REAP
demands ‘relief package’ for rice exports
Rice Exporters
Association of Pakistan (REAP) has urged the federal government to announce a
relief package for the rice exports. A delegation of REAP led by Chaudhary
Samiullah Naeem held meetings with federal ministers including Commerce
Minister Muhammad Pervez Malik, Minister Food Security and Research Sikandar
Hayat Khan Bosan and Minister of Defense Eng Khurram Dastgir to discuss various
issues relating rice trade. Rafique Suleman Senior Vice Chairman REAP, Shahzad
Ali Malik, Faizan Ali Ghori, Shah Jahan Malik, Mian Muhsin Aziz, Karim Aziz
Malik and Pir Nazim Hussain were also a part of the delegation.
Suggestions and proposals for betterment of rice trade were also discussed and ministers assured to resolve all the issues being faced by rice exporters. Commerce Minister announced to form a high level committee for increase in rice exports. The committee will meet monthly basis to review the rice exports situation and draw further strategy for higher rice exports.
Chairman REAP informed the ministers that rice exports, the second largest foreign exchange earned sector, is facing several challenges from the last few years due to lower commodity price in the world market. "Rice should be given status of industry as rice is being exported after value addition through a processing procedure", he demanded.
He said that the government has announced Rs 180 billion relief package for the major several exporting sectors, however rice could not be included in this package. "Rice is also facing some issues, therefore, it should be included in already announced relief package or another package should be announced for rice exporters", he demanded.
Chairman REAP said that Iran is one of the largest rice importing country as it imports are over one million ton rice annually. Despite the lifting of US sanctions, banking channel between Pakistan and Iran has not yet restored, of which Pakistan exporters are unable to directly export to Iran, he added.
"We can earn some 300 to 400 million dollar foreign exchange annually for the country by exporting up to 0.4 million tons to Iran", he said. Senior Vice chairman Rafique Suleman said that Indonesia is also an important market for Pakistani exporters, but unfortunately, rice is not included in the Free Trade Agreement items. He urged commerce minister for dialogs with Indonesia to finalize the formalities for export of rice.
He suggested that like India and Thailand, the rice exporting association-REAP should be declared a competent authority for export of rice to Indonesia. Suleman also proposed subsidy on agricultural inputs such as seed, water, diesel, electricity, besides measurers to enhance the per acre yield. "We demand that Rice Research Institute should work on a mage project to minimize the input cost and increase the yield and quality of Pakistani rice, so that cost of paddy will be reduced and exporters can compete in the world market", he added. He also demanded REAP representation on Export Development Board.
Suggestions and proposals for betterment of rice trade were also discussed and ministers assured to resolve all the issues being faced by rice exporters. Commerce Minister announced to form a high level committee for increase in rice exports. The committee will meet monthly basis to review the rice exports situation and draw further strategy for higher rice exports.
Chairman REAP informed the ministers that rice exports, the second largest foreign exchange earned sector, is facing several challenges from the last few years due to lower commodity price in the world market. "Rice should be given status of industry as rice is being exported after value addition through a processing procedure", he demanded.
He said that the government has announced Rs 180 billion relief package for the major several exporting sectors, however rice could not be included in this package. "Rice is also facing some issues, therefore, it should be included in already announced relief package or another package should be announced for rice exporters", he demanded.
Chairman REAP said that Iran is one of the largest rice importing country as it imports are over one million ton rice annually. Despite the lifting of US sanctions, banking channel between Pakistan and Iran has not yet restored, of which Pakistan exporters are unable to directly export to Iran, he added.
"We can earn some 300 to 400 million dollar foreign exchange annually for the country by exporting up to 0.4 million tons to Iran", he said. Senior Vice chairman Rafique Suleman said that Indonesia is also an important market for Pakistani exporters, but unfortunately, rice is not included in the Free Trade Agreement items. He urged commerce minister for dialogs with Indonesia to finalize the formalities for export of rice.
He suggested that like India and Thailand, the rice exporting association-REAP should be declared a competent authority for export of rice to Indonesia. Suleman also proposed subsidy on agricultural inputs such as seed, water, diesel, electricity, besides measurers to enhance the per acre yield. "We demand that Rice Research Institute should work on a mage project to minimize the input cost and increase the yield and quality of Pakistani rice, so that cost of paddy will be reduced and exporters can compete in the world market", he added. He also demanded REAP representation on Export Development Board.
https://fp.brecorder.com/2017/10/20171026229555/
Rice harvest races to finish
before autumn rains
Harvest started with a field of
short-grain rice last month. The earlier-maturing variety is typically one of
the first to be harvested in the Sacramento Valley.
After being held up by late spring rains
that led to a hectic planting schedule, California rice farmers have begun
harvesting what is expected to be a smaller crop.
With an estimated 458,000 acres in
production this year, California rice acreage declined by 78,000 acres from
2016, according to a forecast this month from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Farmers have attributed that drop to the difficult spring weather
that did not allow them to finish on time.
“Everybody in the industry thought we
were going to have a big crop this year,” said Sutter County rice farmer Greg
Van Dyke. “But with the type of weather we had, we just physically couldn’t get
in and plant it.”
He ended up leaving 40 percent of his
normal acreage fallow because it got too late in the season to plant the rest.
The late planting was also expected to
push back the start of harvest, which could put farmers at risk of early fall
rains that could wreak havoc on their crop. Farmers agree the number of
sweltering days this summer helped speed growth of the plants, but there are
also concerns that the high heat could lower yields.
“I don’t think yields are going to be bad
by any means; I just think they’re going to be slightly reduced from last year,
which had very good yields,” Van Dyke said.
A smaller incoming crop could help firm
up prices, he added, noting the depressed rice market in recent years. Also
boosting grower optimism is the prospect of China, the world’s largest
consumer, opening its doors to U.S. rice. A phytosanitary agreement reached by
the U.S. and China in July is expected to be particularly beneficial to
California growers and millers, by raising long-term export sales.
Van Dyke started harvest last week on a
short-grain variety, which has a shorter growing season than the state’s
predominant, medium-grain Calrose variety and is typically one of the first to
come off in the Sacramento Valley.
Colusa County farmer Brian Barrett said
he expects some medium-grain fields will begin cutting sometime next week, with
harvest ramping up in October, on par with typical harvest dates.
“I think (the crop) has caught up a
little bit, but I think it’ll still be about a week behind where we were last
year,” he said.
Advertisement
His family managed to plant all their
ground except for about 100 acres, which were covered by prevented-planting
insurance. The option of the indemnity, Barrett said, allowed farmers to focus
on the fields they were able to plant.
“It was like, let’s do it right and get
the best crop we could,” he said.
With half his acreage in the Yolo Bypass,
which remained flooded late in the season, Yolo County farmer Mike Hall said he
left some 4,800 acres unplanted. He completed harvest on about 2,000 acres of
wild rice—another short-season crop—more than two weeks ago, but he said some
of his later-maturing, medium-grain varieties won’t be harvested until
mid-October.
“When you start to get into October, you
run the risk of late October wind and rain that could knock (the plant) down,”
he said. “We’ve encountered that before, where the yield was cut more than 50
percent when those fields just got wet and knocked down.”
Because many fields were planted during a
two-week window, Barrett said if farmers try to harvest it all in a similar
timeframe, it could “make things hard” for dryers as they face a possible
logjam.
Yuba County farmer Charley Mathews Jr.,
who expects to start harvest sometime this week, said when there’s late
planting, farmers typically scramble on the back end, with multiple varieties
coming off at the same time.
“It’s going to be a rush, but it always
is,” he said. “We all harvest a lot faster than we used to.”
Now that the weather has started to cool
down, he said, it has slowed progress of the crop.
Consecutive days of triple-digit
temperatures this summer may cause some yield losses, Barrett said.
During the heading stage of the rice
plant, temperatures exceeding 104 degrees could dry out the pollen, thwarting
fertilization, which leads to blanking, or empty kernels, said Luis Espino, a
University of California Cooperative Extension farm adviser.
“And this year, I’ve seen some of that,”
he said. “I don’t know how widespread it is. It’s going to depend on when the
panicles were coming out and the temperature at that time. I’ve seen some
fields where you can see can blanking, and I believe it’s because of the high
temperature.”
Blanking more often happens when
temperatures below 55 degrees damage the pollen when it is first formed, making
it unviable, Espino said. But this year, temperatures never dropped that low
during that stage of the plant’s development, raising hopes that there would be
less blanking and higher yields, he said.
Aside from possible heat-related issues,
Espino described the overall growing season as “good,” noting that he didn’t
see any blast in fields and received few reports of it this year. However,
there were more reports of stem rot, a common fungal disease caused by a
pathogen in the soil that he said may be becoming more prevalent.
The pathogen overwinters in rice straw,
and farmers used to manage the disease by burning the straw after harvest.
Because burning has been greatly reduced for many years, Espino said he thinks
the pathogen has accumulated in some fields, leading to an increase in stem-rot
problems. Fungicides, he noted, have not been very effective.
Small infestations of weedy rice, or red
rice, also are showing up in more California fields, Espino said. As of the end
of 2016, it had been confirmed in more than 10,000 acres, according to UCCE.
Because the weed is considered one of the
most damaging for rice and can affect yield and quality significantly, Espino
said farm advisors have been “trying to spread the word and get growers to be
on the lookout for it.”
“We want to make sure that if a grower
finds something that looks suspicious, they let us know,” he said.
http://www.dailydemocrat.com/article/NI/20171025/BUSINESS/171029919 What the
heck is view-through in digital marketing?
If your digital ad campaign generates the
same click-through rates as the average campaign, then more than 99 percent of
people who see your ad won’t click on it. So what’s the point of
advertising online?
Just because someone sees your digital ad
and doesn’t click on it doesn’t mean the ad wasn’t valuable. Understanding that
most digital ads are never clicked but can still result in brand management,
subsequent searches, delayed conversions, and offline sales will help you more
effectively track view-through rates and plan better campaigns.
Three
Values of View-Throughs
Digital display ads that don’t get
clicked can reinforce a brand message, help with a new product launch (e.g.,
get a new name or feature in front of people), remind core customers about you,
and provide other valuable benefits. For example, a manufacturer of tennis
racquets might be introducing a new racquet for advanced-level women. Men might
not click on that ad, but they’ll be aware of the racquet and might later
mention it to their female partners who are looking for a new racquet
specifically designed for competitive female players.
A second value of view-throughs is that,
while they don’t create immediate clicks, they can lead to a potential customer
visiting your site later because of the impression. These delayed
click-throughs, called “view-through visits,” can lead to conversions
(“view-through conversions”). In our tennis example, if a female tennis player
doesn’t click on the ad for the new racquet while she’s on that website page,
she might make a mental note of that information and find her way to the
manufacturer’s site later, when she has more time.
A third benefit of view-throughs is
that they stimulate offline
sales. Again, using our tennis racquet example, a woman sees a
banner ad for a new racquet, doesn’t click on it, but heads over to the racquet
wall the next time she visits her tennis club pro shop. While there’s no way to
track these sales back to view-throughs, knowing they happen makes tracking
view-throughs all the more important to digital advertisers who want to gauge
the overall importance of an ad campaign.
Tracking
Display Ad View-Throughs
In addition to tracking clicks and
conversions, marketers should track both kinds of view-throughs: those that
create an impression only, and those that result in later conversions when a
customer visits your site because of the original viewed ad.
To track deferred click-throughs and
conversions, digital advertisers use embedded code to track user cookies. The
advertiser sets different expiration dates for cookies, depending on what they
believe is a realistic view-through conversion for a campaign. This window is
known as the view-through timeframe or lookback window.
For example, if someone sees an ad,
doesn’t click on it, and navigates to the advertiser’s website within 48 hours
and/or converts, the ad probably was the reason. If the person sees an ad and
comes back two weeks later, it could have been for any number of reasons,
including a print or TV ad. Using a more robust marketing analytics platform
can help you dive even deeper
into your data to track user paths to your door and help you
better determine a campaign’s return on investment (ROI).
Tracking view-throughs will help digital
advertisers determine whether a website that offers higher view-throughs but
lower click-throughs than other sites is a waste of money, or if it’s at least
producing some value, either through brand awareness or delayed conversions. In
this case, a creative department should focus on creating ads that provide
information that makes an impact from just a view, even if the visitor doesn’t
click for more information.
Tracking
Video Ad View-Throughs
Video ads can be more valuable than
display ads, even if they don’t generate a click-through. If they are watched,
they deliver a message. This is the whole purpose of a display ad click-through
— to get the consumer to a landing page to get a message. This doesn’t need to
happen with a video, but the more view-throughs of a video ad, the more benefit
to the advertiser (similar to a click-through).
With online video ads, tracking
impressions can be trickier because many video ads are “skippable,” meaning the
video viewer can skip all or part of the ad instead of watching it. Some ads
require the viewer to watch the first three to five seconds before skipping,
which can provide some benefit to the advertiser if those few seconds contain a
message.
Digital advertisers have the opportunity
to track what percentage of a video a viewer watches, which can help them
create better ads. For example, if people only watch 25 percent of Video A, but
leave after watching at least 50 percent of Video B, that might be an indicator
that Video B has a better ad (if it’s run on the same site as Video A ads), or
that the site Video B is playing on is a better buy (if the videos run on
different sites).
