Farmers no need
to worry about La Niña — PhilRice
Despite reports on La Niña expecting to last until March from the
Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration
(PAGASA), climate change experts from PhilRice advise farmers to remain calm as
the effects may not be detrimental but at the same urge them to be always
prepared.
“The effects of La Niña vary
around the world. In the Philippines, it brings more rains while in other
countries, the usual effect can also be drought. Local farmers need not panic
as what we might be experiencing until March are just slight effects of La
Niña, after that everything will return to the neutral condition,” says Dr.
Jasper G. Tallada, climate change expert and supervising science research specialist
from PhilRice’s Rice Engineering and Mechanization Division (REMD).
Tallada has emphasized that while there is no early sign of
detrimental effects of La Niña, it is still good to be prepared and alert.
Hence, he advises farmers to regularly check updates on La Niña and other
extreme weather conditions that can affect their rice farming. He also
recommends them to adopt some practices that will help them prepare for the
effects of La Niña.
“We encourage farmers to use
submergence-tolerant varieties or those that can still survive despite being
soaked in water for days. These varieties include NSIC Rc 68 (Sacobia) and NSIC
Rc 194 (Submarino 1). They should also plan their planting schedule very well
to avoid torrential rains and strong winds that can cause damages to crops,”
explains Dr. Ricardo F. Orge, lead of the PhilRice’s Climate Resiliency for
Enhanced Agricultural Trade and Efficiency for Rice (CREATE Rice) Program.
According to these experts, farmers should repair drainage canals,
dykes, and ensure an effective water management system in the field to avoid
pest infestation and diseases that are prevalent during La Niña. Farmers are
also encouraged to plant trees around their fields that can serve as wind
breakers for crops during strong winds.
Meanwhile, Orge and Tallada have also highlighted the effectiveness
of using mechanical dryers in drying the crops, the establishment of floating
gardens for water-soaked areas, and the use of small farm reservoir to store
rainwater that can be used by farmers in the next planting seasons.
“The bottomline is that we should always be informed about the
changes in our weather. We can check for updates from PAGASA and the National
Disaster Risk Reduction & Management Council (NDRRMC),” Tallada concludes.
PhilRice Central Experimentation
Station
Domoguen: Waging wars on crop pests and diseases
Monday, February 26, 2018
By ROBERT L. DOMOGUEN
MOUNTAIN LIGHT BY EXPERIENCE
, farmers know that major outbreaks of pests and diseases are
infrequent. The question is when these outbreaks occur do the farmers and
stakeholders know what to do? Otherwise, the farmers lose their crop. When
local farmers lose their crop for the current season, they lose their
livelihood and are forced to incur additional debts to start all over again.
This need not happen.
A whole field crop may not necessarily be damaged if the farmer and
crop technicians were vigilant in their surveillance of the occurrence of pests
and diseases. It is also during pests and disease outbreak situations that
farmers are forced to use pesticides fueling continued concern on food safety
and abuse of the environment. The Integrated Pest Management (IPM) program was
developed to aid farmers in making economically and environmentally responsible
decisions on the use of pesticides when necessary. In most cases, the program
would advise farmers not to use pesticides – “it is not even necessary.” Pest
monitoring, also known as field scouting is a cornerstone of any effective IPM
program. It begins with the correct identification of a pest, according to
Ulysses G. Duque, Agricultural Center Chief ll at the Bureau of Plant Industry
(BPI), San Andres St., Malate, Manila.
“Farmers and pest scouts must know and identify their enemies
(referring to field crop pests) properly to be able to control and manage the
damage they inflict on their plants,” he added. Duque was part of a team of
experts invited by the Department of Agriculture-Cordillera Administrative
Region (DA-CAR) to train and introduce local agricultural technicians and pest
control officers to a new government pest surveillance research project called
“Pests Risks Identification and Management (PRIME). PRIME is currently being
implemented on rice by the Department of Agriculture (DA) and its attached agencies:
Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR); Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI); and
Philippine Rice Research Institute (Philrice). The International Rice Research
Institute (IRRI) and other partner institutions are part of the team.
The other and earlier projects
on rice pests and diseases identification, control and management include the
Surveillance and Early Warning System for Masagana (1985 edition). This was
later updated into a Philippine Pest Surveillance and Early Warning System on
Rice (2017 edition) by the BPI. The primary objective of any public invested
research and development project is to transfer technology and tools to the
major stakeholders of farming, more importantly, the farmers to use, manage,
and enhance the practice of their professions. In the two days that I joined
and participated in the PRIME lectures and field activities in Tabuk City,
Kalinga Province, last February 20-21, it was apparent how expertise evolved
over the years on pest surveillance, monitoring, and risk management that are
integrated into a system that stakeholders can use to their benefit and that of
the consumers of agricultural products.
It does take time and effort to learn the old techniques and be
updated with the new strategies and approaches. For example, during the lecture
on injuries caused by insects, by Mr. Ricardo Marquez, Senior Science Research
Specialist at Philrice, explained that scouts or those tasked to monitor the
pests of crops can easily see what they are looking for with a combination of
direct recognition, knowing something about the biology and habits of the
pests, and identifying injury symptoms on the plant caused by a pest. In time,
“you must learn to create your story about a certain pest that would make you
readily recognize it and understand its behavior,” he said. Knowing and
understanding a pest prevents hasty decisions and efforts to control it.
This is because monitoring pests, when properly done, provide
enough information to make an economically sensible decision that is based on solid
research information, according to Marquez. In practice, the decision is
flexible and is still incumbent upon knowing and understanding the pests and
diseases of rice, for instance. This leads to the formulation and employment of
a suitable and efficient combination of management strategies and biological,
cultural and mechanical control methods of pest control. If pesticides are to
be used, it must as a rule, be utilized as a corrective tool that targets a
specific pest present in economically damaging numbers. Here is a story
formulated by a pest scout on the brown planthopper that is helpful in
recognizing the problem and evolving effective solutions, management and
control of the pest.
The brown planthopper is a very damaging insect in rice cultivation.
These are very tiny insects that are hardly noticed even if the rice plants in
a paddy are covered by them. An infested rice field can be lost if
interventions come in too late. The brown planthopper can be recognized by
knowing its feeding habits. It normally attacks at the base of the plant and
sucks its sap that causes drying. Affected plants look burnt. The worst attack
is in the booting stage or just before the rice ripens. The brown planthopper
is a pest that likes some kinds of rice more than the others. This
characteristic suggests one aspect of controlling the pest. Avoid planting rice
varieties that are susceptible to the brown planthopper in those times where
their growth is very favorable.
The brown planthoppers like
warm and moist weather but do not like bright sunlight. Planting several rice
seedlings close together makes it is easy for the hoppers to move from one
plant to another. The pest also likes to eat rice that has been fertilized with
lots of urea. Do not spray pesticides early in the season as a control measure.
