Rice basmati weakens on easing demand
Basmati rice
(Lal Quila) Rs 10,700, Shri Lal Mahal Rs 11,300, Super Basmati Rice Rs 9,800,
Basmati common new Rs 6,800-7,100, Rice Pusa (1121) Rs 5,500-5,550, Permal raw
Rs 2,225-2,250, Permal wand Rs 2,275-2,300, Sela Rs 2,500-2,600 and Rice IR-8
Rs 1,850-1,900, Bajra Rs 1,190-1,200, Jowar yellow Rs 1,450-1,500, white Rs
2,900-3,100, Maize Rs 1,335-1,340, Barley Rs 1,450-1,460
New Delhi,
Jul 15 Rice basmati prices were lower by Rs 100 per quintal in lacklustre trade
at wholesale grains market today on fall in demand.
However, other grains moved in a
narrow range in scattered deals and pegged at last levels.
Traders said easing demand
against adequate stocks position, mainly led to the decline in rice basmati
prices.
In the national capital, rice
basmati Pusa-1121 variety slipped to Rs 5,500-5,550 from previous level of Rs
5,600- 5,650 per quintal.
Following are today's quotations (in
Rs per quintal):
Wheat MP (desi) Rs 2,100-2,345,
Wheat dara (for mills) Rs 1,760-1,765, Chakki atta (delivery) Rs 1,765-1,770,
Atta Rajdhani (10 kg) Rs 260-300, Shakti Bhog (10 kg) Rs 255-290, Roller flour
mill Rs 975-980 (50 kg), Maida Rs 1,010-1,020
(50 kg)and Sooji Rs 1,035-1,040 (50 kg).
Basmati rice (Lal Quila) Rs
10,700, Shri Lal Mahal Rs 11,300, Super Basmati Rice Rs 9,800, Basmati common
new Rs 6,800-7,100, Rice Pusa (1121) Rs 5,500-5,550, Permal raw Rs 2,225-2,250,
Permal wand Rs 2,275-2,300, Sela Rs 2,500-2,600 and Rice IR-8 Rs 1,850-1,900,
Bajra Rs 1,190-1,200, Jowar yellow Rs 1,450-1,500, white Rs 2,900-3,100, Maize
Rs 1,335-1,340, Barley Rs 1,450-1,460.
https://www.outlookindia.com/newsscroll/rice-basmati-weakens-on-easing-demand/1099669
Emergency import of 500,000 tons of rice
The Government is to make an
emergency import of 500,000 tons of rice to face a feared shortfall in local
production due to adverse weather conditions. The state will import 300,000
tons whilst the private sector will be allowed to import the remaining 200,000
tons. Stocks will come mainly from Vietnam, Myanmar, Pakistan and Thailand.
Officials have been tasked to visit these countries to assess prices and
quality.
The Cabinet Sub Committee on Cost
of Living at recent a meeting presided over by President Maithripala Sirisena,
discussed the crisis arising out of the drop in production. One of the
immediate measures then was to remove the five rupee tax on imported rice and
revise the Maximum Retail Price to match locally produced varieties in the
market. The sub committee noted that adequate paddy stocks were also not
available. It was observed that in India also rice prices had risen due to
shortages.
President Sirisena has since been
spearheading a diplomatic push to buy stocks from abroad. He has personally
spoken on the telephone to those at Sri Lanka diplomatic missions abroad and
leaders of rice producing countries in South Asia. The Co-operative Wholesale
Establishment (CWE) is to import stocks on behalf of the Government. However,
the CWE is in a financial crisis and is unable to pay the Paddy Marketing Board
(PMB) a staggering Rs 3.7 billion.
In what appears to be an irony,
the PMB is repaying with interest loans obtained by the CWE from the Treasury
and borrowings from the Bank of Ceylon and the People’s Bank. Now, the
Government has said the Treasury is free to take “necessary steps to recover
the amount”. Industry Commerce Ministry Secretary Chinthaka Lokuhetti said
Pakistan and Myanmar had agreed to supply 25,000 tons each within two weeks.
He said Myanmar would confirm tomorrow whether to increase the amount up to 45,000 tons.
He said Myanmar would confirm tomorrow whether to increase the amount up to 45,000 tons.
The recent drought and the flood
hit both Yala and Maha seasons causing a drastic drop in the yield. Mr
Lokuhetti said that by November about 300,000 tons of rice would be imported
from Pakistan to be distributed through Lak Sathosa outlets and cooperatives.
He added that rice varieties specially Nadu and White Raw rice would be
imported while the Food Technologists and the local officials had checked and
confirmed the quality and the taste of the rice to be imported.
Meanwhile, Lak Sathosa Chairman
T.M.K.B. Tennekoon said 50,000 tons of paddy were available with Lak Sathosa
and the stock would be enough for the next 4-5 months. He said that with the
import of rice, a controlled price would be maintained.
http://www.sundaytimes.lk/170716/news/emergency-import-of-500000-tons-of-rice-250582.html
Pakistan, Myanmar
agree to provide 55,000 MT of rice immediately
Pakistan and Myanmar have agreed to supply 55, 000 MT of rice to
Sri Lanka immediately to overcome any possible rice shortage in the domestic
market.
The four-member team of officials that flew to Pakistan and Myanmar returned yesterday (14th July) and met the Minister of Industry and Commerce Rishad Bathiudeen. The team was led by Secretary of Ministry of Industry and Commerce Chinthaka Lokuhetti.
“After this successful tour, it is
clear that there will be no more rice shortages in the domestic markets-or even
any likelihood of it. Some elements in the market are trying to create an
artificial shortage”, the Minister said. According to an official,
Pakistan has agreed to supply 25000 MT immediately. No final price has been
quoted yet but once the final price is agreed, they will be shipped from
Pakistan in early August. Pakistan is also ready to supply some more rice
quantity by September. Myanmar is ready to supply another 30,000 MT
immediately and its final price too, to be agreed.
https://www.news.lk/news/political-current-affairs/item/17423-pakistan-myanmar-agree-to-provide-55-000-mt-of-rice-immediately
Flood Assistance Available for Louisiana Rice Producers
WELSH,
LA -- Louisiana rice producers affected by the 2016 floods attended several
informational meetings last week hosted by the Louisiana Department of
Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) to learn more about the 2016 Louisiana Farm
Recovery Grant Program.
Awards of up to $100,000 will be offered to producers in the following parishes to help with 2017 replanting expenses: Acadia, Allen, Ascension, Avoyelles, Beauregard, Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Calcasieu, Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, DeSoto, East Baton Rouge, East Carroll, East Feliciana, Evangeline, Franklin, Grant, Iberia, Iberville, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Lafayette, LaSalle, Lincoln, Livingston, Madison, Morehouse, Natchitoches, Ouachita, Point Coupee, Rapides, Red River, Richland, Sabine, St. Helena, St. James, St. Landry, St. Martin, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Union, Vermilion, Vernon, Washington, Webster, West Baton Rouge, West Carroll, West Feliciana, and Winn.
"The funding is part of the $1.6 billion congressional appropriation for Restore Louisiana program which was setup to help citizens recover from the flood events," said USA Rice's Kane Webb. "Unfortunately, several rice producing parishes affected by the 2016 floods did not qualify since funds for this program come from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and not from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Eligibility is set by HUD which requires the parish to have been declared a disaster area by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to be eligible. Being declared a disaster area by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture does not qualify the parish."
The funds are part of a grant program rather than a combination of a loan and grant that does not have to be paid back. Rice producers with pre-storm annual gross farm revenue of at least $25,000 in the years 2014, 2015, or 2016 are eligible to apply. Crop loss must be at least $10,000 as calculated by the LSU AgCenter's crop loss calculator.
The 36-day application period begins July 26 and runs through August 30. Applications, supporting information, and the crop loss calculator are available here.