Using a tracking pixel or a program like
Google’s AdWords conversion tracking code (code that’s inserted into a video
ad), marketers can track when an ad viewer comes back to the advertiser’s
website later. Just as with display ads, video ads can be clicked on, providing
tracking for click-through and conversion rates. Digital marketers should look
to determine if the deferred conversions from video ad view-throughs are
similar to those for display ads, or if there is a different view-through
timeframe or lookback window.
Set
Multiple Parameters to Measure Success
Immediate or same-session conversions are
not always an indicator of a digital ad’s success. This is borne out by
the fact that the vast majority of people who see an ad (we’re talking more
than 99 percent) don’t click on it. This means that view-throughs themselves,
which can lead to a variety of advertiser benefits including later conversions,
better brand management and offline sales, must be tracked to determine which
campaigns, which audience segments and targeting provide the best ROI
Agri chief bets on achieving rice
self-sufficiency in 2019
Published 2017-10-26
13:02:55
TED
CORDERO,GMA News
"Our target is 2020, but we could achieve it as early as 2019," Piñol said in an interview after a breakfast forum at Klub Filipino in San Juan City.
"As early as 2019 this country will be rice sufficient," he said.
The Department of Agriculture saw a positive "trend" in average rice production per hectare. "We used to be just 3.9 metric tons per hectare per harvest. We are now 4.38 metric tons per hectare per harvest," Piñol said.
The DA is targeting an average of 6 metric tons per hectare per harvest or about 19 million metric tons of palay per year.
Piñol said the DA is embarking on a hybrid rice-planting program to cover around one million hectares and providing small farmers with "easy access" to loan financing. — VDS, GMA News
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/money/economy/630952/agri-chief-bets-on-achieving-rice-self-sufficiency-in-2019/story/
Vietnam uses remote
sensing to monitor rice production
The use of satellite
earth observation date to monitor rice production in the Red River and Mekong
Deltas was discussed at a workshop in Hanoi on October 25.
Signals collected from
the satellite every six or 12 days can help calculate rice productivity in
Vietnam
The workshop on remote
sensing application in agricultural production in Vietnam was jointly held by
the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and the Swiss Embassy.
Nguyen Quang Dung,
Director of the National Institute of Agricultural Planning and Projection
(NIAPP), said the project on remote sensing application in rice production in
10 provinces of the Red River and Mekong Deltas has been launched since 2012.
The two-phase project
conducted studies using finance from the Swiss Agency for Development and
Cooperation and other international partners, he said.
Dung said rice
production in Vietnam has been monitored from the Sentinel satellite of the
European Space Agency, with the algorithm and model developed by Sarmap Company
of Switzerland and the International Rice Research Institute.
Signals collected from
the satellite every six or 12 days can help calculate rice productivity in
Vietnam.
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Pham
Quang Ha, from the NIAPP, said losses caused by natural disasters can be
evaluated by remote sensing technology, thus assisting insurance activities to
ease risks facing farmers.-VNA
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/society/189091/vietnam-uses-remote-sensing-to-monitor-rice-production.html
BANGLADESH APPROVES PURCHASE OF RICE
FROM THAILAND AT $465/T
10/26/2017
DHAKA,
Oct 26 (Reuters) - Bangladesh has approved the
purchase of 150,000 tonnes of parboiled rice from Thailand at
$465 a tonne, officials said on Thursday, as the government
races to secure supplies amid depleted reserves and high
domestic prices of the staple grain.
purchase of 150,000 tonnes of parboiled rice from Thailand at
$465 a tonne, officials said on Thursday, as the government
races to secure supplies amid depleted reserves and high
domestic prices of the staple grain.
Traditionally
the world's fourth-biggest rice producer,
Bangladesh has emerged as a major importer of the grain, with
imports set to hit their highest levels in a decade after floods
damaged its crops.
Bangladesh has emerged as a major importer of the grain, with
imports set to hit their highest levels in a decade after floods
damaged its crops.
(Reporting
by Ruma Paul; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
http://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/bangladesh-approves-purchase-of-rice-from-thailand-at-465t
ecord harvest of rice gathered in Kazakhstan’s
Kyzylorda region
26
October 2017 17:18 (UTC+04:00)
·
·
·
·
·
Baku,
Azerbaijan, Oct. 26
By Nigar
Guliyeva – Trend:
In
Kazakhstan’s Kyzylorda region, there has been a growth tendency in the export
of agricultural products and volume of gross output since early 2017, said the
region’s head Krimbek Kusherbayev.
He was
addressing a regional government meeting dedicated to the results of
socio-economic development in January-September 2017.
According
to preliminary data, a record harvest of rice was once again reaped in the
region – more than 500,000 tons, average yield of 55.3 centners per hectare.
In
January-September 2017, the region’s industrial enterprises manufactured
products worth 547.9 billion tenge. Meanwhile, due to the increase in the
production of light, chemical industry and refined products, the growth of
production by 6.2 percent was ensured in the processing industry (products
worth 78.2 billion tenge were produced).
(333.40
KZT = 1$ on Oct. 26)
https://en.trend.az/casia/2812818.html Paddy production crosses target
October 26, 2017
SHARE
:
Our Staff Reporter
LAHORE:
Paddy yield across the country has increased by 7.2pc against the govt
target
for year 2017-18. The govt had fixed rice production target at 6.8 million tons
but the yield crossed 7.3m tons. In Punjab, paddy was sown on 1.8m acres and
production target was set 3.5m tons but the production crossed 3.7 million
tons. In Sindh, paddy was sown over 822,000 acres and its yield crossed 2.8
million tons against the target of 2.6 million tons. Rice production crossed
159,000 tons in KP against the target of 144,000 tons but the production
decreased by 3pc in Balochistan.–Staff Reporter
http://nation.com.pk/26-Oct-2017/paddy-production-crosses-target
Rice worth US$ 320.242mn exported in
first quarter
26.10.2017
Rice
exports from the country during first three months of current financial year
grew by 31.91 percent as compared the exports of the corresponding period of
last year.
During the period from July-September, 2017-18 around 621,094 metric tons rice exported as compared the exports of 482,445 metric tons of the same period last year, according the data of Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
During the period under review, rice worth US$ 320.242 million exported as compared the exports of US$ 242.694 million of same period last year.
Meanwhile, exports of “Basmati” rice grew by 2.43 percent and reached at 86,672 tons valuing of US$ 90.31 million in last three months as against 92,321 metric tons worth US$ 88.772 million tons of same period last year, it added.
In first quarter of current financial year, about 534,442 metric tons of rice other then basmati worth US$ 299.321 million exported as against the exports of 390,124 metric tons valuing US$ 153,922 million of same period last year,
During the period under review, seafood exports from the country registered an increase of 17.64 percent as about 28,488 metric tons of fish and fish products valuing US$ 75.370 million exported as compared the exports of 21,959 metric tons worth of US$ 64.06 million of same period last year.
However, the exports of fruit, vegetable reduced by 24.37 percent and 0.99 percent respectively during the period under review, where as no quantity of pulses exported in first quarter of current financial year, the data reveled.
It may be recalled that food group exports from the country during first quarter of current financial year increased by 17.52 percent as compared the exports of the corresponding period of last year.
Food commodities worth US$ 742.391 million were exported during the period from July-September, 2017-18 as compared the exports US$ 631.731 million of same period of last year.
Wheat exports grew by 100 percent and about 1088 metric tons of wheat valuing US$ 344,000 exported, where as 91,916 metric tons of sugar worth of US$ 41.99 million exported which was also up by 100 percent as compared the exports of same period last year, it added.
During the period under review, all other food commodities worth US$ 140.299 million exported as against the exports of US$ 132.216 million of same period last year, hence showing an increase of 16.11 percent.
During the period from July-September, 2017-18 around 621,094 metric tons rice exported as compared the exports of 482,445 metric tons of the same period last year, according the data of Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
During the period under review, rice worth US$ 320.242 million exported as compared the exports of US$ 242.694 million of same period last year.
Meanwhile, exports of “Basmati” rice grew by 2.43 percent and reached at 86,672 tons valuing of US$ 90.31 million in last three months as against 92,321 metric tons worth US$ 88.772 million tons of same period last year, it added.
In first quarter of current financial year, about 534,442 metric tons of rice other then basmati worth US$ 299.321 million exported as against the exports of 390,124 metric tons valuing US$ 153,922 million of same period last year,
During the period under review, seafood exports from the country registered an increase of 17.64 percent as about 28,488 metric tons of fish and fish products valuing US$ 75.370 million exported as compared the exports of 21,959 metric tons worth of US$ 64.06 million of same period last year.
However, the exports of fruit, vegetable reduced by 24.37 percent and 0.99 percent respectively during the period under review, where as no quantity of pulses exported in first quarter of current financial year, the data reveled.
It may be recalled that food group exports from the country during first quarter of current financial year increased by 17.52 percent as compared the exports of the corresponding period of last year.
Food commodities worth US$ 742.391 million were exported during the period from July-September, 2017-18 as compared the exports US$ 631.731 million of same period of last year.
Wheat exports grew by 100 percent and about 1088 metric tons of wheat valuing US$ 344,000 exported, where as 91,916 metric tons of sugar worth of US$ 41.99 million exported which was also up by 100 percent as compared the exports of same period last year, it added.
During the period under review, all other food commodities worth US$ 140.299 million exported as against the exports of US$ 132.216 million of same period last year, hence showing an increase of 16.11 percent.
http://www.blackseagrain.net/novosti/rice-worth-us-320-242mn-exported-in-first-quarter
OCTOBER 26,
2017 / 5:47 PM / UPDATED 21 HOURS AGO
Rice prices in India dip on rising
supply; Thailand eyes Sri Lankan demand
3 MIN READ
·
·
BENGALURU (Reuters) - Rice prices in India
slipped this week on expectations of a rise in supplies from the new season
crop, while rates for the staple grain edged higher in Thailand as traders were
optimistic about the possibility of demand from Sri Lanka.
Farmers winnow paddy crops at a field in Gudem Kotha Veedhi
village in Andhra Pradesh January 20, 2015. REUTERS/R Narendra/Files
Thailand’s benchmark 5-percent broken rice was
quoted at $375-$388 a tonne, free-on-board (FOB) Bangkok, up from $375-$385
last week.
“There looks to be demand from Sri Lanka,
which we’re optimistic will translate into more demand for Thai rice,” said a
Bangkok-based rice trader.
The government of Sri Lanka has issued a tender
to buy 200,000 tonnes of rice as recent floods in the country have destroyed
crops.
In Thailand, however, heavy rain have not hurt
crops and all of the rice has already been harvested. But, the rains have
caused difficulties for shipments to be collected and delivered, which has had
a negative impact on exports, traders said.
“Due to heavy rains, a lot of ships from
abroad coming in to get rice have had to push their schedule back. From
November onwards when the rains subside, exports will hopefully be more
active,” said a Bangkok-based trader.
India’s 5 percent broken parboiled rice prices
edged down by $2 per tonne to $402 to $405 per tonne
this week.
“New season supply will be available in the
next few weeks. Exports will also pick up with supply,” said B V Krishna Rao,
managing director of leading exporter Pattabhi Agro Foods Pvt.
“Demand is expected to be robust from Sri
Lanka and Bangladesh in the next few months,” he added.
Bangladesh, which has emerged as a major
importer this year after floods damaged its crops, has approved the purchase of
100,000 tonnes of parboiled rice from India in a government-to-government deal
at $455 a tonne, including CIF and discharge costs.
It has also approved a purchase of 150,000
tonnes of parboiled rice from Thailand at $465 a tonne.
The country’s major summer rice output in 2017
fell about 5 percent from a year earlier to 18 million tonnes, the lowest in
seven years, according to a preliminary estimate of the Bangladesh Bureau of
Statistics.
Meanwhile, in Vietnam, high prices prevailed
as rice stocks were running dry, traders said. Benchmark 5-percent broken rice
rates rose to $395-405 per tonne, FOB Saigon, from $390-400 last week.
“Supply is very low. We are running out of
stock, so rice prices will stay high,” a trader in Ho Chi Minh City said,
adding trade was dull as Vietnam’s prices are not appealing to foreign rice
importers.
“I think prices will have to fall, otherwise
no one would buy from us,” another trader said.
Traders said new supply would not be available
until the completion of minor autumn-winter crop harvest in November.
Rice growing areas in southern regions have
shrunk due to flooding, but productivity is expected to rise 3.2 percent from a
year earlier, an agriculture ministry report said on Thursday.
Reporting by Mi Nguyen in
Hanoi, Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka and Suphanida Thakral in
Bangkok; editing by David Evans
http://in.reuters.com/article/asia-rice/rice-prices-in-india-dip-on-rising-supply-thailand-eyes-sri-lankan-demand-idINKBN1CV1Y5
FOOD
Rice,
in a Starring Role
Photo
CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times
I’m always in the mood for rice.
Any kind will do: Carolina rice, boiled and buttered; steamed jasmine rice;
basmati rice in any guise; nutty brown, red or black rice; short-grained sticky
rice. You can tempt me with a plate of Louisiana dirty rice, risotto, paella or
biryani. I’ll travel miles for fried rice, congee or coconut rice pudding.
