Minister urges growers, rice millers to work
towards value addition
October 27, 2016
Sohail Anwar Khan Sial, Provincial Minister for
Agriculture, has urged the growers and rice millers to jointly work for value
addition in rice. A high delegation of Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan
(REAP) under the leadership of Mahmood Moulvi, Chairman REAP, met Sohail Anwar
Khan Sial at his office to discuss various issues.
During the meeting Members of Managing
Committee Haji Abdul Rauf Chappal, Abdul Latif Piracha as well as members from
Growers and Rice Millers were also present. During the meeting various
suggestions and proposals for the betterment of rice trade have been discussed.
Chairman REAP appreciated the efforts of the Minister for Agriculture to gather
all the stakeholders of rice trade on the table and listening to their issues
& problems and seek their solutions.
During the meeting, the Minister for
Agricultural also agreed with REAP proposal for handing over of two Rice
Research Institutes to REAP to run on Public Private Partnership basis. He
assured REAP that Ministry of Agricultural will send his summary to Chief
Minister Sindh for formal approval.
He hoped that in this way opportunity for
employment will be generated as well as other development work will be improved
in Sindh, besides resumption of the Research & Development work on rice
which is stagnant since many years. Minister for Agriculture also urged the
growers and rice millers to jointly work for value addition in rice and produce
better quality rice, so that we can fetch more and more foreign exchange for
our beloved country. The Minister appreciated the role of REAP towards the
generation of valuable foreign exchange which is the back bone of our country's
economy
Indonesia may
abolish licensing system for onion & chilli imports
A government official in Indonesia
reported Tuesday 25 Oct., that the country may abolish the licensing system for
importers of some food commodities and put in place a tariff system in order to
open its economy."At this moment, we are reviewing the trade regime for
important commodities such as rice, sugar, beef, chillies, onions and two other
commodities," Denni Purbasari, deputy chief of staff at the executive
office of the president, said during the launch of the World Bank's Indonesia
Economic Quarterly report.
"We are looking at the
possibility of changing from licensing regime to tariffs, such that everybody
can play to import the commodities," she said.Indonesia's food trade
restrictions and other policy interventions impose a massive "tax" on
consumers, the World Bank said in the report.
In 2015, the cost burden from the
system on Indonesian consumers was estimated at $36 billion, much higher than
the $22 billion estimate for the entire European Union, the report said.
Currently, the Indonesian
government has a quota system for the import of food commodities it considers
important. Only the state procurement agency Bulog is allowed to import
non-premium rice. Importation of white sugar is limited to state-owned
companies appointed by the government.
The import quota is decided, based
on domestic food production data, compiled by the Agriculture Ministry. But
ministry officials routinely inflate the rice production data to present a rosy
picture to the government to keep farm subsidies flowing, a senior government
official told Reuters earlier this year.
The World Bank said Indonesia needs
to rebalance its food security policy, highlighting, not only the trade
barriers on some commodities, but also the government's approach on public
spending to increase productivity.
Source: bangkokpost.com
http://www.freshplaza.com/article/165696/Indonesia-may-abolish-licensing-system-for-onion-and-chilli-imports
Letting
‘quantitative restriction’ go is a tough but sensible choice
THE proposed lifting of the
“quantitative restriction,” or QR, on rice has become a tense issue, pitting
the administration of President Rodrigo Duterte, which largely favors lifting
the QR, against farmers’ advocates, who say that the restriction on rice
imports is necessary support for the Philippines’ impoverished rice farmers.QR
is a special advantage given the Philippines under the World Trade Organization
(WTO), which sets a limit on the amount of rice that can be imported at a
reduced tariff. This amount, called the Minimum Access Volume (MAV), is set at
850,000 metric tons.
Up to that amount, rice imports can
only be charged a tariff of 35 percent; above that amount, the tariff can be 50
percent, plus the shipments must have the prior approval of the National Food
Authority (NFA). Along with the QR allowance, the Philippine rice sector is
also free from other WTO rules of agricultural liberalization.The QR is set to
expire in July 2017; it has been extended twice, in 2005 for 10 years, and in
2015 for two more. The rationale behind granting the QR in the first place and
then extending it for a number of years was to allow the Philippine rice sector
to “catch up” to its potential trade competitors, an acknowledgement of how
critical the grain is to our country’s well-being.
Even a cursory look at the plight
of most Filipino rice farmers is clear evidence that QR hasn’t worked;
government support for farmers has fallen woefully short, and the Philippines
has a number of natural disadvantages – less land available for rice farming,
and far less natural irrigation – compared with competitors like Thailand and
Vietnam that no form of import restrictions short of an outright ban could
overcome. NFA importation on a government-to-government basis annually exceeds
the MAV anyway, thoroughly undermining the purpose of the restriction, and
worse yet, is not counted against the restricted volume.
Even though advocates of
maintaining QR assert that an open market will force Filipino rice farmers into
unfair competition with cheaper imports, the unfortunate reality is that QR has
boxed them into that very situation for years, and that letting it expire,
despite the risks, might very well be the most economically sensible move the
government could make.Unfortunately, it seems nearly impossible to have a
sensible debate about the relative merits and disadvantages of QR in the
current political climate, in which advocates of keeping the restriction in
place insist on conflating what should be an economic issue with political
complaints. QR is just one tool that can be used to support the farming sector;
keeping it will not make up for manifold shortcomings in government efforts
over the past few decades. As a matter of fact, the argument could be made that
the existence of QR actually discouraged government from doing more, behind the
misguided belief that the partial cover from the biggest threat to Filipino
farmers – outside competition – was an adequate form of support.
The second and very real problem is
that the government may have no choice. Granting another extension of QR is up
to the WTO, and the organization has been very vocal over the past year in
expressing its alarm at growing protectionist measures around the world. When
the last extension was granted last year, it was with a clear warning that it
was done against the WTO’s wishes and better judgment, and that the Philippines
should make the most of what would likely be the last accommodation.
All things considered, although it will not be a harmless
decision, the better choice for the long term is to let the QR lapse. Doing so
will improve the Philippines’ position within the WTO, and in a sense, hold the
government’s feet to the fire to turn its agricultural advocacy rhetoric into
real action
http://www.manilatimes.net/letting-quantitative-restriction-go-tough-sensible-choice/293338/
Ad Campaign Underway in Saudi Arabia: Making Life in the Kitchen Easier
By Eszter Somogyi
JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA -- USA Rice initiated a
month long advertising campaign here that will reach 80 percent of the
population in this, Saudi Arabia's second largest city and an important
commercial hub and the principal gateway to the Islamic holy cities of Mecca
and Medina.
The campaign includes six huge unipoles (12
feet x 42 feet), as well as animated advertisements on 11 high definition
screens all positioned on highly frequented roads next to traffic lights, to
enhance exposure. The outdoor media
elements are supported with an "in-mall campaign" featuring backlit
posters urging consumers to opt for U.S.-grown rice with messages of
convenience for the home cook.