Awards of up to $100,000 will be offered to producers in the following parishes to help with 2017 replanting expenses: Acadia, Allen, Ascension, Avoyelles, Beauregard, Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Calcasieu, Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, DeSoto, East Baton Rouge, East Carroll, East Feliciana, Evangeline, Franklin, Grant, Iberia, Iberville, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Lafayette, LaSalle, Lincoln, Livingston, Madison, Morehouse, Natchitoches, Ouachita, Point Coupee, Rapides, Red River, Richland, Sabine, St. Helena, St. James, St. Landry, St. Martin, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Union, Vermilion, Vernon, Washington, Webster, West Baton Rouge, West Carroll, West Feliciana, and Winn.
"The funding is part of the $1.6 billion congressional appropriation for Restore Louisiana program which was setup to help citizens recover from the flood events," said USA Rice's Kane Webb. "Unfortunately, several rice producing parishes affected by the 2016 floods did not qualify since funds for this program come from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and not from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Eligibility is set by HUD which requires the parish to have been declared a disaster area by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to be eligible. Being declared a disaster area by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture does not qualify the parish."
The funds are part of a grant program rather than a combination of a loan and grant that does not have to be paid back. Rice producers with pre-storm annual gross farm revenue of at least $25,000 in the years 2014, 2015, or 2016 are eligible to apply. Crop loss must be at least $10,000 as calculated by the LSU AgCenter's crop loss calculator.
The 36-day application period begins July 26 and runs through August 30. Applications, supporting information, and the crop loss calculator are available here.
Colored rice may brighten the menu for
diabetics in the future
Jul 14, 2017
Shown are purple, brown and red rice piles. ARS scientists found
that colored rice bran extracts help mouse fat cells use glucose, or sugar.
(Photo courtesy of ARS.)
When it comes to healthful foods,
fruits, vegetables and whole grains are some choices that come to mind. But how
about rice—colored rice that is? Agricultural Research Service scientists are
investigating the potential of brown, purple and red rice in managing diabetes.
Rice bran contains bioactive
compounds—extra nutrients that occur in small amounts in foods. Studies have
shown that these compounds have the potential to promote human health.
A health issue of great concern
is diabetes—a disease that affects how your body uses blood glucose (sugar).
Today, nearly 30 million Americans and 422 million people worldwide are
affected by diabetes.
ARS chemist Stephen Boue and his
colleagues in New Orleans, Louisiana, and Stuttgart, Arkansas, examined the
impact of brown, red and purple rice bran on mice fat cells as a model for
developing methods to help with diabetes management. They studied the colored
rice bran extracts’ ability to stimulate glucose uptake in mice fat cells.
Glucose uptake is critical for
people with diabetes because their bodies are unable to produce enough insulin,
which causes elevated glucose levels in the blood. Without proper medical care,
diabetes can lead to heart attack, stroke, blindness, kidney failure and nerve
damage.
The ARS study, published in the
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, showed a significant increase in
glucose uptake in mice fat cells exposed to colored bran extracts. Glucose
uptake nearly tripled in mice fat cells exposed to red rice bran extracts and
more than doubled with purple rice bran extracts, according to Boue, who works
at ARS’s Southern Regional Research Center.
While these results showed
promise in using red and purple bran extracts to regulate glucose uptake in
mice fat cells, Boue noted that additional research with humans is needed to
verify the same positive effect.
Govt brushes off call to test the quality of rice stocks
national July 17, 2017 01:00
By The Nation
THE NATIONAL Council for
Peace and Order (NCPO) has brushed aside requests for a special order to open
up warehouses to verify rice quality to see if it is still good for human
consumption.
Col
Winthai Suwaree, the NCPO spokesman, said the Commerce Ministry is responsible
for responding to the Pheu Thai party’s claims that the government had sold
rice in its inventory for feedmill production at a low price.
This has
resulted in a heavy loss estimated to exceed Bt10 billion, according to
Yuttapong Charassathien, a former Pheu Thai MP who doubted that the ongoing
sale of 2.4 million tonnes of government-owned rice was implemented properly.
Winthai
said Yuttapong should seek further information from the Commerce Ministry,
which said it has reasons to justify its decision to sell the large quantity of
rice at a relatively low price.
Earlier,
Yuttapong, a former deputy agriculture minister, said he had evidence that the
Commerce Ministry did not sell the rice to a company, named CPS Co, which
offered to buy the government’s stock at about Bt9,000 per tonne.
Instead,
he said, the ministry later sold the same rice to other firms at a price of
only Bt4,000 per tonne for use as feedmill rather than human consumption.
As a
result, Yuttapong asked Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha to exercise his power
under Article 44 of the interim charter to re-open warehouses for the public to
help verify the quality of rice.
Duangporn
Rodprayad, director-general of the Department of Foreign Trade, said the
selling price is not the only factor in managing the huge inventory that
resulted from the previous Yingluck government’s unlimited rice-pledging
scheme. The government needed to take into account warehouse, interest and rice
treatment expenses as well as impacts on human and animal health, Duangporn
said.
The huge
inventory was acquired under the previous government’s rice-pledging scheme at
a cost of Bt22,000-23,000 per tonne for white rice and Bt29,000-30,000 for Hom
Mali rice.
According
to the Commerce Ministry, the quality of rice had deteriorated due to an
extended period of storage and was no longer suitable for human consumption, so
it was sold to the feedmill industry at a lower price.
Yuttapong
said CPS Co, the company previously contracted by the ministry, had insisted
that the rice was still good for people’s consumption so it should not be sold
to the feedmill industry.
The
former deputy agriculture ministry also urged Deputy Prime Minister Somkid
Jatusripitak and Commerce Minister Apiradi Tantraporn to attend to the
verification process to see if the rice inventory was still good for human
consumption.
Yuttapong
also said CPS Co had twice sent letters to the Department of Foreign Trade
seeking a review of the sale of rice at a low price.
When it
took office more than three years ago, the Prayut government inherited a huge
rice inventory of 18 million tonnes from the previous government’s
rice-pledging scheme. Over the past three years, 3.5-4 million tonnes of rice
have been sold annually at a loss to ease the government’s burden.
The last
inventory of 2.87 million tonnes has been in the process of being sold,
consisting of 167,000 tonnes of rice for people’s consumption, 2.14 million
tonnes for feedmill, and 568,000 tonnes for the energy sector.
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30320919
Fruit exporters move CCP against
high freight charges
14-Jul-17
KARACHI: The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) has decided
to probe into higher air freight rates being charged by foreign airlines for
export of perishable commodities in Pakistan, fruit exporters claimed Thursday.
The commission after examining
complaints of horticultural exporters has decided to look into the issue by
constituting a relevant committee. This development was reported after a detailed
meeting of concerned stockholders with Director General of CCP in Islamabad. A
four-member joint delegation of PFVEA & ACAAP, comprising of Waheed Ahmed
Patron-in-chief and Shahzad Shaikh, also member Executive Committee of Pakistan
Fruit & Vegetable Exporters Association PFVEA, along with Mohsin Abbas
Dharsi, Chairman and Shujaat Ali Convener, FDSC of Air Cargo Agents Association
of Pakistan ACAAP, were called upon by Shaista Bano, Director General, CCP.
The meeting was summoned by
Director General CCP, after a complaint registered by the associations before
start of mango season 2017. They discussed the matters of higher freight rates
being charged by foreign carriers on perishable commodities, especially mango
shipments to European destinations, Middle East and USA. The delegation
explained and clarified the contention with all the supportive documentary
evidences.