There are times when a simple pot
of freshly cooked rice is the perfect accompaniment to a meal. On other
occasions, a rice dish can be the main event. Pilaf (it goes by other names,
like pilav, plov and pulao) falls into this category. Pilaf usually involves
simmering rice with onions, aromatics and broth to amplify flavor and
nutrients.
Some types of pilaf are meant to
escort a main course. They can be unadorned, or may have small additions of
tomato, or a handful of orzo.
In the cuisines of the Middle
East, from Turkey to Afghanistan (and beyond to India and western China)
pilaf-style rice and meat dishes are traditional and popular, especially for
festive occasions. Usually, they’re made from steamed long-grain rice studded
with spices, meat or chicken.
Photo
CreditKarsten
Moran for The New York Times
A pilaf I tasted in Istanbul
inspired this particular one-pot meal. Essentially a fragrant lamb stew
combined with basmati rice, it is not at all difficult to prepare. Though many
pilafs are made entirely on the stovetop, my version is baked instead, once the
lamb is nicely browned. Using the oven provides more-even heat for cooking the
rice, and frees up your stovetop for other dishes.
The best cuts to use are lamb
shoulder and neck, both of which are succulent and juicy when cooked; leaner
leg meat is apt to turn dry. Browning the meat and onions very well is
important for building the flavor of the dish. Once this initial work is out of
the way, all the dish requires from you is an (unattended) hour in the oven.
Advertisement
Cinnamon, mace, allspice, cumin
and coriander perfume the mixture. Golden raisins add sweetness, while
chickpeas contribute a welcome flavor and texture, as well as additional
protein. I prefer to cook my own chickpeas, and use their cooking liquid to
moisten the rice. If you use canned, rinse them and use chicken broth instead.
With a topping of buttery walnuts,
fresh mint leaves and tart pomegranate seeds, this is a nuanced, harmonious,
festive pilaf. Served with a dollop of thick yogurt, it makes a fine family
dinner, but is special enough for company, too
October 26, 2017
|
Cooks Rule at Annual
Rice Festival
By Kane Webb
CROWLEY, LA -- The 81st Annual International Rice Festival was
held this past weekend here in the "Rice Capital of America."
A celebration of all things rice, the festival is Louisiana's oldest
agricultural festival, and also one of the largest - since its beginning in
1937, more than seven million people have attended the annual event.
The celebration showcases the importance of rice as a food and emphasizes its place in the world economic picture. The festival also hosts a Rice Creole and Cookery Contest, and this year more than 100 entries, some from as far away as Arkansas, competed in four divisions: Children, Intermediate, Teen, and Adult. Dishes submitted by contestants must contain at least one cup of cooked rice to qualify in one of four categories: Rice and Meats, Rice and Seafood, Rice Salad/Vegetable, and Rice Desserts. First place dishes in the Teen and Adult divisions compete for the coveted "Chef de Riz" title, and the honor of becoming an official representative of the International Rice Festival. Selection of the grand prize winner is based on taste, originality, and eye appeal, plus an interview with judges where contestants are quizzed on their knowledge of rice and the U.S. rice industry.
|
New science suggests the ocean could rise more — and faster
— than we thought
In this Sept. 10, 2017, photo, waves crash over a seawall at the
mouth of the Miami River from Biscayne Bay, Fla., as Hurricane Irma passes by
in Miami.
(Wilfredo
Lee / AP)
Climate change could lead to sea
level rises that are larger, and happen more rapidly, than previously thought,
according to a trio of new studies that reflect mounting concerns about the
stability of polar ice.
In one
case, the research suggests that previous high end
projections for sea level rise by the year 2100 — a little
over three feet — could be too low, substituting numbers as high as six
feet at the extreme if the world continues to burn large volumes of fossil
fuels throughout the century.
"We
have the potential to have much more sea level rise under high emissions
scenarios," said Alexander Nauels, a researcher at the University of
Melbourne in Australia who led one of the three studies. His work, co-authored
with researchers at institutions in Austria, Switzerland and Germany, was published Thursday in
Environmental Research Letters.
The
results comprise both novel scientific observations - based on high resolution
seafloor imaging techniques that give a new window on past sea level
events — and new modeling techniques based on a better understanding of
Antarctic ice.
The
observational results, from Texas and Antarctica, examine a similar time period
- the close of the last Ice Age a little over 10,000 years ago, when seas are
believed to have risen very rapidly at times, as northern hemisphere ice sheets
collapsed.
Off the
Texas coast, this would have inundated ancient coral reefs. Usually, these
reefs can grow upward to keep pace with sea level rise, but there's a
limit — one observed by a team of scientists aboard a vessel called the
Falcor in 200 foot deep waters off the coast of Corpus Christi.
These
so-called drowned reefs showed features that the researchers called
"terraces," an indicator of how the corals would have tried to
respond to fast rising sea levels. Because the organisms must maintain access
to a certain amount of sunlight, they would have tried to grow higher to keep
up with fast rising seas — but they wouldn't have been able to do so over
a very large area. And so their growth became concentrated in progressively
smaller, stepped regions.
"The
reef under stress often has a tendency to kind of shrink to this higher
elevated area," said André Droxler, one of the authors of the study in
Nature Communications and a researcher at Rice University.
"It creates this pyramid-like system." (Droxler completed the
research with colleagues from Rice and Texas A&M University,
Corpus Christi.)
The
youngest drowned corals date to the end of the last ice age, around 11,500
years ago — corresponding to what scientists believe were large warming
events in the northern hemisphere and so-called meltwater pulses from now
melted ice sheets. And multiple drowned reefs off Texas show a similar
pattern — and terminate in similar water depths.
"Over
120 kilometers, the reefs behaved the same way. It's difficult to find any
other reason why they would do this," Droxler said.
Droxler
thinks the reef structures suggest eras when sea level was rising by tens of
millimeters annually, far beyond the current, roughly 3 millimeters per year.
(A 50 millimeter annual sea level rise would produce a meter, or over 3 feet,
of rise every 20 years.) The new study therefore concludes that during the last
ice age, there were multiple bursts of fast sea level rise - and implies that
our future could hold something similar.
"The
steady and gradual sea-level rise, observed over the past two centuries [may]
not be a complete characterization of how sea level would rise in the
future," the study concludes.
Meanwhile,
far away in the Southern hemisphere, a team of scientists used a very similar
seafloor mapping technology to detect ancient iceberg "plough marks"
etched deep into the seafloor of Pine Island Bay, an ocean body that currently
sits in front of one of West Antarctica's most worrying glaciers, Pine Island.
The results were published in the journal Nature on Wednesday by researchers at
the University of Cambridge, the British Antarctic Survey, and the Bolin Center
for Climate Research in Stockholm.
The
seafloor grooves, the researchers believe, were made during a similar era to
the Texas coral steppes (the close of the last ice age), and signal a very
rapid retreat of Pine Island over roughly a thousand years.
What's
critical about the markings, explains lead study author Matthew Wise of the
University of Cambridge, is their maximum depth — 848 meters, or around
2,800 feet. Because ice floats with 10 percent of its mass above the surface
and the remaining 90 percent below it, this suggests that when the ice broke
from the glacier, close to 100 meters (over 3oo feet) of it was extending above
the water surface.
That's a
key number, because scientists are converging on the belief that ice cliffs of
about this height above the water level are no longer sustainable and collapse
under their own weight — meaning that when you get a glacier this tall up
against the ocean, it tends to crumble and crumble, leading to fast retreat and
potentially fast sea level rise.
"If
we think about how thick these icebergs would have needed to be considering
these float with 90 percent of their mass and thickness beneath the sea,"
Wise said, "we think of an ice cliff that was at the maximum thickness
implied by the physics of the ice."
The
problem is that if it happened then, well, it could happen again. Both Pine
Island glacier and its next door neighbor, Thwaites, are known to get thicker
as one travels inland away from the sea, which means they are capable of once
again generating ice cliffs taller than the critical size detected by the
current study.
"If a
cliff even higher than the ~100 m subaerial/900 m submarine cliffs were to
form, as might occur with retreat of Thwaites Glacier in West Antarctica, it
might break repeatedly with much shorter pauses than now observed, causing very
fast grounding line retreat and sea level rise," explained Richard Alley,
a glaciologist at Penn State University, by email after reviewing the current
study for the Post.
The final study,
released Thursday morning in Environmental Research Letters, takes a different
approach but provides perhaps the most sweeping verdict.
The study used five "shared
socioeconomic pathways" that analyze possible futures for global society
and its energy system, and resulting climate change, over the course of this
century. These scenarios will feed into the next report of the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the most influential scientific body
that assesses climate change, according to the University of Melbourne's
Alexander Nauels, the lead author of the current study
The
research combined these scenarios with tools to project future sea level rise
in light of recent science suggesting that Antarctic ice in key regions could
collapse relatively rapidly. That includes possible fast retreat at Pine Island
and Thwaites glaciers due, in part, to the problem of ice cliff instability.
The result
was that in one scenario assuming high fossil fuel use and strong economic
growth during the century, the study predicted that seas could rise by as much
as 4.33 feet on average — with a high end possibility of as much as 6.2
feet — by 2100. That includes possibly rapid sea level rise as high as 19
millimeters per year by the end of the century. These numbers are considerably
higher than high end projections released in 2013 by the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change.
(It is
important to emphasize that the highest sea level numbers presented in the new
study would result from human choices to pursue large fossil fuel exploitation
and economic growth with little attempt to slow climate change. It is far from
clear that this is the path the world will actually take.)
On the
other hand, if the world limits global warming to the Paris climate agreement
emissions target, the study finds that sea level rise might be held as low as
1.7 feet by 2100, on average.
When the
IPCC undertakes a similar analysis, Nauels said, it could produce results like
these. "I think the numbers will go up," he said of the body's
report, which is expected in 2021.
So in
sum — new research is affirming that seas have risen quite rapidly in the
planet's past, and that major glaciers have retreated quickly because their
enormous size makes them potentially unstable. Meanwhile, additional modeling
projects these kinds of observations forward and suggests that the century in
which we are now living could — could — see similar changes, at least in
more severe global warming scenarios in which the world continues to burn high
volumes of fossil fuels.
But unlike
those submerged corals off the coast of Texas, the difference is that we know
this could be coming — which gives us a chance to stop it.
Nigeria
saves N216bn from rice importation – BOA
Posted
By: On: October
27, 2017 In: News Update
Nigeria has saved over N216 billion from the importation of rice
alone from Thailand and other countries since the nation’s domestic mass
production flooded the markets under the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP).
Prince Niyi Akenzua, the Executive Director, Risk Management and
Finance, Bank of Agriculture (BOA) disclosed on Thursday in Ibadan when he
visited Gov. Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State.
The News Agency of Nigeria(NAN) reports that Akenzua had led
some other officials of the bank on the visit to the state.
He said that the figure represented a fraction of a staggering
$22 billion (N7.92trillion) spent on importation of foods into the country
annually prior to the advent of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.
Akenzua said it was worthy of
commendation that the country had committed itself to diversifying from oil
economy, with emphasis on revitalisation of agriculture.
He said he had embarked on advocacy
visit around the country to enlist the support and involvement of state
governments in ABP, which freed the country from reliance on importation of
rice.
“We enjoin Oyo State to participate in
the ABP as we have remodelled the programme to expand the scope of
beneficiaries.
“The pilot scheme was so successful that
$600m was saved from rice importation due to massive rice production in the
country.
“One or two rice millers in Thailand
have closed down because Nigeria, which has always been their major importer,
has stopped importing their rice.
“We used to spend $22 billion importing
food into Nigeria and with our consciousness that every square meter in the
country is arable land.
“We felt that it was not sustainable. Of
course, the crash in crude oil price has forced us back to agriculture,’’ he
said.
Akenzua said that the state could choose
a particular crop to produce under the programme, with a promise to co-fund or
fund the production of such crop.
Ajimobi in his remarks commended the
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh for the
positive changes he had brought into the agriculture sector since he assumed
duties at the ministry.
The governor stated that the fundamental
problem besetting the country was attitudinal, stressing that the country was
not bereft of knowledge, policies and programmes capable of enhancing its
economy.
Ajimobi said that the state was supposed
to be the food basket of the nation if past leaders had seen agriculture as a
major solution to unemployment, hunger and economic driver.
According to him, the state is in good
stead to be a major agric hub, judging by the concentration of reputable
research institutions in the state and its vast arable land.
“The state is also strategically located
between Lagos, the commercial nerve centre of the country and the North among
other comparative advantages.”
He advised the new management of BOA to
do all that is humanly possible to sustain the momentum in its renewed drive to
revitalise the agriculture sector.
“You need to change the attitude of our
people so they will know that there is money in agriculture.
“We are in this sorry state today
because of bureaucracy and lack of sustenance of past agric policies. What has
happened to Operation Feed the Nation?
“Don’t just talk the talk, walk the
talk. In the past, some people will just give loans to themselves, which they
knew they would not recover and this had crippled the bank.”
The governor stated that the state was
ready to take advantage of all opportunities available in agriculture to
promote the standard of living of its people.
The governor promised to lead by example
by also venturing into commercial agriculture, urging the BOA team to advise
him on how he could go about obtaining a loan for the purpose.
o CATTLE
o DAIRY
o CROPPING
o WINE
o ON FARM
o FOTY
o FARM MAG
o PHOTOS
In the black: Rice
importers Marcus Brown and Jarrod Milani, and (below) the black rice.
