Riceplus Magazien is a quarterly magazine that publishes research articles including industry realted for the rice sector.It shares global and regional articles on rice.Riceplus Magazine also publishes two digital magazines on daily basis namely Daily Global Rice E-Newsletter & Exclusive ORYZA Rice E-Newsletter for entire global agriculture community.For more information visit on www.ricepluss.com
TF teams
prevent leakage of commodities worth ₹ 3.17 crore in three months
The enforcement task force teams of the Civil Supplies Department
have prevented leakage of public distribution system and other commodities
worth about ₹ 3.17 crore in
three months, from February to April, by conducting raids at 179 places,
registering nine criminal cases and 56 cases (6A) under the Essential
Commodities Act.
According to the Civil Supplies officials, the five task force
teams have seized 3,507 quintals of PDS rice, 937 quintals of custom milled
rice (fine quality rice), both worth about ₹ 1 crore and sugar, LPG cylinders and kerosene worth over ₹ 2.15 crore during the raids.
Besides, the department was also able to recover maximum quantity of CMR from
millers with the help of frequent checks.
Against the due of 4,525.701 tonnes of CMR from millers for the
2015-16 kharif season, the due in 2016-17 kharif was only 1,192 tonnes as the
recovery rate went up to 99.91%.
Commissioner of Civil Supplies C.V. Anand reviewed the performance
of the enforcement wing on Sunday. He stated that the task force teams were
formed with retired police, revenue, civil supplies and commercial taxes
officers to check malpractices and corruption in the distribution of essential
commodities was yielding good results.
The teams were conducting frequent raids on the mandal-level stock
(MLS) points and fair price shops to check irregularities/misuse in PDS and at
State borders to prevent illegal transportation of PDS rice to other States,
Mr. Anand said. Besides, raids were also being conducted on rice mills,
government hostels and schools getting fine quality rice (sanna biyyam) from
rice millers under the Mid-Day-Meal Scheme, LPG godowns and illegal transportation
of rice to other States through rail and road transport, he noted.
Amidst
a major Boro crop loss, Bangladesh for the first time in five years is going to
the international market to buy rice with the aim of reining in the soaring
prices of the staple.
Hard on the heels of 10 lakh tonnes
of flash flood-induced projected Boro loss in north-eastern Bangladesh and
further crop loss due to widespread fungi attack (rice blast), the government
floated first of a series of international import tenders on Tuesday amounting
to 50,000 tonnes.
Food Ministry sources said the
government would allow up to six lakh tonnes of rice import this year with the
Directorate General of Food getting ready to float the second tender in the
series (for 50,000 tonnes) this week.
After a sustained growth in farm
output for the last several years, the government took the import decision when
the prices of the staple showed an upward trend with allegations that a section
of millers and middlemen were deliberately supplying the market less rice to
put pressure on the government to lift the 25 percent import duty.
A
farmer collecting paddy from his submerged field, to use the plant as fodder in
Moulvibazar last month. Photo: Collected/File
According to the Trading
Corporation of Bangladesh (TCB), over the last two weeks, the upper band of
coarse rice price rose to Tk 45 a kg from Tk 42.
Earlier, a food ministry monitoring report also showed that the retail prices
of rice rose by 3.7 percent in Dhaka.
Since the unusually early floods
struck the vast haor areas of Sunamganj, Habiganj, Sylhet, Moulvibazar, and
Netrakona districts in late March, rice traders had a series of meetings with
the government's food officials asking for the waiver of import duty.
The duty was imposed two years ago
to stop private importers' flooding the country's market with cheaper rice from
India when Bangladesh had already attained self-sustenance in rice and even
exported some to Sri Lanka.
Talking to The Daily Star on
Wednesday, Agriculture Minister Matia Chowdhury said, "We've decided to
import some rice -- initially one lakh tonnes may be -- and if needed, more
later.
"We lost crops this year
because of climate change-induced early rainfall. There were incessant rainfall
for six and half hours one day and for five hours another day. We experienced
too much rainfall too early -- early by three weeks. Humid conditions and high
temperatures all helped otherwise dormant fungi to become active causing crop
loss."
Matia said, "It's not that
we'll not get grains from blast-affected rice fields. May be we'll reap 40
maunds of rice instead of 70 maunds per acre from the affected fields."
She, however, offered no estimate
of how much of a 19.1 million projected Boro would be lost due to the blast.
The import decision also came when
rice stock in public granaries dropped to a six-year low, less than three lakh
tonnes.
Director General of the food
directorate Badrul Hasan told the media that the state agency also planned to
import rice through government-to-government deals from producers such as
Thailand, Vietnam and India as importing via tenders was a lengthy process.
The country's prominent plant
pathologist, M Bahadur Meah, who teaches at Bangladesh Agricultural University,
feared that the fungi attacks have already caused a huge crop loss in southern,
central and lately in northern districts.
Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural
University's plant pathology professor Abu Noman Faruq Ahmmed had seen
firsthand the damage caused by rice blast in several districts in recent weeks.
Both Bahadur and Noman told The
Daily Star that early rainfall, fluctuations in day and night time temperatures
and humid conditions helped blast-causing fungi to become active. They found
BRRI-28, one of the country's best-bred Boro rice variety, vulnerable to
blast.
Immediate past director general of
Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) Jiban Krishna Biswas said,
"Resurgence of rice blast in the form of neck blast is dominant this year.
There was rain during the flowering stage of BRRI-28, BRRI-50, BRRI-61 and
BRRI-63. None of these varieties are tolerant to the blast. It may be mentioned
that BRRI-28 was recorded as moderately tolerant during the time of its
release. But the rice blast has the ability to adapt. A blast-resistant variety
may not be able to fight back infection from adapted fungi.”
After the Department of
Agricultural Extension (DAE) report that rice blasts have been identified in as
many as 19 districts this year, the government held a blast consultation
workshop on Thursday involving national and international stakeholders.
Addressing the workshop, Matia
Chowdhury thanked the media for spreading awareness about the fungi this year.
She said the Awami League assumed
power in 1996 amidst a 4 million tonne food deficit but turned the country into
rice self-sufficient in 1999. Despite inheriting a food-deficit country again
in 2009, "we succeeded in achieving self sufficiency".
The minister asked all relevant to
try and develop varieties resistant to blast.
BRRI Plant Pathology Division chief
MA Latif said work was underway to develop blast-resistant rice varieties. He
said crop loss due to blast was under control as BRRI had warned a month ago
about possible blast attack.
PRICES of different varieties of rice have gone up by 20 to 25 per
cent in retail markets which are beyond the capacity of common consumers. This
is happening when the harvesting season of summer paddy is on. Only seven
hundred thousand metric tons of rice was affected by flash floods in the hour
areas which is less than 2.0 per cent of our annual yields and the government
decided to import six hundred thousand metric tons of rice to retain a healthy
stock. Usually at this time of the year price of rice comes down to its lowest
level which is not happening this time.
The secret behind the fact is that large rice millers received huge
short-term loans from banks. They used the money for hoarding rice creating
crisis in markets. The same thing happened eight years ago. At that time
Bangladesh Bank (BB) instructed all banks to realise agricultural loans within
a month and the price of rice started coming down within a week. This time also
the central bank BB should repeat the same measure to protect the interest of
the common consumers.