Their concerns are; the higher
air freight rates being charged from on all "Pakistani perishable
commodities" especially Mangoes Shipments to European, Middle Eastern and
American destinations. Apart from other serious and unjustified conditions
imposed by Airlines, the indemnity bond are take from the Exporters before the
start of Mango Season. By virtue of this documents, the exporters cut their
hands and in case of any mishandling, damage or loss of shipment, the Exporters
cannot submit a claim. Although Pakistan's Exporters paying highest air freight
rates among the Sub- continent Mango Exporters, yet their shipments are not
given priority. Even by paying higher air freights Pakistani exporters are not
able to compete in International market and on another side due to negligence
and mishandling by airlines the exports consignments are being rejected which
leads towards heavy revenue losses. Later the CCP officials assured the PFVA
delegation about prompt investigation into the issue for which a committee
would be constituted soon.
Published in Daily Times,
July 14th , 2017
Are China’s scientists more interested in cash
than the search for truth?
New study suggests financial rewards for published papers are
tarnishing the reputation of Chinese research
PUBLISHED : Monday, 17 July, 2017, 8:33am
UPDATED : Monday, 17 July, 2017, 11:00pm
The research, carried out by a
team led by Chen Bikun, an associate professor at Nanjing University of Science
and Technology’s School of Economics and Management, looked at the different
reward policies adopted by 100 Chinese universities over the past 17 years.
Released earlier this month, the
study found that between 1999 and 2016, academics were paid between US$30 and
US$165,000 for each paper they had published in an internationally recognised
journal, with the mean payment rising noticeably over the past decade.The
average reward for an article published in either Nature or Science,
for instance, rose from US$26,212 in 2008 to US$43,783 last year, an increase
of 67 per cent. The top figure equates to about 20 times a professor’s annual
salary, the study said.
China’s cash-for-papers policy
came under increased scrutiny last month when a research team was awarded US$2
million for a paper on a possible cure for rice fungus published in the
scientific journal Cell.The payment was made to
Professor Chen Xuewei and his colleagues at Sichuan Agricultural University for
their breakthrough work that could help rice crops become resistant to a deadly
fungus known as rice blast.
Despite the credibility of the
team’s work, the size of their reward – which equated to about double the
amount last year’s Nobel laureates received – made headlines around the world
and raised questions about the ethics of paying scientists such large sums for
their research.In China, the cash-for-papers system was introduced by Nanjing
University in Jiangsu province about 1990, according to Chen Bikun’s study.
Though the reward in those days
was just US$25, the scheme led to a huge spike in the number of papers
published by the university, which topped the national rankings for such for
the whole of that decade. Other universities rapidly followed suit and launched
their own reward schemes.According to figures from China’s National Bureau of
Statistics, the number of papers published outside the country increased
17-fold between 1996 and 2014, from 13,134 to 232,070.
“Traditionally, financial
incentives are used in business to reward employees for their excellent
performance,” Chen Bikun said in the study.“[But now] Chinese universities are
rewarding their scholars for their research performance,” he said.Despite the
negative implications of the payment system, there can be no doubt that it has
been instrumental in raising the profile of China’s scientists on the world
stage, the study said.
“The reward policy has been
successful, as China has experienced exponential growth in the number of papers
it has had published in international science publications over the past 20 years.”
Chen could not be immediately
reached for comment about his study – which is currently in draft form pending
peer review – but it has already caught the attention of scientific journals
overseas.
“This caused the odd raised
eyebrow among Western scientists, for whom this kind of financial reward is an
anathema,” said a commentary in MIT Technology Review last
week.
“For them, science is venerated
as a search for truth that is unaffected by self-interest,” it added.
In his research, Chen claimed
that some Chinese scholars are “driven to publish just for the monetary reward
rather than disseminating knowledge and receiving the recognition”.
He cited the example of a
materials scientist at Heilongjiang University, who between 2004 and 2009 had
more than 250 papers published in a single journal, for which he received “more
than half of the total cash rewards” given by the university in the
northeastern province. He did not name the researcher.
According to other studies, last
year there were 1,234 corrections made to academic works published by Chinese
scientists. In 1996, the number was just two. The figures were released amid
growing concerns about the scale of academic fraud in the country, which
encompasses plagiarism, dishonesty, ghost written papers and fake peer reviews.
Not that China is the only guilty
party, according to the article in the MIT Technology Review.
“The search for ‘truth’ is not as
pure as many would like to believe,” it said, though the events in China could
“tarnish it further”.
It added: “If publication success
can be improved by cash payments to scientists, how long before universities in
other countries follow suit?”
In contrast, a front page
editorial in the July 5 issue of China Science Daily, the official
newspaper of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, referred to the US$2 million
award in Sichuan as a “new beginning”.
In the past, China’s investment
in research and development went mostly on the purchase or construction of
large, sophisticated hardware and facilities, it said. Such spending was
“unfair” to the scientists, the majority of whom earn relatively modest
salaries, it said.
Jason Chan, Asia spokesman for
global publishing group Elsevier, said that controversy aside, it is clear that
China’s research might is growing, and not just in terms of the number of
papers it has published.
“China still has some catching up
to do in terms of quality of research output but the gap is closing fast,” he
said.
“What’s interesting is that the
country is starting to be a serious innovation exporter, judging from the
growing number of patent applications filed,” Chan said, adding that the figure
had been rising by about 19 per cent a year, to 1.1 million in 2015 alone.
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post
print edition as:
Pay-for-papers policy ‘may undermine quest for truth’
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/2102869/are-chinas-scientists-more-interested-cash-search-truth
Government to
tap emergency rice fund to help corn farmers
Tue, 18 July 2017
A farmer plucks ripe corns in a field in Pailin province in
2012. Heng Chivoan
The government will use the
untapped funds of an emergency rice loan package to support struggling corn
farmers who have protested the low market prices for their crop this season,
state officials said yesterday.
Kao Thach, CEO of the
government-backed Rural Development Bank (RDB), said the bank will distribute
the remaining funds from a $27 million rice loan package to corn traders so
that they can offer higher prices on the corn they purchase from smallholder
farmers.
“We will provide loans to corn
traders so that they can collect the corn from farmers as well as to ensure
better corn prices,” he said.
Thach said the loans would be
provided using the same formula that RDB used for the rice sector, which
offered loans at a low annual interest rate of 7 percent while requiring only
rice paddy as collateral.
“The loans will be offered based
on using corn in storage as collateral,” he said. “However, the interest rate
will be less than 7 percent – maybe from 5-6 percent.”
Thach insisted that the
disbursement of loans to corn traders would not interfere with the emergency
loan package’s original purpose.
“As the seasons of rice
harvesting and corn harvesting are different, we can use this budget to help
our corn industry, especially as rice millers have not utilised the full
package.”
He said just $3.5 million of the
original $27 million package has been disbursed to rice millers, while another
$50 million could be made available, if needed.
“The loans will be available
following a board meeting tomorrow [Tuesday] to set the interest rate, which
must then be finalised by the Ministry of Economy and Finance,” he said.
Thach’s announcement followed an
emergency meeting yesterday between government and private sector
representatives in response to protests in Battambang province over the weekend,
where farmers blocked roads demanding that authorities help them to negotiate
better prices for their harvested corn.
Kim Hout, director of Battambang
province’s commerce department, said the protests came after traders began
offering 3 baht per kilo for corn (about $0.09), down from 3.9 baht just weeks
earlier. He said the price decrease was due to the early harvest of corn, which
resulted in an unusually high moisture content.
“The farmers harvested too early
this year because of heavy rains, so the moisture content exceeded 30 percent,
which led to lower prices,” he explained.
Thach said RDB’s loan package
would be sufficient to cover the main area of corn cultivation in northwestern
Cambodia, which produces an estimated 1 million tonnes of corn a year. He said
the loans would be suitable for long-term investments such as silos and
warehouses, which require five to seven-year terms.
Minister of Commerce Pan Sorasak
said the availability of storage facilities was crucial to ensuring better
prices.
