which allows Kenya to import its rice while
exporting tea on barter trade terms approved by the EAC.“Kenya should be
importing rice from Uganda or Tanzania and not Pakistan,” he argued. Kenya
imports over $1m worth of rice daily from Pakistan.
SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN
http://www.ippmedia.com/frontend/index.php?l=84566
My State Can Supply Nigeria's Rice Needs - Oshiomhole
Edo state governor, Adams Oshiomhole has boasted that his state
can provide the country with all the rice supplies it needs.
This is not the first time the governor will throw swipes at the
former president as he had earlier blamed Goodluck Jonathan for
Edo state’s misery.Governor Oshiomhole
said that large scale rice millers in Edo State were already waiting to see if
a new policy that favours local production will be implemented before they
would return to the farms. He also said that Dangote Group had acquired
about 50,000 hectares of land for rice farming in the state and was
enthusiastic to go into massive rice farming with the right policies in
place.Meanwhile, Elder Godsay Peter Orubebe recently slammed Governor Oshiomhole of for his inciting statement against former president
Goodluck Jonathan describing the comrade as a “villa sycophant” who is willing to switch
allegiance to anyone is in power.
https://www.naij.com/557638-edo-state-can-feed-whole-nigeria-oshiomhole-blows-hot.html
Storms rage on
in parts
Mon,
21 September 2015
Locals contend with rising floodwaters in Pailin province on
Friday, as coastal and northwestern provinces were inundated over the weekend.
PHOTO SUPPLIED
have battered coastal
areas and the Kingdom’s northwest, leaving hundreds of homes flooded and
thousands of hectares of crops underwater, a disaster management official said
yesterday.Battambang province was the worst hit, with at least one death
reported and some roads blocked by floodwaters, according to national and local
officials.“The storm hit the four provinces at the coast and four provinces in
the northwest,” said Keo Vy, cabinet director and a spokesman for the National
Committee for Disaster Management (NCDM).“The provinces nearby the sea are Koh
Kong province, Preah Sihanouk, Kampot and Kep province.
The four provinces in the
northwest that also flooded are Battambang, Pailin, Banteay Meanchey and
Pursat.”Vy attributed the heavy flooding in Battambang to runoff from across
the Thai border.“Rainfall and water that flowed down from Thailand caused 757
houses to be flooded in Kamrieng and Bavel districts,” Vy said. “The
authorities moved nine families to a place of safety. There were 9,839 hectares
of cassava flooded, which might be damaged, and some roads were cut off.”A
teenage girl was also reported to have drowned in Battambang’s Bavel
district.“A 13-year-old girl died this morning when she went to swim under her
house when her mother was not at home,” said Sar Sary, chief of Bavel district’s
Bavel commune.
“Her house flooded until the water came up the stairs.”Sary went
on to say that he was optimistic that farmers’ crops now underwater could be
saved.“We cannot know if their paddies are damaged because the water started to
go down little by little. It would be better if the water went down quickly,”
he said. “I think if there is no rain for two days, the water will go down
quickly.”In Koh Kong province, 245 houses were damaged and six destroyed
completely, while in Kampot province 4,381 families were affected by flooding
and 2,291 hectares of rice were submerged.
Three districts and one town were flooded in Preah Sihanouk
province, where one home was totally destroyed, 75 houses suffered damage to
their roofs and four boats sank.However, according to Ian Thomas, technical
adviser to the Mekong River Commission, the heavy rain is unlikely to signal an
end to drought conditions, which have blighted crops in large parts of the
country since 2014.“Cambodia has to be ready for more extreme weather as a
result of the El Niño in the Pacific,” he said. “When El Niño peaks around
January, I expect even more severe drought in parts of Cambodia than the
previous year.The beginning of next year is going to be very bad for dry-season
crops.”
But not every province will be affected.“It’s not a consistent
picture,” Thomas said. “Pursat and Battambang are the driest provinces, but
Prey Veng and Svay Rieng are OK.”Thomas added that the current El Niño, a
climate event that occurs roughly every five years, is the strongest NASA has
ever seen and the space agency has nicknamed it “Godzilla”.Extreme weather
could soon lead to an increase in the price of rice.“In the drought of 2014,
the price of rice fell because of Thai rice subsidies,” Thomas said. “But the
IRRI [International Rice Research Institute] has just issued a warning that
drought conditions have been so bad across Asia due to El Niño, the price of
rice will go up.”The current El Nino is expected to end next year, bringing
some relief to farmers.“I am hopeful that in February to March the E.
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/storms-rage-parts
Green Super Rice Project Funded by the
Chinese Government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Selects
Affymetrix Axiom® Genotyping Platform for Developing New Rice
Varieties
Axiom Rice Genotyping Array (Photo: Business Wire)
September 21, 2015 06:30 AM Eastern Daylight Time
“The superior array design, bioinformatics and software
capabilities available with the Axiom platform are playing a key role in
advancing multiple agriculture projects around the world. Affymetrix is
committed to meet the agricultural community’s needs with advanced technologies
that are practical, easy to use, and cost effective.”
The Green Super Rice (GSR) project includes building a highly efficient genotyping
platform for the large-scale molecular breeding activities within the
international rice research community. The Green Super Rice project is
supported by the Chinese government and the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, and aims to increase the income of resource-limited rice producers
by the development and wide-adoption of GSR varieties and corresponding crop
management technology. The long-term goal of the project is to benefit at least
20 million resource-limited rice farmers and to boost rice productivity by 20%
in the target countries.
“We are excited and very happy to see that the efforts of the
rice community in the Green Super Rice project coming to fruition. The Green
Super Rice project is the world’s first rice project that is helping lead the
scientific and breeding breakthroughs achieved by the efforts of the Chinese
rice scientists to release elite cultivars suitable for growth in the target
countries,” stated Professor Zhikang Li, project director of GSR, Institute of
Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. “We selected the Axiom
genotyping platform from Affymetrix due to the platform’s capability to screen
millions of markers and accurately transfer them to smaller 384HT format
arrays. Such precision and fidelity is not available on any other genotyping
platform.”
The genotyping array, specifically designed for the Green Super
Rice project, reflects an unprecedented effort by the rice community to
leverage over 20 million SNP markers that were discovered in the 3000 Rice
Genomes Project. This array uses a novel SNP genotyping marker screening
process to screen more than 2 million selected rice SNP markers to identify
relevant and valuable markers with high accuracy and precision.A subset of the
2 million markers identified on the rice screening genotyping array will be
transferred with 100 percent accuracy onto the Axiom 384HT-format to create the
new array. This new Axiom GSR Rice Array, consisting of approximately 55,000
markers, will enable ultra high-throughput processing and analysis of 384
samples simultaneously and will be used to screen thousands of samples in a
highly cost-effective manner.
“We are pleased to be able to support the goals of the Green
Super Rice Project to help the rice community develop new varieties, address
the needs of rice breeders, and to help achieve self-sustainable rice
production and food security,” said Laurent Bellon, Ph.D., senior vice
president and general manager, Genotyping Business Unit at Affymetrix. “The
superior array design, bioinformatics and software capabilities available with
the Axiom platform are playing a key role in advancing multiple agriculture
projects around the world. Affymetrix is committed to meet the agricultural
community’s needs with advanced technologies that are practical, easy to use,
and cost effective.”
With Affymetrix’ advanced bioinformatics and innovative design
strategies, Axiom genotyping array designs routinely support genome-wide
genotyping applications and accurately call the genotypes of both diploid and
polyploid species.To learn more about the Axiom genotyping platform, please
visit www.affymetrix.com/agrigenotyping for applications in agrigenomics.
About Green Super Rice Project
“Green Super Rice for the Resources-Poor of Africa and Asia” is
a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-funded rice research project with the aim
to develop Green Super Rice (GSR) varieties that produce high and stable yields
under low-inputs and to transfer corresponding crop management technology to
the resources-poor rice farmers in fifteen countries across Africa and Asia and
four Southwestern provinces in China. The GSR project’s mission is to help
achieve self-sustainable rice production and food security in the target
countries and regions. Find out more at http://gsr.org.cn/
About Affymetrix
Affymetrix provides leadership and support, partnering with
customers in pharmaceutical, diagnostic, and biotechnology companies, as well
as leading academic, government, and non-profit research institutes in their
quest to use biology for a better world. More than 2,300 microarray systems
have been shipped around the world and more than 94,000 peer-reviewed papers
have been published citing Affymetrix technologies. Affymetrix is headquartered
in Santa Clara, California, and has manufacturing facilities in Cleveland, San
Diego, Vienna, and Singapore. Affymetrix has about 1,100 employees and
maintains sales and distribution operations worldwide. For more information
about Affymetrix, please visit www.affymetrix.com
Forward-looking statements
All statements in this press release that are not historical are
"forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act as amended, including statements regarding Affymetrix'
"expectations," "beliefs," "hopes," "intentions,"
"strategies," or the like. Such statements are subject to risks and
uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially for
Affymetrix from those projected. These and other risk factors are discussed in
Affymetrix' Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014, and other SEC
reports for subsequent quarterly periods.
PLEASE NOTE: Affymetrix, the Affymetrix logo,
and Axiom trademarks are the property of Affymetrix, Inc. All other trademarks
are the property of their respective owners.
Contacts
Affymetrix, Inc.