"U.S. Rice: Easy cooking, to make your
life easier!" proclaims one of the ads.
The ads are appearing in 80 locations in the top 10 indoor malls in
Jeddah, each with hypermarkets where consumers can shop for groceries nearby.
The campaign is supported by Abu Bint, one of
the premier rice brands in the Middle East.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, especially in its
western and southern regions, is a loyal consumer of U.S.-grown rice, with a
preference for long grain parboiled rice, but also purchasing some U.S. medium
grain.
USA Rice works together with several identified
local U.S. rice brands to increase sales and maintain consumer loyalty to U.S.
origin, especially against a growing preference for basmati rice in the
country.
Chef de Riz Named at International Rice
Festival
By Randy Jemison
Paying homage to the Chef de Riz
CROWLEY, LA -- Despite major flooding that inundated
much of rice country in August and threatened cancellation of this year's Rice
and Creole Cookery, the contest proceeded as scheduled last Friday and was a
huge success. One hundred and forty-nine
dishes were entered in the cook-off held at the 80th Annual International Rice
Festival. Joshia Dietz of Lafayette
claimed the title of Chef de Riz (Cooker of Rice).
Overall winners from the rice-dish categories
included: Ian McElwee, children's
division; Kullen Mouton of Branch, intermediate division and Junior Chef
winner; Anna Esquivel, teen division; and Blake Vidrine of Crowley, adult
division.
"The summer rains caused extensive damage
to the facility where we hold the contest and destroyed many of our files we
use to organize the event," said Letha Vincent, contest organizer. "However, with the support of the
festival board of directors and the Jeff Davis Parish Volunteers for Family and
Community Club, we were able to pull it together again this year and even
double the amount of entries.
Philippine Farm Minister: No Urgent Need to
Import Rice After Typhooni
Manila. The Philippine farm minister said on Monday (24/10) there was
no urgent need to import rice despite huge crop losses from Super Typhoon Haima
hitting major rice-growing provinces last week."As of the moment I don't
think so," Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said at a press briefing
when asked if the government needs to allow more rice imports on top of the
250,000 tonnes the state grains agency recently bought from Vietnam and Thailand.
"Cagayan Valley is actually
one of our major rice production areas but the good thing is that some of our
farmers were able to harvest their palay (unmilled rice) ahead of the
typhoon," Piñol said, referring to one of the northern regions hit hard by
Haima
http://jakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/international/philippine-farm-minister-no-urgent-need-import-rice-typhoon/
ASIA RICE-PRICES WEAK DESPITE CHINA PURCHASE, MANILA DEMAND
PROSPECTS
10/26/2016
* Vietnam's 5 pct broken rice prices narrow to $350/T
* China resumes purchases in cross-border trade
* Thai 5 pct broken rice prices steady at $350-$354/T
* India's rice prices ease on sluggish export demand
By Ho Binh Minh
HANOI, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Asian
rice prices were largelysubdued this week on thin buying demand despite
purchase ofVietnamese grain by China and the likelihood of demand emergingfrom
the Philippines, traders said on Wednesday.The Thai market also remained dull,
with quotations steadyeven after the commerce ministry cited a smaller harvest
and
also said the country's trade talks with Malaysia and Indonesiawill support prices.Thai benchmark 5 percent broken rice <RI-THBKN5-P1> stoodunchanged in the past week at $350-$354 a tonne, free-on-board(FOB) basis.
also said the country's trade talks with Malaysia and Indonesiawill support prices.Thai benchmark 5 percent broken rice <RI-THBKN5-P1> stoodunchanged in the past week at $350-$354 a tonne, free-on-board(FOB) basis.
"There is no demand, so the
market is rather quiet," atrader in Bangkok said.Vietnamese rice prices
eased after a short rally last weekat the end of the Mekong Delta crop harvest
while most buyerswere looking at Thai or Pakistani grain, traders said.Demand
has improved just recently after China resumed itsgrain imports via
cross-border trade earlier this month,
Vietnam's agriculture ministry said in its October report.Vietnam's 5 percent broken rice <RI-VNBKN5-P1> pricesnarrowed to $350 a tonne, FOB basis, against $350-$355 a week
ago, of which $355 was the highest since Aug. 31."Vietnamese rice has now lost its competitive edge againstThai rice," a trader at a foreign firm in Ho Chi Minh City said,
citing similar quotations of Thai rice.Vietnamese traders said they were monitoring possible demandby the Philippines, which is assessing the country's rice supply
and will decide shortly if more imports are needed.
Vietnam's agriculture ministry said in its October report.Vietnam's 5 percent broken rice <RI-VNBKN5-P1> pricesnarrowed to $350 a tonne, FOB basis, against $350-$355 a week
ago, of which $355 was the highest since Aug. 31."Vietnamese rice has now lost its competitive edge againstThai rice," a trader at a foreign firm in Ho Chi Minh City said,
citing similar quotations of Thai rice.Vietnamese traders said they were monitoring possible demandby the Philippines, which is assessing the country's rice supply
and will decide shortly if more imports are needed.
Vietnam's January-October rice exports will drop 21.2percent from
a year ago to an estimated 4.22 million tonnes,mostly sold to China, Ghana and
the Philippines, the agricultureministry said.In India, the world's top rice
exporter, the 5-percentbroken parboiled rice <RI-INBKN5-P1> prices edged
down to$364-$374 per tonne, from $367-$377 last Wednesday due tosluggish export
demand and on expectations of a bumper crop.
"Since prices are correcting, some buyers are
delayingpurchases expecting further drops," said an exporter based
atKakinada in India's southern state of Andhra Pradesh."Expectations of a
bumper Indian crop are also puttingpressure on prices," he added.India's
non-basmati rice exports in April to August, thefirst five months of its fiscal
year, edged up 0.8 percent froma year ago to 3 million tonnes.Thailand's
shipment so far this year hit 7.9 million tonnes,
nearing its goal of 9.5 million tonnes.(Reporting Ho Binh Minh in HANOI; Additional reporting byPatpicha Tanakasempipat in BANGKOK and Rajendra Jadhav in
MUMBAI; Editing by Sunil Nair)
http://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/asia-rice-prices-weak-despite-china-purchase-manila-demand-prospects
NFA to purchase
palay from typhoon-affected farmers in Regions 1, 2, 3
October 26, 2016
The National Food Authority (NFA)
said it has started buying storm-damaged palay in Regions 1, 2 and 3 that were
severely affected by Typhoon Karen (international code name Sarika) and
Supertyphoon Lawin (international code name Haima).
The agency’s officer in charge,
Tomas Escarez, said he has authorized field offices in the three regions to
procure storm-damaged palay (SDP) from farmers. Field offices will be allowed
to procure SDP for a period of one month.