“With the support of the RDB we
can promote the building of silos and warehouses, which can be used to store
corn when the price is low,” he said, encouraging the sector to develop more
contract farming in the coming season.
Lao Sunchea, director of the Sala
Krao Cassava Cooperative in Pailin province, which pools local smallholder
farmer resources for cassava and corn production, said the RDB’s loan package
should help to improve the market for its members.“If the RDB issues loans to
help corn traders I think farmers will be happy and it could resolve the
problem as corn traders currently do not have sufficient budgets to buy corn
from farmers,” he said
http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/government-tap-emergency-rice-fund-help-corn-farmers
Global rice processing
facility to come up in Mysuru
Shankar Bennur JULY 18, 2017 00:37
IST
KARNATAKA
UPDATED: JULY 18, 2017 00:37 IST
CFTRI setting up the centre on its
campus to create skilled manpower for thisRice milling and processing may soon
get a new dimension with the Mysuru-based Central Food Technological Research
Institute (CFTRI), a premier CSIR laboratory, in the process of establishing a
state-of-the-art global rice processing facility on its premises here.It will
be Asia’s first institution where the best practices of rice milling with a
focus on dealing with by-products, mainly bran, to prevent its waste, will be
taught.
The institute aims to create skilled
manpower in the area of rice processing with the new facility, which is similar
to International School of Milling Technology (ISMT) that started functioning
over three decades ago.
Annual training
According to CFTRI, around 600
working professionals and entrepreneurs will be trained annually at the Global
Rice Processing facility. Paddy growers will also be trained as part of
Skilling India.
One of the key visions of the
institute has been to create a sustainable agriculture sector through many
innovative products and services by supporting the livelihood of marginal
farmers and rural entrepreneurs in the country with the help of its expert
faculty and over six decades of R and D efforts.
Ram Rajashekaran, director, CFTRI,
told The Hindu that rice milling becomes unfinished if bran and other
components are not utilised. Bran is rich in oil and fibre and our idea is to
make bran industrially viable, imparting the know-how to the people in the
milling industry, he explained.
Prof. Rajashekaran, who has been
nominated as chairman of the South Asian Regional Standards Organisation
(SARSO) which has its headquarters in Dhaka, Bangladesh, described the effort
on rice processing as an ‘academic’ and ‘industrial’ venture. SARSO is a
Specialised Body of SAARC.
After China, India is the second
largest rice producer in the world with about 106 million tonnes of paddy
produced annually. “Imagine the volume of bran rice milling generated in the
country with such a large production of paddy. If 10% of bran was processed, it
will have generated a lot of revenue,” he explained.
Flour milling industry
CFTRI hopes to develop the global
rice processing centre along the lines of ISMT, which offers regular courses,
and was established as a joint Indo-Swiss venture, and the Roller Flour Millers
Federation of India project during 1981 to serve the needs of flour milling
industry in India and other developing countries with regard to training in
flour milling technology.
Qualitative change
People from countries such as
Bangladesh, Cambodia, Ghana, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Nepal, Nigeria, Oman, The
Philippines, Sri Lanka, Syria, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam, have been
trained at ISMT and many of them have served in various roller flour mills in
India and also in their respective countries. “There has been a qualitative
change in the working of these mills as per the feedback received from the
milling industry,” CFTRI sources said.
Mannachanallur
rice mills struggle to sustain operation
TIRUCHIRAPALLI
JULY 17, 2017 20:23 IST
UPDATED: JULY 17, 2017 20:23 IST
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Declining paddy arrivals due to the
drought conditions has caused a perceptible downslide in milling activities in
Mannachanallur town that is famous for its Ponni variety of rice.
Most of the about 40 mills in the
town witnessed manufacturing activities for only three to four months in a year
during 2015 and 2016. Even to ensure this, the mills, according to local
sources, were constrained to purchase paddy from Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh.
The predicament of the member units
of Mannachanallur Rice Mill Owners’ Association is not getting any better this
year. Though the rice mills in the town have embraced modernisation over the
last decade, the competition they face from the millers in Karnataka and Andhra
Pradesh is rather tough, members said.
Top quality paddy varieties produced
in these States are procured by the mills there, and only the second quality is
brought here for processing. The mills in the other States are also better
placed in terms of operating efficiency. With capacities to process 50 to 60
tonnes a day, the mills are able to produce and sell the rice at lower prices
when compared to the millers in Mannachanallur where the capacities of the
manufacturing units have capacities are much lower in the range of 10 to 15
tonnes.
The industry is also
labour-intensive, particularly in conventional rice mills where cleaning,
drying, grading and polishing activities are carried out manually. Manpower
requirement is rather high since the overall operation in rice milling unit
encompass cleaning to remove impurities; separation of small stones from paddy;
parboiling to improve nutritional quality; husk removal; husk aspiration; paddy
separation; whitening by removal of bran layer; polishing the exterior of
milled kernel; length grading of broken and full rice; and finally packaging
it.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Tiruchirapalli/rice/article19296912.ece
Ganeden’s BC30 Probiotic Aids Plant Protein
Digestion, Study Suggests
July 17, 2017 | Digestive Health, Protein, Science
Probiotic supplier Ganeden
Biotech Inc. (Cleveland) is ramping up its research on how its flagship Bacillus
coagulans probiotic strain GanedenBC30 can enhance the
absorption of protein. Last year, the company announced a new study indicating that GanedenBC30, when taken
together with dairy protein casein, was more effective than casein alone at
reducing muscle damage following exercise. Earlier company data hadsuggested that
GanedenBC30 may help the body better absorb protein. Now, the company has
announced a new study finding that GanedenBC30 may also enhance the absorption
of plant protein.
Alternative sources of protein are
more popular than ever, but plant proteins are known to have lower
digestibility than animal proteins. In a study published in Beneficial
Microbes,1 researchers sought to
determine whether GanedenBC30 has the potential to aid in the digestion of
plant-based proteins. The in vitro study found
that the presence of BC30 both increased plant-protein digestion uptake in the
upper gastrointestinal tract and promoted a healthier environment in the colon
by reducing the amount of excess undigested protein in the colon. According to
the study authors, BC30 is the only Bacillus coagulans strain
that has been shown to have an effect on protein utilization.
Researchers used three plant proteins—pea,
soy, and rice—to test the potential benefits of BC30 in an in
vitro model of the stomach and small intestine. They note that
the experiment was carried out under the “average physiological conditions as
found in the human gastrointestinal tract for adults,” and average
concentrations of electrolytes, enzymes, bile, and pancreatic juice were
adjusted accordingly. In addition, the researchers simulated pancreatic output
by secreting 10% pancreatin in a small intestinal electrolyte solution. The models
that did not receive BC30 served as the control.
To create the test meals,
researchers mixed 15 g of each plant protein with 45 mg of a saliva-electrolyte
solution. They then added the gastric residue. Over a period of six hours,
researchers collected samples from the jejunal, ileal dialysate, ileal efflux,
and from the secretion fluids. They measured concentrations of a-amino nitrogen
and total nitrogen using a Cobas Mira Plus autoanalyzer and a Biuret assay,
respectively. As the researchers explain, the amount of -amino nitrogen present
following in vitro “digestion” is used
as a proxy indicator of the hydrolysis of free amino acids and short peptides,
which overall indicates the degree of digestion that has taken place. As the
study authors explain, the ratio of total nitrogen to a-amino nitrogen reflects
the degree of protein digestion. A lower ratio, the researchers say, indicates
a higher degree of digestion.
According to researchers, BC30 increased protein digestibility of
all three plant proteins, with digestion increases highest for soy protein,
followed by pea and then rice protein. The researchers did point out that these
results are not necessarily indicative of the quality of the digested proteins.