Media Contact:
Mindy Lee-Olsen, 408-731-5523
Vice President, Marketing Services
mindy_lee-olsen@affymetrix.com
or
Investor Contact:
Doug Farrell, 408-731-5285
Vice President, Investor Relations
doug_farrell@affymetrix.com
Media Contact:
Mindy Lee-Olsen, 408-731-5523
Vice President, Marketing Services
mindy_lee-olsen@affymetrix.com
or
Investor Contact:
Doug Farrell, 408-731-5285
Vice President, Investor Relations
doug_farrell@affymetrix.com
Adani eyes 5 MT sales from agro biz; to expand
portfolio The annual turnover of company's agri business is about Rs 20,000
crore at present and it sells wide range of food products which includes apple,
various variants of edible oil, basmati rice, gram flour (besan), pulses among
others. 3 0Google +0 0 Riding on its strong food products
portfolio, Adani Enterprises is expecting more than 20 percent growth in
sale proceeds from the segment, with volumes likely to reach 5 million tonnes.
The annual turnover of company's agri business is about
Rs 20,000 crore at present and it sells wide range of food products which
includes apple, various variants of edible oil, basmati rice, gram flour
(besan), pulses among others. "...the growth has been good from sale of
processed food products, our sales was about 4 million tonnes last fiscal. We
are expecting 20 percent growth in sales and it will reach 5 million tonnes
mark this year," Adani Agri Business CEO Atul Chaturvedi told PTI. When
asked, Chaturvedi said, "We certainly would expand our food product
portfolio and always look for the opportunities." Chaturvedi added that
though chunk of the sales will continue to come from the edible oil, but now
they are also relying on basmati rice and gram flour. "Edible oil will
continue to remain the largest contributor in terms of sales. But we are
witnessing good response to our new products basmati rice and gram flour,"
he added. The sales of both these commodities are close to 70,000 tonnes per
annum each, and it seems that they will register a good growth this fiscal, he
said.
In addition to this, the company is aiming to sell
30,000 tonnes of apples this year, compared to about 22,000 tonnes last year.
"We are looking to expand our capacity in case of apples, as of now we
have capacity constraints," Chaturvedi said. The group has three three
main agro verticals - Adani Wilmar Limited (AWL), Adani Agri Logistics Limited
(AALL) and Adani Agri Fresh Limited (AAFL). Adani Wilmar is a 50:50 joint
venture between Adani Enterprises and Wilmar International. It sells edible
oil, pulses, rice, gram flour under the brand Fortune. Whereas Adani Agri Fresh
Ltd mainly deals into sales of apples in packed form. Besides this, Adani Agri
Logistics is an integrated bulk handling, storage and logistics system for food
grains. It provides seamless end-to-end bulk supply chain to Food Corporation
of India (FCI).
The company has 13 state-of-the-art silo and besides
that it also has its own rail rakes and terminals in major cities. Adani
Enterpris stock price On September 22, 2015, at 15:43 hrs Adani Enterprises was
quoting at Rs 78.30, down Rs 2.6, or 3.21 percent. The 52-week high of the
share was Rs 803.90 and the 52-week low was Rs 65.85. The company's trailing
12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 4.32 per share as per the quarter ended June 2015.
The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 18.12. The latest book value of
the company is Rs 93.45 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of
the company is 0.84.
Amarinder seeks
adequate compensation for Basmati growers
Source : PTI
Last Updated: Sun, Sep 20, 2015 19:20 hrs
Senior Congress leader Capt Amarinder Singh today asked the Punjab
government to provide adequate compensation to Basmati growers who have
allegedly been forced to go for distress sale.In a statement issued here, the
leader threatened to launch a protest across the state if his demands were not
met.Singh noted that last year the Basmati sold for about Rs 3,200 per quintal.
But this year the rice variety is not selling for more than Rs 1,200 per
quintal."This does not even meet the input costs of the farmers. Moreover,
the Basmati yield is less as compared to other varieties of paddy," he
said.
The Congress leader lamented that he has been repeatedly reminding
Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal to take up the matter with the central
government to address this pressing problem.
"However, he (Badal) only returns after presenting a bouquet
to the Prime Minister without asking for anything, for the reasons best known
to him," he said.The former Chief Minister also warned that if the farmers
do not get adequate prices for their produce it may lead to law and order
problem in the state."Better you take serious note of the situation lest
it is too late for you and the state as the resentment and anger among farmers
is brewing fast," he charged.The leader added that he will personally lead
the farmers' protests as this government had failed to address their
concerns.Notably, Singh did not attend the 'Kisan Samman rally' by Congress in
Delhi today.
Sify
control
Climate change-resilient varieties for VisMin
A study by PhilRice identified two climate change-resilient
varieties suitable for irrigated lowlands in the Visayas and Mindanao.
Titled Location-specific irrigated rice varieties resilient to climate
change, the study identified NSIC Rc308 (Tubigan 26) and NSIC Rc358
(Tubigan 30) as climate change-resilient varieties with superior performance in
irrigated lowland ecosystems.
Thelma Padolina, lead researcher, said that varieties
with superior location-specific performance and improved resistance to lodging
and biotic stresses must be bred and recommended to help the farmers adapt to
climate change.“The two recommended varieties have relatively high yield
advantage over their check varieties. The NSIC Rc308 has a yield advantage of
5.5% in the Visayas and 4.0% in Mindanao in contrast with PSB Rc82. NSIC Rc358
outyielded PSB Rc18 by 12%,” Padolina said.NSIC Rc308 and the NSIC Rc358 are
2013 PhilRice-bred varieties. Under favorable irrigated lowland ecosystems,
NSIC Rc308 has a maximum average yield of 10.9 t/ha and matures in 11 days if
transplanted. When direct-seeded, it matures in 105 days and has a maximum
yield of 8.0 t/ha.
Under the same farming condition, NSIC Rc358 can also
attain a maximum average yield of 5.4 t/ha to 9.1 t/ha if transplanted.Both
varieties are early-maturing. Hence, they can possibly escape stress
conditions. NSIC Rc308 showed superior performance in Zamboanga del Sur,
Davao del Sur, Sultan Kudarat, Eastern Samar, and Aklan. According to Padolina,
the variety has intermediate reaction to pests such as stemborer, brown planthopper,
and bacterial leaf light.NSIC Rc358 is considered as an all-season variety for
Visayas. Padolina said that it is suitable for the transplanting culture in the
provinces of Samar, Aklan, and Bohol.Padolina added that the development of
location-specific, high-yielding, and climate change-resilient varieties are
among the cost-effective strategies to increase rice yields.For more
information about climate change-resilient varieties, call or text the PhilRice
Text Center 0920 911 1398.
Partnerships, investment key to
stronger rice R&D
There is strength in unity.Rice scientists and
experts encouraged R&D institutions to foster stronger
partnerships as the country prepares to address the effects of trade
liberalization and climate change.During the 28th National Rice
R&D Conference at PhilRice, 9 Sept, experts discussed on industry trends to
address current issues and emerging problems besetting rice R&D.Dr. Madonna
Casimero of IRRI stressed that there is a need to rethink and step-up R&D strategies
in order to help the national government in crafting policies and develop the
right technologies for the farmers.Casimero also highlighted the message of
IRRI’s deputy director general for research Dr. Matthew Morell that “not one
institution can provide the solutions to all the issues confronting
agriculture.” Hence, cooperation among R&D institutions is needed.
“We need to strengthen ourselves and harness the
skills of our partners,” she said.Economics professor Dr. Cesar Quicoy of UPLB
emphasized that the national government must invest more in R&D as it plays
a major role in making farmers competitive.“Literature will always point out
that the reason why we’re always behind in agriculture is because our R&D
is very minimal in terms of our GDP,” he said.According to the book
titled Securing rice, reducing poverty: challenges and poverty
directions written in 2006 by A.M. Balisacan, Leocadio Sebastian and
several others, R&D contributes about 25% yield growth in rice.During the
conference, experts also suggested that PhilRice, as Ph’s lead institute in
rice R&D, must look at the issues in agriculture as an opportunity to prove
the relevance of the institute.The 28th National Rice Research and Development
Conference is annually hosted by PhilRice that gathers around 500 researchers,
academicians, students, farmers, and extension workers from all over the
country.
Punjab, Haryana to procure over 17 million tonnes paddy
Chandigarh, Sep 21: Despite a poor monsoon season this year, with rainfall deficiency
being 55 to 60 percent, foodgrain states Punjab and Haryana are looking forward
to procurement of 17.2 million tonnes of paddy this year. Punjab, where
the paddy production and procurement is much higher than neighbouring Haryana,
is in fact looking at a much higher procurement than even last year.Food and Civil Supplies Minister Adaish Pratap Singh Kairon, who
met department officers in recent days to finalise paddy procurement
operations, said Punjab was eyeing to procure 13.7 million tonnes of paddy this
year as against 11.8 million tonnes of paddy procured last year (2014).Haryana
is expecting to procure over 3.5 million tonnes of paddy from an expected
arrival of 3.6 million tonnes this year. The procurement in both the
states begins from October 1 officially even though the bulk supplies of paddy
are expected to arrive after October 10.