The act kills hopper predators such as spiders. Here are a few information and
recommendations I gathered during the lectures for identifying and managing
insect pests in rice in the Philippines from the pest scout exercises in Tabuk
City. - The farmer is a very important character in the identification and
management of pests and diseases in the farm. Their active support in
developing and adopting a scientific approach to pest surveillance and
monitoring must be sought continuously especially in putting in place an early
warning system for pest outbreaks. - The PRIME is building a rice area pest
monitoring system. It would be best to also utilize the strategies and
learnings from this project for other crops.
- The site selection and monitoring sites establish visits by
trained pest scouts in the study, identification and determining the emergence
of pests at a very early stage. The arrangement must provide for close working
tie-ups with the farmers in the area to ensure transfer of critical knowledge
and technology. - The Project can look into creating awareness among the
farmers about Integrated Crop Management (ICM) practices that keep the plant
healthy and less vulnerable to plant pests and diseases. - Pest and disease
management consist of a range of activities that support each other. Good crop
management practices are aimed at preventing pests and diseases from affecting
a crop. It focuses on keeping existing pest populations and diseases low.
Control, on the other hand, is an activity that focuses on killing the pest and
disease. In organic agriculture, the management of pests and diseases deals
with the causes of a problem rather than treating the symptoms. Therefore,
management is a much higher priority than control. Besides monitoring pests and
their management are focused on preventive practices, as well as control
practices using biological, mechanical control, and natural pesticides which
are important considerations in pests risks identification and management on
food crops.
http://www.sunstar.com.ph/baguio/opinion/2018/02/26/domoguen-waging-wars-crop-pests-and-diseases-590956
Organic Rice Market Potential
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SOURCE The Financial Consulting https://thefinancialconsulting.com/
Worldwide Steamed Rice Market –
Trends, Emerging Growth Factors and Forecasts 2022
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Company 3
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Steamed Rice Market by Type and
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Steamed Rice Market Size by Type
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Steamed Rice Market Size by Type (2012-2017)
Steamed Rice Market Size by Application (2012-2017)
Potential Application of Steamed Rice in Future
Top Consumer/End Users of Steamed Rice
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SOURCE The Financial Consulting https://thefinancialconsulting.com/
Communicating
science through journalism
Monday, February 26, 2018 By ERWIN P. NICAVERA MANILA. Dr. Clarissa
David delivers her keynote address. (Contributed photo) "JOURNALISM about
science, technology, engineering, and all manner of innovation is not really
just about the science. The stories written are about tackling the country’s
and our world’s most perplexing and urgent problems like environmental
conservation, climate change, disasters, and public health crises.
" This was underscored by University of the Philippines (UP)
Diliman Graduate Studies Department professor Clarissa David in her keynote
address during the 1st UP Science Journalism Awards at the university's film
studio in Quezon City recently. Tracing back the journey of her late father,
who is a rice scientist, David stressed that communicating science is not
really about the scientists and their work, it is rather about the broader
public that these scientific advances seek to serve. "Science for the
public good can only be realized when the science is informed by communication
and journalism," she said.
The professor described the state of science journalism in the
Philippine as something that needs improvement. There is lack of demand from
audiences for science-centered news stories because any stories will have to
compete for public attention on all other things that require it, like
politics, national security, and global affairs, she said. David lamented that
there is not really a broad constituency for science and technology as
indicated by a lack of public funding, the lack of public attention, and a lack
of press coverage. "We don't have to be scientists to help science get on
the public and policy agenda, there is much to do by way of communication and
good journalism," David said, adding that "science journalists need
support if we want them to help us in this mission." Stories about Mayon
Volcano, dengvaxia, the fire on Mt. Pulag, and research on Benham Rise are just
among the evolving circumstances making good science reporting urgent and
necessary in the country.
David expressed optimism that barriers to reporting science stories
like these are getting lower. Now that news is largely consumed online, she said
the issue of "scarcity of space" that dominated much of the logic of
what is considered newsworthy is on the decline. David said communicating the
importance of any scientific research work is, centrally, the role of
journalists. "Journalists have a nose for the story, for the public
interest, for sorting out the important points amidst the technical
jargon," she noted. David then appealed to science writers and editors to
emphasize the journalism not on the scientists but on the substance of their
works and its impact on the community. Responding to the challenge of giving
more importance to science journalism, the UP College of Mass Communication
initiated the said Science Journalism Awards. This is a project component of
Communicating Science and Technology Research and Development at UP (CoST UP).
This initiative is aimed at recognizing the exemplary reporting in science and
technology, as well as, the scientific researches and developments in the
country. It also aims to acknowledge the importance of communicating accurate
science stories and the mainstreaming of science and technology into the public
consciousness.
From 60 nominations of a diverse group of mainstream and community
media organizations nationwide, four SunStar journalists emerged as winner and
finalists. This writer representing SunStar Bacolod was among the three
finalists for Best UP Science Story for Print and Online along with Nickolas
Tubo of SunStar Philippines. Herty Lopez of Super Balita Cebu was a finalist
for Best Science Feature Story for Print and Online while Nef Luczon of SunStar
Cagayan De Oro won the Best Science Commentary for Print and Online. The other
winners are Angelica Yang of GMA News Online for Best Science News Story,
Edmund Usman of Rappler for Best Science Feature Story for Print and Online,
Michael Joe Delizo of ABS-CBN/DZMM for Best Science Story for Radio, and Mikael
Angelo Francisco of GMA News Online for Best UP Science Story. They received a
cash prize and a trophy designed by the late National Artist for Sculpture,
Napoleon Abueva.
The judging committee is composed of journalists, academicians,
scientists, and an economist to well represent science and technology as an
interdisciplinary field. Dr. Elena Pernia, program leader of CoST UP and dean
of College of Mass Communication, said very often science is perceived to be
something that is not understandable, something that exists in laboratories.
Pernia said the program aims to bring home the fact that "everything we do
and everything that we use" benefited and continues to benefit from
developments in science. "The UP Science Journalism Awards is part of that
communicating product it is to bring the journalists together with the
scientists to deliver the message to the ordinary man that science is something
that is daily beneficial,” she added.
http://www.sunstar.com.ph/bacolod/lifestyle/2018/02/26/communicating-science-through-journalism-590816
Made-in-Vietnam
varieties cover 59 percent of rice fields
As
many as 4.6 million hectares of land, or 59 percent of total rice area in
Vietnam, have been cultivated with domestically-made varieties, according to
the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Harvesting
rice in the Mekong Delta region
In the Mekong Delta region alone,
the varieties made by Vietnamese scientists have been grown on 77 percent of
the total rice area. In particular, the high-quality OM5451 variety has been
used for nearly 1 million hectares.The productivity of the new varieties is
higher than old ones by an average 10 percent, equivalent to an addition 1.65
million tonnes of rice or over 8 trillion VND per year.
At the same time, many new
techniques and technologies have been transferred and applied in agriculture,
contributing to improving the quality and productivity of products as well as
competitiveness of Vietnamese farm produce, while reducing production cost and
enhancing incomes of farmers.Last year, the MARD recognised 48 new plant
varieties, 29 new technology advances and processes, many of which have been
applied in production.The ministry has also placed order for research on
agricultural technologies for the sector’s restructuring towards sustainable
development, with 36 technology research projects and seven pilot production
projects with the engagement of many enterprises.