In addition, they noted, “The ratio of TN/AAN indicated that for pea protein
digestion was increased by BC30, but the degree of polymerization of the
liberated small peptides and free amino acids was not changed. For soy and
rice, however, BC30 showed a two-fold reduction in the TN/AAN ratio, indicating
that the liberated digestion products formed during digestion in the presence
of BC30 were shorter peptides and more free amino acids, than those liberated
in the absence of BC30.”
The researchers suggest that BC30 can help the body in other ways
related to protein digestion, too, besides simply improving amino acid
bioavailability and uptake thanks to improved digestion. By improving protein
digestion, BC30 has a secondary benefit of supporting colon health, they said.
Excess protein that is not digested often reaches the colon, the study authors
note, which can may be incorporated into the gut microbiota, or be fermented
into toxic metabolites by the gut microbiota.
Given that BC30 was shown in the current study to improve
digestibility of all three plant protein sources, researchers concluded that
“Thus, the enhanced protein digestion by BC30 showed a dual benefit: enhanced
amino acid bioavailability from plant proteins in the upper GI tract, and a
healthier environment in the colon,” they wrote.“Consumers want multifunctional
foods and beverages with ingredients that provide a variety of health
benefits,” said David Keller, vice president of scientific operations, Ganeden,
in a press release. “Using a probiotic strain like GanedenBC30 that supports the
function of other ingredients is a win for both manufacturers and consumers.
Genetically Modified Rice Stacked With Antioxidants
Chinese researchers have developed a genetic engineering tool to
generate antioxidant-rich purple rice.
AsianScientist (July 17, 2017) - Researchers in China have
developed a genetic engineering approach to make purple rice that produces high
levels of antioxidants. Their work is published in the journal Molecular
Plant.
Rice is a staple food in Asia,
making it a good agent for delivering micronutrients that are beneficial to
health. However, not all micronutrients are produced in large quantities by
rice.
To date, genetic engineering
approaches have been used to develop rice enriched in beta-carotene and folate
(precursors of vitamins A and B), but not anthocyanins. Anthocyanins are
natural antioxidants that have the potential to decrease the risk of certain
cancers, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other chronic disorders.
Although these health-promoting
compounds are naturally abundant in some black and red rice varieties, they are
absent in polished rice grains because the husk, bran and germ have been
removed, leaving only the endosperm—the fleshy part at the center of the grain.
In this study, researchers
developed a method to deliver many genes at once and used it to make rice
endosperm produce high levels of anthocyanins. Previous attempts to engineer
anthocyanin production in rice have failed because the underlying biosynthesis
pathway is highly complex and it has been difficult to efficiently transfer
many genes into plants.
To address this challenge, Professor Liu Yao-Guang and his
colleagues at the South China Agricultural University first set out to identify
the genes required to engineer anthocyanin production in the rice endosperm. To
do so, they analyzed sequences of anthocyanin pathway genes in different rice
varieties and pinpointed the defective genes in japonica and indica subspecies
that do not produce anthocyanins.
Based on this analysis, they
developed a transgene stacking strategy for expressing eight anthocyanin
pathway genes specifically in the endosperm of the japonica and indica rice
varieties. The resulting purple endosperm rice had high anthocyanin levels and
antioxidant activity in the endosperm.
“We have developed a highly efficient, easy-to-use transgene
stacking system called TransGene Stacking II that enables the assembly of a
large number of genes in single vectors for plant transformation,” said Liu.
“This is the first demonstration of engineering such a complex metabolic
pathway in plants. We envisage that this vector system will have many potential
applications in this era of synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.”
In the future, this transgene stacking vector system could be used
to develop plant bioreactors for the production of many other important
nutrients and medicinal ingredients. The researchers plan to evaluate the
safety of purple endosperm rice as biofortified food and they will also try to
engineer the biosynthesis of anthocyanins in other crops to produce more purple
endosperm cereals such as maize, wheat and barley.
The article can be found at: Zhu et al. (2017) Development of “Purple Endosperm Rice” by Engineering Anthocyanin Biosynthesis in the Endosperm with a High-Efficiency Transgene Stacking System.
The article can be found at: Zhu et al. (2017) Development of “Purple Endosperm Rice” by Engineering Anthocyanin Biosynthesis in the Endosperm with a High-Efficiency Transgene Stacking System.
Source: Cell
Press; Photo: Zhu Qinlong.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.
https://www.asianscientist.com/2017/07/in-the-lab/purple-rice-antioxidants-cancer/
Bangladesh imports surge 11.83 pct in July-May
period
Xinhua| 2017-07-17
18:57:20|Editor: Zhou Xin
by Naim-Ul-Karim
DHAKA, July 17 (Xinhua) -- Bangladesh's imports surged 11.83
percent to some 41 billion U.S. dollars in the first 11 months of the just
concluded 2016-17 fiscal year (July 2016-June 2017) on increased importation of
staple food, officials said Monday.
Quoting the Bangladesh Bank (BB) data, they said the settlement
of letters of credit (LCs), generally known as actual imports, stood at
40,998.48 million dollars in the July-May period compared to 36,661.44 million
dollars in the same period a year earlier.
Overall import orders also surged by 13.97 percent in the
July-May period, showed the BB data.
The overall import orders, officially known as fresh opening of
import letters of credit (LCs), increased to 44,118.71 million dollars in
July-May against 38,711.89 million dollars in the same period of the last
2016-17 fiscal year, it showed.
A BB official told Xinhua Monday that Bangladesh's imports will
continue to rise as the government needs to procure food grains in large
quantities due to devastating flooding in parts of Bangladesh.
"Increased importation of staple food specially in recent
months continued to push up the over all import bills," said the central
bank official who did not like to be named.
Officials say ongoing floods triggered by heavy seasonal rains
and onrush of water from hills across the Indian borders have caused widespread
damage to habitation, crops, roads and highways across vast areas of the
country.
They said flash flood also struck the country's northeastern
region in March, causing huge loss of winter rice.
In a bid to replenish reserves and rein in prices of rice, the
Bangladeshi government in May announced importing 600,000 tons of staple food.
Also in a bid to rein the instability in prices of the staple
food item in the domestic market, Bangladesh cut import duty on rice to 10
percent from 28 percent last month.
The Bangladeshi government on June 14 decided to import 250,000
tons of rice from Vietnam under a government-to-government agreement.
Price hike of food items particularly staple rice is a key
concern for the Bangladeshi government as nearly 31.5 percent of its around 160
million people still live below the national poverty line and spend a large
part of their incomes on food purchase. (1 U.S. dollar = 81 taka)
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2017-07/17/c_136450547.htm
Rice price unlikely to drop
despite import from Vietnam
01:12 AM July 18, 2017
The government reserves some 500,000
to 600,000 tonnes of rice every year, while 3.4 million tonnes are needed to
feed the country in a single year.Rice traders have warned of continued high
prices of the staple food, saying fresh imports from Vietnam will have little
effect “any time soon” as they will not be distributed for Open Market Sale to
the general public.
A total of 47,000 tonnes of rice
have arrived at the Chittagong port in two consignments in the past week. The
first batch of 20,000 tonnes arrived on July 13 and has already been unloaded,
while the second shipment of 27,000 tonnes reached the port city on
Monday.Asked about the destination of the imported rice, Md Zahirul Islam,
controller, Movement and Storage, Chittagong Food Department, told the Dhaka
Tribune that the government is yet to take any decision in this regard.“It is
white rice, not the parboiled one so it could not be distributed only for open
markets,” he said. “It might go for rationing to the government employees, or
to flood-affected people.”
But after visiting different kitchen
markets across the city on Monday, the Dhaka Tribune found rice prices remains
high with traders not envisaging a drop for the next couple of months.Amirul
Islam, proprietor of Chatkhil Rice Agency at Karwanbazar wholesale market in
Dhaka, said there had been no change of rice price this week.