”All heads of the state procurement agencies are to personally
supervise paddy procurement operations across the state beginning from October
1 so as to ensure prompt lifting of paddy as per their allotted share of
procurement,” Kairon said here.The higher procurement of paddy this year is
being attributed to Punjab farmers preferring non-basmati varieties of paddy
instead of basmati, leading to higher productivity. Only last year, the
Punjab government had encouraged farmers to shift to growing ‘basmati’ variety
of paddy, which is much finer than the common paddy variety and carries a
distinct smell and taste, so that the dependence on common paddy variety was
minimized.
The state government had targeted procurement of over 14 million
tonnes of paddy last year but fell well short of that target owing to lower
productivity of the basmati variety. ”The yield of the basmati variety was
much lower. The variety needs a lot of care and suitable climatic conditions,”
said farmer Kirpal Singh of Rahon near Nawanshahr town.The Punjab government
has been actively trying to drastically reduce the area under water-gulping
paddy cultivation. Under its agriculture diversification mission to
conserve depleting ground water, the Punjab government had announced in May
this year that the area under paddy cultivation would be reduced from the
present 2.65 million hectares to 1.45 million hectares over the next five
years.“The reduced area of 1.2 million hectares will be shifted to alternative
crops like maize, sugarcane, cotton, pulses, fruits and vegetables besides agro-forestry
in the next five years,” an agriculture department official said.
The agriculturally successful Malwa belt (south of the river
Sutlej) in southwest Punjab has been facing a problem of water-logging in
districts like Bathinda, Mansa and Muktsar.Agriculture experts have been
advising farmers to switch from paddy cultivation as the water table in the
state was also depleting fast. Haryana Minister of State for Food and
Supplies Karan Dev Kamboj said arrival of about 3.6 million tonnes of paddy is
expected in grain markets of the state this season. ”About 3.5 million
tonnes of paddy would be procured by government procurement agencies at Minimum
Support Price. The remaining one million tonnes of paddy is likely to be
procured by private millers,” Kamboj sai
Modified Date: September 21, 2015
4:57 PM
PR
evaluates Prime Minister’s Agriculture Relief Package
September 20, 2015
ISLAMABAD:
Institute for Policy Reforms (IPR) Managing Director Dr Hafiz Pasha wrote a
report titled ‘An Evaluation of the Prime Minister’s Agriculture Relief
Package’, which finds that cash support and access to credit would have a
positive impact on small farmers.The report questions the timing and adequacy
of cash support, as well as its mechanism. There are concerns about the
measures to reduce input cost and to provide access to credit. Cost of the
package could increase fiscal deficit by an estimated 0.4% of the GDP. The
report recommends a number of additional incentives to increase effectiveness
of the package like the expansion of the coverage of support prices to rice and
cotton, an export subsidy on rice andreduction in price of light diesel oil
(LDO).
“With a year-to-year drop of 13%
each in price of rice and cotton, cash support for small farmers was much
needed. The government has announced cash support even before full loss has
occurred to the new crop. It is not clear how well the announced compensation
reflects the actual loss to farmers. For example, if the price were to drop by
15%, support of Rs 5,000 per acre would meet 68% of loss for rice farmers and
just 29% for cotton growers,” it added.The experts estimate a price decline of
28% for cotton and 22% for rice in 2016. The report said even within the scale
of announced compensation, the amount set aside for the purpose is inadequate.
Rs 20 billion provided for rice and cotton each would fall short by 34% and 30%
respectively, taking into account the number of small farmers and the acreage.
It said that the targeting of
benefits would also be a challenge. It requires estimating cropping patterns at
individual farm level. This could lead to leakage during disbursement and the
government must take steps to prevent it from happening.“With fertiliser
comprising 35% of farm variable input cost, the government is right to target
reduction in its price. The estimated 15% reduction in price of potassium and
phosphate also has the potential to improve the country’s fertiliser mix. Some
questions remain, especially with respect to effect on fiscal operations.The
burden of cost to be borne by each province is not clear. The package does not
quantify the fiscal effect of withdrawal of price increase on urea.If the
reduction comes through reduced GST, the revenue loss would be Rs 10 billion.
Similarly, estimate of Rs 7 billion as the fiscal effect of tariff reduction
seems incorrect.
Its true impact is Rs 10 billion or 43%
higher. Government estimates GST support by provinces to cost Rs 7 billion,
whereas it would cost Rs 11 billion, or 57% higher. Continued load shedding
will take away the real impact of reduction in tariff. The government also has
overestimated the cost reduction by Rs 500 per bag of fertiliser,” the report
highlighted.Through a number of measures, the package attempts to correct the
bias in access to credit for agriculture. However, there are questions about
its viability when farm profits are falling. ZTBL, the main supplier to small
farmers, already has 20% non-performing loans. It is uncertain if it is prudent
for ZTBL to take on higher risk. Regardless, the announced measures would
likely benefit small farmers.The package provides balanced relief to all farm
sizes. Cash support and credit targets small farmers while reduced costs help
large and medium sized farms. The package seems to have underestimated by Rs 31
billion its cost to the federal and provincial budgets. Overall, it would
increase the fiscal deficit by a half percent of GDP.
This is entirely justified though
it may need special advocacy with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).The
report recommends that rather than reacting, the government may look
holistically at its policy in support of agriculture. The commodity prices
would likely stay low for some time to come.In addition to measures in force
already, the report recommends support price for additional products.Of these,
rice and cotton need early inclusion. The government may provide export subsidy
for rice to help dispose off present stock as well as stabilise the domestic
price.The government may reduce price of LDO, as 90% of all tube wells work on
diesel. IPR recommends reduction in GST on LDO from the present 29.5% to
7%.Largely, the success of this relief package depends on commitment by the
provincial governments. They must meet a portion of the cost and provide direct
executive support.The package does not appear to have consent of the four
provincial governments as two of them have questioned its validity.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/business/20-Sep-2015/ipr-evaluates-prime-minister-s-agriculture-relief-package
IPR report evaluates PM’s agriculture relief package
IPR report evaluates PM’s
agriculture relief package
September
20, 2015
Lahore -
With a year-to-year drop of 13% in price of rice and cotton, Prime Minister’s
recently announced cash support of Rs5000 per acre for small farmers would meet
68% of loss for rice farmers and just 29% for cotton growers.The government has
announced cash support even before full loss has occurred to the new crop.It is
not clear how well the announced compensation reflects actual loss to
farmers.Experts estimate a price decline of 28% for cotton and 22% for rice in
2016.Even within the scale of announced compensation, the amount set aside for
the purpose is inadequate.
The
twenty billion rupees provided for rice and cotton each would fall short by 34%
and 30% respectively taking into account the number of small farmers and the acreage.These
views were expressed in a report released by the Institute for Policy
Reforms.Dr Hafiz Pasha, the Managing Director IPR, in his report titled ‘An
Evaluation of the Prime Minister’s Agriculture Relief Package’ welcomed the
Prime Minister’s relief package for farmers, which was announced at a time of
falling output prices.He said that the package attempted to extend essential
support to agriculture, however, evaluation of the package raises issues about
the timing and adequacy of cash support, as well as its mechanism.
Questions
remain also about the measures to reduce input cost and to provide access to
credit, he added.The cost of Prime Minister’s relief package for farmers could
increase fiscal deficit by an estimated 0.4 percent of the GDP, however, the
cash support and access to credit would have positive effect on small farmers
while other measures may help medium and large farmers.The report also
recommended a number of additional measures to increase effectiveness of the
package and lack of consultation with provincial governments.The report
expresses fear that “Once again good intentions may fail to convert to sound
deeds and leave the feeling of unilateral policymaking.This is hardly advisable
for strengthening the Federation.
Targeting of benefits would be a challenge.It requires estimating cropping patterns at individual farm level.This could lead to leakage during disbursement and government must do all to prevent it from happening.With fertilizer comprising 35% of farm variable input cost, government is right to target reduction in its price.
Targeting of benefits would be a challenge.It requires estimating cropping patterns at individual farm level.This could lead to leakage during disbursement and government must do all to prevent it from happening.With fertilizer comprising 35% of farm variable input cost, government is right to target reduction in its price.
The
estimated 15% reduction in price of potassium and phosphate also has the
potential to improve the country’s fertilizer mix.Some questions remain,
especially with respect to effect on fiscal operations.The burden of cost to be
borne by each province is not clear.The package does not quantify the fiscal
effect of withdrawal of price increase on Urea.If the reduction comes through
reduced GST, the revenue loss would be Rs 10 billion.Similarly, estimate of Rs
7billion as the fiscal effect of tariff reduction seems incorrect.Its true
impact is Rs.10 billion or 43% higher.
Government
estimates GST support by provinces to cost Rs 7 billion whereas it would cost
Rs 11 billion, or 57% higher.Continued load-shedding will take away the real
impact of reduction in tariff.Government also has overestimated the cost
reduction by Rs.500 per bag of fertilizer.Through a number of measures, the
package attempts to correct the bias in access to credit for agriculture.However,
there are questions about its viability when farm profits are falling.ZTBL, the
main supplier to small farmers, already has 20% non-performing loans.It is
uncertain if it is prudent for ZTBL to take on higher risk.Regardless, the
announced measures would likely benefit small farmers.