In 2018, the MARD will promote
technology research and transfer to serve the sector’s reform and the building
of new-style rural areas in the 2018-2025 period.At the same time, the ministry
will focus on developing national products and national trademarks for a number
of products, including rice, mushroom, coffee, catfish and shrimp.It will also
continue encouraging the involvement of enterprises in scientific research and
technology transfer activities.In 2017, Vietnam exported about 6 million tonnes
of rice, over 1 million tonnes higher than last year’s figure.An estimated
524,000 tonnes of rice was exported in January 2018.-VNA
Razzak
Janoo Trust organises free eye camp
Haji Razzak Janoo Memorial Trust in collaboration with Dadu
Chamber of Commerce organised a free Laser Eye Camp at Ladies Gymkhana, Dadu. Rafique Suleman Senior Vice
Chairman Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP) was the chief guest of
the inaugural ceremony, whereas Ghulam Qadir Solangi Patron of Dadu Chamber of
Commerce, Ghulam Mustafa Solangi President Dadu Chamber of Commerce and leading
rice exporters Usman Shaikh, Ashfaq Ghaffar and Asif Ali Shaikh were the guests
of the honour at the eye camp inaugural ceremony.
Rafique Suleman inaugurated the free eye camp and hailed the services of Razzak Janoo Trust. He said that Haji Razzak Janoo Memorial Trust is Pakistan's largest family trust for eye care and organizing fee laser Eye Surgery camps in Pakistan and abroad. Till now trust has organized 260 Free Eye Camps During the free eye camp, approximately 2200 patients were given free treatment in OPDs whereas 327 laser surgeries were done by Pakistan's prominent eye surgeons, in which three siblings are included, who are now able to see the colours of the world after their successful surgeries.
Additional, in the 30 years history of free eye camp, first time a person was selected for Cornea Grafting, whose surgery will be done in Karachi next week. Rafique Suleman in his address appreciated the services of Haji Razzak Memorial Trust towards the cure of eye diseases.
Rafique Suleman inaugurated the free eye camp and hailed the services of Razzak Janoo Trust. He said that Haji Razzak Janoo Memorial Trust is Pakistan's largest family trust for eye care and organizing fee laser Eye Surgery camps in Pakistan and abroad. Till now trust has organized 260 Free Eye Camps During the free eye camp, approximately 2200 patients were given free treatment in OPDs whereas 327 laser surgeries were done by Pakistan's prominent eye surgeons, in which three siblings are included, who are now able to see the colours of the world after their successful surgeries.
Additional, in the 30 years history of free eye camp, first time a person was selected for Cornea Grafting, whose surgery will be done in Karachi next week. Rafique Suleman in his address appreciated the services of Haji Razzak Memorial Trust towards the cure of eye diseases.
Rice-tariff
bill up for plenary deliberations
February 27, 2018
The House of Representatives is
eyeing to start next week plenary deliberations for a measure that would amend
Republic Act (RA) 8178 to abolish the quantitative restriction (QR) on rice.
This, after the House Committee
on Appropriations, chaired by Rep. Karlo Alexe B. Nograles of the First
District of Davao City together with the House Committee on Agriculture and
Food, chaired by Party-list Rep. Jose T. Panganiban Jr. of Anac-IP,
endorsed on Tuesday for plenary approval the unnumbered substitute bill, which
seeks to replace the rice QR with tariffs.
Nograles adopted the
recommendation of the Department of Finance (DOF) and recommended to the House
Committee on Agriculture and Food the inclusion of this provision: “the fund
shall be in place for the first six years upon the implementation of this act,
after which the earmarking of the amount collected for the purpose shall
terminate
unless otherwise extended by law.”
unless otherwise extended by law.”
However, the panel noted that any
remaining balances on the expiration date of the earmarking for the fund shall
not revert to the general fund, but will continue to be used for the purpose
for which it was set aside.
Under the bill, the rice fund
shall consist of all duties collected from the importation of rice under the
proposed law.
The appropriations panel’s
recommendation was accepted by Panganiban, saying “this is for the benefit of
the farmers.”
With the support of the
leadership of the lower chamber, Panganiban has expressed confidence that the
rice tariff will be passed before Congress goes on its Lenten break next month,
or on March 21.
“So by next week it will be
deliberated at the plenary. We want to finish it here in the lower chamber
before our Holy Week break,” Panganiban told the BusinessMirror.
He also reiterated that the
Duterte administration, particularly the DOF, wants the bill enacted into law
by March 23.
The passage of the law allowing
the tariffication of rice is included in the priority bills identified as
urgent by the Legislative-Executive Development Advisory Council. It is also
one of the priority measures of Congress.
Panganiban has also expressed
confidence that the Senate will pass its version of the rice tariff measure
soon.
“I think, the Senate will pass
its version soon. But, if there is difference between the House and Senate
versions of the QR bill, we will all settle that during the bicameral
conference committee,” he said. The Senate has already committed to pass
its version of the bill by March.
After approving their respective
versions of the rice-tariffication bill, the Senate and the House of
Representatives will transmit their bills to a bicameral conference committee
to consolidate their versions and to discuss the divergent provisions.
The lower house has set the bound
tariff rate for rice imports outside the minimum access volume (MAV) at 180
percent.
Under the substitute bill, the
Philippines will impose a bound tariff rate of 35 percent for rice originating
from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations region, regardless of volume.
Manila would also impose a 40-percent bound tariff most-favored nation (MFN)
rate for in-quota rice imports from countries that do not belong to Asean.
Once the substitute bill is
enacted into law, the country’s MAV for rice shall revert to its 2012 level of
350,000 metric tons (MT), from the current 805,000 MT.
Earlier, the BusinessMirror
reported that Manila has assured the World Trade Organization (WTO) that the
Philippines will be able to finally convert its QR on rice into tariffs by
June, nearly a year after the government was supposed to have scrapped the
nontariff measure.
A Geneva trade official, who was
privy to the proceedings of the recent WTO Committee on Agriculture (COA)
meeting said the Philippine delegation had informed WTO member-countries
that lawmakers are “fast-tracking and prioritizing” the amendment of RA 8178.
RA 8178, or the Agricultural
Tariffication Act, had allowed the Philippines to continue imposing rice quotas
even after the WTO waiver on the special treatment on rice had lapsed on June
30.
The Philippines is under pressure
to convert its QR into tariff after the waiver on the special treatment on rice
expired last June 30. The expiration of the waiver meant that Manila can no
longer impose the nontariff measure.
To avoid possible trade disputes,
President Duterte issued an executive order which retained the country’s rice
concessions as “a sign of goodwill” to the country’s trade partners.
Impact on farmers
The Kilusang Magbubukid ng
Pilipinas (KMP) said on Tuesday the removal of the QR on rice will not improve
food security and reduce poverty.
Citing studies, KMP Chairman
Emeritus Rafael V. Mariano said the income of farmers will drop by 29 percent
upon the lifting of the rice QR.