“I do not see the price come down
soon; rather, we are worried over whether the price shoots up in coming days,”
he said.“We sell coarse rice at Tk2,050, Minicate at Tk2,700, Paizom at Tk2,100
and Brri-28 at Tk2,500 and Najir Shail at Tk30,000 per 50kg sack.Amirul said
the government cut in rice import duty to 18% from 28% had also failed to rein
in prices since the Indian government increased its export price by Tk2-Tk3 per
kg after the duty cut.
As the price of paddy has gone up in
local market as well as India’s hike in export price, there is hardly any
possibility that the price will drop soon.Usually, the government reserves some
500,000 to 600,000 tonnes of rice every year, while 3.4 million tonnes are
needed to feed the country in a single year.A total of 165,000tonnes of rice
are in reserve now. According to the Food Ministry, the private sector imported
133,000 tonnes between July 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017, but the government did
not make any imports during that time.Azad Mia, Azad Rice Agency, Mohammadpur,
hailed the import from Vietnam, but cast doubt on a possible price decrease
anytime soon.“Around 6 lakh tonnes of rice needs to be reserved for the country
while the current amount is not enough,” he said.
“However, the imported rice is not
available in the markets. We look forward to seeing when the price comes down
(but) it will take at least six months.”Bangladesh Rice Merchants Association
Vice President Zakir Hossain Rony said he expects the price of coarse rice to reduce
by Tk35 and fine ones by Tk45, “but to no avail.”In total the government has
purchased 200,000 tonnes of white rice at $430 per tonne and 50,000 tonnes of
parboiled rice at $470 per tonne from Vietnam to maintain immediate
availability of stock in the market, as well as reserves, according to the Food
Ministry proposal.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/business/2017/07/18/rice-price-unlikely-drop-despite-import-vietnam/
Tariff on imported rice among Ledac priority
bills
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 07:31 AM July 17, 2017
The
Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council (Ledac) executive committee
is pushing for a tariff on imported rice as well as comprehensive tax reform among
the priority measures that Congress must act on once it resumes session next
week.
In a
statement on Sunday, the state planning agency National Economic and
Development Authority (Neda) said the Ledac committee wanted the proposed
amendment to Republic Act (RA) No. 8178, or the Agricultural Tariffication Act
of 1996, to be approved or certified by President Duterte as urgent.
RA 8178 put
in place the rice import quota, or quantitative restriction (QR).
Along with
the first package of the Duterte administration’s comprehensive tax reform
program and 12 other measures, the Ledac committee wanted the tax on rice
“passed into law possibly within the year,” said Socioeconomic Planning
Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia.
“We need
rice tariffication because the import QR allowed by the World Trade
Organization (WTO) has already ended. This is to prevent uncertainty as to what
the demands of the WTO members will be following the lapse of the QR,” said
Pernia, who also chairs the Ledac executive committee.
“Earnings
from the proposed law [amendment to RA 8178] will also be used to improve the
productivity of farmers and the agriculture sector as specified in the
Philippine Development Plan 2017-2022, which aims to expand economic
opportunities in agriculture,” Pernia said.
Ads by Kiosked
In May, Mr.
Duterte certified as urgent the passage of the first tax reform package aimed
at slashing personal income tax rates while slapping new or higher taxes on
consumption, Neda noted.
House Bill
No. 5636 was approved by the House of Representatives before Congress went on
sine die adjournment.
Besides
imposing a tax on imported rice and tax reform, Neda identified the 12 other
bills to be endorsed by the Ledac executive committee as urgent:
• Amendments
to the Anti-Cybercrime Act
• Amendments to the National Irrigation Administration Charter
• Amendments to the Public Service Act
• Budget Reform Act
• Ease of Doing Business Act/Fast Business Permit Act
• Government Procurement Reform Act Amendments
• National Land Use Act
• National Transport Act
• Rightsizing of the national government
• Security of tenure bill
• Unified National Identification System Act
• Utilization of the coconut levy fund.
• Amendments to the National Irrigation Administration Charter
• Amendments to the Public Service Act
• Budget Reform Act
• Ease of Doing Business Act/Fast Business Permit Act
• Government Procurement Reform Act Amendments
• National Land Use Act
• National Transport Act
• Rightsizing of the national government
• Security of tenure bill
• Unified National Identification System Act
• Utilization of the coconut levy fund.
—Ben O. de Vera
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/914467/tariff-on-imported-rice-among-ledac-priority-bills#ixzz4nB95EtTi
More bidders sought for rice
imports
July 15, 2017
MANILA, Philippines – State-run
National Food Authority (NFA) is eyeing more bidders for 250,000 metric tons
(MT) of milled rice.
During the pre-bidding conference
Thursday, only 11 bidders bought bid documents for the 250,000 MT rice.
Although the NFA did not set a
target as to the total number of bidders to participate, the agency wanted to
have as many as possible.
“We have eight lots and 11
bidders. We are not saying that it is not enough but we would want to have more
and to open it up to as many bidders as possible,” said NFA special assistant
to the administrator Rachel Miguel.
“The very purpose of the NFA
Council is for more private participation and that the volume will not be from
a single supplier only,” NFA deputy administrator Tomas Escarez said.
Of the 11 bidders, five came from
Thailand namely Ponglarp Co. Ltd., Thai Hua Co. Ltd., Capital Cereals Co. Ltd.,
Asia Golden Rice Co. Ltd. and Thai Granlux International Inc.
Four came from Vietnam which
include Vietnam Northern Food Corp., Vietnam Southern Food Corp. II, Gentraco,
and Gia International Corp.
The remaining bidders are Olam
International Ltd. from Singapore and Louis Dreyfus Co. from Netherlands.
The NFA will still accept bidders
until the opening of bid documents on July 25.
Of the total import volume,
100,000 MT will be discharged in the port of Manila, 30,000 MT in Batangas,
25,000 MT each in Tabaco, Cebu, Cagayan de Oro, 20,000 MT in Poro Pt. in La
Union, 15,000 MT in Davao and 10,000 MT in General Santos City.
The imported volume is expected
to arrive in August until September, the period of the lean season. The agency
has allotted P5.6 billion for the procurement.
Current NFA inventory can only
last for five days compared to its mandated buffer stock.
The NFA is mandated to maintain a
food security reserve good for at least 15 days at any given time
https://mtnvnews.com/more-bidders-sought-for-rice-imports/119590/
Second batch of rice supply reaches
Ctg
The
second consignment containing 27,000 tonnes of rice imported from Vietnam
reaches Chittagong port in Bangladesh in the morning on Monday, July 17, 2017.
STAR file photo
Star Online Report
The second consignment containing 27,000 tonnes of rice imported from Vietnam reached
Chittagong port in Bangladesh this morning.
A ship, MV Fax, reached the outer anchorage in Chittagong port
around 10:00am, reports our Chittagong staff correspondent.
“The rice will be unloaded after a lab test to verify whether it
was sent as per our requirement,” said Md Zahirul Islam, controller of movement
and storage of Chittagong’s food department.
The first consignment containing 20,000 tonnes of rice entered
Bangladesh territory on July 13.
The government on June 14 decided to import 250,000 tonnes of rice
at Tk 908.85 crore from Vietnam under a government-to-government agreement.
As per the decision, the ministry will import 50,000 tonnes of
boiled rice at Tk 195.05 crore (US$470 per tonne) and 200,000 tonnes of white
rice at Tk 713.80 crore (US$430 per tonne).
http://www.thedailystar.net/country/second-batch-rice-imported-from-vietnam-reaches-chittagong-bangladesh-1434424
Second shipment of imported
Vietnam rice arrives in Chittagong
Published: 2017-07-17 11:22:28.0 BdST Updated: 2017-07-17 18:15:18.0
BdST
The second shipment of rice from
Vietnam has arrived at the Chittagong port.