Forbidden Foods
opens up healthy market for black rice from China
PETER
HEMPHILL, The Weekly Times
October
26, 2017 6:00pm
TWO of
Australia’s youngest health food entrepreneurs believe farmers could benefit
from burgeoning black rice sales if local varieties can be bred for domestic
production.
Marcus
Brown and Jarrod Milani, both in their late 20s, have built a flourishing
business importing organic black rice from northeast China to Australia for
sale in the health food sector under their Forbidden Foods brand.
Black
rice is an ancient grain grown in China, with healthy attributes such as
several antioxidants not found in brown rice that show potential for fighting
heart disease and cancer.
Mr
Brown said black rice was just as healthy, if not more so, than quinoa.
Forbidden
Foods’ black rice sales have doubled every year for four years, selling through
1600 retail outlets.
The black rice.
It
imports a few hundred tonnes of the grain each month for processing and
packaging.
After
originally importing packaged product from Asia, the pair have now brought all
stages of the production chain to Australia except one — growing the rice.
That is
carried out overseas but Mr Brown believes it, too, could eventually be brought
to Australia.
“Maybe
the CSIRO could develop a local variety for growing here,” he said.
“It’s
really going to take someone to really drive it.
“And
you are going to have the major volumes there to start the R and D (research
and development) and also start getting the right farmers willing to help
develop those genetics.”
Rice
Rural Development Committee chairman Ian Mason said there were thousands of
different rice varieties, of which black rice was just one of several coloured
rice types.
“We are
always looking at varieties like coloured rice,” he said.
“The
breeders will have a look at it, the marketing team will have a look at it and
they will assess where it sits in terms of its importance and prioritise that,
along with all the other work we have to do.”
Mr
Mason said the breeding process for a rice variety took about eight years on
average.
Forbidden
Foods imported its first consignment in 2012.
“Our
first container was bought with a credit card,” Mr Brown said. “Over time we
have got capital from a bank.
“And
now we have capital from four investors who have farms in Serpentine and the
Western District.”
Six
months after Forbidden Foods imported its first shipment, NSW monopoly rice
processor SunRice began importing packs of black rice from Thailand.
Mr
Brown said the black rice from China was a natural grain, while the Thai
product was a hybrid developed from crossing with jasmine rice.
He said
Forbidden Foods’ black rice was certified as organic.
“We
have seen a big uptake in people seeking higher quality and organic products,”
Mr Brown said.
The
company now produces a black rice flour that is sold into the gluten-free
market.
It is
also using chefs to help develop products for the convenience meal market.
http://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/agribusiness/forbidden-foods-opens-up-healthy-market-for-black-rice-from-china/news-story/7850cd18bb5715678af7b53034060b5b
+1
Samuel Awoyinfa,
Abeokuta
A former President,
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, on Thursday flayed former President Shehu Shagari for
scuttling the efforts the nation was making to be self-sufficient in rice
production.
Obasanjo spoke as
the chief launcher at the unveiling of Okun Rice at the Olusegun Obasanjo
Presidential Library, Abeokuta, Ogun State.
Okun Rice is
produced by Hyst Global Business Limited, owned by Mr. Biodun Onalaja.
Obasanjo,
who noted that Nigeria was almost achieving self sufficiency in rice production
in 1979 before he quit as the military Head of State, said due to policy
inconsistency, the Shagari administration later set up a committee on
importation of rice.
He
said this shift in policy focus from his own agricultural revolution, served as
a disincentive to rice farmers who had to compete with government-backed rice
importers.
Obasanjo,
however, commended Onalaja for rekindling the hope of the country at
achieving self-sufficiency in rice production and ensuring food security for
the nation.
He
said, “One of our problems in this country is inconsistency in policy. In 1979,
we were getting to a place where we would be self-sufficient in rice
production, but then a new administration came and set up a presidential
committee on rice importation instead of a presidential committee on
exportation of rice.
“In
no time, when the imported rice started a arriving, those farmers who were
cultivating rice gave up.
“Today,
I commend Hyst Global Business Limited and the Chairman, Mr. Biodun
Onalaja, for his doggedness, persistence, and stubbornness. It is not easy to
succeed here as a farmer. But I want to say Onalaja is a success story, because
despite the odds he never gave up.”
Obasanjo
said if the nation had just 100 Onalajas, the country would not only be self
sufficient in rice production but would have become an exporter of rice.
The
former President appealed to commercial banks to offer soft loans to farmers at
a single digit interest rate, arguing that no farmer could break even on two
digits interest rate.
In
his remark, Onalaja said the company, currently located at Ejiba, in Kogi
State, engages in rice farming on 1,000 hectares of land, in the precinct of
the Lower Niger River Basin.
He
said the company started its operation at Ejiba in 2014, after its efforts to
start rice farming at Taraba State ran into a hitch.
Onalaja,
who commended Obasanjo, said his (Obasanjo’s) administration’s policy on
agriculture and assistance helped the company to find its footing in rice
production.
He
said, “The rice project was made possible by the assistance given by the chief
launcher of today, who is a former President, Federal Republic of Nigeria,
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo.
“While
in office, he had food self-sufficiency for the nation as one of his goals. He
assisted us to set up the company while also blazing the trail for people like
us as farmers. Here is a person who not only talks agriculture, but also walks
the talk of a farmer and agro entrepreneur.”
Onalaja
also commended the current administration on the priority given to agriculture,
and noted the assistance of the Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, in
getting a 20-tonne integrated rice mill for the company at a subsidised rate.
He,
however, disclosed that the company’s five-year lease on the rice plantation at
Ejiba would lapse in November and pleaded with the state and federal
governments to renew it, in order to sustain food self-sufficiency for the
nation and employment opportunities for the youth.
Onalaja,
who said the company had trained many youths and women in rice production and
offered to do more, added that the Okun Rice, “is available in different sizes
of 1kg, 5kg, 10kg, 25kg and 50kg bags.”
The
Ogun State Governor, Ibikunle Amosun, also commended Onalaja for his
company’s efforts at making the nation self-sufficient in rice production.
Amosun,
who was represented by the state Commissioner for Commerce and
Industry, Bimbo Ashiru, noted that through rice production, “he is helping to
industrialise the nation.”
He,
however, appealed to him to invest in his home state, Ogun.
Highlight
of the event was an informative documentary on the rice plantation at Ejiba.
Among
the dignitaries at the event were the Ebumawe of Ago Iwoye, Oba Razak Adenugba;
a former Vice-Chancellor, Tai Solarin University of Education, Ijagun, Prof.
Segun Awonusi; the Managing Director, Punch Nigeria Limited, Mr. Demola
Osinubi; and other royal fathers from Ogun and Kogi states.
Copyright
PUNCH.
All rights reserved. This material, and other
digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written
permission from PUNCH.
Contact: theeditor@punchng.com
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Bangladesh
to import 150,000 tons parboiled rice from Thailand
·
Published at 02:32 PM
October 26, 2017
File photo: A Bangladesh rice vendor waits for customers at a
market in Dhaka |
150,000 tons will be imported from Thailand and rest will be supplied
by local traders
- 56
- 56SHARES
The government has decided to import 150,000 tons of parboiled
rice from Thailand, and procure another 100,000 tons from local traders at a
total cost of Tk1017.14cr to boost domestic food grain reserves.
The Cabinet Committee on Public Purchase approved two Food
Ministry proposals on the purchases on Wednesday, at a meeting chaired by
Finance Minister AMA Muhith.
After the meeting, Additional Secretary of Cabinet Division
Mostafizur Rahman said: “A total of 150,000 tons of rice will be imported from
Thailand at a cost of Tk578.92 crore.
“The remaining 100,000 tons will be supplied at a cost of
Tk438.22 crore by local traders, who import rice from India, Thailand, Pakistan
and Vietnam.
He added that traders Rabiul Islam and Mahmmand Aynul Haque
would deliver the rice to 38 warehouses across the country.
Bangladesh is the fourth biggest producer of rice. It moved to
import rice to replenish its depleted stocks and cool local market, after flash
floods cut domestic production and pushed up rice prices in local market
earlier this year.
The government slashed taxes on rice imports to 2% from 28% to
replenish supplies and cool the soaring prices.
According to the Food Ministry proposals, the negotiations between
Bangladesh and Thailand ended successfully with the Thai government agreeing to
sell rice at $465 per ton.
Thailand had initially asked for $516 per ton under a government
to government deal.
The Prime Minister’s Office had directed the Food Ministry to
import 1.15 million tons of rice under G2G agreement and also through
international and domestic tenders within the next month.
Last week, the Cabinet Committee on Public Purchase approved
another proposal of the ministry to purchase 100,000 tons of rice from India at
Tk377.65 crore, with each ton costing $455 (Tk37, 487).
The rice will be imported under a G2G agreeent.
As of October 18, Bangladesh had a reserve of 499,000 tons of
food grains, including 396,000 tons of rice
http://www.dhakatribune.com/business/2017/10/26/bangladesh-import-150000-tons-parboiled-rice-thailand/
Van
Dyke started harvest last week on a short-grain variety, which has a shorter
growing season than the state’s predominant, medium-grain Calrose variety and
is typically one of the first to come off in the Sacramento Valley.
Colusa
County farmer Brian Barrett said he expects some medium-grain fields will begin
cutting sometime next week, with harvest ramping up in October, on par with
typical harvest dates.
“I
think (the crop) has caught up a little bit, but I think it’ll still be about a
week behind where we were last year,” he said.
Advertisement
His
family managed to plant all their ground except for about 100 acres, which were
covered by prevented-planting insurance. The option of the indemnity, Barrett
said, allowed farmers to focus on the fields they were able to plant.
“It was
like, let’s do it right and get the best crop we could,” he said.
With
half his acreage in the Yolo Bypass, which remained flooded late in the season,
Yolo County farmer Mike Hall said he left some 4,800 acres unplanted. He
completed harvest on about 2,000 acres of wild rice—another short-season
crop—more than two weeks ago, but he said some of his later-maturing,
medium-grain varieties won’t be harvested until mid-October.
“When
you start to get into October, you run the risk of late October wind and rain
that could knock (the plant) down,” he said. “We’ve encountered that before,
where the yield was cut more than 50 percent when those fields just got wet and
knocked down.”
Because
many fields were planted during a two-week window, Barrett said if farmers try
to harvest it all in a similar timeframe, it could “make things hard” for
dryers as they face a possible logjam.
Yuba
County farmer Charley Mathews Jr., who expects to start harvest sometime this
week, said when there’s late planting, farmers typically scramble on the back
end, with multiple varieties coming off at the same time.
“It’s
going to be a rush, but it always is,” he said. “We all harvest a lot faster
than we used to.”
Now
that the weather has started to cool down, he said, it has slowed progress of
the crop.
Consecutive
days of triple-digit temperatures this summer may cause some yield losses,
Barrett said.
During
the heading stage of the rice plant, temperatures exceeding 104 degrees could
dry out the pollen, thwarting fertilization, which leads to blanking, or empty
kernels, said Luis Espino, a University of California Cooperative Extension
farm adviser.
“And
this year, I’ve seen some of that,” he said. “I don’t know how widespread it
is. It’s going to depend on when the panicles were coming out and the
temperature at that time. I’ve seen some fields where you can see can blanking,
and I believe it’s because of the high temperature.”
Blanking
more often happens when temperatures below 55 degrees damage the pollen when it
is first formed, making it unviable, Espino said. But this year, temperatures
never dropped that low during that stage of the plant’s development, raising
hopes that there would be less blanking and higher yields, he said. http://www.dailydemocrat.com/business/20171025/rice-harvest-races-to-finish-before-autumn-rains
Aside
from possible heat-related issues, Espino described the overall growing season
as “good,” noting that he didn’t see any blast in fields and received few
reports of it this year. However, there were more reports of stem rot, a common
fungal disease caused by a pathogen in the soil that he said may be becoming
more prevalent.
The
pathogen overwinters in rice straw, and farmers used to manage the disease by
burning the straw after harvest. Because burning has been greatly reduced for
many years, Espino said he thinks the pathogen has accumulated in some fields,
leading to an increase in stem-rot problems. Fungicides, he noted, have not
been very effective.
Small
infestations of weedy rice, or red rice, also are showing up in more California
fields, Espino said. As of the end of 2016, it had been confirmed in more than
10,000 acres, according to UCCE.
Because
the weed is considered one of the most damaging for rice and can affect yield
and quality significantly, Espino said farm advisors have been “trying to
spread the word and get growers to be on the lookout for it.”
“We
want to make sure that if a grower finds something that looks suspicious, they
let us know,” he said.
16 foods that will help you sleep better
through the night
18h
- Chemicals in the body such as
melatonin and tryptophan can impact your sleep.
- Dairy, carbohydrates, and high
glycemic foods can help your sleep.
Many foods contain naturally occurring substances
that bring on sleep; here are some of the best choices to help you settle down
for a quality rest.
Walnuts
Thomson
Reuters
Walnuts are a good source of tryptophan, a
sleep-enhancing amino acid that helps make serotonin and melatonin, the
"body clock" hormone that sets your sleep-wake cycles. Additionally,
University of Texas researchers found that walnuts contain their own source of
melatonin, which may help you fall asleep faster — unlike these eight worst eating habits for your sleep.