The NFA said its base price for
SDP is P11 per kilogram, but this will depend on its qualities, such as
moisture content and purity. SDP with more than 80-percent damaged and
discolored kernels will no longer be bought by the agency.
“The NFA’s procurement of SDP is
in addition to our intensified buying operations in the 35 surplus areas across
the country identified by the Philippine Statistics Authority [PSA],” Escarez
said in a statement.
These surplus areas include Abra, Ilocos Norte, Kalinga,
Cagayan, Isabela, Nueva Vizcaya, Aurora, Nueva Ecija, Tarlac, San Jose and
Mamburao in Occidental Mindoro, Antique, Capiz and Iloilo.
The food agency attached to the
Office of the President buys palay at the government support price of P17 per
kg, plus a maximum of P0.70 per kg for incentives, P0.20 for drying fee, P0.20
for delivery fee and P0.30 for cooperative development-incentive fee.
Escarez said the funds that will
be used in procuring SDP will come from the Calamity Fund or the President’s
Social Fund. He also assured farmers that the NFA has the needed funds to buy
their SDP using its regular cereal-procurement fund, while the agency awaits
the money from the national government.He also directed concerned NFA field
officials to mobilize their procurement teams; prepare the necessary logistical
requirements; and coordinate with their local government units and farmers’
organizations in identifying priority areas for the procurement of SDP.
As of October 24, the NFA said it
has released a total of 25,075 bags of rice to relief agencies and LGUs for
distribution to affected families in typhoon-hit areas.
http://www.businessmirror.com.ph/nfa-to-purchase-palay-from-typhoon-affected-farmers-in-regions-1-2-3/
Rice output
likely rose 16.2% in Q3
October 26, 2016
The country’s ummilled-rice
output may have expanded by 16.2 percent to 2.963 million metric tons (MMT) in
the third quarter, from 2.55 MMT recorded a year ago, according to the
Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).The latest forecast, however, is 500 metric
tons (MT) lower than the 2.964 MMT projected by the PSA in its July report.
“Possible reduction in palay
production may be attributed to the damaged areas in Pampanga and Pangasinan
due to monsoon rains in August and tropical storm Carina in Cagayan province,”
the PSA said.
“Infestation of rat and black
bugs in Zamboanga Sibugay, brown plant hopper in Aurora and occurrence of
bacterial leaf blight, rice blast and weeds in Iloilo may affect palay
production,” it added.
The PSA also said there was insufficient water supply during the
vegetative and reproductive stages of the staple in Batangas, Quezon, Aklan,
Capiz and Guimaras, which may result in lower output of these provinces.
“Harvest area may contract by 114
hectares, from 751,370 hectare, while overall yield may stabilize at 3.95 MT
per hectare,” the PSA said.
“About 214,000 hectare of the
updated standing crop have been harvested. Almost 1,537 hectare, or 80.6
percent, of the planting intentions for the October to December 2016 crop have
been realized,” the PSA added.
The agency also lowered its corn
production forecast by 1.3 percent to 2.66 MMT, from its July round forecast of
2.7 MMT. The new forecast is still higher than last year’s production of 2.41
MMT by 10.6 percent.
“The combined effects of dry
spell/drought and tropical storm resulting to damaged areas may bring down corn
production in Isabela and Cagayan,” the PSA said.
“Infestations of locusts, corn
borers and rats in Cebu, Negros Oriental and South Cotabato, respectively, may
cause the reduction in yield,” it added.
The PSA said harvest area may
contract to 973,400 hectare, from 974,400 hectare, while yield may fall to 2.73
MT per hectare, from 2.77 MT per hectare.
“Dry spell were experienced in
Kalinga and Quezon, which may also result to the decrease in corn output,” the
report read.
The PSA added that about 435,500
hectare of the updated standing crop have been harvested and around 457,800
hectare, or 70.6 percent, of the planting intentions for the October to
December 2016 harvests have
materialized.
materialized.
The prolonged dry spell caused
the country’s rice and corn output to decline in the second quarter of the
year, according to data from the PSA. In the April-to-July period, the PSA said
the production of the crops subsector, which accounts for nearly half of farm
output, shrank by nearly 5 percent.According to the PSA, unmilled-rice output
in the second quarter declined by 6.1 percent to 3.96 MMT, from 3.71 MMT, while
corn output fell by 10 percent to 911,000 MT, from 1.01 MMT posted in April to
June 2015.The dismal performance of the crops subsector during the period
caused Philippine farm output to decline by 2.34 percent, the PSA said. Jasper Y. Arcalas
Jasper Y. Arcallas is a
graduating Journalism student of the University of Santo Tomas and has been
contributing to the BusinessMirror. Like his story online via the
BusinessMirror Millennials Universe (BMMU) Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Millennial-Universe/435594193285671. Follow BMMU
on Twitter via @millennial_U or Instagram (type Millennial Universe). E-mail
comments or story to millennialuniverse@yahoo.com and the editor at
dennis.estopace@gmail.com
http://www.businessmirror.com.ph/rice-output-likely-rose-16-2-in-q3/
Philippines Mulls Extra 250,000 T in Rice Imports: Officially
Manila. Philippine authorities are keeping an eye on the country's
rice supply and will decide shortly if more imports of the staple grain are
needed after two typhoons hit major rice-producing provinces this month, an
official said on Tuesday (25/10).The country's grains procurement agency
National Food Authority (NFA) has a stand-by authority to import another
250,000 tonnes of rice in addition to the 250,000 tonnes it bought recently
from Vietnam and Thailand, said Diwa Guinigundo, the deputy governor of the
country's central bank.
The central bank is represented
in the NFA Council, the inter-agency panel that approves rice importation.
The council "will be
monitoring the situation within the month and on the basis of our assessment, decide
accordingly," Guinigundo told Reuters, without giving any further details
on the timing of the NFA's next rice import deal.
The central bank is closely
watching domestic rice prices, which account for 9 percent of the consumer
basket, making the commodity an "important determinant of inflation,"
Guinigundo said in separate interview with local news channel ANC.
The NFA Council has yet to see
any damage report after Super Typhoon Haima hit some of the country's
rice-growing regions last week, Guinigundo said in the ANC interview.
"Depending on the magnitude
... I think the NFA has sufficient buffer at this point to make sure that
prices of rice and other commodities will be more or less stable," he
said.
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel
Piñol said on Monday there was no urgent need to import rice, although his
department said the damage inflicted by Super Typhoon Haima on agriculture and
fisheries had reached 10.2 billion pesos ($212 million), with the biggest
losses seen in rice, corn and vegetables.
Haima, the 12th storm to hit the
Philippines this year, came just days after Typhoon Sarika also slammed into
the northern provinces, damaging $62 million worth of crops.