“This is because subsidized cheap
rice imports will flood the domestic market, compete with local rice
expensively produced by Filipino farmers who lack government support, and
depress more the farm-gate price of palay,” said the former chief of the
Department of Agrarian Reform.
Mariano said weakening rice
production will lead to shrinking agricultural production.
While palay used to account for
almost one-fourth of the gross value added (GVA) in agriculture at current
prices, the KMP said its GVA has been falling by 10.4 percent annually from
2014 to 2016, contributing to overall agriculture decline of almost 1 percent
annually.
“Once the QR is lifted, we expect
greater liberalization and a deluge of rice imports under various free trade
agreements and the World Trade Organization,” Mariano said.
“This will impact on the
livelihood of close to 20 million Filipinos, or about a fifth of the national
population, made up of 2.5 million small farmers, several hundred thousand farm
laborers and other workers involved in the supply of farm inputs and machinery,
milling/processing, warehousing, transport, other services and related economic
activities,” he added.
Mariano also said the government
should seriously consider disengaging from the Agreement on Agriculture (AoA),
which he said, “binds” the local agricultural sector to rice importation
policies.
“Decades under the WTO and the
AoA proved that importation of rice further drove down the farm-gate prices of
palay and increased the window for rice smuggling. The average farm-gate price
of rice is P19.29 per kilogram and even lower, as dictated by traders imposing
the monopoly prices of rice,” he said.
With Jonathan L. Mayuga
Rice prices up due to NFA
THE National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) on Tuesday
said prices of government-subsidized rice jumped a week after the agency
announced its buffer stock would only be enough for two days. Mercedita
Sombilla, assistant secretary for regional development, said that before NFA
came out with a press release on February 6, “prices went even down, even
decreased.”
She made the remark in answer to the query of Sen. Paolo Benigno
Aquino 4th concerning reports that consumers could no longer find the
P27-per-kilo NFA rice. Low-priced rice in the market costs P42 per kilo, he
said.
“You mean after the NFA announced that the buffer stock will only
last for two days, prices went up?” Aquino asked Sombilla.
She replied, “It affected [the prices]. There were speculations from
the traders. People panicked. The week after the press release, prices shot
up.”
Sombilla also said that there was, in fact, an increase in market
penetration of NFA rice. “There was a 245 percent increase in distribution or
market penetration in January. And they are saying now that they no longer have
stocks?”
NFA Administrator Jason Aquino said that as of February 27, the
country’s buffer stock stood at just 1.7 days, way down from the required
15-day buffer stock at any given time and 30 days at the onset of the lean
months of July to September.
‘NFA Council pressured’
Sen. Cynthia Villar, chairman of the Senate Committee on
Agriculture, weighed in, saying: “I think what she (Sombilla) was saying is
that it has psychological effect.”
Sen. Grace Poe advised the NFA officials “to be cautious,
balancing transparency but also offering an alternative.”
Aquino replied: “Yes, we did our job.”
Villar contradicted him, saying. “What job did you do? The mandate
of the NFA is to buy at P17 per kilo palay (paddy rice) from the farmer to make
sure that traders would not take advantage of our farmers.”
“Now, you failed to buy at P17. You then issue a press release
that you don’t have [enough]NFA rice. What is the reason for that? Why? Do you
want that to happen?” she asked.
Villar accused the NFA chief of exerting pressure on the
interagency NFA Council to allow rice imports. The council issued an authority
to import 250,000 metric tons of rice earlier this month because of the
supposed shortage.
The NFA chief explained that the source of NFA buffer stock is
local procurement, but it was unable to buy clean and dry rice at P17 because
the farm gate price stood at P21.
“The farmer is selling that to the traders not to the NFA,” he
said.
Villar retorted: “Senator [Loren] Legarda always says that in
Antique, the farm gate price is P8 per kilo. [Agriculture] Secretary Emmanuel]
Piñol said it was at P10 to P12. So, don’t tell me that.”
“Don’t limit yourself to Central and Northern Luzon because the
NFA has facilities in 87 provinces. Why not go to Mindanao and in Bicol, in
Palawan? Why do we have to stick to Northern Luzon?”
Piñol echoed Villar and said the reported shortage in NFA stocks
was being used “to justify the increase in the price of rice in the market” and
the “additional importation of rice.”
The Agriculture chief said there was no need to import rice
because the country was 96-percent sufficient in rice, with a record harvest of
19.4 million metric tons last year.
Imported rice to arrive in June
The NFA said it expected imported rice to arrive in June, leaving poor Filipinos with no choice but to settle for rice with prices ranging from P42 to P45 per kilo in the meantime.
The NFA said it expected imported rice to arrive in June, leaving poor Filipinos with no choice but to settle for rice with prices ranging from P42 to P45 per kilo in the meantime.
Sen. Juan Edgardo “Sonny” Angara called on authorities to ensure
that the poorest consumers benefit from government-subsidized rice amid
allegations of irregularities in the distribution of rice by the NFA.
Based on the study by the Senate Economic Planning Office, the
government policy of stabilizing the price of rice—both for producers and consumers—cost
the government P45 billion in the past 10 years.
Poe urged the government to send to court suspected big-time rice
smuggler Davidson Bangayan, also known as David Tan, as well as other alleged
members of syndicates or smugglers “operating under the nose of the NFA.”
The government had so far filed three cases against suspected rice
smugglers and illegal importers in Cebu, Subic, Zamboanga under Republic Act
No. 10845 or the Anti-Agricultural Smuggling Act of 2016, a result of a Senate
inquiry in the previous Congress.
Telangana
government steps up vigil on PDS rice distribution
DECCAN
CHRONICLE.
PublishedFeb 27, 2018, 1:38 am IST
UpdatedFeb 27, 2018, 1:44 am IST
However,
the lack of vigilance at district and mandal-level stock points is still giving
scope for diversion of rice.
Hyderabad: The state government has
stepped up vigilance on PDS rice to check illegal diversion from district and
mandal-level stock points. Despite enforcement teams conducting frequent raids
on rice millers, ration dealers, traders and godowns in all districts to
check illegal diversion of PDS rice, it continued to be smuggled to black/open
market and neighbouring states and investigations revealed that these
irregularities are taking place at district and mandal-level stock points
of the civil supplies department, where PDS rice stocks are stored.
To
check this nuisance, it was decided to set up command control centres in all
the district headquarters, which will be integrated with mandal-level stock
points through CCTV cameras. The district-level stock points will be linked
with a state-level common control centre in Hyderabad. The first such common
control centre in districts is being opened in Siddipet on February 28.
Civil
supplies commissioner C.V. Anand had already established state-level command
control centre at departments headquarters “Civil Supplies Bhavan” in the city
last year.
The
initiative could successfully check diversion of PDS stocks as GPS devices were
installed on all trucks transporting PDS rice from godowns to ration
shops and all these were linked with the command control centre. Officials in
the centre are continuosly monitoring the movement of trucks.
However,
the lack of vigilance at district and mandal-level stock points is still
giving scope for diversion of rice.