The
package provides balanced relief to all farm sizes.Cash support and credit
targets small farmers while reduced costs help large and medium sized farms.The
package seems to have underestimated by Rs.31 billion its cost to the federal
and provincial budgets.Overall, it would increase the fiscal deficit by a half
percent of GDP.This is entirely justified though may need special advocacy with
the IMF.The report recommends that rather than reacting, government may look
holistically at its policy in support of agriculture.Commodity prices would
likely stay low for some time to come.In addition to measures in force already,
the report recommends support price for additional products.Of these, rice and
cotton need early inclusion.Government may provide export subsidy for rice to
help dispose off present stock as well as stabilize domestic price.Government
may reduce price of Light Diesel Oil, as 90% of all tube wells work on
diesel.IPR recommends reduction in GST on LDO from the present 29.5% to 7%.
http://nation.com.pk/business/20-Sep-2015/cash-support-won-t-help-rice-cotton-farmers-meet-losses-fully
Punjab all set to start Paddy procurement from
October 1
Reviewing
the arrangements of the Paddy procurement for the Kharif Season 2015-16 in the
state, Mr. Kairon said that all out efforts should be made to ensure smooth,
hassle free and quick procurement of Paddy on one hand and facilitate the farmers
in getting timely payment of their produce on the other. Farmers have preferred
non basmati varieties of paddy instead of basmati that is why more Paddy
arrival was anticipated in Punjab
He categorically said that farmers of the state should not be put to any inconvenience for the sale of their produce in the mandis. He firmly said that good quality sturdy gunny bags with accurate weight would be ensured while packing the produce. He also said that the officers concerned have been especially asked to visit the mandis during the procurement and ensure smooth lifting. He said the field staff would work day and night to procure the stocks even on Saturdays and Sundays and also on government holidays. The Minister has also asked the officers concerned to ensure that there would be no shortage of gunny bags for storage of grains, he added. The minister has asked Punjab Mandi Board officials to make sure of arrangements in mandis to save produce and to have proper sanitation facilities.
He categorically said that farmers of the state should not be put to any inconvenience for the sale of their produce in the mandis. He firmly said that good quality sturdy gunny bags with accurate weight would be ensured while packing the produce. He also said that the officers concerned have been especially asked to visit the mandis during the procurement and ensure smooth lifting. He said the field staff would work day and night to procure the stocks even on Saturdays and Sundays and also on government holidays. The Minister has also asked the officers concerned to ensure that there would be no shortage of gunny bags for storage of grains, he added. The minister has asked Punjab Mandi Board officials to make sure of arrangements in mandis to save produce and to have proper sanitation facilities.
http://punjabexpress.com.au/archives/9459
September rains improve Rabi outlook
TOMOJIT
BASU
NEW DELHI, SEPTEMBER 21:
After prolonged dry spells in
July and August, a resurgent monsoon this month is expected to help farmers during
the Rabi season.Deficit rainfall is likely to take its toll on Kharif
foodgrains (rice, pulses and coarse cereals) output which the Agriculture
Ministry expects will contract by 2 per cent to 124.05 million tonnes (mt) this
year, according to its early estimates released last week.As of Monday, the
rainfall deficit has narrowed to 14 per cent after showers across East and
North-East India.The early monsoon withdrawal appears to have slowed with low
pressure systems moving toward the North bringing more moisture to parts of
Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh over the weekend.
Parched areas of Maharashtra also
received much needed precipitation, while Gujarat’s Saurashtra and Kutch areas
recorded steady rainfall.The South Peninsula also received significant rainfall
in the first two weeks of September. This helped narrow the deficit to 14 per
cent from a late-August high of 22 per cent.“The resurgence will improve soil
moisture in these areas. Even if Kharif yields fall due to less rain during the
monsoon, Rabi prospects appear to be good. Overall, food inflation is unlikely
to worsen,” said an Agriculture Ministry official.According to India
Meteorological Department data, 16 out of 36 sub-stations have reported
deficient rainfall between June 1 and September 21. Eastern Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, Marathwada and the Konkan coast are largely rain-fed and have been hit
the hardest.
The normal area during the Rabi
season is 61.43 million hectares and important crops grown include wheat,
pulses like chickpea (chana) and gram, mustard and barley. The season accounts
for 51 per cent of the country’s foodgrain output.“Rainfall has been forecast
for another 10 days. So, this will help crops in the final flowering stage.
Moisture retention in the soil and charged reservoir levels is a positive sign
for Rabi,” said a senior official from Indian Agricultural Research Institute.
Kharif crop sowing, of which 97 per cent has been completed, will end this
month.
Rabi conference
The two-day annual ‘Rabi Conference’, which reviews the performance of the preceding Kharif and strategises about the Rabi, will be held here from Tuesday. The conference will see Central and State agriculture officers engaging on preparedness for the season.Six topics, including the promotion of horticulture and organic farming, more cultivation of pulses and oilseeds in rice fallows, and ways to tackle agrarian crisis, will be focused on.
(This article was published on September 21, 2015)
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/september-rains-improve-rabi-outlook/article7674441.ece
Indonesia likely to import rice after El Nino affects harvest
However, kharif output may be down by 2% on deficit rains
English.news.cn 2015-09-21
19:52:08
JAKARTA, Sept. 21 (Xinhua) -- The Indonesian government is likely
to ship rice from overseas as El Nino causes failure in harvests at some areas,
Vice President Jusuf Kalla disclosed here on Monday.El Nino has triggered
drought and prolonged harvest as well as disturbed cultivation in paddy rice
fields.Vice President Kalla said that the country's rice outputs may not be
sufficient for the compliance of the demand of most of the country's 250
million populations."Therefore, we are open on possibility for rice
importation. We must be open (on import).
This is a
problem of drought," he said at Borobudur Hotel.Mr. Kalla argued that the
country's rice stockpile is not sufficient to meet with rice demand of the
population."The rice stockpile at the national logistic agency is only 1.5
million tons, while the demand of whole of the population is 2.5 to 3 million
tons (per year)," he said.The Indonesian government has created artificial
rains and distributed hundreds of pumps to water down some areas which have
suffered from drought.The prolonged dry season has caused over 200,000 hectares
rice field across the country a lack of water and 30,000 hectares of which has
failed in harvest, according to agriculture ministry.
Moderate impact
of El Nino will hit Indonesia from August to December with the peak in
September, according to the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency.In
1998, El Nino attacked Indonesia with severe impact, pushing the government to
import 5 million tons of foods, said Kalla.El Nino is a warming of the sea's
surface in the Pacific that occurs every four to 12 years.
Editor:
Hou Qiang
September rains improve Rabi outlook
TOMOJIT BASU
Book Online by 30 September. 2015!
However, kharif output may be down by 2% on deficit rains
NEW DELHI, SEPTEMBER
21:
After prolonged dry spells in July
and August, a resurgent monsoon this month is expected to help farmers during
the Rabi season.Deficit rainfall is likely to take its toll on Kharif
foodgrains (rice, pulses and coarse cereals) output which the Agriculture
Ministry expects will contract by 2 per cent to 124.05 million tonnes (mt) this
year, according to its early estimates released last week.As of Monday, the
rainfall deficit has narrowed to 14 per cent after showers across East and
North-East India.
The early monsoon withdrawal appears
to have slowed with low pressure systems moving toward the North bringing more
moisture to parts of Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh over the
weekend. Parched areas of Maharashtra also received much needed precipitation,
while Gujarat’s Saurashtra and Kutch areas recorded steady rainfall.The South
Peninsula also received significant rainfall in the first two weeks of
September. This helped narrow the deficit to 14 per cent from a late-August
high of 22 per cent.“The resurgence will improve soil moisture in these areas.
Even if Kharif yields fall due to less rain during the monsoon, Rabi prospects
appear to be good.
Overall, food inflation is unlikely to
worsen,” said an Agriculture Ministry official.According to India
Meteorological Department data, 16 out of 36 sub-stations have reported
deficient rainfall between June 1 and September 21. Eastern Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, Marathwada and the Konkan coast are largely rain-fed and have been hit
the hardest.The normal area during the Rabi season is 61.43 million hectares
and important crops grown include wheat, pulses like chickpea (chana) and gram,
mustard and barley. The season accounts for 51 per cent of the country’s
foodgrain output.“Rainfall has been forecast for another 10 days. So, this will
help crops in the final flowering stage. Moisture retention in the soil and
charged reservoir levels is a positive sign for Rabi,” said a senior official
from Indian Agricultural Research Institute. Kharif crop sowing, of which 97
per cent has been completed, will end this month.
Rabi
conference
The
two-day annual ‘Rabi Conference’, which reviews the performance of the
preceding Kharif and strategises about the Rabi, will be held here from
Tuesday. The conference will see Central and State agriculture officers
engaging on preparedness for the season.Six topics, including the promotion of
horticulture and organic farming, more cultivation of pulses and oilseeds in
rice fallows, and ways to tackle agrarian crisis, will be focused on.
(This article was published on September 21, 2015)
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/september-rains-improve-rabi-outlook/article7674441.ece
Monsoon surge cracks open new front over East, N-E
VINSON KURIAN THIRUVANANTHAPURAM,
SEPTEMBER 21:
With just 10 days to go, the South-West monsoon has opened a new
front along the country’s eastern flanks even as it worked its way around the
West and North-West overnight on Monday morning.An India Met Department update
said that a fresh low-pressure area in the Bay of Bengal has curled its way
into Jharkhand and neighbourhood, scaling up the monsoon to vigorous mode along
the hills.