The Southeast Asian country, one
of the world's biggest rice importers, is hit by an average of 20 storms every
year.
http://www.jakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/international/philippines-mulls-extra-250000-t-rice-imports-official/
Rice exports hit
US$1.9 billion
Wednesday, 10/26/2016, 10:37
According to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam had to lower the export target from
more than 6 million tons to 5.7 million tons, however, it is very difficult to
reach the target.This is the first time since 2009 that the country’s rice
exports dropped to below 6 million tons.The average export price in nine months
was US$449 per ton, up 4.8% over the same period last year.
China remained the largest importer of Vietnam rice with 35.4% of market shares. Vietnam shipped 1.35 million tons of rice to China to earn US$613.8 million in the first nine months of this year, down 23% in volume and 13.9% in value.
Rice exports to many other markets like the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, the US and Ivory Coast also dipped sharply. However, exports to Ghana saw a strong growth of 36% (making up 11% of the country’s total exports).Indonesia ranked fourth among importers of Vietnam rice with 8.2% of market shares. Vietnam exported 359,400 tons to the market to get US$142.5 million, up 21.5 times in volume and 22.5% in value against the same period last year.
China remained the largest importer of Vietnam rice with 35.4% of market shares. Vietnam shipped 1.35 million tons of rice to China to earn US$613.8 million in the first nine months of this year, down 23% in volume and 13.9% in value.
Rice exports to many other markets like the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, the US and Ivory Coast also dipped sharply. However, exports to Ghana saw a strong growth of 36% (making up 11% of the country’s total exports).Indonesia ranked fourth among importers of Vietnam rice with 8.2% of market shares. Vietnam exported 359,400 tons to the market to get US$142.5 million, up 21.5 times in volume and 22.5% in value against the same period last year.
VOV
http://english.vov.vn/market/rice-exports-hit-us19-billion-334856.vov
Nagpur
Foodgrain Prices Open- Oct 26
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices - APMC & Open Market-October 26
Nagpur, Oct 26 Gram and tuar prices firmed up in Nagpur Agriculture Produce and
Marketing Committee (APMC)auctions on increased demand from local millers amid weak supply from
producing region. Fresh rise in Madhya Pradesh gram prices and enquiries from South-based
millers also pushed up prices, according to sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Gram varieties ruled steady in open market on subdued demand from local traders amid
ample stock in ready position.
TUAR
* Tuar gavarani reported higher in open market on good demand from local traders amid
thin arrival from producing belt.
* Moong Chamki recovered in open market on good festival season buying support from
local traders amid tight supply from producing region.
* In Akola, Tuar New - 6,300-6,400, Tuar dal (clean) - 10,800-11,700, Udid -
9,700-10,000, Udid Mogar (clean) - 11,400-11,700, Moong -
6,100-6,300, Moong Mogar (clean) 6,800-7,200, Gram - 9,000-9,500,
Gram Super best bold - 12,400-12,700 for 100 kg.
* Wheat, rice and other commodities moved in a narrow range in
scattered deals, settled at last levels.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100 kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 6,800-8,500 6,600-8,500
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 5,000-5,600 5,000-5,500
Moong Auction n.a. 6,400-6,600
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,600-2,800
Gram Super Best Bold 12,500-13,000 12,500-13,000
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 11,800-12,100 11,800-12,100
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 10,200-10,500 10,200-10,500
Desi gram Raw 9,800-10,000 9,800-10,000
Gram Yellow 13,300-13,700 13,300-13,700
Gram Kabuli 13,700-15,000 13,700-15,000
Gram Pink 13,000-13,500 13,000-13,500
Tuar Fataka Best-New 11,500-12,000 11,500-12,000
Tuar Fataka Medium-New 10,900-11,200 10,900-11,200
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New 9,500-10,200 9,500-10,200
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New 8,500-9,000 8,500-9,000
Tuar Gavarani New 6,550-6,650 6,500-6,600
Tuar Karnataka 6,800-6,950 6,800-6,950
Tuar Black 11,800-12,300 11,800-12,300
Masoor dal best 6,400-6,500 6,400-6,500
Masoor dal medium 6,000-6,200 6,000-6,200
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New) 6,800-7,200 6,800-7,200
Moong Mogar Medium 6,300-6,600 6,300-6,600
Moong dal Chilka 6,200-6,500 6,300-6,500
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 6,500-7,000 6,400-6,900
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 11,000-12,100 11,000-12,100
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG) 9,500-10,500 9,500-10,500
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG) 7,300-7,600 7,300-7,600
Batri dal (100 INR/KG) 6,400-6,800 6,400-6,800
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg) 4,600-4,800 4,600-4,800
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG) 2,800-2,900 2,800-2,900
Watana White (100 INR/KG) 3,400-3,600 3,400-3,600
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG) 4,000-4,500 4,000-4,500
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,000 1,900-2,000
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,000 1,900-2,000
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG) 1,750-1,950 1,750-1,950
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG) 2,250-2,450 2,250-2,450
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG) 1,950-2,250 1,950-2,250
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,300-4,000 3,300-4,000
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,400-3,000 2,400-3,000
Rice BPT best New(100 INR/KG) 2,800-3,250 2,800-3,250
Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG) 2,300-2,650 2,300-2,650
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG) 2,200-2,500 2,200-2,500
Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG) 2,100-2,450 2,100-2,450
Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG) 1,800-2,000 1,800-2,000
Rice HMT best New (100 INR/KG) 3,450-3,800 3,450-3,800
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG) 2,600-3,000 2,600-3,000
Rice Shriram best New(100 INR/KG) 4,200-4,500 4,200-4,500
Rice Shriram med New(100 INR/KG) 3,800-4,100 3,800-4,100
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG) 8,700-13,300 9,000-13,500
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG) 6,300-7,800 6,500-8,000
Rice Chinnor best New(100 INR/KG) 5,300-5,600 5,300-5,600
Rice Chinnor med. New (100 INR/KG) 4,900-5,100 4,900-5,100
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,200 1,900-2,200
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 1,700-1,850 1,700-1,850
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 34.0 degree Celsius (93.2 degree Fahrenheit), minimum temp.
18.1 degree Celsius (64.6 degree Fahrenheit)
Humidity: Highest - n.a., lowest - n.a.
Rainfall : Nil
FORECAST: Partly cloudy sky. Maximum and minimum temperature would be around and 34 and 18
degree Celsius respectively.
Note: n.a.--not available
(For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices, but
included in market prices)
Rice Prices
as on : 27-10-2016 12:38:13 PM
Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
|
Price
|
|||||
Current
|
%
change |
Season
cumulative |
Modal
|
Prev.