“We
will install CCTV cameras in all the 1,700 godowns located in the state within
a week. Around 10 cameras will be set up to track loading, unloading, godowns,
main entrance, weighing bridge, platform and movement of all staff at
each godown. All this will be linked to 31 district-level common control
centres in all districts. Collector, joint collector, civil supplies officials
can directly track the movements live from godowns. These 31 centres will be
linked with the state centre in Hyderabad,” Mr Anand said.
Mr
Anand added that these cameras will have a recording back-up of 30 days, linked
with 2MB internet speed, with which officials can track the movements in
godowns and trucks round the clock.
Made-in-Vietnam
varieties cover 59 percent of rice fields
As
many as 4.6 million hectares of land, or 59 percent of total rice area in
Vietnam, have been cultivated with domestically-made varieties, according to
the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Harvesting
rice in the Mekong Delta region
In the Mekong Delta region alone,
the varieties made by Vietnamese scientists have been grown on 77 percent of
the total rice area. In particular, the high-quality OM5451 variety has been
used for nearly 1 million hectares.The productivity of the new varieties is
higher than old ones by an average 10 percent, equivalent to an addition 1.65
million tonnes of rice or over 8 trillion VND per year.At the same time, many
new techniques and technologies have been transferred and applied in
agriculture, contributing to improving the quality and productivity of products
as well as competitiveness of Vietnamese farm produce, while reducing
production cost and enhancing incomes of farmers.
Last year, the MARD recognised 48
new plant varieties, 29 new technology advances and processes, many of which
have been applied in production.The ministry has also placed order for research
on agricultural technologies for the sector’s restructuring towards sustainable
development, with 36 technology research projects and seven pilot production
projects with the engagement of many enterprises.
In 2018, the MARD will promote
technology research and transfer to serve the sector’s reform and the building
of new-style rural areas in the 2018-2025 period.At the same time, the ministry
will focus on developing national products and national trademarks for a number
of products, including rice, mushroom, coffee, catfish and shrimp.It will also
continue encouraging the involvement of enterprises in scientific research and
technology transfer activities.In 2017, Vietnam exported about 6 million tonnes
of rice, over 1 million tonnes higher than last year’s figure.
An estimated 524,000 tonnes of rice
was exported in January 2018.-VNA
Cuz Lifts Hold; Senate Confirms
Northey at USDA
By Lesley Dixon
WASHINGTON, DC -- The Senate confirmed Bill Northey as USDA
Undersecretary for Farm Production and Conservation today after an extended
stalemate surrounding his confirmation. The Senate Agriculture Committee voted
unanimously last October to advance Northey, currently Iowa's Secretary of
Agriculture, but Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) held up the nominee for months in an
effort to alter the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).
President Trump met this morning with Cruz at the White House,
along with Senators Joni Ernst (R-IA), Chuck Grassley (R-IA), and Pat Toomey
(R-PA) to discuss Cruz's issues with the RFS. Cruz then released his hold on
Northey's confirmation, ending a drawn-out standoff leaving several positions
unfilled at the Farm Service Agency (FSA), the Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS), and the
Risk
Management Agency (RMA)."Undersecretary Northey's confirmation is long
overdue and we're glad to see it finally go through," said Ben Mosely, USA
Rice vice president of government affairs.
"With this leadership role filled, we hope to soon see the
administrator-level positions filled so they can get to work on the many issues
facing rice farmers."While this morning's meeting at the White House
lifted the hold on Northey, a compromise on the RFS was not reached. Created by
the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the RFS mandates that gasoline contain a certain
percentage of biofuels, mostly ethanol from corn. The senators from Iowa, the country's largest
producer of biofuels, have pushed back on Cruz's criticism of the RFS. Cruz says the RFS hurts energy jobs, a
particular concern for Pennsylvania refineries. USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue has
long supported Northey's nomination, calling him "a quality
candidate" and "an authentic farmer" who is trusted in
Iowa. "We're anxious to get him up
on the job," Perdue has said.
Don't squander the opportunity
CSP Sign-Up Deadlines This
Friday
By Emily Woodall
LITTLE ROCK, AR -- The
deadline to apply for the Sustaining the Future of Rice Conservation
Stewardship Program (CSP) is this Friday, March 2. This program is available for rice producers
in Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Texas. Go here for more information.
A second separate and concurrent CSP sign-up is currently available
for rice producers in Texas. This
sign-up is part of the Lower Colorado River Authority's Prairie Conservation
Reservoir Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) which is supported
by the USA Rice-Ducks Unlimited Rice Stewardship Partnership.
Producers should note that they will have to choose which program
to apply for, and that they can only apply for one. The Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) CSP special project assists landowners and rice
producers who voluntarily implement conservation and management practices that
aim to improve irrigation water management, control sediment and nutrient
runoff, and provide waterfowl habitat on rice production lands.
"NRCS has updated the program to help producers better
evaluate their conservation options and the benefits to their operations and
natural resources," said Texas Rice Stewardship Coordinator Kirby
Brown. "Partnership staff can help
producers see up front why they are or are not meeting stewardship thresholds,
and allow them to pick practices and enhancements that work for their conservation
objectives. These tools also enable
producers to see potential payment scenarios for conservation early in the
process."
This special RCPP CSP project area includes rice production acreage
in 12 counties, including Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Colorado, Fort Bend,
Jackson, Jefferson, Lavaca, Liberty, Matagorda, Waller, and Wharton. A special emphasis is placed on Colorado,
Wharton, and Matagorda counties.
This project allots 35,000 acres of CSP in 2018 specifically to
Texas rice growers, however, applications must be received by NRCS Field
Offices by March 2, 2018 to be considered.
Producers interested in CSP are
encouraged to contact their local USDA service center or visit
www.nrcs.usda.gov/GetStarted. For more
help, contact Texas Rice Stewardship staff Kirby Brown at (210) 213-2805 or
kbrown2@ducks.org, and Dennis Neuman at (512) 373-5736 or dneuman@ducks.org.
USA Rice Daily
New rice herbicides available this year
Rice
farmers will have new herbicides to fight weeds in 2018.
Another new product, RiceOne, has
good residual activity, and it is effective on grasses and broadleaf weeds, he
said, but farmers must spray it soon after it is mixed. “If you stop that
sprayer for any reason, it’s not going to take long for it to fall out of
solution,” he said.
Webster cautioned farmers against
mixing Provisia, a grass herbicide, with broadleaf herbicides, especially
propanil. The Provisia herbicide was less effective about three out of four
times when it was mixed in combination with a broadleaf herbicide, he
said.
Provisia is to be used with the
Provisia rice, and it is intended for fields that have severe weedy rice
problems that cannot be controlled with Clearfield rice.
AgCenter Extension rice
specialist Dustin Harrell said Provisia rice needs
more nitrogen, and that increases the likelihood of developing blast, so he is
recommending two fungicide applications on Provisia rice.The company that sells
the AV-1011 bird repellent for seed treatment is offering a rebate for the
product this year, Harrell said.Farmers also have a new fungicide, Amistar Top,
said AgCenter plant pathologist Don
Groth.