Almonds
robinmcnicoll/flickr
Almonds are rich in magnesium, a mineral needed for
quality sleep (and for building bones). A study published in the Journal of
Orthomolecular Medicine found that when the body's magnesium levels are too
low, it makes it harder to stay asleep. Don't miss these other 10 natural tricks for sleeping better without drugs.
Cheese and
crackers
Old wives' tales suggest that warm milk can make you
sleepy, but the truth is any dairy product can help. Calcium (found in cheese,
yogurt, milk, and these surprising sources) helps the brain use the
tryptophan found in dairy to manufacture sleep-triggering melatonin.
Additionally, calcium helps regulate muscle movements. Learn the nine signs you aren't getting enough calcium.
Lettuce
A salad with dinner could speed up your bedtime since
lettuce contains lactucarium, which has sedative properties and affects the
brain similarly to opium. You can also try this brew from the book Stealth Health: Simmer three to four large lettuce
leaves in a cup of water for 15 minutes. Remove from heat, add two sprigs of
mint, and sip just before you go to bed. Check out these other 13 best tips from sleep doctors.
Pretzels
Foods like pretzels and corn chips have a high
glycemic index. After eating them you'll have a natural spike in your blood
sugar and insulin levels, shortening the time it takes you to fall asleep.
Normally, you want steady levels to avoid mood swings and insulin resistance.
(In those cases, reach for one of these 10 delicious low-glycemic snacks.) But if you are
looking to get rest, the blood sugar and insulin increase helps tryptophan
enter your brain to bring on sleep. Learn the other best way to improve your sleep quality.
Tuna
Fish such as tuna, halibut, and salmon are high in
vitamin B6, which your body needs to make melatonin and serotonin. (Find
out how to tell if you're low in important vitamins.)
Other foods high in B6 include raw garlic and pistachio nuts. Don't miss
these 22 sleeping mistakes that are messing with your rest.
Rice
White rice has a high glycemic index, so eating it
will significantly slash the time it takes you to fall asleep, according to an
Australian study. In particular, jasmine rice brings on shut-eye faster;
research published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that
people who ate a meal that included jasmine rice fell asleep faster than when
they ate other rice types. Check out these other 11 weird tricks that help you sleep better
Cherry juice
A glass of cherry juice could make you fall asleep
faster, according to researchers from the Universities of Pennsylvania and
Rochester. Cherries, particularly tart cherries, naturally boost levels of
melatonin. (Here are seven things you should know before taking melatonin pills to
sleep.) In the study, subjects who drank cherry juice experienced
some improvement in their insomnia symptoms compared to those who drank a
placebo beverage.
Cereal
A bowl of your favorite flakes before bed could help
you get better sleep, according to the National Sleep Foundation. The snack
combines two components for getting some Zzzs: carbohydrates (from the cereal)
and calcium (from the milk). Here are eight more little daytime tweaks to help you sleep better
tonight.
Chamomile tea
Shutterstock
Steeping a cup of stress-busting chamomile tea will
help you sleep. According to researchers, drinking the tea is associated with
an increase of glycine, a chemical that relaxes nerves and muscles and acts as
a mild sedative. Here are nine more drinks that help you sleep—and 4 that keep you awake.
Passionfruit
tea
An Australian study found that drinking a cup of passionfruit
tea one hour before bed helped people sleep more soundly. Researchers believe
that Harman alkaloids — chemicals found in high levels in the flower — act on
your nervous system to make you tired. Don't miss these other 11 home remedies for insomnia.
Honey
Pexels
The natural sugar found in honey slightly raises
insulin and allows tryptophan to enter the brain more easily, according to
nutritionist Lindsey Duncan on DrOz.com. A spoonful before bed or mixed with
chamomile tea could give you a more restful sleep. Just make sure to stop
these 12 innocent habits that ruin your sleep quality.
Kale
Green leafy vegetables like kale are loaded with
calcium, which helps the brain use tryptophan to manufacture melatonin. Spinach
and mustard greens are other good options. Check out these other nine reasons to start eating more spinach.
Shrimp and
lobster
Another good source of tryptophan, crustaceans like
shrimp (which is one of 13 superfoods every woman should eat) or lobster may
bring on an easier sleep. These 10 facts about seafood will change how you think
about your meal.
Hummus
Chickpeas are also a good source of tryptophan, so a
light lunch of hummus and whole-grain crackers (to help the tryptophan reach
the brain), could be a good way to head into an afternoon nap. Don't miss these
other 11 tricks for a more restful nap.
Elk
This game meat has nearly twice more tryptophan than
turkey breast, meaning you're much more likely to nod off after eating it,
especially with a side of carbohydrates to help the tryptophan reach the brain.
Here are 18 other food combinations that are healthier when eaten
together.
16 foods that will help you sleep better
through the night
18h
- Chemicals in the body such as
melatonin and tryptophan can impact your sleep.
- Dairy, carbohydrates, and high
glycemic foods can help your sleep.
Many foods contain naturally occurring substances
that bring on sleep; here are some of the best choices to help you settle down
for a quality rest.
Walnuts
Thomson
Reuters
Walnuts are a good source of tryptophan, a
sleep-enhancing amino acid that helps make serotonin and melatonin, the
"body clock" hormone that sets your sleep-wake cycles. Additionally,
University of Texas researchers found that walnuts contain their own source of
melatonin, which may help you fall asleep faster — unlike these eight worst eating habits for your sleep.
Almonds
robinmcnicoll/flickr
Almonds are rich in magnesium, a mineral needed for
quality sleep (and for building bones). A study published in the Journal of
Orthomolecular Medicine found that when the body's magnesium levels are too
low, it makes it harder to stay asleep. Don't miss these other 10 natural tricks for sleeping better without drugs.
Cheese and
crackers
Old wives' tales suggest that warm milk can make you
sleepy, but the truth is any dairy product can help. Calcium (found in cheese,
yogurt, milk, and these surprising sources) helps the brain use the tryptophan
found in dairy to manufacture sleep-triggering melatonin. Additionally, calcium
helps regulate muscle movements. Learn the nine signs you aren't getting enough calcium.
Lettuce
A salad with dinner could speed up your bedtime since
lettuce contains lactucarium, which has sedative properties and affects the
brain similarly to opium. You can also try this brew from the book Stealth Health: Simmer three to four large lettuce
leaves in a cup of water for 15 minutes. Remove from heat, add two sprigs of
mint, and sip just before you go to bed. Check out these other 13 best tips from sleep doctors.
Pretzels
Foods like pretzels and corn chips have a high glycemic
index. After eating them you'll have a natural spike in your blood sugar and
insulin levels, shortening the time it takes you to fall asleep. Normally, you
want steady levels to avoid mood swings and insulin resistance. (In those
cases, reach for one of these 10 delicious low-glycemic snacks.) But if you are
looking to get rest, the blood sugar and insulin increase helps tryptophan
enter your brain to bring on sleep. Learn the other best way to improve your sleep quality.
Tuna
Fish such as tuna, halibut, and salmon are high in
vitamin B6, which your body needs to make melatonin and serotonin. (Find
out how to tell if you're low in important vitamins.)
Other foods high in B6 include raw garlic and pistachio nuts. Don't miss
these 22 sleeping mistakes that are messing with your rest.
Rice
White rice has a high glycemic index, so eating it
will significantly slash the time it takes you to fall asleep, according to an
Australian study. In particular, jasmine rice brings on shut-eye faster;
research published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that people
who ate a meal that included jasmine rice fell asleep faster than when they ate
other rice types. Check out these other 11 weird tricks that help you sleep better
Cherry juice
A glass of cherry juice could make you fall asleep
faster, according to researchers from the Universities of Pennsylvania and
Rochester. Cherries, particularly tart cherries, naturally boost levels of
melatonin. (Here are seven things you should know before taking melatonin pills to
sleep.) In the study, subjects who drank cherry juice experienced
some improvement in their insomnia symptoms compared to those who drank a
placebo beverage.
Cereal
A bowl of your favorite flakes before bed could help
you get better sleep, according to the National Sleep Foundation. The snack
combines two components for getting some Zzzs: carbohydrates (from the cereal)
and calcium (from the milk). Here are eight more little daytime tweaks to help you sleep better
tonight.
Chamomile tea
Shutterstock
Steeping a cup of stress-busting chamomile tea will
help you sleep. According to researchers, drinking the tea is associated with
an increase of glycine, a chemical that relaxes nerves and muscles and acts as
a mild sedative. Here are nine more drinks that help you sleep—and 4 that keep you awake.
Passionfruit
tea
An Australian study found that drinking a cup of
passionfruit tea one hour before bed helped people sleep more soundly.
Researchers believe that Harman alkaloids — chemicals found in high levels in
the flower — act on your nervous system to make you tired. Don't miss these
other 11 home remedies for insomnia.
Honey
Pexels
The natural sugar found in honey slightly raises
insulin and allows tryptophan to enter the brain more easily, according to
nutritionist Lindsey Duncan on DrOz.com. A spoonful before bed or mixed with
chamomile tea could give you a more restful sleep. Just make sure to stop
these 12 innocent habits that ruin your sleep quality.
Kale
Green leafy vegetables like kale are loaded with
calcium, which helps the brain use tryptophan to manufacture melatonin. Spinach
and mustard greens are other good options. Check out these other nine reasons to start eating more spinach.
Shrimp and
lobster
Another good source of tryptophan, crustaceans like
shrimp (which is one of 13 superfoods every woman should eat) or lobster may
bring on an easier sleep. These 10 facts about seafood will change how you think
about your meal.
Hummus
Chickpeas are also a good source of tryptophan, so a
light lunch of hummus and whole-grain crackers (to help the tryptophan reach
the brain), could be a good way to head into an afternoon nap. Don't miss these
other 11 tricks for a more restful nap.
Elk
This game meat has nearly twice more tryptophan than
turkey breast, meaning you're much more likely to nod off after eating it,
especially with a side of carbohydrates to help the tryptophan reach the brain.
Here are 18 other food combinations that are healthier when eaten
together.
New type of
taste behind our love for pasta: study
October 27,
2017 | UPDATED 13:50 IST
Melbourne, Oct 27 (PTI)
Scientists have identified a potential seventh taste - carbohydrate - which may
be behind our craving for starchy foods such as bread, pasta and rice.
Researchers from Deakin
University in Australia have shown that taste sensitivity to carbohydrates
increases intakes of energy and carbohydrates, and leads to a larger waist
measurement.
Carbohydrates had long been
assumed invisible to taste, said Russell Keast, Professor at Deakin University.
"It is typically sugar,
with its hedonically pleasing sweet taste, that is the most sought after
carbohydrate," said Keast, who led the research published in the Journal
of Nutrition.
"But our research has
shown that there is a perceivable taste quality elicited by other carbohydrates
independent of sweet taste," he said.
The research looked at two
carbohydrates, maltodextrin and oligofructose, both found in common foods like
bread, pasta and rice.
Initial testing by Julia
Low, an academic at Deakin, showed that these carbohydrates could be sensed in
the mouth.
Researchers then undertook a
study to examine whether sensitivity to the carbohydrates was linked to peoples
consumption of starchy foods.
The study looked at 34
adults and found significant correlations between how sensitive someone was to
these carbohydrates, their dietary intake of carbohydrates, the amount of
energy they ate, and their waist measurement.
"Those who were most
sensitive to the carbohydrate taste ate more of these foods and had a larger
waist," Low said.
"We specifically looked
at waist measurements as they are a good measure of the risk of dietary related
diseases," said Low.
Keast said this line of
novel tastes research was important because the increasing problem of
dietary-related chronic illnesses, such as obesity, required a greater
understanding of the drivers of the food we consume.
"Increased energy
intake, in particular greater intakes of energy-dense foods, is thought to be
one of the major contributors to the global rise of overweight and obesity, and
carbohydrates represent a major source of energy in our diet," he said.
Keasts team previously named
fat as the "sixth taste". The fat taste studies explored the tongues
ability to detect fat as a distinct taste similar to peoples ability to sense
sweet, sour, bitter, salty and umami - the five traditional or classic tastes.
"Interestingly, what we
found in the fat taste studies was that the people who were more sensitive to
fat consumed less fatty foods, but it is the other way around for
carbohydrates," Keast said.
"What that could mean
is that individuals who are more sensitive to the taste of carbohydrate also
have some form of subconscious accelerator that increases carbohydrate or
starchy food consumption. But we need to do much more research to identify the
reason why," said Keast. PTI SAR SAR
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:uOD9RpnqLL4J:indiatoday.intoday.in/story/new-type-of-taste-behind-our-love-for-pasta-study/1/1076525.html+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=pk
Vietnam uses remote
sensing to monitor rice production
The use of satellite
earth observation date to monitor rice production in the Red River and Mekong
Deltas was discussed at a workshop in Hanoi on October 25.
Signals collected from
the satellite every six or 12 days can help calculate rice productivity in
Vietnam
The workshop on remote
sensing application in agricultural production in Vietnam was jointly held by
the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and the Swiss Embassy.
Nguyen Quang Dung,
Director of the National Institute of Agricultural Planning and Projection
(NIAPP), said the project on remote sensing application in rice production in
10 provinces of the Red River and Mekong Deltas has been launched since 2012.
The two-phase project
conducted studies using finance from the Swiss Agency for Development and
Cooperation and other international partners, he said.