The ship, MV Pax, arrived at the
harbour carrying 27,000 tonnes of rice from Vietnam on Monday morning, Food
Directorate’s Controller of the Movement, Storage and Silo Division Md Jahirul
Islam told bdnews24.com.“The distribution of the first shipment of 20,000
tonnes has begun. The second shipment will also be distributed quickly once the
necessary formalities are complete.”
So far 47,000 of the 250,000
tonnes of rice the Bangladesh government bought from Vietnam arrived.
Food Directorate officials expect
the third shipment on Jul 22.
Bangladesh decided to import rice
from the Southeast Asian country after floods destroyed crops in haor areas and
depleted the government’s rice reserves.
On Jun 14 this year, the government cleared the 9.08 billion
procurement under a government-to-government deal.
Bangladesh will buy 50,000 tonnes
of parboiled rice for around Tk 1.95 billion, or $470 a tonne and 200,000
tonnes of white rice for about Tk 7.14 billion at $430 a tonne, according to
the agreement.Vietnam’s state-run Vinafood 2 will supply 60 percent of shipments
through Chittagong port and the rest through the Mongla port.
http://bdnews24.com/business/2017/07/17/second-shipment-of-imported-vietnam-rice-arrives-in-chittagong
Govt issues new tender to buy 50,000t rice
| Update: 17:59, Jul 16, 2017
Bangladesh’s
state grains buyer has issued a new international tender to purchase 50,000
tonnes of rice, European traders said on Friday.The bidding deadline is July
27. Non-basmati parboiled rice is sought, they said.Rice from any origin will
be accepted and shipment must take place within 40 days of contract signing.
Bangladesh,
the world’s fourth-biggest rice producer, could import as much as 1.2 million
tonnes of rice this year in an effort to replenish reserves to combat high
domestic prices.
Bangladesh
has been in talks about purchasing 200,000 tonnes of parboiled rice from
Thailand in a government-to-government deal, an official said on Thursday.
Bangladesh
on Friday issued a separate international tender to import 50,000 tonnes of
wheat.
http://en.prothom-alo.com/economy/news/153815/Govt-issues-new-tender-to-buy-50-000t-rice
Sri Lanka signs rice deal
Submitted by ttwin on Sun,
07/16/2017 - 17:46
Writer: Nilar
Workers loading rice on a ship at Pakokku jetty. (Photo-Thet
Htein Win)
Myanmar plans to export 0.2
million tonnes of parboiled rice and 0.3 million tonnes of white rice to Sri
Lanka under a memorandum of understanding this year, according to Myanmar Rice
Federation (MRF).The National Food Authority of the Philippines has invited a bid
for the contract to buy about 50,000 tonnes of rice, according to the Commerce
Ministry.
Khin Maung Lwin, the assistant
permanent secretary at the Commerce Ministry, said: “The Philippines has
proposed the lowest price. We will win the tender if the price is fair. The
Myanmar Rice Federation has already discussed with rice exporters on tender
conditions and the loading of rice.”
The MRF has sent tender prices to
Manila. Myanmar can send 50,000 tonnes of rice to the Philippines in October
and November if it wins the tender.Currently, Myanmar is exporting rice to
Africa, the EU and within Asean.Thanks to the expansion of new rice markets, it
exported nearly 700,000 tonnes of rice and broken rice until the end of June
this fiscal year.
Until July this financial year, the sector earned US$160 million
from the export of 522,440 million tonnes of rice. The same period last year,
the sector generated more than US$71 million from the export of more than
200,000 tonnes of rice, according to the Commerce Ministry
http://www.elevenmyanmar.com/business/10577
Kharif sowing picks up with monsoon
CHANDIGARH,JULY 15, 2017 21:11
IST
There is an increased in sowing of
rice and pulsesthis year. | Photo Credit: ARUN KULKARNI;ARUN KULKARNI - Arun kulkarni
563.17 lakh hectares covered so far.With
the monsoon covering most parts of the country, sowing of the summer (kharif)
crop has gained momentum. A higher crop output is anticipated following
increased sowing of rice and pulses when compared with the last season.
The latest Union Agriculture
department data showed that across the country, kharif crops have been planted
on 563.17 lakh hectares till now, as against 521.80 lakh hectares in the
corresponding period last year.
Increase in acreage
With the sowing of crops apace
during the past few days across the country, paddy (rice) has been sown in
125.77 lakh hectares in the current season till July 14, which is marginally
higher than the 120.32 lakh hectares recorded in the 2016-17 season. The acreage
under pulses has been recorded at 74.61 lakh hectares till now, as against the
60.28 lakh hectares of the corresponding period for the last season.
The sowing of coarse cereals is up
as well, at 113.06 lakh hectares against the 98.79 lakh hectares of last year.
But the total oilseeds sown has come down to 103.92 lakh hectares, when
compared with 115.75 lakh hectares of last year.
Cotton acreage is up this season at
90.88 lakh hectares, against 73.93 lakh hectares last year in the corresponding
period. Sugarcane, too, continues to see an increase in acreage and has been
planted in 47.94 lakh hectares against the 45.22 lakh hectares last year.
According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), conditions are
favourable for further advancement of the monsoon and overall rainfall activity
is likely to be above normal over the next two weeks, from July 13 to July 26.
Favourable conditions
“Sowing of kharif crops has gained
momentum during the past few days as the monsoon is progressing well. Paddy transplanting,
though, has been a bit sluggish in Uttar Pradesh, Odisha, Tamil Nadu and
Karnataka, but it is likely to pick up in the coming days. Sowing of pulses is
apace in the key growing states of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and
Karnataka, which is an encouraging sign,” Anand Sharma, regional co-ordinator
of the IMD’s agricultural meteorology told, The Hindu.
“Apart from western parts of
Rajasthan, Punjab and Haryana, the monsoon rains have covered most parts of the
country,” he added. The monsoon rain delivers about 70% of India’s annual
rainfall and is critical for millions of farmers as nearly half the country’s
farmland lacks irrigation and is dependent on rain.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/kharif-sowing-picks-up-with-monsoon/article19286138.ece
Importers say 40% of rice in the market is
imported
The Rice
Importers Association says that over 40 percent of rice available in the market
at present is imported.Convenor of the Association, Hemaka Fernando, said that
steps would be taken, before the end of October, to import another 220,000
tonnes of rice to the country.
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices Open- JUL 18, 2017
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open Market-July 18
Nagpur, July 18 (Reuters) – Gram and tuar prices moved down in Nagpur Agriculture Produce and
Marketing Committee (APMC) here on poor demand from local millers amid high moisture content
arrival. Easy condition in Madhya Pradesh gram prices and profit-taking selling by stockists
also pulled down prices. Heavy rains since last evening here affected trading activity.
About 750 of gram and 400 bags of tuar were available for auctions, according to sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Desi gram raw reported higher in open market on good seasonal demand from local
traders. Good recovery on NCDEX also boosted sentiment.
TUAR
* Tuar varieties ruled steady in open market here but demand was poor.