Modal |
Prev.Yr
%change |
|
Rice
|
||||||
Gadarpur(Utr)
|
6414.00
|
58.06
|
181444.00
|
2000
|
1826
|
-2.68
|
Allahabad(UP)
|
100.00
|
-28.57
|
5290.00
|
2240
|
2240
|
-0.88
|
Siliguri(WB)
|
90.00
|
-5.26
|
8136.00
|
2700
|
2700
|
-
|
Saharanpur(UP)
|
78.00
|
-8.24
|
6035.00
|
2280
|
2300
|
6.54
|
Silapathar(ASM)
|
57.00
|
16.33
|
971.90
|
3000
|
3000
|
NC
|
Pandua(WB)
|
48.00
|
6.67
|
3122.00
|
2800
|
2800
|
16.67
|
Beldanga(WB)
|
47.00
|
-6
|
3780.00
|
2500
|
2600
|
7.53
|
Lanka(ASM)
|
45.00
|
50
|
3360.00
|
2000
|
2000
|
12.68
|
Gauripur(ASM)
|
40.70
|
-6.86
|
2866.80
|
4600
|
4500
|
2.22
|
Cachar(ASM)
|
40.00
|
-50
|
3270.00
|
2200
|
2200
|
-18.52
|
Partaval(UP)
|
25.00
|
-27.54
|
1466.50
|
2100
|
2100
|
6.33
|
Wansi(UP)
|
25.00
|
-87.5
|
330.50
|
2110
|
2100
|
9.33
|
North Lakhimpur(ASM)
|
19.50
|
52.34
|
2020.10
|
1900
|
1900
|
NC
|
Sahiyapur(UP)
|
19.50
|
21.88
|
82.00
|
2105
|
2100
|
-
|
Kolhapur(Laxmipuri)(Mah)
|
18.00
|
NC
|
2330.00
|
3000
|
3000
|
-
|
Dibrugarh(ASM)
|
9.00
|
-25
|
1732.20
|
2450
|
2450
|
-
|
Mirzapur(UP)
|
8.00
|
6.67
|
1702.10
|
2185
|
2180
|
10.35
|
Muradabad(UP)
|
8.00
|
-20
|
588.70
|
2310
|
2300
|
5.48
|
Raiganj(WB)
|
7.00
|
NC
|
964.00
|
2730
|
2730
|
-5.86
|
Chengannur(Ker)
|
6.50
|
44.44
|
558.00
|
2300
|
2400
|
-8.00
|
Chandoli(UP)
|
6.50
|
30
|
184.50
|
2165
|
2160
|
14.55
|
Arakalgud(Kar)
|
6.00
|
100
|
26.00
|
1636
|
1500
|
-
|
Jeypore(Ori)
|
6.00
|
NC
|
246.50
|
4300
|
4400
|
4.88
|
Ahirora(UP)
|
6.00
|
-96.25
|
192.50
|
2150
|
1975
|
9.69
|
Karanjia(Ori)
|
5.50
|
-8.33
|
423.60
|
2800
|
2800
|
-3.45
|
Jeypore(Kotpad)(Ori)
|
4.00
|
11.11
|
233.50
|
4200
|
4300
|
-1.18
|
Karjat(Mah)
|
3.00
|
-25
|
10.00
|
4000
|
3000
|
33.33
|
Jahangirabad(UP)
|
2.50
|
25
|
17.00
|
2265
|
2260
|
-
|
Aroor(Ker)
|
2.00
|
100
|
203.70
|
6900
|
7300
|
-2.82
|
Jajpur(Ori)
|
0.75
|
1.35
|
446.24
|
2500
|
2000
|
NC
|
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/article9275292.ece
Anambra
Surpasses 2016 Rice Production Target
The Anambra State Commissioner for Agriculture, Afam Mbanefo, said
on Monday that the state has reached self-sufficiency in rice production. Mr. Mbanefo made the disclosure
at a Commodity Alliance Forum/Consultative meeting organized by the state Value
Chain Development Programme (VCDP) in Awka.The commissioner recalled that the
state government had earlier targeted production of 210,000 metric tons of rice
per annum.
“Based on the calculation of our expected yield, we are expecting
to realize over 236,000 metric tons of rice in 2016 based on the production
capacity.”Mr. Mbanefo said the calculation was based on expected yield of 35
per cent of over 14,300 farmers and the activities of programs like the VCDP
and FADAMA.He said the expected yield also included the activities of rice
investors in the state, including Coscharis farms, Joseph Agro, and others.He
said the state government was passionate about revolutionizing agriculture and
making it wealth creator, especially for unemployed youth willing to venture
into the sector
Rice Farming TV:
Episode 9
Rice
Farming TV aims to Promote the California Rice Industry with weekly videos.
What’s happening this week in rice:
The Wives of Rice Farmers
With the 2016 Rice Harvest well underway it's time to give
credit to the most important support system a farmer has...his wife (her husband) or
significant other. Without such support a healthy lifestyle would not be
possible during these long days, long months.
Thank you to all the wives, husbands, moms and dads for supporting the farmer
in their family.
Matthew Sligar, producer of Rice Farming TV, is a third
generation rice farmer in Butte County and was born and raised in Gridley.
http://www.gridleyherald.com/article/20161014/NEWS/161019767
Reconciliation ecology could end
California’s water wars
by Eric Miller, CVBT Correspondent
October 25, 2016 9:01pm
by Eric Miller, CVBT Correspondent
October 25, 2016 9:01pm
In California and most of the West, those conflicts have boiled
over into water wars that have lasted for generations. But there might be a
solution. It’s taking shape in the Sacramento Valley.October 1 marked the start
of California’s new Water Year and the end of yet another drought year. From
2010 through 2016 California encountered only one “wet” year in a mix of below
normal, dry or critically dry years. Last year we learned a new term, snow
drought, where most precipitation landed in California as rain instead of snow.
Reservoirs filled, but not quite enough, while groundwater basins throughout
parts of the state continued to drop, draining California water users’
temperament.
Ideological stances about who’s conserving, who’s not, or when
and if new storage projects are built, exacerbate when conversations delve into
discussions about the environment, sensitive species, or the economy. It’s
humans over fish. Urban needs over agriculture. Environment over ag or urban
over environment or environment over everything.
Whether we’re debating fish, birds, frogs, people, or Species A
over Species B, ideological differences fill California’s sandbox. Some
ideological extremists argue that California’s environment should return to a
natural pristine state and that we should back pedal to pre-Statehood
conditions, while others argue that man’s needs are more important than the
environment. To them the only things that matter are jobs, money, and their
chosen way of life. Ideological extremism exists at the fringe in all camps, be
it government, the conservation community, the agricultural community, or the
public in general.
The reality is that California’s sandbox isn’t getting larger.
Other than beachfront property that has slid into the Pacific, California’s
borders haven’t changed much the past 166 years. From April 2010 to July 2015
the U.S. Census Bureau reports that the Golden State gained 1.6 million people,
about the same population as all of Idaho. Our headcount now is estimated to be
39.1 million. We gained an Idaho without breaking a sweat and, according to the
California Department of Finance, are projected to reach nearly 50 million by
2050.