Dung said rice production
in Vietnam has been monitored from the Sentinel satellite of the European Space
Agency, with the algorithm and model developed by Sarmap Company of Switzerland
and the International Rice Research Institute.
Signals collected from
the satellite every six or 12 days can help calculate rice productivity in
Vietnam.
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Pham
Quang Ha, from the NIAPP, said losses caused by natural disasters can be
evaluated by remote sensing technology, thus assisting insurance activities to
ease risks facing farmers.-VNA
Where rice fields go, geese follow, experts report
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Area Special Olympians have chance to
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15
City unemployment rate sees slight
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16
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1
Pine Bluff police investigate Sunday
murder
2
UAPB nursing
alumna headlines White Coat Ceremony
3
PB NAACP banquet-goers encouraged to
love all
4
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6
HOF inductees
honored at AM&N/UAPB National Alumni Banquet
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law
8
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in death
9
County raises awareness for domestic
violence
10
A&P
Commission advised to reduce its spending
11
Obituaries for Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2017
12
Obituaries for Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017
13
Obituaries for Wednesday, Oct. 25,
2017
14
Area Special Olympians have chance to
shine
15
City unemployment rate sees slight
decline
16
Fatal shootings
at Grambling State not random, sheriff says
1
Pine Bluff police investigate Sunday
murder
2
UAPB nursing
alumna headlines White Coat Ceremony
3
PB NAACP banquet-goers encouraged to
love all
4
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Sheriff’s Department office receiving upgrades
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Researchers
say there's more geese wintering in Arkansas than ever before. Experts are
using transmitters to understand migration patterns and winter distribution.
Special to The Commercial/Jarrod Hardke.
MONTICELLO – The western edge of the Mississippi Delta, which
contributes so richly to Arkansas agriculture, is well known as a prime area
for hunters, with both wet marshes and flooded rice fields after the fall. But
it hasn’t always necessarily been so.
Until about the early 1990′s, the migration patterns of Arctic
geese — migrating over North America through the fall and into the winter —
were dominated not by the Delta, but by the rich, rice-dominated farmland of
East Texas and Louisiana. But as drought took hold in the South and water
rights issues left growers in those areas with little choice but to move into
other, less water-intensive crops, mid-continent migration patterns gradually
gravitated toward eastern Arkansas.
Which raises more than a few questions.
Satellite telemetry technology
Douglass Osborne, associate professor at the University of
Arkansas at Monticello, has been leading a research team studying not only how
the shift occurred, but what some of the potential adverse implications may be,
as well.
“Right now, we’re in the relatively early stages of using
satellite telemetry technology to learn about the distribution of the geese on
the landscape.” Osborne said. “Aerial surveys are conducted during the winter,
and anecdotally, we know that there’s more geese wintering in Arkansas than
ever before. We’re using transmitters to understand migration patterns and
winter distribution.”
Osborne and his team have about 40 years’ worth of data to work
with, much of it from band and encounter data, supplied from hunters on
occasions when banded birds were harvested during a hunt.
“Analyzing that data, we see that the initial shift in
distribution, from Texas-Louisiana into Arkansas, occurred in the 90′s. In the
early 2000′s, we see a really dramatic shift into the Arkansas Delta,” he said.
At the same time so many Texas and Louisiana growers were shifting from rice to
cotton, Arkansas rice growers realized that by reflooding their fields after
harvest, they could in turn make a profit leasing the land to bird hunters for
the season.
Trading coastal layovers for the Delta
Osborne said the data reflect three distinct time periods over
the past four decades, including a historical wintering distribution of
migrating arctic geese, a transient distribution in the mid- to late-90′s, as
the birds “began to dabble in Arkansas,” and the current distribution, in which
the birds have essentially traded their coastal layovers for the Delta.
“Historically, these birds were migrating from the arctic tundra
in the summer, through the mid-continent and toward the Gulf of Mexico, hanging
out in freshwater coastal marshes, feeding on plant material in the marsh,
digging up the root tubers, then bouncing out of the marsh into the surrounding
agriculture,” Osborne said. “But the conversion of agriculture toward cotton in
the mid-1990′s in that part of the world took water off the landscape — water
that was necessary for these birds in winter.
While the increasing artic goose population may be a boon to
both landowners and hunters, Osborne said there are other, long-term factors to
consider.
MORE VIDEO:
The latest
on Monday's solar eclipse.
“It’s worth asking: What is the role of these geese in the
agricultural system itself,” Osborne said. “What’s their role in nutrient distribution,
and seed dispersal of different weeds? Are these geese environmental pests, or
do they help agriculture?
“There’s also potential impacts for other waterfowl, that
historically always wintered here,” he said. “There’s upwards of 3 million
white-fronted geese in the population, and 10-20 million snow geese in the
population — so now that a large portion of the distribution of birds has
shifted into Arkansas, what does that mean for the amount of food on the
landscape, which other birds always wintered here rely on?”
Osborne said that because hunting is such a strong engine in the
Arkansas economy, it behooves the state and its residents to consider such
implications, including effects on the populations and reproduction of other
birds competing for scarce resources.
Osborne said his research, which began about three years ago,
could easily take a career’s worth of time.
“You attempt to answer one question, and it leads to about four
more questions,” he said.
More research needed?
While his research to this point has been supported through the
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, Ducks Unlimited, the
Canadian Wildlife Services and Environment Canada, Osborne said his team is
hoping to attract underwriters for continuing research.
“Overall, the waterfowl community thinks there’s too many geese
on the landscape — but what does ‘too many geese’ mean, and what impacts are
they having on agricultural production in the southern portion of the range?”
Osborne said. “This whole topic is a relatively unexplored area right now.
There’s lots to learn about what impacts these geese may have here in the
South.”
To learn about waterfowl in Arkansas, contact a local
Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.edu.
The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture offers
all its Extension and Research programs to all eligible persons without
discrimination.
— Ryan McGeeney is with the U of A System Division of
Agriculture.
http://www.pbcommercial.com/news/20171026/where-rice-fields-go-geese-follow-experts-report
DINNER PARTY INTEL: Chad’s
passport paper problem
26 OCTOBER 2017 - 11:37
Topics to impress this week.
1. Office supply glitch
US officials say a paperwork shortage
that prevented Chad from providing the US with a sample passport was one reason
the country was included in the Trump administration’s latest travel ban
targeting majority Muslim nations. Its inclusion came as a surprise because
Chad is regarded as an ally of the US.
All countries were given 50 days to
take steps including providing a sample of a recent passport. Chad ran out of
passport paper and simply couldn’t comply.
2. Solar power future
The cost of solar energy will fall by
another 60% over the next decade, the head of the International Renewable
Energy Agency says. The drop in the cost coupled with improvements in
efficiency have already pushed capacity from virtually zero at the start of the
century to 300GW by the end of 2016. The agency expects at least 80GW of new
capacity to be added globally each year over the next five to six years. China
is set to be the world’s biggest and fastest growing solar market.
3. Saltwater rice research
Scientists in China have managed to
improve the yields on a strain of saltwater-tolerant rice, after more than four
decades of research. Though it is eight times as expensive as normal rice, the
initial yield was sold thanks to its unique flavour.
Over 200 types of rice were planted
at the Saline-Alkali Tolerant Rice Research & Development Center in
Qingdao. Seawater from the Yellow Sea was pumped, diluted and channelled into
the rice paddies. Yields beat forecasts, leading the project researchers to say
the rice is ready for commercialisation.
https://www.businesslive.co.za/fm/fm-fox/dinner-party-intel/2017-10-26-dinner-party-intel-chads-passport-paper-problem/
Smart Rice Cooker Market Growing
Trends and Demands Analysis 2017 to 2022
By
-
October 26, 2017
89
SHARE
Global
Smart Rice Cooker Market Research Report 2017 to 2022 presents
an in-depth assessment of the Smart Rice Cooker including enabling
technologies, key trends, market drivers, challenges, standardization,
regulatory landscape, deployment models, operator case studies, opportunities,
future roadmap, value chain, ecosystem player profiles and strategies. The
report also presents forecasts for Smart Rice Cooker investments from 2017 till
2022.
This
study answers several questions for stakeholders, primarily which market
segments they should focus upon during the next five years to prioritize their
efforts and investments. These Stakeholders include: Midea,
Joyoung, Panasonic, PHILIPS, SUPOR, ZO JIRUSHI, TIGER, Povos, Toshiba,
Matsushita, Mitsubishi, Sanyo, Philips, LG, Xiaomi, Aroma, Hamilton Beach,
Panasonic.
Primary
sources are mainly industry experts from core and related industries, and
suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, service providers, and organizations
related to all segments of the industry’s supply chain. The bottom-up approach
was used to estimate the global market size of Smart Rice Cooker based on
end-use industry and region, in terms of value. With the data triangulation
procedure and validation of data through primary interviews, the exact values
of the overall parent market, and individual market sizes were determined and
confirmed in this study.
Sample/Inquire
at: https://www.marketinsightsreports.com/reports/102623394/global-smart-rice-cooker-market-professional-survey-report-2017/inquiry
Global
Smart Rice Cooker (K Units) and Revenue (Million USD) Market Split by Product
Type
Market Segment by Type
|
2016
|
2017
|
2018
|
2019
|
2020
|
2021
|
2022
|
Electric Rice Cookers
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
-Change (%)
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
Gas Rice Cookers
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
-Change (%)
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
others
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
-Change (%)
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
Total
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
-Change (%)
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
Global
Smart Rice Cooker (K Units) by Application (2016-2022)
Market Segment
by
Application
|
2012
|
2016
|
2022
|
Market Share (%)2022
|
CGAR (%)
(2016-2022)
|
Houshold
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
Commercial
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
others
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx%
|
xx%
|
Total
|
xx
|
xx
|
xx
|
100%
|
xx%
|
Browse
Full Report at: https://www.marketinsightsreports.com/reports/102623394/global-smart-rice-cooker-market-professional-survey-report-2017
The
research provides answers to the following key questions:
·
What will be the market
size and the growth rate in 2022?
·
What are the key factors
driving the global Smart Rice Cooker market?
·
Who are the key market
players and what are their strategies in the global Smart Rice Cooker market?
·
What are the key market
trends impacting the growth of the global Smart Rice Cooker market?
·
What trends, challenges
and barriers are influencing its growth?
·
What are the market
opportunities and threats faced by the vendors in the global Smart Rice Cooker
market?
·
What are the key outcomes
of the five forces analysis of the global Smart Rice Cooker market?
This
independent 119 page report guarantees you will remain better
informed than your competition. With over 170 tables and figures examining the
Smart Rice Cooker market, the report gives you a visual, one-stop breakdown of
the leading products, submarkets and market leader’s market revenue forecasts
as well as analysis to 2022.
Geographically, this
report is segmented into several key Regions, with production, consumption,
revenue (million USD), and market share and growth rate of Storage Area Network
Switch in these regions, from 2012 to 2022 (forecast), covering North America,
China, Europe, Southeast Asia, Japan, India.
The
report provides a basic overview of the Smart Rice Cooker industry including
definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. And
development policies and plans are discussed as well as manufacturing processes
and cost structures.
Then,
the report focuses on global major leading industry players with information
such as company profiles, product picture and specifications, sales, market
share and contact information. What’s more, the Smart Rice Cooker industry
development trends and marketing channels are analyzed.
The
research includes historic data from 2012 to 2016 and forecasts until 2022
which makes the reports an invaluable resource for industry executives,
marketing, sales and product managers, consultants, analysts, and other people
looking for key industry data in readily accessible documents with clearly
presented tables and graphs. The report will make detailed analysis mainly on
above questions and in-depth research on the development environment, market
size, development trend, operation situation and future development trend of
Smart Rice Cooker on the basis of stating current situation of the
industry in 2017 so as to make comprehensive organization and judgment on the
competition situation and development trend of Smart Rice Cooker Sales
Silica Gel Sales Market and assist manufacturers and investment
organization to better grasp the development course of Smart Rice Cooker
Sales Silica Gel Sales Market.
The
study was conducted using an objective combination of primary and secondary
information including inputs from key participants in the industry. The report
contains a comprehensive market and vendor landscape in addition to a SWOT
analysis of the key vendors.
There
are 15 Chapters to deeply display the global Smart Rice Cooker market.
Chapter
1- To describe Smart Rice Cooker Introduction, product scope,
market overview, market opportunities, market risk, market driving force;
Chapter
2- To analyze the top manufacturers of Smart Rice Cooker,
with sales, revenue, and price of Smart Rice Cooker, in 2016 and 2017;
Chapter
3- To display the competitive situation among the top
manufacturers, with sales, revenue and market share in 2016 and 2017;
Chapter
4- To show the global market by regions, with sales, revenue
and market share of Smart Rice Cooker, for each region, from 2012 to 2017;
Chapter
5, 6, 7, 8, 9- To analyze the key regions, with sales, revenue and market
share by key countries in these regions;
Chapter
10, 11- To show the market by type and application, with sales
market share and growth rate by type, application, from 2012 to 2017;
Chapter
12- Smart Rice Cooker Sales Silica Gel Sales market forecast,
by regions, type and application, with sales and revenue, from 2017 to 2022;
Chapter
13, 14, 15- To describe Smart Rice Cooker Sales channel, distributors,
traders, dealers, Research Findings and Conclusion, appendix and data source.