Rain deficit
The overall rainfall deficit has reduced further to 14 per cent with Central India making major gains from the current spell where the regional deficit stood revised lower to 13 per cent from the high teens.Amongst the four broad geographical regions, North-West India stood worst with 20 per cent. South peninsula too has benefited from the latest spell, bringing down its shortfall to 14 per cent.Over East and North-East India, the deficit remains unchanged at eight per cent from Sunday. The late revival of fortunes was unexpected and in the best traditions of truant nature of the monsoon.IMD has now joined global models to predict that the ongoing spell would sustain in various intensities over many parts of the country right until the end of the month.
Heavy showers
Moderate to heavy showers were reported from the plains and foothills of West Bengal, East Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha and the North-eastern States until the morning.Towards the West and Northwest, a prevailing ‘low’ over North Gujarat and adjoining South Rajasthan has been driving rain into Saurashtra and Kutch, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Gujarat, and Konkan-Goa.Most parts of the country will remain variously wet over the remaining 10 days of the monsoon, with some heavier showers forecast for the South during the latter part.Early forecasts suggest that the Bay of Bengal, specifically the Andaman Sea, could conjure up a low-pressure area towards the last few days of the month with scope for intensification.
Bay storm?
A storm forecaster model featured by the US Climate Prediction Centre saw this developing into a likely storm and racing away west-northwest towards the Odisha coast during the first week of October.This would blast away the last vestiges of the southwest monsoon and prepare the ground ready for the monsoon-in-reverse, i.e. northeast monsoon or winter monsoon.
But reliable leads on the
emerging weather could be had only after the prevailing two ‘low’s sign out
from the East and the North-West.El Nino years have in the past coincided with
average or even above normal North-East monsoon though there is no direct
cause-effect relationship between the two.
(This article was published on September 21, 2015)
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/monsoon-surge-cracks-open-new-front-over-east-ne/article7674439.ece
Rice harvest begins across Northern California
POSTED: 09/21/15, 8:55 AM PDT | UPDATED: 2 HRS AGO
With
blistering weather last week, it was nice for the crew of the Gorrill Ranch to
have gray skies for the first day of rice harvest.About 25 days ago, the water
was drained from the fields and the plants began to dry. In mid summer, at the
height of the growing season, the plants are a vibrant green, a color that
stands out against the faded yellow of the valley.Closer to harvest, the colors
dim. Stalks holding rice kernels turn a light beige and flop over with weight.
The green of the stalks also begins to fade.Yet, it’s not the appearance of the
plants that triggers the start of the rice harvesting engines. The kernels
themselves let ranch CEO Danny Robinson know when they’re ready.The ranch
office is a little building dwarfed by the towering round rice dryers along the
Midway.
Close to
the door, the ranch workers keep the Motomco moisture meter, a faded and
scratched blue/gray machine that sits on the counter. The machine is tested
each growing season for accuracy.When the first truckload of rice is delivered to
the drying area, a worker scoops up a cup filled with raw rice. The kernels are
placed into the Motomco, and a meter gives a reading.Michelle Pisenti runs a
calculation, and comes up with the moisture content of the grain.Too wet, the
workers will cool their engines and wait for the rice to dry more in the
field.Its more cost efficient to let the sun and wind dry the rice than to run
the kernels through the dryers multiple times.Plus, if the kernels dry out too
quickly, they can crack, which decreases the quality of the rice
overall.There’s a lot more that can go wrong during the growing season.This
year, availability of water was the primary concern.
The
California Rice Commission reports that about 30 percent less rice was planted in
the state this year.If you take a back road near Durham and drive west, you’re
bound to pass fields where rice was not planted this year. Some of the fields
have been worked over by tractors. Others are filled with weeds that have grown
so tall they look like bushes.Rice grower Steve Rystrom cut back his acreage by
15 percent to 20 percent this year.He planted rice varieties that looked ready
for harvest more than a week ago. But he checked the moisture content and the
kernels were still too green.He predicted the combines would really get rolling
later this week and then will cut straight through until the end of
harvest.Rice could be all done by the second week of October, he guesstimated.That’s
about a week and a half earlier than the past few years.So far, the weather
looked good for harvest. The little bit of rain this week was so slight it
should not harm the rice plants. A heavier rain could cause rice to lodge. This
is where the stalks flop over and form a heavy mass. Harvesting machines can
have a more difficult time harvesting the rice that is flat to the ground.
What is
grown in Butte County, and elsewhere for that matter, is often dictated by the
soil type. Rice does best in hard adobe clay, which holds water when the fields
are flooded.Most rice is produced using surface water provided through water
rights along a river or through irrigation districts.This year, water supply
was tight. Some farm water districts received zero water allocation from the
Sacramento or Feather rivers. Depending on the strength of the water rights,
other water districts were cut back 25 or 50 percent.If growers had access to
wells, they pumped groundwater.This year there was much uncertainty about water,
and even if a certain amount of water was allocated, growers did not know
whether those numbers would be changed mid-season, said rice grower Steve
Rystrom.Also, the soil was so dry, growers did not know how much water the land
would absorb once fields were flooded.Because of these factors, some growers
were conservative and pumped more water earlier in the season.In a normal year,
rice farmers can have as much water as they want after Nov. 1, to flood fields
for rice straw decomposition.
This
year they will have none after October. When the minimal amount of water runs
out, growers will pull up the barricades to their fields, which holds the water
in during the growing season. When rain falls, the fields will capture and hold
that water.Water worries are the year’s biggest concern, but armyworms might be
remembered as No. 2.Was it the weather? The lack of water? Whatever the
combination, the worms were here en masse.At the recent Rice Experiment Station
annual meeting held in Biggs, researchers noted this was the biggest armyworm
outbreak in three decades.In areas where the worms were most voracious, all the
leaves on the rice plants had been eaten away.More typically, parts of the
leaves would have bites taken out.Normally, growers would apply Sevin to the
field to knock back the worms, However, thetiming of the arrival was too close
to when the herbicide Propanil is applied.Other pesticides were used, but they
were not as effective.
Contact reporter Heather Hacking at 896-7758.
http://www.dailydemocrat.com/business/20150921/rice-harvest-begins-across-northern-california
Indonesia crop failure blamed on El Nino
As some southern regions
experience drought for six months now, farmers rely on government to buy food
and water.
Wonogiri, Indonesia - Indonesia says some of its southern regions are experiencing
drought because of the weather phenomenon known as El Nino.Some areas of
the country have not had rain for six months. Wells in Wonigiri, in
central Java, have run dry after nearly half a year without rain.Farmers have
been hit hard, with monsoon rains expected to start two months later than usual
due to El Nino.Nearly 100,000 hectares of rice harvest have failed already.
Farmers are now depending on financial support from the government for food,
including basic necessities, like drinking water.The Indonesian government
insists food stocks are still sufficient, but experts say this is too
optimistic.
The agriculture ministry admits the effects of El Nino have yet
to be calculated.The government is resorting to drastic measures in an effort
to create rain.Planes have been flying over the worst-hit areas, releasing salt
into the clouds - a procedure that causes raindrops to become heavy and
fall.Authorities have also distributed thousands of water pumps. But without
any water sources, farmers are struggling.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/09/indonesia-crop-failure-blamed-el-nino-150921062759431.html
Vietnam aims to export high-end, quality rice
VietNamNet Bridge - Experts have urged changing the rice export
strategy: instead of growing high-yield rice and exporting rice in large
quantities, it should focus on exporting high-quality products at high prices
and building a national brand.
Agricultural
experts have warned that Vietnam might be overtaken by newly emerging rice
exporters such as Myanmar and Cambodia. Myanmar has two scented rice
varieties well known in the world market, Lone Thwal Hmwe and Paw San. Paw San,
considered the most delicious variety now, exported at $900 per
ton. Cambodia has Phka Romduol. Meanwhile, Vietnam still does not have any
strong brand.Nguyen Phuoc Tuyen from the Dong Thap provincial Department of
Agriculture and Rural Development, warned that Vietnam will be under pressure
as Myanmar and Iran have lifted rice export bans. The Indonesian
government is also considering a self-supply policy, and plans to stop
importing rice in coming years.
The country plans to have an output of 36.3
million tons of rice in 2015 and will only import 1.25 million tons.Meanwhile,
other rice exporters have been growing rapidly. Cambodia has positioned its
rice products in the world market with scented varieties such as Phka Romdeng,
Phka Romeat and Phka Rumduol. The country reportedly plans to export 1.1
million tons of high-quality rice this year at high prices.Vietnamese rice
exports find it more difficult to compete with other exporters also because of
the cheap yuan. With the yuan devaluation, the rice imported from Vietnam has
become 4 percent more expensive in US dollar payments. A report showed
that the cross-border rice export to China has decreased by VND300 per kilo in
price. Meanwhile, China is a big rice buyer, consuming 38 percent of 3.72
million tons of rice Vietnam has exported.
Rice varieties
Dr. Le Van Banh, former head of the Mekong River Delta Rice Institute, Vietnam mostly exports long-grain white rice priced at $350-360 per ton. However, many other countries also export this product. Vietnam has to compete with India and Pakistan, which are trying to lower export prices.International press on September 8 reported that the Thai government plans to put 732,806 tons out of 14 million tons in stocks into auction. Vietnam’s 5 percent broken rice is priced at $325-335 per ton, while 25 percent broken rice at $320-330 per ton, which is $15-20 per ton lower than Thai rice of the same kind. “If Vietnam still focuses on exporting long-grain white rice, it will suffer,” Banh said, adding that Vietnam should try to earn more money by selling high-end products instead of making modest money by exporting high-yield rice.