The product is effective against
sheath blight and blast diseases. It also will work against sheath blight that
has developed resistance to strobilurin fungicides, he said.The product is labeled
for one or two 15-ounce applications. “I would recommend using the full labeled
rate,” Groth said.
Groth urged farmers to rotate
fungicides. “If we keep using the same fungicides over and over, we’re going to
get resistance, and I don’t have any new material coming down the pipeline,” he
said.
Mexican rice
borer
AgCenter entomologist Blake
Wilson said the Mexican rice borer has spread throughout
southwest Louisiana, but it has not been found in Avoyelles or Rapides
parishes. “I anticipate it will be in the next few years,” he said.AgCenter
entomologist Sebe Brown said rice water weevils in
Arkansas fields have developed resistance to the seed treatment Cruiser.
AgCenter rice breeder Adam
Famoso said a seed increase in Puerto Rico is being grown now
for the second generation of Provisia that will have better yield potential
than the current version, PVL01.Famoso also said development of a long-grain
conventional variety is underway. “This is an area we would like to put more
emphasis on,” he said.
The hybrid program is making
progress, but increasing the seed production of hybrid lines is a
challenge.AgCenter economist Mike
Deliberto said a 17 percent rice acreage increase is projected
by the U.S. Farm Bureau. “Arkansas’ acreage will be similar to where it was in
2016,” he said.An increase in cotton acres in India could result in reduced
rice exports by that country, which would help U.S. rice exports, he said.
http://www.deltafarmpress.com/rice/new-rice-herbicides-available-year
Rice subsidy costs gov’t P45 B in past 10 years –Angara
February 28, 2018, 8:35 AM
By Mario Casayuran and Vanne
Elaine Terrazola
Sen. Juan Edgardo Angara,
chairman of the Senate ways and means committee on Tuesday pressed
authorities to ensure that the poorest consumers truly benefit from government-subsidized
rice amid allegations of irregularities in the distribution of rice by the
National Food Authority (NFA).
Citing a study by the Senate
Economic Planning Office, Angara said the policy to stabilize the price of
rice—both for producers and consumers—has cost the government P45 billion in
subsidy for the past 10 years.“The government has appropriated huge amount of
funds to subsidize rice. Are we sure that the poorest Filipino families are
benefitting from these subsidies?” said Angara, questioning the reported
leakages and poor targets of the agency.
Angara has filed a resolution
seeking to look into the NFA’s effectiveness in ensuring the food security of
the country, and the stability of supply and price of the staple grain-rice.
“Rice is the most important
staple food for every Filipino family. The supply of rice should be ensured and
is made affordable to ordinary citizens,” he added. Last month, NFA announced
it only had two days worth of buffer stock which alarmed consumers triggering a
spike in rice prices.
The NFA is required to maintain a
buffer stock of at least 15 days of consumption at any given time.NFA
Administrator Jason Aquino explained it decreased its distribution in the
market and prioritized distributing stocks in calamity-prone areas,
highly-depressed regions and relief agencies.
Given the low supply of NFA rice,
the price of commercial rice increased from P3 to P5 per kilo in some areas.
Sufficient rice stock
Sufficient rice stock
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F.
Piñol said the reported shortage in NFA stocks is being used “to justify the
increase in the price of rice in the market” and the “additional importation of
rice”.
“In the last quarter of 2017
going into the first quarter of 2018, the country has a buffer stock of 2.7
million metric tons (MT), good for 88 days,” Piñol told Manila Bulletin after
attending a public hearing on the reported rice shortage conducted by the
Senate agriculture committee chaired by Sen. Cynthia A. Villar.
“By the end of this quarter going
into the second quarter, the country will have a projected buffer stock of
three million metric tons, good for 96 days,” Piñol added.
He said the “confusion” over the
supposed rice shortage could also be traced to the failure of the NFA to adjust
its strategies probably because of its conflict with the
NFA Council which prevented the
NFA to bring in rice stocks right away to support the needs of retailers who
are pressured by consumers to provide rice at P27 per kilo.
Piñol also traced the rice
problem to the failure of the NFA to increase the price of palay it buys from
farmers and is losing out to the private sector.
Piñol assured farmers’ groups
there is no need to fear a proposed imposition of tariff on imported rice
“because in the long run everything in the end will level up.”
P18 per kilo
P18 per kilo
At the hearing, NFA was urged to
increase its buying price for rice at P18 so that local farmers will sell them
their harvest and address the shortage of cheap rice.
Villar said the shortage would not have happened if the agency had fulfilled its mandate to buy unmilled dry rice from local farmers at P17 per kilogram.
Villar said the shortage would not have happened if the agency had fulfilled its mandate to buy unmilled dry rice from local farmers at P17 per kilogram.
But Aquino said while they “did
(their) job” and were “aggressive” in procuring rice supply, they are having
difficulties in looking for farmers who would sell their harvests at the said
rate.
Citing their data from the last
quarter of 2017, Aquino said the average buying price for rice currently stands
at P18.95 per kilogram.
He said he sought the approval of the NFA Council to buy rice at P22 per kilo but was rejected.
He said he sought the approval of the NFA Council to buy rice at P22 per kilo but was rejected.
Villar supported the Council’s
decision saying the increase would result to higher price of NFA rice in the
market.
She, however, is amenable to
increase the buying price to P18, but warned that NFA rice would increase to
P30 to P34 per kilo, from its current P27-per-kilo rate.
https://news.mb.com.ph/2018/02/27/rice-subsidy-costs-govt-p45-b-in-past-10-years-angara/
REFILE-Nagpur Foodgrain Prices Open- February 27, 2018
Nagpur, Feb 27 (Reuters) – Gram and Tuar declined further in Nagpur Agriculture Produce
Marketing Committee (APMC) on lack of demand from local millers. Fresh fall in Madhya Pradeshpulses, increased supply from producing regions and high moisture content arrival also pulleddown prices in limited deals.
About 3,400 bags of gram and 1,500 bags of tuar reported for auction in Nagpur APMC, accordingto sources.
FOODGRAINS & PULSES
GRAM
* Gram varieties ruled steady in open market here but demand was poor.
TUAR
* Tuar gavarani and tuar Karnataka firmed up in open market here on good festival
demand from local traders.