So how is it conceivable to unravel human impacts on
California’s environment? Unless the California border closes and we all
emigrate, what are we to do? We are already here and part of the land’s ecology
and biodiversity. It’s clear that we’re not going back and what we’ve been
doing hasn’t worked. New ways are starting to emerge, however, and projects are
getting done to make things better.
Industry leaders in the Sacramento Valley are willing to break a
sweat to preserve the region’s ecology. Their projects, relatively small in
capitalistic measures, have regional benefit but set national precedents. In
collaboration with forward thinking governmental agencies and conservation
groups, these leaders are investing time, political chits, and resources to
address environmental and socioeconomic concerns. In addition to “snow
drought,” add “reconciliation ecology” to the vernacular.
“The concept of reconciliation ecology is to apply benefit to
all creatures,” says Les Canter, “to increase biodiversity in the environment.”
Mr. Canter, part owner of River Garden Farms, grows rice, walnuts, oilseed,
corn, and alfalfa among other crops on agricultural lands in Yolo and Colusa
Counties.By definition, reconciliation ecology studies ways to encourage
biodiversity in human dominated ecosystems. Consider for example a bird house.
Humans place bird houses as a substitute habitat in areas devoid of trees or
brush. Motivations may vary, whether it’s to propagate a species or perhaps the
simple fact that people just like birds.
“For the last ten years,” Mr. Canter continues, “our company has
focused on sustainability. We’re concerned about groundwater levels and water
quality. We’ve installed test wells to monitor groundwater levels, drawdown and
rebound. Prior to 2014 when drought impacts really became apparent, the
overseeing resource agencies, as well as conservation groups and ag interests,
primarily operated within their silos.” The agencies Mr. Canter refers to
include federal and state agencies, each having a specific and narrow
focus.“Consider the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) which focuses on
anadromous fish [salmon], versus the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, which focuses
on flood control and navigable waters, versus the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service, which focuses on species management like Delta smelt. The focuses of
these agencies, let alone state agencies, are often times diametrically
opposed. Everyone butted heads.”
Mr. Canter continues, “An example is winter run salmon. One
position, or theory, was that the fish needed more water flushing through the
Delta. Water volume isn’t the sole answer though. Biological studies
commissioned by the Northern California Water Association revealed that not one
particular thing was harming the fishery but rather a multitude of things --
salinity, temperature, predation, upstream habitat, geomorphology,
channelization, river flow velocity -- a whole bunch of things. In 2014,
reasonable and courageous people within the Sacramento River Settlement
Contractors, conservation groups, and agencies started talking and working
together to solve problems.”
Mr. Canter touts several projects on the Sacramento River where
humans have helped to reconcile local ecology, such as the Nigiri Project near
the Yolo Bypass.
The Nigiri Project seeks to optimize habitat benefits for salmon
and water birds while maintaining farming on the largest floodplain in the
Sacramento Valley. Named after a Japanese cuisine, Nigiri is a form of sushi
with a slice of fish atop a compact wedge of rice. In Yolo County the “Nigiri
Project” is the collaborative effort between farmers and researchers to help
restore salmon populations by reintroducing them during winter to floodplains
that are farmed with rice during summer.
The target area, recognizable to commuters along Interstate 80
between Davis and Sacramento, is the 60,000 acre Yolo Bypass. Among the Nigiri
Project’s goals are to create a multi-benefit revenue model to sustain
agriculture in the Yolo Bypass, to maintain bypass flood control capacity, to
improve seasonal floodplain habitat for fish and waterfowl, to increase bypass
outflows to improve the Delta food web, and to improve adult fish passage and
reduce juvenile stranding.
“Essentially, the juvenile salmon rear and hold over in flooded
rice fields until they can move on,” says Mr. Canter. Scientists from the
University of California-Davis Center for Watershed Sciences have monitored the
study since 2011, which involves a consortium of landowners, conservation
groups, and public agencies.
Results are encouraging. For four consecutive winters,
experiments conducted on rice fields at the Knaggs Ranch property on the Yolo
Bypass documented the fastest growth of juvenile Chinook salmon ever recorded
in the Central Valley.
“Without this type of experimentation and innovation, we
[farming community] would continue to be frustrated,” explains Mr. Canter. “But
when people cooperate we can achieve success. In this case, the parties used
rice ground to create habitat. It’s unnatural but then again the young fish
don’t care where they live, they just want to live. Some parties, mired in
their ideology, just want to sue. They litigate, block, and impede progress.
But groups like CalTrout, the California Rice Commission, and Ducks Unlimited
exemplify what can happen if we simply talk through issues with governing
agencies. What affects outcomes is when people come together with a common goal
and a can-do mindset. Another good example is the Painter’s Riffle project on the
Sacramento River near Redding.”
Completed in December 2014, the Painters Riffle Anadromous Fish
Habitat and Enhancement Project arose from interagency relationships between
the Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District, U.S. Army Corp of Engineers, NMFS, Bureau
of Reclamation, Federal and State Wildlife Agencies, Northern California Water
Association, City of Redding, Central Valley Flood Protection Board, Central
Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board, and conservation groups. In short,
the project involved the repositioning of a gravel bar located downstream of
the State Highway 44/299 Bridge in Redding.
Initially constructed in 1986, Painter’s Riffle successfully
produced fish nests resulting in up to 750,000 young salmon before they
migrated to sea for the first time. For 25 years Painter’s Riffle helped the
survival of winter-run and spring-run Chinook salmon and fall-run Chinook
salmon, important to the commercial fishing industry. But in 2011 Painter’s
Riffle was blocked and filled with gravel during a large storm event. The
unstable gravel filled the channel and buried the Painter’s Riffle spawning
habitat.That prompted the Painters Riffle Anadromous Fish Habitat and
Enhancement Project.
“The project received accolades from the Bureau of Reclamation,”
says Thad Bettner, General Manager for the Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District.
“The work involved a multitude of agencies but all shared a common goal to
support salmon re-establishment and CVPIA operations.”
Mr. Bettner explains that it’s typically not regulators’ role to
collaborate. “Regulators focus on a specific issue central to their mission
whether it’s permitting, regulating, mandating, or monitoring. One of the best
take-aways from the Painter’s Riffle Project is that we’re slowly breaking down
uncommunicative silos. We [all parties] now expect good communication.” Built
in three weeks during low water flows, the project required a six-month lead
time to permit. Total project costs were approximately $200,000.
“Small projects like this are contagious,” adds Mr. Bettner,
“and starting small got us success. We [agencies] all respected each other’s
roles and hierarchy but slowly built trust and delivered. We’re seeing fish use
Painter’s Riffle. They’re spawning and that’s positive. And the agencies are monitoring
results.” Mr. Bettner explains that no opponents protested the project. “After
successes like this, we’re more confident to try larger projects.”