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/141395/vietnam-aims-to-export-high-end--quality-rice.html
Vietnam rice loses to Thailand and Cambodia
VietNamNet Bridge – Vietnamese rice has lower quality compared to
rice of Thailand and Cambodia because Vietnamese farmers are using short day varieties,
while Thai and Cambodian farmers mainly plant only one rice crop/year, with
higher quality, safety and more competitive prices.
To get a deeper look inside the existing problems and find
solutions to the problem of Vietnamese rice, VietNamNet talks with Dr. Nguyen
Do Anh Tuan, Director of the Vietnam Institute for Policy and Strategy of
Agriculture and Rural Development (IPSARD).
Q: How has the policy on limiting
agricultural land allocation influenced the development of agriculture and rice
in general in the context of international integration, as Vietnam is about to
join the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the ASEAN Economic Community
(AEC)?
A: The process of international economic
integration in general and TPP and AEC in particular, with the reduction of
tariff barriers, create competitive pressures for Vietnam’s agriculture.
Instead, countries will focus on using technical barriers and standards in the
trade relationship. Vietnam’s agricultural products currently have low quality
and food safety standards, failing to meet the requirements of picky
markets.One of the main causes of this situation is that the scale of
agricultural land in Vietnam is too small, averaging less than 0.5 hectares per
household. The small-scale production makes difficulties for organization of
production and value chain links, quality management, food safety, disease
control. And application of science and technology and also makes the increase of
costs of production and transaction costs.
Land concentration is a major policy of the Party and the State to
advance to modern agriculture. The 2013 Land Law also expands the limits of
agricultural land used by households compared to the previous regulations.
However, the process of land consolidation is taking place very slowly. The
main reason is the weak operation of the agricultural land market, because of
the following factors:
- The ability to attract workers to the industrial and service
sectors is still weak. According to the General Statistics Office, last year
66.9% of the population and 69.6 percent of the labor force were still
concentrated in rural areas - of which the labor force employed in agriculture,
forestry and fisheries sector was 46.3%. This figure has been falling very
slowly in recent years. Most of the new workforce generated annually is in
rural areas.- The majority of the labor force from rural areas participates in
the informal labor force (accounting for 77% of the workforce) because the
rural workforce is largely unskilled labor (accounting for 47.6 % of workers
with jobs). Facing the risk of social security, poor housing conditions and
living standards, most migrant workers still remain in the countryside.
The role of land as the "means of production" has become
"risk insurance." Labor withdrawing from the agricultural sector but
still keeping land has affected investment in agricultural land. As a result,
land is not concentrated in the hands of the best farmers.- Meanwhile, small
farmer households do not have enough financial conditions, production and
management skills, information and social connections in order to have land.
Also, procedures for land transfer is complex which makes it very difficult for
farmers.Small-scale production makes it is difficult for Vietnam to manage
quality, control disease and apply new science and technology in agriculture.
Q: Could you analyze the
competitiveness of Vietnamese rice and farmers in comparison with other
emerging countries like Myanmar, India... especially when Vietnam is more
deeply integrating into the world market?
A: As income rises, consumers tend to
prefer high quality products in general and high-quality rice in particular.
Vietnam rice has lower quality than that of Thailand and Cambodia because
farmers use short-term varieties (3 month/season) and grow 2-3 crops/year to
take advantage of the limited land, the short growth cycle. Meanwhile, rice of
the two other countries is mainly one crop/year, with good quality, safety and
more competitive prices.
After the world food crisis in 2007 - 2008, rice exporting and
importing countries have been boosting rice production to ensure food security
and avoid dependence on rice imports. This has led to an oversupply of rice.
Consumers in the major rice importing countries like China also require
high-quality rice.
Therefore, even before integration, Vietnamese rice has had to
face fierce competition. When Vietnam opens its market under bilateral and
multilateral commitments, Vietnamese rice will face more difficulties. To
enhance competitiveness, Vietnam should promote rice restructuring towards
focusing on the improvement of product quality and diversification of export
markets.
Q: In the context of fierce regional competition,
should Vietnam loosen conditions on rice exports (Decree 109)?
A: To compete amid rice oversupply and
consumers preferring to use high-quality rice, the rice sector must improve the
quality of rice to participate in niche markets which are small but have high
value.
However, Decree 109/ND-CP/2010 and Decision 6139/QD-BCT in 2013
stipulate that to become a rice exporting firm, an enterprise must meet the
following conditions: (i) have at least one warehouse with a minimum capacity
of 5,000 tons of rice and (ii) at least a rice husking factory with a minimum
capacity of 10 tons of paddy per hour.Because of these conditions, the market
only has big and powerful ones and rejects small businesses that don’t meet
conditions on warehouses and rice husking factories, although they can produce
rice of good quality for export.
Therefore, it is necessary to create conditions to encourage
enterprises with vast fields, with stable raw material areas, large warehouses
and husking factories and quality rice to export rice.
In the long term, it is necessary to promote value chain links,
support businesses to renew equipment, build brands, and switch from
hand-to-hand contracts to investment partnership contracts with the importers.
Hoang Huong
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/special-reports/141623/vietnam-rice-loses-to-thailand-and-cambodia.html
Drought exposes cracks in Australia's
acclaimed water market
SYDNEY |
A farmer walks past a mobile irrigation boom on a
dying oat crop on his farm in the heart of Australia's Murray-Darling river
basin outside Moulamein, west of Canberra, in this August 24, 2007 file photo.
REUTERS/TIM WIMBORNE/FILES
A pioneering Australian scheme to improve the management of
water in the world's driest inhabited continent is facing its first real test
as an intensifying El Nino threatens crops and builds tensions between farmers and
environmentalists.The three-year old management plan for the Murray-Darling
basin, an area twice the size of Spain and home to 40 percent of Australia's
agricultural output, has been lauded internationally and suggested as a guide
for drought-hit California.Forged in the wake of a ruinous 14-year drought, the
scheme set up a market-based water trading system, improved cooperation across
state borders and focused on efficient water usage.
"All of these lessons are appropriate to the United
States," said water policy expert Professor David Feldman of the
University of California, Irvine, where the state is suffering from a four-year
dry spell that has threatened agriculture and helped fan severe wildfires this
summer.Australia's Murray-Darling basin encompasses two major river systems in
Australia's southeast, but years of siphoning off water to irrigate crops has
devastated waterways, creating dried-out wetlands and acidic soils, toxic algal
blooms that threaten animal and human health, and high levels of salinity.A
2012 water management plan instituted a raft of water-saving measures, and set
up a market-based system where farmers who have been allocated water rights
under decades-old systems can trade their entitlements.Under the scheme, the
government buys water to keep the river healthy, farmers can buy water to
irrigate crops in lean years or during the hot summer season, and investors are
also welcome.
DROUGHT PRESSURE
But changes to the Australian plan amid a resurgent El Nino
weather pattern have worried environmentalists who say its reputation and
credibility are now at risk.The plan initially met little resistance in rural
areas, but dry weather this year has depleted some dams that store river water,
forcing farmers to accept big cuts in their water entitlements.The loss is
particularly hard for summer crops that rely heavily on irrigation like cotton,
rice and sorghum. Australia is the world's fourth-largest exporter of
cotton.Cotton accounts for about A$2 billion ($1.4 billion) in export earnings,
or about 7 percent of total crop earnings, and production is forecast to fall
nearly 10 percent in the year to end-June 2016 from last year's five-year
low.While the dry weather is hastening a shift from water-intensive crops like
cotton and rice, it has also sparked calls for changes to the management plan
as farmers say too much water is being used for the environment.While farmers
can buy water on market, prices have jumped sharply to more than A$200 ($145) a
megalitre in some regions - well in excess of viable limits for many, who argue
that having to compete with the government has driven up prices.
CAPS AND OVERSIGHT
Australian lawmakers last week nearly halved the amount of water
the government can buy from local farmers, instead giving farmers subsidies to
save water that would then be available for sale.Environmentalists and some
academics question the changes, which the Australian Conservation Foundation
(ACF) says will cost up to five times the market rate of buying water, while
there is also a physical limit on how much can be saved.This week, the
government transferred management of Australia's water resources from the
Department of the Environment to the Department of Agriculture, a move long
sought by rural bodies."It introduces a remarkable conflict of interest
between a minister whose job it is to promote the agricultural industry and now
under this arrangement, a minister who will be responsible for securing the
health of water resources that are used by that industry," said ACF campaigner
Jonathan La Nauze.
Academics say the scheme has had some success in improving the
health of the river system, and will survive in its basic form given the
importance of the basin to all water users."Any tinkering will be at the
edges and not the core," said Willem Vervoort, associate professor in
hydrology and catchment management, the University of Sydney. "If the
water quality keeps deteriorating then the irrigators are out of business. In
the end, the irrigators have a stake in the environment too."The
University of California's Feldman said legal and political differences would
make it difficult to implement parts of the Australian system in the United
States, where water rights remain linked to property rights.However, the
lessons for California included overcoming the fragmented authority for water
management and getting public buy-in on how to best save and use water, he
said.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/09/20/us-australia-water-basin-idUSKCN0RK03K20150920
Government to ease permits required for exports, imports
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Sat, September 19 2015,
5:42 PM
Business News
In following up on the issuance
of the government’s economic policy package last week, the Trade Ministry will
ease export and import regulations to improve the business climate and ensure
national stocks of basic commodities, an official has said. The ministry’s deregulation team head Arlinda Imbang Jaya said
at least 32 regulations, mostly ministerial regulations, would be amended by
the ministry through October this year.The ministry will also cut at least 38
export and import permits from the total of 121 permits under the ministry,
including four registered exporter (ET) permits, 21 registered importer (IT)
permits and 13 producing importer (IP) permits. “We hope the measure will increase the flow of goods for
imports, exports and domestic trade, as well as ensure the supply of the
commodities in the market and therefore stabilize prices,” Arlinda said at a
press briefing on Friday.