* Batri dal, Lakhodi dal and Watana dal recovered strongly in open market here on good
festival season demand from local traders amid weak supply from producing regions.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 3,900-4,100, Tuar dal (clean) – 6,300-6,500, Udid Mogar (clean)
– 7,200-8,000, Moong Mogar (clean) 7,000-7,400, Gram – 3,700-3,900, Gram Super best
– 5,400-5,800
* Wheat, rice and other foodgrain items moved in a narrow range in
scattered deals and settled at last levels in thin trading activity.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100 kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 3,050-3,450 3,100-3,580
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 3,700-4,215 3,800-4,220
Moong Auction n.a. 3,900-4,200
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,600-2,800
Wheat Mill quality Auction 1,700-1,758 1,700-1,790
Gram Super Best Bold 5,500-6,000 5,500-6,000
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 5,200-5,400 5,200-5,400
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 3,900-4,000 3,900-4,050
Desi gram Raw 3,750-3,850 3,800-3,900
Gram Kabuli 12,500-13,100 12,500-13,100
Tuar Fataka Best-New 6,800-7,000 6,800-7,000
Tuar Fataka Medium-New 6,400-6,600 6,400-6,600
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New 6,100-6,400 6,100-6,400
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New 5,700-6,000 5,700-6,000
Tuar Gavarani New 4,550-4,650 4,500-4,600
Tuar Karnataka 4,650-4,850 4,600-4,800
Masoor dal best 4,800-5,000 4,800-5,000
Masoor dal medium 4,500-4,700 4,500-4,700
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New) 7,500-8,000 7,500-8,000
Moong Mogar Medium 6,500-7,000 6,500-7,000
Moong dal Chilka 5,700-6,700 5,700-6,700
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 7,500-8,000 7,500-8,000
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,800-8,500 7,800-8,500
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,900-6,500 5,900-6,500
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG) 5,900-6,100 5,900-6,100
Batri dal (100 INR/KG) 4,800-5,300 4,800-5,000
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg) 2,600-2,700 2,500-2,600
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG) 3,400-3,500 3,100-3,200
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG) 4,200-4,300 4,200-4,300
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG) 1,900-2,000 1,900-2,000
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG) 1,750-1,850 1,750-1,850
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG) 2,150-2,350 2,150-2,350
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG) 2,200-2,400 2,200-2,400
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG) 1,950-2,100 1,950-2,100
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,200-3,800 3,200-3,800
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,400-2,700 2,400-2,700
Rice BPT best (100 INR/KG) 3,500-3,800 3,500-3,800
Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,200 3,000-3,200
Rice BPT new (100 INR/KG) 3,500-4,000 3,500-4,000
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG) 2,500-2,700 2,500-2,700
Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG) 2,600-2,800 2,600-2,800
Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG) 2,400-2,500 2,400-2,500
Rice Swarna new (100 INR/KG) 2,400-2,500 2,400-2,500
Rice HMT best (100 INR/KG) 4,200-4,600 4,500-4,800
Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG) 3,600-4,000 3,900-4,300
Rice HMT new (100 INR/KG) 4,200-4,600 4,200-4,600
Rice Shriram best(100 INR/KG) 5,500-5,800 5,500-5,800
Rice Shriram med (100 INR/KG) 5,000-5,100 5,000-5,100
Rice Shriram new (100 INR/KG) 5,000-5,500 5,000-5,500
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG) 9,500-14,000 9,500-13,500
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,000-7,500 5,000-7,500
Rice Chinnor best 100 INR/KG) 6,100-6,500 6,100-6,500
Rice Chinnor medium (100 INR/KG) 5,500-5,900 5,500-5,900
Rice Chinnor new (100 INR/KG) 6,000-6,200 6,000-6,200
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG) 2,000-2,200 2,000-2,100
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 1,800-2,000 1,700-2,000
WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 34.6 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 17.0 degree Celsius
Rainfall : Nil
FORECAST: Mainly clear sky. Maximum and minimum temperature would be around and 35 and 17 degreeCelsius respectively.
Note: n.a.--not available
(For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices, but included in market prices)
https://in.reuters.com/article/nagpur-foodgrain/refile-nagpur-foodgrain-prices-open-february-27-2018-idINL4N1QH3DW
Piñol
assures public: Rice stocks are enough
d February
27, 2018, 4:11 PM
By Mario Casayuran
Agriculture Secretary
Emmanuel F. Piñol today assured the public there is no need to panic
because there are enough rice stocks.
Department
of Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Pinol
(AP Photo/Bullit Marquez / MANILA BULLETIN)
(AP Photo/Bullit Marquez / MANILA BULLETIN)
‘’In the last quarter of 2017
going into the first quarter of 2018, the country has a buffer stock of
2.7-million metric tons (MT), good for 88 days,’’ Pinol told the Manila
Bulletin after attending a public hearing conducted by the Senate agriculture
committee chaired by Sen. Cynthia A. Villar on the reported shortage of
National Food Authority (NFA) rice stocks and the inability of the NFA to
provide buffer stocks which are sold in the market at a higher price. Piñol
said he attended the Senate hearing to assure the public that there is no need
to panic because there is enough rice.
‘’By the end of this quarter
going into the second quarter, the country will have a projected buffer stock
of three million metric tons, good for 96 days,’’ he added.On the supposed rice
shortage, Piñol said what was established in the Villar committee hearing was
that when the NFA said ‘’there is shortage of rice, they were referring to
buffer stocks.’’
Piñol said the present
‘’confusion’’ over the supposed rice shortage could also be traced to the failure
of the NFA to adjust its strategies probably because of its ongoing conflict
with the NFA Council which prevented the NFA to bring rice stocks right away to
provide for the needs of retailers who are pressured by poor consumers to
provide rice at P27 per kilo.He also traced the rice problem to the failure of
the NFA to increase the price of palay it buys from farmers and is thus losing
out to the private sector.
Piñol also assured farmers’
groups that there is no need to fear a proposed imposition of tariff on
imported rice ‘’because in the long run everything in the end will level up.’’
Minister of Trade Inspects Rice Stock at Bulog
The Trade Minister along with the entourage conducted the first
inspection at Bulog Warehouse of Jakarta and Banten which is located in Kelapa
Gading, North Jakarta. The government guarantees that the rice which imported
from Thailand and Vietnam will not harm the farmers.
Bulog will continue to absorb rice grain and rice in accordance
with Presidential Instruction No. 5/2015. The price of government purchases
(HPP) of Bulog for dried grain harvest is Rp3,700 per kilogram at farmer level
and Rp3,750 per kilogram at milling level.
As for dried grain, the HPP is set at Rp4,600 per kilogram at milling
level and Rp4,650 in Bulog warehouse.
The Trade Minister said the rice expenditure would use the
market operation scheme, to lower the rice price at the highest set retail
price (HET).
On the occasion, the President Director of Bulog Djarot
Kusumayakti stated that Bulog’s rice stock, especially the
imported ones, will continue to move.
Tuesday,
2018-02-27 09:45:28
Rice prices
are predicted to decrease in February 2018 as the winter-spring crop harvest
begins, however, prices will remain high compared to previous years.
NDO – Rice
export turnover in the first months of 2018 has increased over the same period
last year, both in volume and value. According to the Vietnam Food Association,
in 2017, Vietnam exported over 5.7 million tonnes of rice, exceeding the set
plan. As of the end of 2017, the set rice export volume under the export
contracts was nearly 6.4 million tonnes, so there are still roughly 630,000
tonnes of rice registered for export in the new year. This is one of the
factors creating momentum for the vibrant rice exports at the beginning of
2018.
Statistics
from the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) show that, in January, the
country's rice export turnover reached 450,000 tonnes, earning US$214 million,
up 34.4% in volume and 49.6% in value over the same period last year. Average
rice export prices last month reached US$486.2 per tonne, up 13.6% against
January 2017.