Slow rolling projects requiring years of involvement consume
stakeholders over a hundred miles away in the Feather River Basin. A sub basin
of the Sacramento River watershed, representatives from Federal and State
agencies, utilities, and non-governmental organizations such as American
Whitewater, have attended thousands of hours of meetings addressing the
relicensing of hydroelectric projects along the Feather River, ranging from and
including Lake Almanor near Lassen National Park downstream into the Feather
River Canyon above Lake Oroville, headwaters for the State Water Project.
Dave Steindorf, California Stewardship Director for American
Whitewater, has participated in the relicensing of Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) facilities within the region the past fifteen years.
Facilities include powerhouses operated by Pacific Gas and Electric Company
that require reliable flow regimes to spin hydropower turbines. At best, the
FERC relicensing process moves at glacial speed, which eschews many
stakeholders from participating due to costs, fatigue, or frustration. The
Electric Consumers Protection Act of 1986 endows that American Whitewater has a
seat at the negotiation table and a voice in the process. The Act puts
recreation and wildlife on equal footing with power generation. With a focus on
river stewardship and recreation, American Whitewater has worked with utilities
and regulatory agencies throughout the United States to promote recreational
uses including fishing, rafting and kayaking.
“I’ve been involved in negotiating more than twenty FERC
licenses in California,” says Mr. Steindorf. “This effort resulted in a hundred
recreation flow releases in California in 2016 on river systems like the
Feather, Pitt, Mokelumne, and Kern,” he adds. For the Feather River, an army of
scientists has tried to resolve the optimum flows for fish and frogs, specifically
the Foothill yellow-legged frog. “What we’ve discovered,” explains Mr.
Steindorf, “is that river flows necessary for frogs and fish are great for
recreation.”
The Foothill yellow-legged frog is a riverine amphibian with
habitat ranging from northern Oregon, California, and into Baja California,
Mexico at elevations as high as 6,300 feet. Adults range in size from one and a
half to three inches, small enough to fit in the palm of a human hand. The
frogs lay eggs in a river’s main stem [channel] and winter upstream within
tributaries. The gestation period ranges from fourteen to twenty-one days. They
generally breed from late April to July. Among the threats to the frogs are
dams, diversions, water development, mining, timber harvesting, road development,
and pollution.
“The frogs survive best on natural snowmelt hydrographs,”
continues Mr. Steindorf. “When hydropower demands alter the timing and duration
of river flows, particularly precipitous drops in flow during spring, it
clashes with frog breeding. For two reaches on the Feather River it became
possible to manage resources that have multiple benefits. The frogs survive
while recreational boaters catch a wave.”Water management within ephemeral
drainages also fall within the guise of reconciliation ecology, if not for fish
or frogs, but for wetlands.
Over ten years ago Butte County’s sanitary landfill needed more
space, not for burying garbage but to develop ancillary operations. The
landfill serves a population of over 200,000 but needed a place to better
manage and detain storm water generated on-site. As part of its facility
footprint, the county developed a five acre seasonal wetland which was
permitted through the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers. The wetland is designed in a
step system where the lower area can be dredged but the upper area remains
untouched. Water quality monitoring occurs downstream below the spillway if
discharges result from storm events.
“The pond properly functions,” says Bill Mannel, Deputy Director
of Butte County’s Waste Management Division. “No water comes into contact with
garbage. We do not disturb the upper wetland area. The floor consists of
grasses. Trees surround the pond.” Canada geese, ducks and wild turkeys are
observed during cooler wetter months, coming and going with the seasons. Adds
Mr. Mannel, “We are very mindful of our storm water management.”
All who play inside California’s sandbox are responsible to
negate ecological harm. Not only is it mandated, but it’s the right thing to
do. As California’s population grows new systems must be monitored for older
systems that have changed.
“How do you define the environment?” asks Mr. Canter. “I look
out the window and see fields and forests. That’s what we have.” Mr. Canter
mulls his role as a businessman and as a parent. “Parenthood has focused me on
what I do and how I do it. I’m more sensitive to the younger generation. We
must be collaborative and not be dragged down by people who won’t get along
with the program. We can’t get mired in ideology. River Garden Farms is now
working on a juvenile salmon rearing project in the Upper Sacramento River, a
project that involves a myriad of federal, state, local agencies, and
conservation groups that are eager to achieve success. My kids are interested
in what I’m doing. Everything must be sustainable because when I’m gone this
will be theirs.”
No matter one’s background, we as a populace are accountable.
The concept of reconciliation ecology casts a broad net. Mr. Canter sums it
best, “We’re here now. Humans possess incredible problem solving capabilities.
Can’t we figure out how to fix this ecosystem together?”
About the writer
Eric Miller is a freelance writer based in Chico who writes
about business innovation and people who make a difference. He has industry
experience in waste management and water resources. Contact him at
eric@etcguy.com, via LinkedIn or visit his humor blog at www.etcguy.com.
Idyllic scenery of Wuzhen 'water
town'
Source:People's Daily Online
Published: 2016/10/25 21:33:28
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet Conference.
(Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a
typical water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals.
The land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
Located in Jiaxing, Zhejiang
province, Wuzhen is an ancient town with over 6,000 years of history. It is a typical
water town in the Yangtze River Delta, built around a series of canals. The
land and water of Wuzhen is known to be agriculturally abundant, boasting
plentiful rice and fish. It is also a traditional center of silk production. In
1991, Wuzhen was named as a renowned historical and cultural town in Zhejiang
province. From 2014, it became the permanent site of the World Internet
Conference. (Photo/People.cn)
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1013685.shtml
CV anand asksr rice millers business honestly
After holding a series of meetings with
millers, the Commissioner convened a special meeting on October 25 and put
forth the following proposals before them and the final decision will be taken
after discussing with Finance Minister Etela Rajender. Only on delivery of 100%
CMR dues the government will consider lifting of criminal cases, 6A cases and
recovery under RR Act. If the
millers deliver 100% CMR dues before November 30, cases will be lifted and seized
mills will be re-opened and allot paddy for custom milling as per milling
capacity.
If they
deliver 75% CMR dues now, paddy will be allotted for custom milling as per
milling capacity provided the balance 25% CMR is delivered before January 31,
2017. Those who deliver 50% CMR dues
now, the balance 50% should be delivered before March 31, 2017. No. relaxation is allowed for the millers who
deliver CMR below 100 MT. Millers have to deliver CMR in their own gunnies.
Those who are not in a position to deliver CMR,
they are allowed to permit cash as per the market rate. On these proposals,
millers represented to exempt payment of interest delivery of 50% CMR dues in
the present Kharif season and the balance 50% in the ensuing Rabi season.