Indonesia recorded US$6.22 billion
in trade surplus in the January-August period of this year, with total exports
and imports slumping by 12.7 percent and 18.96 percent year-on-year (yoy),
respectively. The declining exports and imports have indicated that many
industries in the country are still facing a slowdown. The ease for exports and imports will also be applied on
so-called strategic commodities, such as rice, sugar, salt and plantation
products, with the removal of requirements for recommendations from other
ministries and agencies for the import and export of the products.“We have
finished talking with the ministries that usually give the recommendations,
such as the Industry Ministry, Agriculture Ministry, Energy and Mineral
Resources Ministry and others.
There are some policies that need relaxation
from their side to remove the recommendation requirements,” she said.Arlinda
added that through the import relaxation, the ministry hoped that the industry
could better utilize raw materials.Imports of raw materials increased by 18.7
percent month-to-month (mtm) to $9.15 billion in August, a reverse from the
21.4 percent drop a month before, according to Central Statistics
Agency (BPS) data.Under the new regulation, the government would make a
decision on local production, national demand and import volume of the
commodities in a limited coordination meeting (Rakortas), involving related
ministries.Regarding rice imports, the State Logistics Agency (Bulog)
previously said that the national stock of subsidized rice would be close to
running out by the year’s end, as the stock stood at 62,000 tons while it
needed 1.5 to 2 million tons to meet next year’s demand. The impact of El Niño
on production also loomed, though Agriculture Minister Amran Sulaiman has
stated his confidence on not importing rice this year.
With regard to salt imports,
Arlinda said the ministry would scrap requirements for IT and IP, saying the
requirement would only be applied to producing importers’ identification
numbers (API).Similar ease on imports would also be applied to other
commodities, such as steel, with the scrapping of tax identification number
(NPWP) and business permit (SIUP) document requirements. According to Arlinda, the export-import process would also be
available online starting October.
With the easing, the ministry would also still manage the flow of imports by obliging importers to uphold the policy to label imported product in Indonesian prior to selling them. (fsu)
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2015/09/19/government-ease-permits-required-exports-imports.html#sthash.ExAZSxjh.dpuf
Mekong Delta rice fields hit by heavy rains
Thousands of hectares of rice in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta were
flattened after heavy rains and strong winds hit the region this week.
In
Dong Thap Province, more than 3,000ha of rice ready for harvest in three
districts were flattened, causing an estimated yield reduction of 10-20 per
cent.Despite public pumps being operated around the clock, rice fields are
still inundated and harvest machines cannot be used.At least 90 per cent of
Tran Van Thom's 3ha of OM 4900 rice fields in Tam Nong's Phu Tho Commune were
flattened by severe weather caused partly by Storm Vamco that hit the central
region this week.Thom said that farmers in the area had never experienced three
consecutive days of severely inundated rice fields.Traders are now offering to
buy fresh paddy directly at fields for a price of VND4,300 a kilo.Farmer Thom
said he would sell rice paddy at a loss because he had been unable to find a
dryer to dry the paddy.
Flattened
rice has lost some of its quality, contributing to a drop in price.The Dong
Thap Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has instructed districts
and agriculture co-operatives to speed up the pumping of water out of rice
fields and prepare machines to harvest rice when the weather improves.Farmer
Phan Thanh Duc in An Giang Province's Thoai Son District said the water level
in rice fields had increased since Sunday, submerging 100 ha in rice-zoning
areas. "If the inundation lasts a long time, farmers will lose
everything," he said.Nguyen Duc Ky, deputy chairman of the Vinh Thanh
Commune People's Committee, said the rice zoning area No1 had seen the most
damage.The rice zoning area No1 had 268ha of rice. The commune had speeded up
pumping water out of rice fields to mitigate damages, Ky said.
In
Tan Chau Town's Phu Loc Commune, soldiers in Tan Chau Town's Phu Loc Commune
have been helping farmers harvest the rice submerged under water since
Wednesday.About 10,000ha of rice ready for harvest in An Giang Province are
still under water.In Ca Mau Province, rain and winds flattened more than
3,400ha of rice in Tran Van Thoi and U Minh districts, according to the
province's Irrigation Sub-department.The yield at the rice fields is expected
to fall by 30 per cent, according to the sub-department.Ca Mau's agriculture
officials have instructed affected districts to open sluice gates to release
water from rice fields. Local farmers have also been encouraged to use pumps at
rice fields.
Vietnamese exporters undercut as global rivals
benefit more from currency effects
Thanh Nien News
HANOI - Saturday, September 19, 2015 14:36
Arabica coffee beans sit in a container inside coffee store in
Hanoi. Photo: Bloomberg
Export earnings from Vietnamese farm commodities have fallen after
many countries let their currencies depreciate significantly, giving their
exporters more ability to undercut rivals. ietnam's farm exports dropped 7.7
percent year-on-year to around US$9.2 billion in the January-August period, and
experts warn that further declines should be expected. They made the gloomy
forecast at a conference held by the Institute of Policy and Strategy for
Agriculture and Rural Development on Wednesday in Hanoi, news website Saigon
Times Online reported.Nguyen Do Anh Tuan, chief of the institute, better known
as Ipsard, said since China, which buys 20 percent of Vietnam's agricultural
exports, depreciated the yuan last month, Vietnamese exporters have been under
pressure to reduce their prices to be able to compete with Chinese products.
Some other major competitors such as Brazil, India and Thailand have also let
their currencies declined, he said.
Over the past year, the Brazilian real has fallen 72 percent
against the US dollar and the Thai baht, 18 percent, he said. Nguyen Trung
Kien, a researcher with Ipsard, was quoted as saying that in 2013, Vietnamese
rice accounted for 66 percent of China's rice imports. But the ratio fell to 47
percent in the first four months this year, after China sourced more rice from
Thailand and Cambodia. Sales of robusta coffee beans could also shrink, now
that arabica beans produced by Brazil and Columbia, which are preferred by
roasters, have become almost just as cheap. Vietnam's seafood products are too
facing difficulties, considering that its shrimp is now more expensive than
similar products from India, Indonesia and Thailand, Kien said. Ipsard
researchers urged local exporters to boost shipments to the US, as the US
dollar has remained strong, especially for products that "have advantages"
in that market such as seafood, coffee, pepper, cashew, and wood, the news
website reported.For a mid- and long-term solution, the government should help
local businesses diversify their markets, for instance by exporting rice to
Ghana and the US, and coffee to Australia and South Korea, Kien said
Myanmar lifts temporary rice
export ban, claims self-sufficiency
Created:
Monday, 21 September 2015 05:50
Myanmar’s Ministry of Commerce has
claimed self-sufficiency of rice, following floods that wrecked several paddy
fields and livestock establishments earlier this month
Due to the widespread destruction, the Myanmar Rice Federation had
imposed a temporary ban on rice exports until 15 September. However, after
assessing the situation, the federation decided to lift the ban. Myanmar’s
Ministry of Commerce permanent secretary Toe Aung Myint said they didn’t wish
to lose the stronghold over the export market and was working with several
departments to ensure rice exports were not affected.
http://www.fareasternagriculture.com/crops/agriculture/myanmar-lifts-temporary-rice-export-ban-claims-self-sufficiency
Egypt Transfers Expertise in Rice
Cultivation Techniques to 15 African States
The Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation announced the
end of the special session on activating joint cooperation between Egypt and
other African countries to apply the state-of-the-art techniques in rice
cultivation in a number of African states.Minister of irrigation Hossam Moghazi
said that this agreement comes within the framework of joint cooperation
between the Ministry of Irrigation and the Egyptian Agency of Partnerships for
Development as well as Japan International Cooperation Agency.Moghazi noted that
the session, which was held from 20 April to 17 September 2015, was attended by
19 experts from 15 African countries including the Nile Basin member-states.
He stressed the importance of joint cooperation between Egypt
and other African countries to find solutions to current problems.
Festive period likely to boost rice prices
21 Sep 2015 at 08:02
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
| WRITER: PHUSADEE
ARUNMAS
Rice
prices are forecast to increase by as much as 10% late this year and early next
year thanks to year-end festive celebrations and lower supply.Chookiat
Ophaswongse, an honorary president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said
rice prices were likely to rise by 8-10% in December and January, the period
that sees most active shipments induced by high demand for Christmas and New
Year celebrations.Nigeria, for instance, will start actively buying parboiled
rice from November.More importantly, he said, Thailand would come up with lower
rice production in the main crop of 23 million tonnes from an earlier forecast
of 27-28 million tonnes of paddy due to drought. "Thai 5% white rice
now quoted at US$355-$360 a tonne is considered low and has possibly reached
its bottom," Mr Chookiat said, citing the baht's fall against the US
dollar as another factor behind low rice prices.