* Lakhodi dal and Watana dal showed firm tendency in open market here on
good seasonal demand from local traders amid weak supply from producing regions.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 3,900-3,975, Tuar dal (clean) – 5,500-5,700, Udid Mogar (clean)
– 7,200-8,200, Moong Mogar (clean) 6,500-7,200, Gram – 5,300-5,450, Gram Super best
– 7,200-8,000
* Wheat, rice and other commodities moved in a narrow range in
scattered deals and settled at last levels in thin trading activity.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100 kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 4,600-5,160 4,600-5,250
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 3,450-3,800 3,450-3,850
Moong Auction n.a. 3,900-4,200
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,600-2,800
Wheat Mill quality Auction 1,550-1,690 1,550-1,674
Gram Super Best Bold 7,500-8,000 7,500-8,000
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 6,700-7,000 6,700-7,000
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 5,300-5,400 5,300-5,400
Desi gram Raw 5,500-5,600 5,450-5,550
Gram Yellow 7,100-8,100 7,100-8,100
Gram Kabuli 12,300-13,400 12,300-13,400
Tuar Fataka Best-New 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Tuar Fataka Medium-New 5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New 5,200-5,500 5,200-5,500
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New 4,800-5,100 4,800-5,100
Tuar Gavarani New 3,950-4,050 3,950-4,050
Tuar Karnataka 4,000-4,100 4,000-4,100
Masoor dal best 4,800-5,000 4,800-5,000
Masoor dal medium 4,600-4,700 4,600-4,700
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New) 6,800-7,500 6,800-7,500
Moong Mogar Medium 6,200-6,500 6,200-6,500
Moong dal Chilka 5,500-6,300 5,500-6,300
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 6,500-7,500 6,500-7,500
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,500-8,500 7,500-8,500
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG) 6,800-7,200 6,800-7,200
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG) 4,400-4,900 4,400-4,900
Batri dal (100 INR/KG) 4,500-5,000 4,500-5,000
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg) 2,850-3,050 2,800-3,000
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG) 2,850-3,000 2,800-2,900
Watana White (100 INR/KG) 3,500-3,700 3,500-3,700
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG) 4,100-4,600 4,100-4,600
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,000 1,900-2,000
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG) 1,700-1,800 1,700-1,800
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG) 2,100-2,300 2,100-2,300
Wheat Lokwan new (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,100 1,900-2,100
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG) 2,100-2,350 2,100-2,350
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,050 1,900-2,050
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,600 3,000-3,600
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,200-2,700 2,200-2,700
Rice BPT new (100 INR/KG) 2,700-3,300 2,800-3,400
Rice BPT best (100 INR/KG) 3,300-3,500 3,300-3,500
Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,100 3,000-3,100
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG) 2,500-2,800 2,500-2,800
Rice Swarna new (100 INR/KG) 2,300-2,400 2,300-2,400
Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG) 2,500-2,650 2,500-2,650
Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG) 2,300-2,400 2,300-2,400
Rice HMT New (100 INR/KG) 3,600-4,000 3,600-4,000
Rice HMT best (100 INR/KG) 4,500-5,000 4,500-5,000
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG) 4,100-4,300 4,100-4,300
Rice Shriram New(100 INR/KG) 4,800-5,500 4,800-5,500
Rice Shriram best 100 INR/KG) 6,500-6,800 6,500-6,800
Rice Shriram med (100 INR/KG) 5,800-6,200 5,800-6,200
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG) 10,000-13,500 10,000-13,500
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,000-7,500 5,000-7,500
Rice Chinnor New(100 INR/KG) 4,600-5,000 4,600-5,000
Rice Chinnor best 100 INR/KG) 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Rice Chinnor medium (100 INR/KG) 5,400-5,600 5,400-5,600
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,200 1,900-2,200
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 1,800-1,900 1,800-1,900
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 29.5 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 23.2 degree Celsius
Rainfall : 135 mm
FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with few spells of rains or thunder-showers. Maximum and minimumtemperature would be around and 29 and 23 degree Celsius respectively.
Note: n.a.--not available
(For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices, butincluded in market prices)
http://in.reuters.com/article/nagpur-foodgrain-idINL3N1K93CV
Iran, Vietnam keen to boost agricultural
cooperation
Xinhua| 2017-07-16
16:53:13|Editor: Zhang Dongmiao
Iran, Vietnam keen to boost agricultural
cooperation
Xinhua| 2017-07-16
16:53:13|Editor: Zhang Dongmiao
TEHRAN, July 16 (Xinhua) -- Iran and Vietnam have discussed
boost of cooperation particularly in agriculture sector, Financial Tribune
daily reported on Sunday.
The issue was raised during a meeting between Iranian
Agriculture Minister, Mahmoud Hojjati, and his visiting Vietnamese counterpart,
Nguyen Xuan Cuong, in the capital Tehran on Saturday.
Hojjati said that both countries have considerable potential in
the agriculture and the two nations can benefit from trading agricultural
products and seafood.
He also said that imports from Vietnam can solve Iran's
800,000-ton deficit in rice production while the latter's consumption for rice
stands at 2.2 million tons per year.
"Sturgeon, trout, salmon and other types of fish produced
in Iran are popular among Vietnamese and we are ready to import seafood from
Iran," said the Vietnamese minister.
During Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's visit to Vietnam in
Oct. 2016, both sides pledged to boost bilateral trade with a value of 2
billion U.S. dollars, a significant increase compared to 350 million U.S.
dollars in the previous year.
Iran is also eager to export oil and gas technology to Vietnam
in exchange for health and industry.
Nigeria won’t import rice next
year – IFAD
On: July 15, 2017
The International Fund for Agricultural Development
Programme (IFAD) has expressed optimism that the nation would not import rice
in 2018 as the nation is gradually moving toward self sufficiency in rice
production.The IFAD Country Programme Officer in Nigeria, Dr. Odoemena Ben said
that with the attention been paid by governments at all levels and
international agencies on rice production, the sector has received a boost.
Ben who stated this during the 5th IFAD Supervision Mission
to Niger state said, “Nigeria is heading for self sufficiency of
rice before the end of 2017. I am very sure that if the path of what we are
doing continues, we will be self sufficient in rice production. By next year,
Nigeria will be able to export rice .”
He said that with the investment
made in rice this year, the farmers across the country can produce more than
three million metric tonnes of rice which would be more than enough until the
next rice planting season. The state IFAD Project
Coordinator, Dr. Ahmed Mathew said that over N83 million has been expended for
infrastructures for Rural Farmers in Niger state to provide them with basic
amenities and alleviate their sufferings.He said that the infrastructures were
provided under the Value Chain Development Programme (VCDP) under the programme
adding that the projects will help in increasing the productivity of the
farmers in the state.
He said that Solar Powered
boreholes was set up for N9.5 million, rehabilitation and construction of warehouses gulped N23 million while others
cost N33 million..Ahmed further said that IFAD has helped the farmers in
increasing their income while he stressed on the need for the state government
to pay up its counterpart fund to enable them give the farmers more
infrastructures
http://thenationonlineng.net/nigeria-wont-import-rice-next-year-ifad/
South Asia in urgent call for Thai
rice
17 Jul 2017 at 08:55
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS |
WRITER: PHUSADEE ARUNMAS
"The countries need to refill
their stocks immediately so they are turning to Thailand, although it's been a
long time since they've bought significant quantities of Thai rice," said
Mr Keerati. "Tentatively, they're asking for prompt deliveries, with all
rice being transferred 60 days after the deals are sealed."
Each country is seeking 200,000
tonnes of rice -- mostly parboiled grade and common grade white rice.
The benchmark common grade 5% white
rice was quoted at US$410 (13,870 baht) a tonne, while parboiled 100% grade
white rice was $439 a tonne, said Thai Rice Exporters Association.
Sri Lanka and Bangladesh normally
grow rice for domestic consumption, primarily supplementing their stocks from
neighbouring Pakistan and India when needed.
Sri Lanka imported 280 tonnes of
Thai rice in 2016, while Bangladesh bought 151 tonnes, said the association.
Mr Keerati said the rice deals were
expected to be secured through government-to-government (G-to-G) contracts.
But Thailand's state rice stocks are
running low, as the Commerce Ministry has opened auctions to sell it off in
recent years. There are only a few million tonnes left, down from a record high
of more than 18 million tonnes.
With diminished state stocks, the
G-to-G rice deals could mean private firms delivering the rice, he said.
Traders said Bangladesh is also approaching private Thai exporters to secure
the best price.
"Bangladesh asked for our rice
price quotes, saying it would compare the prices offered by the government and
private firms and choose the cheaper one," said a Bangkok-based rice
trader who requested anonymity.