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for Buying this Report
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pin-point analysis for changing competitive dynamics
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looking perspective on different factors driving or restraining market growth
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Father of Korean farm machinery passes away
Posted
: 2017-10-26 16:18
Updated
: 2017-10-26 18:07
By Yoon Ja-young
Kim Sang-soo
|
Kim Sang-soo, Chairman and CEO of the
country's leading agricultural machinery manufacturer Daedong Industrial, died
Tuesday. He was 84.
Kim led the mechanization of the country's agriculture, which previously relied on hard physical work and cows.
He was born in Jinju, South Gyeongsang Province, in 1933, the eldest son of Kim Sam-man who founded Daedong Industrial in 1947. After graduating from the prestigious Jinju High School, the junior Kim studied manufacturing management at Nihon University and the Tokyo Institute of Technology in Japan.
He joined his father's company in 1959 and was in charge of product development and manufacturing. He also trained in Germany for three years and in Japan for a year to learn new technologies. He became CEO in 1975 and had been chairman since 1984.
Based on his expertise and know-how in agriculture technology, he set up the foundation for the modernization of the country's rural community. He developed cultivators, tractors, combine harvesters and rice-planting machines for the first time here.
He set up a factory in Daegu in 1984 with annual capacity of 25,000 tractors, 5,000 rice-planting machines and 5,000 combine harvesters. He also expanded the company sales network to around 150 dealers.
Daedong grew to be the country's top farm machinery company with over 30 percent of the market.
Kim also focused on opening markets overseas. Daedong started exporting to the United States in 1985 and set up a U.S. subsidiary in 1993. It also set up subsidiaries in China in 2007 and Europe in 2010.
The chairman continued his efforts to develop technology and nurture human resources. Daedong set up a technology research and training center in Changnyeong, South Gyeongsang Province, in 1997.
Since Kim became CEO, the company's annual sales have risen to 580 billion won from 200 billion won. Exports increased explosively to 200 billion won in 60 countries from 100 million won.
The government acknowledged Kim's achievement with an order of industrial merit.
Though he transferred managerial control to his son in 2011, Kim participated in management until recently to nurture the 70-year-old company toward a successful centennial.
Kim led the mechanization of the country's agriculture, which previously relied on hard physical work and cows.
He was born in Jinju, South Gyeongsang Province, in 1933, the eldest son of Kim Sam-man who founded Daedong Industrial in 1947. After graduating from the prestigious Jinju High School, the junior Kim studied manufacturing management at Nihon University and the Tokyo Institute of Technology in Japan.
He joined his father's company in 1959 and was in charge of product development and manufacturing. He also trained in Germany for three years and in Japan for a year to learn new technologies. He became CEO in 1975 and had been chairman since 1984.
Based on his expertise and know-how in agriculture technology, he set up the foundation for the modernization of the country's rural community. He developed cultivators, tractors, combine harvesters and rice-planting machines for the first time here.
He set up a factory in Daegu in 1984 with annual capacity of 25,000 tractors, 5,000 rice-planting machines and 5,000 combine harvesters. He also expanded the company sales network to around 150 dealers.
Daedong grew to be the country's top farm machinery company with over 30 percent of the market.
Kim also focused on opening markets overseas. Daedong started exporting to the United States in 1985 and set up a U.S. subsidiary in 1993. It also set up subsidiaries in China in 2007 and Europe in 2010.
The chairman continued his efforts to develop technology and nurture human resources. Daedong set up a technology research and training center in Changnyeong, South Gyeongsang Province, in 1997.
Since Kim became CEO, the company's annual sales have risen to 580 billion won from 200 billion won. Exports increased explosively to 200 billion won in 60 countries from 100 million won.
The government acknowledged Kim's achievement with an order of industrial merit.
Though he transferred managerial control to his son in 2011, Kim participated in management until recently to nurture the 70-year-old company toward a successful centennial.
Vietnam, Russia
determined to raise trade to $10 bln by 2020
Vietnam and Russia are
determined to raise their two-way trade to 10 billion USD by 2020 to create a
turning point in bilateral trade relations.
Vietnam, Russia
determined to raise trade to 10 bln USD by 2020
According to statistics
from the European – American Markets Department under the Ministry of Industry
and Trade (MoIT), Vietnam-Russia trade has recorded strong growth, especially
in the context of a free trade agreement between Vietnam and the Eurasian
Economic Union (EAEU) taking effect last year.
In the first seven
months of this year, trade turnover between Vietnam and Russia reached nearly 2
billion USD, up 27 percent year-on-year. Vietnam mainly exports mobile phones,
garment and textiles, coffee, rice, machinery and grain products to Russia.
According to economists,
Russia is a traditional market for Vietnamese goods. Although trade value has
increased yearly, Russia’s demand for made-in-Vietnam commodities remains huge.
Bui Huy Son, head of the
Trade Promotion Agency under the MoIT, said that trade fairs and exhibitions
are an effective channel to connect the two countries’ businesses, associations
and organisations.
Therefore, to boost
domestic production and exports, businesses should seek to approach trade
promotion agencies in Russia through trade fairs and exhibitions, Son suggested.
Sharing experience in
exporting products to Russia, Sergey Gusev from the EXPOCENTRE, said that his
company has a subsidiary in charge of providing transportation services and
customs services assistance.
Russia is considering
the transport of goods by train from Southeast Asia to Russia. If approved,
this will help save time and costs for businesses, he stated.
Viacheslav Kharinov,
Chief Representative of the Russian Trade Office in Vietnam, stated that
Vietnam is the first country signing a free trade agreement (FTA) with the
EAEU, helping boost Russia-Vietnam trade.
Since the beginning of
2017, rapid increases have been seen in exports of cereals, coal, steel and
chemicals from Russia to Vietnam and exports of mobile phone components,
electronic products, clothing, footwear and agricultural products from Vietnam
to Russia, he added.
To make use of the FTA,
Nguyen Khanh Ngoc, deputy head of the European – American Markets Department,
suggested Vietnamese businesses search for market information to understand
EAEU member states’ demands and improve the quality of the their products to
make full use of the agreement’s advantages before the EAEU signs similar deals
with other countries.
According to Deputy
Minister of Industry and Trade Hoang Quoc Vuong, the FTA between Vietnam and
the EAEU became effective in October 2016, opening a huge opportunity for the
two sides’ businesses. Vietnamese businesses can access a 183-million-people
market with combined GDP of nearly 2.2 trillion USD.
Vuong also asked
enterprises to increase product quality and diversify products to raise their
competitiveness.-VNA
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/189085/vietnam--russia-determined-to-raise-trade-to--10-bln-by-2020.html
Eating poorly cooked rice as dangerous as smoking: study
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 25 2017
Fertility researchers have found that rice that is not properly
cooked contains arsenic metals which interferes with reproductive systems and
causes cancer. PHOTO| FILE| NMG
In Summary
·
Fertility
researchers have found that rice that is not properly cooked contains arsenic
metals which interferes with reproductive systems and causes cancer
·
Arsenic
metal lowers progesterone levels but increases oestrogen, impairs ovulation and
lowers thyroid function which are all causes for fibroids and infertility.
·
He
advised that people should avoid the normal ratio of one to two, whereby one
glass of rice goes with two glasses of water, the method is very dangerous
since all the water soak in.
ADVERTISEMENT
In Cairo, Egypt
Rice may be a common delicacy on our tables. But new findings
show eating poorly cooked rice may cause fibroids and cancer.
Fertility researchers have found that rice that is not properly
cooked contains arsenic metals which interferes with reproductive systems and
causes cancer.
Prof Oladapo Ashiru, President of Africa Fertility Society said
despite rice being one of the world’s most important grains, eaten by the
majority of the world’s population, few know how to prepare it.
“I am worried at the rate at which this commodity is being
prepared. Most people are not even aware that they are endangering their lives
so long as they are full, that is it,” he said
He said the high consumption of improperly cooked rice in Africa
has led to high incidences of fibroids.
‘CAUSES FOR FIBROIDS AND INFERTILITY’
Speaking on Tuesday during a meeting organised by Merck
Foundation, and dubbed Merck Africa Asia Luminary meeting in Cairo, Egypt, the
experts argued rice picks up these arsenic metals which are naturally found in
the soil and in groundwater often used to irrigate the grain in the dry season.
This makes the metal in the soil more readily available, making
easier to be absorbed by humans when they eat the grain.
“Arsenic metal lowers progesterone levels but increases
oestrogen, impairs ovulation and lowers thyroid function which are all causes
for fibroids and infertility,” he said.
Fibroids are non-cancerous tumours that appear in the tissues
around the uterus, it also grows from the muscle layers of the womb.
Fibroid affects 25 per cent of females especially those in the
reproductive age.
The growths vary from the size of a bean to being as large as a
melon.
‘ONLY THING I CAN EQUATE TO IS SMOKING’
Prof Andy Meharg of Queen’s University Belfast who has been
studying arsenic for years said the problem looked big though it has an easy
solution, ways of cooking rice will reduce arsenic content in our food.
“The only thing I can really equate arsenic consumption to is
smoking. If you take one or two cigarettes per day, your risks are going to be
a lot less than if you’re smoking 30 or 40 cigarettes a day. It’s
dose-dependent the more you eat, the higher your risk is.” he said.
Prof Meharg said the technique of reducing the content was to
soak rice overnight before cooking it in a 5:1 water-to-rice ratio.
This cuts the level by over 80 per cent.
He advised that people should avoid the normal ratio of one to
two, whereby one glass of rice goes with two glasses of water, the method is
very dangerous since all the water soak in.
“I know the soaking method is boring but for your health, it is
necessary since the one to two ratios is very dangerous,” he said
According to data from the National Irrigation Board, the
consumption of rice is increasing at about 12 per cent since 2008 while maize
stands at one per cent and wheat at three per cent respectively.
Kenya produces less than 200,000 metric tonnes of rice against a
demand of over 540,000 to 600,000 metric tonnes per year. The deficit of 75 per
cent is imported from neighbouring countries, and mostly from Pakistan, who
grows it using the same irrigation method.
According to Prof Ashiru, boiling and pouring out the water and
boiling again also reduces arsenic content by huge percentage.
“Alternatively without having to boil, the water ratio to rice
ratio should be increased to five to one,” he said.
Research carried out by Professor Jörg Feldmann of the
University of Aberdeen has explored the amount and type of arsenic that can be
found in rice and rice products and reasons for its occurrence.
According to the study mentioned by speakers states that arsenic
found in rice can be subcategorised further one of these categories is
inorganic arsenic which is a class I carcinogen which means it can cause
cancer.
The research has been identified as fundamental by food
standards agencies in the USA, the UK, and the European Union.
http://www.nation.co.ke/lifestyle/health/eating-poorly-cooked-rice-as-dangerous-as-smoking/1954202-4155266-e6gem8/index.html
ustoms arrest 3, seize
1,440 bags of rice, 14 vehicles, others worth N55m
Published
on
October 25, 2017
By
The Nigeria Customs Service
(NCS), Oyo/Osun Command have arrested three people in connection with smuggling
of some prohibited items into the country.
It also disclosed that it has
seized one thousand, four hundred and forty bags of rice (1,440) with duty paid
value of nineteen million, three hundred and eighty thousand, one hundred and
sixty kobo (N19,380,160.00).
The command also declared that
fourteen vehicles, 30 bales and jumbo sacks of second-hand clothing materials
and used tyres with duty paid value of N25,703,875.00, N4,062,500.00 and
N6,513,710.00 respectively were seized within the command’s territory.
Newly posted Customs Area
Controller (CAC), Mr. Elisha David Chikan while briefing journalists on
Wednesday disclosed that the duty paid value of all the seized items was
N55,660,245.00.
He, however, declared that three
people who were still under investigation were arrested in connection with the
seized items.
Chikan also noted that most of
the seizures were effected along Oyo/Ibadan Road while the Tokunbo vehicles
were arrested within Saki axis at Aleniboro village in ATISBO Local Government
area of Oyo State.
He said that all the seizures
were within three weeks.
He said “Consequently, the
eagle-eyed operatives of the command succeeded within the period under review
in botching the illicit attempts of smugglers to ferry into the country
assotrted contrabands including foreign rice, bales of second hand clothings,
used tyres as well as Tokunbo vehincles through the borders of this area
command.
“Specifically, we have been able
to succesfully effect the following seiures durung the period under review.
“Nissan Almera carrying 20 bags
of (50kg) foreign rice, DAF 45 truck with 800 pieces of used tyres, Mazda bus
with 50 bags of (50kg) foreign rice, Mazda Bus with 30 bales and Jumbo sacks of
second-hand clothings, Volvo Tipper with 100 bags of (50kg) foreign rice,
Mercedes Benz Truck 911 with 200 bags of foreign rice, Truck with 420 bags of
forreign rice, Maszda Bus with 50 bags of foreign rice and HowoTrailer Truck
with 600 bags of foreign rice.”
Others are “Mazda Premacy
-Tokunbo Car, Toyota Camry -Tokunbo Car, Volkswagen Golf -Tokunbo Car, Nissan
Serena -Tokunbo Car and Mitsubishi Lancer -Tokunbo Car”.
http://dailypost.ng/2017/10/25/customs-arrest-3-seize-1440-bags-rice-14-vehicles-others-worth-n55m/
Rice Noodle Market Global Potential
Growth, Share, Demand and Analysis of Key Players- Research Forecasts to 2022
Rice Noodle Market research
report provides Emerging Market trends, Raw Materials Analysis, Manufacturing
Process, regional outlook and comprehensive analysis on different market
segments.