Responding to the request of the millers, the
Civil Supplies Commissioner informed them that due to on-delivery of CMR as per
schedule, Civil Supplies Corporation was forced to pay interest running into
crores on cash credit and hence there was no possibility of exempting interest. While disagreeing with the proposal of
millers, he advised them to make best use of the opportunity given by the
Government.
The Commissioner advised the millers to do
their business honestly and rice milling industry should not get bad name in
the eyes of public for the illegal activities of 10 out of 100 millers as the
rice milling industry is also a part and parcel of CS department, Government
will always extend its full cooperation as long as they do business honestly.
The Commissioner assured them that
there will not be any problems form their staff and the government will always
extend full cooperation. Finally the
Commissioner of Civil Supplies advised the millers to have social responsibility
towards the society without looking at everything on commercial angle and help
in realizing the goal of Bangaru Telangana under the able leadership of K.
Chandrashekar Rao. (NSS)
http://www.siasat.com/news/cv-anand-asks-rice-millers-business-honestly-1050496/
APEDA
AgriExchange Newsletter - Volume 1584
Market Watch
|
||||
Commodity-wise, Market-wise Daily Price on 25-10-2016
|
||||
Domestic Prices
|
Unit Price : Rs per Qty
|
|||
Product
|
Market Center
|
Variety
|
Min Price
|
Max Price
|
Rice
|
||||
1
|
Dibrugarh (Assam)
|
Other
|
2000
|
2900
|
2
|
Manjeri (Kerala)
|
Other
|
3000
|
3900
|
3
|
Sainthia (West Bengal)
|
Common
|
1860
|
1890
|
Wheat
|
||||
1
|
Haveri (Karnataka)
|
Local
|
1800
|
1800
|
2
|
Dehgam (Gujarat)
|
Other
|
1675
|
1750
|
3
|
Sangli (Maharashtra)
|
Other
|
2000
|
2800
|
Banana
|
||||
1
|
Jagraon (Punjab)
|
Other
|
2400
|
2800
|
2
|
Karad (Maharashtra)
|
Other
|
1000
|
1500
|
3
|
Thanesar (Haryana)
|
Other
|
1500
|
2200
|
Carrot
|
||||
1
|
Manjeri (Kerala)
|
Other
|
2700
|
3000
|
2
|
Bonai (Orissa)
|
Other
|
1000
|
1500
|
3
|
Jagraon (Punjab)
|
Other
|
1600
|
1900
|
Source:agmarknet.nic.in
|
6 places in the
UAE to celebrate Diwali, the festival of lights
Diwali is a celebration of the
victory of good over evil and is auspicious for new beginnings
Image Credit: WikiCommons
Published: 13:00 October 26, 2016
Note: Sale or purchase of fireworks
is illegal in the UAE
The name
Diwali is derived form ‘deepavali’,
a Sanskrit word which translates to a row (avali) of lights or lamps (deep).
The festival is celebrated with scores of small lamps or lights decorating
houses and buildings, even on rooftops and outside doors and windows.
The Diwali night
The night of Diwali is the darkest
night of autumn, the new moon night of the Hindu lunar month ‘Kartik’. The
lighted lamps are believed to illuminate the path for Hindu goddess of wealth,
Lakshmi to find her way to your home.
Days of celebration
Dhanteras The first day starts off with cleaning and renovation of all
houses and building premises. New clothes and ornaments are purchased. This day
is believed to mark the birth of the Hindu goddess of wealth, Lakshmi. Rangolis
or colourful floor patterns are drawn and lamps are kept burning throughout the
night in worship of the goddess.Choti Diwali Also known as Naraka Chaturdasi, this is the eve of the main festival. Rangolis are drawn and the preparation of Diwali sweets starts. Women decorate their hands with henna and pujas are held.
Padwa The day after Diwali sees the celebration of the mutual love and affection between husbands and wives. The Hindu god, Krishna is also worshipped on this day.
Bhai Dhuj In north-east India and Nepal, this day celebrates the relationship between sister and brother through various rituals and exchange of gifts.
The stories
There are many stories
around this festival. It is believed that the Hindu goddess, Lakshmi
was born on the Dhanteras day and on Diwali, it is believed that she
visits and blesses her devotees.Another story in northern India is that Diwali is commemorative of the kingdom of Ayodhya, which was lit up with lights to welcome their long exiled king and Hindu god, Rama. In Bengal and some southern states, Diwali is associated with the Hindu goddess, Durga. Jains and Sikhs also celebrate this auspicious time with their own story renditions.
Things to do in the UAE for Diwali
You have a lot of great options to
celebrate this Diwali in style with your friends and family.
1. Chor Bazaar Restaurant, Dubai
Location Movenpick, Ibn Battuta Gate, Dubai Dates October 30 to November 1 Cost Dh180 (with soft drinks) Dh280 (with house beverages) Timings 7pm to 11pm Contact +971 4 444 5613 Emaildine.ibnbattuta@moevenpick.com
2. Ferrari World, Abu Dhabi
Location Yas Island Dates October 28 to November 5 Cost From Dh275 per person Tickets here
3. The Eatery, Dubai
Location The Eatery, Four Points by Sheraton Downtown Dubai Dates October 28 Timing 12.30pm to 3.30pm Cost Dh90 (includes soft beverages and juices) Dh199 (house beverages) Contact +971 4 501 3115 Emaildtn.restaurants@fourpoints.com
4. Mint Leaf of London, Dubai
Location Emirates Financial Towers, DIFC Dates October 27 to 31 Timings 12pm to 1am Cost Dh245 per person Contact +971 4 706 0900 Email reservations@mintleafdubai.com
5. Art of Spice at Pullman Dubai
Location Pullman Dubai Deira City Centre, Dubai Cost Dh120 per person Dates October 28 (Launch night) Every Friday onwards till November 29 Timing 7.30pm to 11pm Contact +9714 294 1222 Email H2022@accor.com
6. Spice & Ice, JLT Dubai
Location Spice & Ice, Cluster A, Jumeirah Lakes Towers, Dubai Cost Dh229 per person (includes unlimited house beverages) Dates October 28 Timings Dinner 8pm to 12pm; Music and dance Until 3am Contact +971 4 421 135
http://gulfnews.com/guides/going-out/events/6-places-in-the-uae-to-celebrate-diwali-the-festival-of-lights-1.1615600
Arkansas Farm Bureau Daily Commodity Report
Rice
High
|
Low
|
|
Long Grain Cash Bids
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
Long Grain New Crop
|
- - -
|
- - -
|
Futures:
|
|
Rice Comment
Rice futures recovered a bit today, but have not negated the
negative chart action from earlier in the week. On Monday, November charted a
bearish key reversal and violated uptrending support in the process, which
could signal a move toward a retest of support at the contract low of $9.35.
Weekly export sales of 69,600 metric tons was an improvement from last week,
but not enough to spark buying interest. The crop is 97% harvested at this
point, with most of what remains to be harvested in California.