He said
rice traders mostly agreed that price prospects from now on will become positive,
as indicated by the rice purchase by the Philippines this month.The
Philippines' National Food Authority will buy 750,000 tonnes of 25% broken
rice under government-to-government deals at cost, insurance and freight prices
of $426.6 baht a tonne.Of the total, Thailand through the Foreign Trade
Department will supply 300,000 tonnes, while Vietnam will provide 450,000
tonnes. Delivery is due from November until January.Mr Chookiat said
purchase demand of about 500,000 tonnes from Indonesia was expected late this
year even though Indonesia has adopted a rice self-sufficiency policy.He said
Indonesia was still failing to produce enough rice for domestic consumption.Mr
Chookiat forecast Thailand could ship about 9 million tonnes of rice this year
but said it was difficult to predict whether the country would reclaim its
title as the world's largest rice exporter.
Thailand lost its
No.1 rice exporter status to India in 2012, while Vietnam
rose to second place.
Despite a late surge by Thailand, India held
onto the title last year, selling 11.3 million tonnes compared with 10.8
million tonnes for Thailand."We still have to wait for the performance of
India's rice shipments for the remaining months," Mr Chookiat said.As of
Aug 17, Thailand had shipped 6 million tonnes of rice, while India had 5.7
million tonnes. According to Mr Chookiat, Vietnam is expected to ship only
6.1-6.2 million tonnes this year.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/business/news/700388/festive-period-likely-to-boost-rice-prices
Arkansas
Farm Bureau Daily Commodity Report
A comprehensive daily commodity market report for Arkansas
agricultural commodities with cash markets, futures and insightful analysis and
commentary from Arkansas Farm Bureau commodity analysts.
Noteworthy benchmark price levels of interest to farmers and
ranchers, as well as long-term commodity market trends which are developing.
Daily fundamental market influences and technical factors are noted and
discussed.
Soybeans
High
|
Low
|
|
Cash Bids
|
902
|
812
|
New Crop
|
897
|
812
|
|
Riceland Foods
|
||
Cash Bids
|
Stuttgart: - - -
|
Pendleton: - - -
|
New Crop
|
Stuttgart: - - -
|
Pendleton: - - -
|
|
Futures:
|
|
Soybean Comment
Soybeans closed higher today. A positive inspections
report combined with another large export sale gave soybeans some much needed
support as prices try to hold support near $8.65. Soybeans continue to trade in
a sideways pattern as continued forecast of large crop in the U.S. prospects
for another record in South America remain a negative for prices. While todays
export reports are positive overall sales remain well below previous years and
will remain a drag on prices.
Wheat
High
|
Low
|
|
Cash Bids
|
393
|
393
|
New Crop
|
494
|
469
|
|
Futures:
|
|
Wheat Comment
Wheat prices closed higher today, and December wheat
is within a few cents of resistance near $5. While today's export report showed
exports still well behind previous year, strength in outside markets helped
wheat take advantage of its oversold position. Wheat prices will continue to
have difficulty maintaining strength without some help given the weak
fundamental situation.
Grain Sorghum
High
|
Low
|
|
Cash Bids
|
399
|
345
|
New Crop
|
397
|
345
|
|
Corn
High
|
Low
|
|
Cash Bids
|
362
|
332
|
New Crop
|
387
|
337
|
|
Futures:
|
|
Corn Comment
Corn prices started the week on a positive note. The
market received some much needed support from USDA reports of a larges sale to
Mexico. This combined with weekly inspections meeting trade expectations
provided support for prices, moving the focus from improving harvest
expectations. While prices remain under pressure, the market seems to have
established strong support at lows left after the August USDA report. Prices
are within a dime of last week’s highs and have support near $3.80.
Cotton
Futures:
|
|
Cotton Comment
Cotton futures moved to new lows again today before
turning around to closed mixed. General economic concerns continue to pressure
prices. With the ending stocks estimate continuing to climb thanks to higher
production, weaker demand will only make the balance sheet worse for cotton prices.
December is testing the water at 60 cents.
Rice
High
|
Low
|
|
Long Grain
Cash Bids
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
Long Grain
New Crop
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
|
Futures:
|
|
Rice Comment
Rice futures were lower across the board, but the
uptrend remains intact for now. Reports of disappointing yields across the
south coupled with smaller acreage has fueled the recent rally. November
continues to have resistance at $13, while January has resistance at $13.34.
Cattle
Futures:
|
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Live Cattle:
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feeders:
|
|
Arkansas Prices
Ash Flat Livestock Auction
Ola Livestock Auction
Springdale Livestock Auction
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City - Feeder Cattle Auction Weighted Average Report
Cattle Comment
While cattle prices saw sharp gains during this
session, prices ended well off of intraday highs. The market found support from
last week's cattle on feed report which showed placements well below trade
estimates. While this is supportive of prices, cattle will need some positive
demand news to help prices maintain gains.
Hogs
Futures:
|
|
Hog Comment
Shell Eggs
National Turkeys
Delmarva
Broilers
http://www.arfb.com/ag-markets-statistics/report/
Trichogramma
Wasps Used as Biocontrol Agents in the Greater Mekong Region
September 21, 2015 by Entomology Today
Cash
support won’t help rice, cotton farmers meet losses fully
Cash support won’t help rice, cotton farmers meet losses fully
IPR report evaluates PM’s agriculture relief package
September 20, 2015
Lahore - With a year-to-year drop of 13% in price of rice and
cotton, Prime Minister’s recently announced cash support of Rs5000 per acre for
small farmers would meet 68% of loss for rice farmers and just 29% for cotton
growers.The government has announced cash support even before full loss has occurred
to the new crop.It is not clear how well the announced compensation reflects
actual loss to farmers.Experts estimate a price decline of 28% for cotton and
22% for rice in 2016.Even within the scale of announced compensation, the
amount set aside for the purpose is inadequate.The twenty billion rupees
provided for rice and cotton each would fall short by 34% and 30% respectively
taking into account the number of small farmers and the acreage.These views
were expressed in a report released by the Institute for Policy Reforms.
Dr Hafiz Pasha, the Managing Director IPR, in his report titled ‘An
Evaluation of the Prime Minister’s Agriculture Relief Package’ welcomed the
Prime Minister’s relief package for farmers, which was announced at a time of
falling output prices.He said that the package attempted to extend essential
support to agriculture, however, evaluation of the package raises issues about
the timing and adequacy of cash support, as well as its mechanism.Questions
remain also about the measures to reduce input cost and to provide access to
credit, he added.The cost of Prime Minister’s relief package for farmers could
increase fiscal deficit by an estimated 0.4 percent of the GDP, however, the
cash support and access to credit would have positive effect on small farmers
while other measures may help medium and large farmers.
The report also recommended a number of additional measures to
increase effectiveness of the package and lack of consultation with provincial
governments.The report expresses fear that “Once again good intentions may fail
to convert to sound deeds and leave the feeling of unilateral policymaking.This
is hardly advisable for strengthening the Federation.” Targeting of benefits
would be a challenge.It requires estimating cropping patterns at individual
farm level.This could lead to leakage during disbursement and government must
do all to prevent it from happening.With fertilizer comprising 35% of farm
variable input cost, government is right to target reduction in its price.The
estimated 15% reduction in price of potassium and phosphate also has the
potential to improve the country’s fertilizer mix.Some questions remain,
especially with respect to effect on fiscal operations.The burden of cost to be
borne by each province is not clear.The package does not quantify the fiscal
effect of withdrawal of price increase on Urea.If the reduction comes through
reduced GST, the revenue loss would be Rs 10 billion.Similarly, estimate of Rs
7billion as the fiscal effect of tariff reduction seems incorrect.
Its true impact is Rs.10 billion or 43% higher.Government estimates
GST support by provinces to cost Rs 7 billion whereas it would cost Rs 11
billion, or 57% higher.Continued load-shedding will take away the real impact
of reduction in tariff.Government also has overestimated the cost reduction by
Rs.500 per bag of fertilizer.Through a number of measures, the package attempts
to correct the bias in access to credit for agriculture.However, there are
questions about its viability when farm profits are falling.ZTBL, the main
supplier to small farmers, already has 20% non-performing loans.It is uncertain
if it is prudent for ZTBL to take on higher risk.Regardless, the announced
measures would likely benefit small farmers.
The package provides balanced relief to all farm sizes.Cash support
and credit targets small farmers while reduced costs help large and medium
sized farms.The package seems to have underestimated by Rs.31 billion its cost
to the federal and provincial budgets.Overall, it would increase the fiscal
deficit by a half percent of GDP.This is entirely justified though may need
special advocacy with the IMF.The report recommends that rather than reacting,
government may look holistically at its policy in support of
agriculture.Commodity prices would likely stay low for some time to come.In
addition to measures in force already, the report recommends support price for
additional products.
Of these, rice and cotton need early inclusion.Government may
provide export subsidy for rice to help dispose off present stock as well as
stabilize domestic price.Government may reduce price of Light Diesel Oil, as
90% of all tube wells work on diesel.IPR recommends reduction in GST on LDO
from the present 29.5% to 7%.Largely, success of this relief package depends on
commitment by provincial governments.
http://nation.com.pk/business/20-Sep-2015/cash-support-won-t-help-rice-cotton-farmers-meet-losses-fully
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