The Rice Noodle Market provides
detailed analysis of Market Overview, Market Drivers, Opportunities, Potential
Application. Top Key
Players of Rice Noodle Market covered as: JFC International,American
Roland Food Corp.,Eskal,Nan Shing Hsinchu,Cali Food,Nature soy,Mandarin Noodle
Manufacturing,Ying Yong Food Products .
Rice Noodle industry drives A strong
trend of R&D investments in food industries. Other growth drivers include
the need to curtail costs, growth and increased use of shifting commodity
prices, strength of private label brands and increased competition from players
in Rice Noodle market.
Get Sample PDF @ http://www.360marketupdates.com/enquiry/request-sample/10384453
The Rice Noodle market research
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end-to-end industries and its scenario.
Rice Noodle Market split by Product Type: Type I,Type II,Type III and
Market split by
Applications: Application
1,Application 2,Application 3 .
The regional distribution of Rice
Noodle industries is across the globe are considered for this market analysis,
the result of which is utilized to estimate the performance of the
International market over the period from 2017 to forecasted year.
Have Any Query? Ask Our Expert @ http://www.360marketupdates.com/enquiry/pre-order-enquiry/10384453
The Rice Noodle market research
report shed light on Foremost Regions: United States, EU, Japan, China, India and Southeast
Asia.
Rice Noodle Market in World, presents
critical information and factual data about Rice Noodle Industry, with an
overall statistical study of this market based on market drivers, market
limitations, and its future prospects. The widespread trends and opportunities
are also taken into consideration in Rice Noodle Market study.
The product range of the Rice
Noodle industry is examined based on their production chain, pricing of
products and the profit generated by them. Various regional markets are
analysed in Rice Noodle market research report and the production volume
and efficacy for Rice Noodle market across the world is also discussed
http://www.satprnews.com/2017/10/25/rice-noodle-market-global-potential-growth-share-demand-and-analysis-of-key-players-research-forecasts-to-2022/
Friday,
October 27, 2017
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HOME
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NATION
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WORLD
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PUNJAB
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HARYANA
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HIMACHAL
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J & K
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CITIES
o
Tiff
with stranger led to double murder
MOHALI:A tiff with a stranger
ledto the double murder of senior journalist KJ Singh (65) and his mother
Gurcharan Kaur (92) here.
·
Killer
was at KJ’s house for hour & 20 minutes
·
Police
theory leaves several questions unanswered
·
OPINION
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SPORT
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BUSINESS
·
FEATURES
o
Echoes
from the Valley
Art for him is problem-solving 24
by 7, certainly an arduous task and a challenge in itself.
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of character
·
Ed
Sheeran keeps his date with India
Slow
lifting: Moga farmers sell paddy directly to millers
3
SHARES
|
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|
40% paddy yet to be lifted
·
As much as 40 per cent of
the total paddy which has arrived in the grain markets of the district is yet
to be lifted by the procurement agencies. A total of 5,35,954 MT of paddy has
arrived in the district till Tuesday evening, out of which, 3,24,524 MT has
been lifted while 1,88,40 MT is still waiting to be lifted and transported to
rice mills.
·
Also in this section
·
Ahead of civic polls, CM’s Rs 363-cr sops for Jalandhar
·
Relief to farmers, industry to cost state Rs10,600 crore
·
Drug case: ASI puts foot down, gets retrial started
·
On HC order, TET result revised after six years
Kulwinder Sandhu
Tribune News Service
Moga, October 26
More than 56 lakh bags
of paddy have been waiting to be lifted by the procurement agencies in more
than 180 grain markets in the district for the past many days causing
inconvenience to the commission agents and farmers.
Due to the delayed
lifting of foodgrains, hundreds of farmers are reportedly selling their produce
directly to rice millers, thus evading 3 per cent market fee and 3 per cent
Rural Development Fund benefiting the rice millers on private purchase.
District Mandi Officer
(DMO) Jasvir Singh has denied the reports of evasion of government taxes. “We
raided a few rice mills in the past couple of days and found no evasion of
taxes,” he said.
He said some
discrepancies were found in a rice mill at Fatehgarh Panchtoor and the market
committee stopped its operations for four days. A warning was also issued to
the owners of a couple of other mills.
Meanwhile, a visit to a
few rice mills in the adjoining areas of Moga city confirmed that direct
purchase of paddy from farmers was going on unabated. A farmer of Dhalleke
village said he had sold his paddy to a rice mill to avoid hassles of drying
the grains due to high humidity content and waiting in the queue for purchase.
Farmers also allege that
the rice millers were packing gunny bags with extra grains ranging from 1 kg to
1.5 kg per bag (3 kg to 4.5 kg per quintal) on the excuse of shrinkage.
Rice millers claim that the
weight of bags containing grains of high humidity content reduces after the
purchase due to shrinkage
www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/slow-lifting-moga-farmers-sell-paddy-directly-to-millers/
State sets 53L ton target for kharif
By Express News Service |
Published: 27th October 2017 02:06 AM |
Last Updated: 27th October 2017 07:31
AM | A+A A- |
BHUBANESWAR: The State Government on
Thursday said paddy procurement for current kharif marketing season will start
from November 1 from Kalahandi district.“Paddy procurement operation will start
from Kalahandi district from November 1 followed by Bargarh district from
November 7. Other districts will be covered under the decentralised procurement
system as and when paddy starts arriving at the mandis (market yards),” Chief
Secretary Aditya Padhi told reporters.The Government has set a tentative target
to procure 36 lakh ton of rice (around 53 lakh ton in terms of paddy)
during the 2017-18 kharif marketing season covering both kharif and rabi crops.
However, there is no bar for procurement of any higher quantum if more paddy
comes to mandi from registered farmers with approval of the Government, he
said.
The Chief Secretary said, kharif paddy will
be procured from farmers who are registered in the online portal of Food
Supplies and Consumer Welfare (FS&CW) Department and the operation will
continue till April 2018. Paddy will be procured as per the minimum support
price (MSP) declared by the Central Government. Padhi reviewed the
preparation for paddy procurement at a high-level meeting attended by
Agriculture Production Commissioner GK Dhal and Secretaries of Agriculture,
FS&CW, Cooperation and Panchayati Raj departments.
The State Government has planned to procure
44 lakh tonnes of paddy during kharif and 9 lakh tonnes during rabi season.
Rabi paddy would be procured from May to June 2018.
Sources in the FS&CW department said around 10 lakh farmers have already been registered under the Government’s e-registration system out of which 73,537 are share croppers. The P-PAS (Paddy Procurement Automation System), an e-governance process for online payment to registered farmers will be extended to 309 out of 314 blocks of the State.
Sources in the FS&CW department said around 10 lakh farmers have already been registered under the Government’s e-registration system out of which 73,537 are share croppers. The P-PAS (Paddy Procurement Automation System), an e-governance process for online payment to registered farmers will be extended to 309 out of 314 blocks of the State.
Apart from Food Corporation of India (FCI),
three State Government agencies will participate in the decentralised
procurement. However, the bulk procurement (around 95 per cent) will be done by
Odisha State Civil Supply Corporation (OSCSC). The Corporation will procure
paddy through 2,576 primary agriculture cooperative societies (PACS).The two
other State agencies are Odisha State Cooperative Marketing Federation (Markfed)
and Tribal Development Cooperative Corporation (TDCC).
About 1436 rice millers will participate in procurement operation and milling of paddy. Rice millers who have defaulted in supply of rice to the Government last year will not be allowed to participate.
About 1436 rice millers will participate in procurement operation and milling of paddy. Rice millers who have defaulted in supply of rice to the Government last year will not be allowed to participate.
J:www.newindianexpress.com/states/odisha/2017/oct/27/state-sets-53l-ton-target-for-kharif-1684274.html
Millers double non basmati
purchase in Punjab
By
, ET Bureau|
Oct 25, 2017,
04.08 PM IST
0Comments
With an eye on
global market, millers are privately purchasing non-basmati with renewed vigour
this season in Punjab
that contributes almost half of rice
for public distribution system. Eying prospects of higher margins in export of
non-basmati, private millers in Punjab this season have purchased more than
double compared to corresponding period in the last kharif marketing season.
This year millers have already bought around 2 lakh tonnes of paddy compared to 1.5 lakh tonnes in the entire procurement season in the last year. The procurement is midway in Punjab that contributed 165 lakh tonnes of paddy in 2016-17.
The private buying is set to further rise in the state as the millers are expecting rise in demand of non basmati from the export destinations. "The private purchase has already surpassed figure of the last year and it is expected to multiply this year," HS Grewal, additional director, Punjab Food and Civil Supplies, told ET.
Export of Indian non basmati is growing more than basmati variety and the country exported 68 million tonnes of non-basmati in 2016-17. Around 32 million tonnes of non basmati was exported during April-August in 2017-18.
"The spike in price of basmati paddy has turned millers and exporters to non-basmati who are expecting better margins," Ashok Sethi, director of Punjab Rice Millers and Exporters Association told ET.
The millers in Punjab are expecting spike in demand from Bangladesh and African countries. In the recent years, the export of non-basmati rice has posted higher growth than basmati rice. Hike in price of basmati paddy has also turned the millers to non basmati.
This time basmati paddy procurement price in Punjab is ruling higher by 30-50 per cent than the last year. This year the scope of lower output of basmati due to less acreage and firm international prices have buttressed the price rise.
Despite higher private purchase of non-basmati, the Food Corporation of India is assured of meeting its target of procurement in Punjab. "The paddy procurement figures at present are almost comparable to corresponding period in the last year," DGM, North, Food Corporation of India VS Kumar told ET.
The Punjab Government agencies and private millers have procured total 8395354 tonnes of Paddy in Punjab till today evening which included 677578 tonnes procured on 23rd October.
Disclosing this here today, an official Spokesman of Punjab Government said that out of total procurement of 8395354 tonnes of paddy in all the procurement centers of Punjab, the Government agencies procured 8197315 tonnes of paddy (97.6%) till date whereas 198039 tonnes (2.4%) of paddy has been procured by millers.
He said that PUNGRAIN had procured 2636216 tonnes (31.4%), MARKFED procured 1889879 tonnes (22.5%). PUNSUP procured 1750608 tonnes (20.9%), PSWC procured 887876 tonnes (10.6%) and PAFC was able to procure 833038 tonnes (9.9%) of paddy. The Central Government agency FCI had been able to procure 199698 tonnes (2.4%).
In Punjab, bulk of non basmati, almost 98-99 per cent is purchased by government agencies through Minimum Support Price scheme. Last year around 165 lakh tonnes of paddy was procured by the agencies in the state.
This year millers have already bought around 2 lakh tonnes of paddy compared to 1.5 lakh tonnes in the entire procurement season in the last year. The procurement is midway in Punjab that contributed 165 lakh tonnes of paddy in 2016-17.
The private buying is set to further rise in the state as the millers are expecting rise in demand of non basmati from the export destinations. "The private purchase has already surpassed figure of the last year and it is expected to multiply this year," HS Grewal, additional director, Punjab Food and Civil Supplies, told ET.
Export of Indian non basmati is growing more than basmati variety and the country exported 68 million tonnes of non-basmati in 2016-17. Around 32 million tonnes of non basmati was exported during April-August in 2017-18.
"The spike in price of basmati paddy has turned millers and exporters to non-basmati who are expecting better margins," Ashok Sethi, director of Punjab Rice Millers and Exporters Association told ET.
The millers in Punjab are expecting spike in demand from Bangladesh and African countries. In the recent years, the export of non-basmati rice has posted higher growth than basmati rice. Hike in price of basmati paddy has also turned the millers to non basmati.
This time basmati paddy procurement price in Punjab is ruling higher by 30-50 per cent than the last year. This year the scope of lower output of basmati due to less acreage and firm international prices have buttressed the price rise.
Despite higher private purchase of non-basmati, the Food Corporation of India is assured of meeting its target of procurement in Punjab. "The paddy procurement figures at present are almost comparable to corresponding period in the last year," DGM, North, Food Corporation of India VS Kumar told ET.
The Punjab Government agencies and private millers have procured total 8395354 tonnes of Paddy in Punjab till today evening which included 677578 tonnes procured on 23rd October.
Disclosing this here today, an official Spokesman of Punjab Government said that out of total procurement of 8395354 tonnes of paddy in all the procurement centers of Punjab, the Government agencies procured 8197315 tonnes of paddy (97.6%) till date whereas 198039 tonnes (2.4%) of paddy has been procured by millers.
He said that PUNGRAIN had procured 2636216 tonnes (31.4%), MARKFED procured 1889879 tonnes (22.5%). PUNSUP procured 1750608 tonnes (20.9%), PSWC procured 887876 tonnes (10.6%) and PAFC was able to procure 833038 tonnes (9.9%) of paddy. The Central Government agency FCI had been able to procure 199698 tonnes (2.4%).
In Punjab, bulk of non basmati, almost 98-99 per cent is purchased by government agencies through Minimum Support Price scheme. Last year around 165 lakh tonnes of paddy was procured by the agencies in the state.
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