The
Philippines is still the largest consumer market for Vietnamese rice, reaching
144,890 tonnes with an export value of US$444.5/tonne, accounting for 29% of
Vietnam’s total rice exports. China is the second largest market with 114,215
tonnes, valuing US$56.21 million and accounting for 23% of its neighbouring
country's total rice exports.
Rice export
turnover has enjoyed good results in the first months of 2018.
Notably, in
the first month of this year, rice exports to Indonesia reached 57,000 tonnes,
equivalent to US$27.16 million, and ranking third in the largest markets
importing Vietnamese rice, with over 11% of the total export volume. The price
of Vietnamese exported rice to this market is also relatively high, at US$476.6
per tonne. This result is due to Vietnam winning the bid to export 141,000
tonnes of rice to Indonesia following the 346,000-tonne tender launched by the
Indonesian national food authority at the end of January.
In addition,
rice exports to other markets, such as Iraq, the US, Hong Kong (China) and
Malaysia witnessed an increase in turnover in the first month of the year.
Rice
exporters have predicted that domestic rice prices would tend to decrease in
February as the winter-spring crop harvest begins. However, prices will remain
high compared to previous years.
With the
increase in volume and value, according to the MOIT, the structure of rice
exports continues to see a positive shift with a sharp decline in the middle
and lower grade rice, while increasing the exportation of high quality rice,
such as glutinous rice, japonica and brown rice, which is suitable for export market
development.
http://en.nhandan.org.vn/business/economy/item/5878502-rice-exports-see-positive-signals-in-new-year.html
Winter-spring rice yields big
profits for farmers
Update: February,
26/2018 - 09:00
|Farmers
tend their winter-spring rice in Hậu Giang Province. – VNA/VNS Photo Duy Khương
HCM CITY
– Farmers in the south have begun harvesting their winter-spring rice crop,
earning large profits because of high yields and prices.
So far
300,000ha out of the 1.9 million hectares planted have been harvested, with the
average yield being 5.9 tonnes per hectares, according to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development.
In the
Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta, the country’s rice granary, farmers have 1.55 million
hectares under the crop, 2.6 per cent higher than planned.
Paddy
prices are up slightly from last month, according to the ministry.
Low-quality
IR50404, one of the main varieties grown in the delta, is now bought at VNĐ5,900
– 6,100 a kilogramme while high-quality grains such as OM 5451, OM 6976, OM
4218 fetch VNĐ6,400 – 6,600.
Trần Văn
Hết, who has 1ha under high-quality rice in Vĩnh Long Province’s Tam Bình
District, said he would harvest his paddy in the next few days but a trader has
bought it all in advance.
Nguyễn
Văn Đồng, director of the Hậu Giang Province Department of Agriculture and
Rural Development, said farmers would have a bumper harvest and get high
prices.
Traders
offering to buy paddy in advance at high prices is a common practice now, he
said.
With the
current price of VNĐ6,000 for low-quality paddy and VNĐ7,400 for fragrant
varieties, farmers would make a profit of more than 30 per cent, he said.
Rice
harvested later is expected to have even higher yields, he said.
Nguyễn
Văn Tốt, a member of the Bắc Xà No Co-operative in Hậu Giang’s Vị Thủy
District, said: “Farmers here are very glad because companies have offered to
buy Tài Thơm 8 rice in advance since they sowed 300ha.”
The
co-operative is one of the province’s first to grow organic rice.
Hậu
Giang is implementing a plan to improve the operation of co-operatives and
co-operative teams and create links between farmers and companies to zone
high-quality rice growing areas.
It
offers many incentives, including preferential loans and low land rents, to
encourage companies to invest in agriculture.
In Hậu
Giang’s Châu Thành District, local authorities have been supporting farmers who
used advanced techniques to grow rice on 400ha for exports during this
winter-spring crop.
Meanwhile,
in the central and northern regions most farmers have finished sowing their
nurseries for the winter-spring crop, according to the ministry.By mid-February
farmers from Thừa Thiên- Huế Province to the north had planted seeds for sowing
935,000ha.They are expected to finish transplanting by the end of this month.–
VNS
Read more at http://vietnamnews.vn/society/423284/winter-spring-rice-yields-big-profits-for-farmers.html#aiEAy4yJGkZ4PFP3.99
2018 Global Organic Rice Protein Market Research Report (2017-2023):
Insights, Opportunity Analysis, and Market Shares - 20% CAGR is Forecast -
ResearchAndMarkets.com
February 27, 2018 08:04 AM
Eastern Standard Time
DUBLIN--(BUSINESS
WIRE)--The "Global Organic Rice Protein Market Research Report,
Insights, Opportunity Analysis, Market Shares and Forecast 2017 - 2023"
report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The global organic rice protein market is expected to have a CAGR of 20% during forecast period 2017-2023.
The key factors driving the market growth are increasing demand for organic rice protein, stringent product label regulations, increasing popularity of organic rice protein due to higher protein composition, potential alternative to animal and other plant proteins.
Geographically, North America is the largest market region for global organic rice protein market and had acquired more than 50% market share in 2015. The key factors driving the market growth in North America is the improved living standards and increased focus and awareness regarding fitness and sports, especially in Canada and U.S. However, Europe is expected to emerge as the fastest growing market region owing to surging consumer awareness regarding plant based diet due to increasing penetration of social media, especially in Germany, France and UK. Additional factors such as increased adoption of meat analogues in European region is likely to augment the demand for organic rice protein by the end of 2023.
The global organic rice protein market is influenced by presence of leading companies such as RiceBran Technologies, AG Commodities Inc., AIDP Inc., Axiom Foods Inc., Ekowarehouse etc. Product launch, joint venture, merger and acquisition are some of the strategies adopted by key market players to gain competitive advantage.
Market Determinants
Market Drivers
- Increasing Demand for Organic Rice Protein
- Helping Manufacturers With Product Label Regulations
- Potential Alternative to Animal and Other Plant Proteins
- Increasing Popularity
- At Development Phase
- Low Consumer Awareness About Rice Proteins
- Increasing Demand for Non-Allergen, Lactose-Free Source of Protein
- High Competition from Other Plant Proteins
1. Introduction
2. Market Overview
3. Market Determinants
4. Market Segmentation
5. Competitive Landscape
6. Geographic Analysis
7. Company Profiles
- AG Commodities Inc. (U.S.)
- Aidp, Inc. (U.S.)
- Axiom Foods, Inc. (U.S.)
- Bioway (Xi'an) Organic Ingredients Co., Ltd. (China)
- Ekowarehouse (Hong Kong)
- Golden Grain Group Limited (China)
- Newgen Direct Ltd, (UK)
- Nutriboost Superfoods (UK)
- Nutrition Resource Inc. (U.S.)
- Ribus, Inc. (U.S.)
- Ricebran Technologies (U.S.)
- Shaanxi Fuheng (Fh) Biotechnology Co., Ltd. (China)
- Shafi Gluco-Chem (Pvt.) Ltd. (Pakistan)
- The Green Labs Llc (U.S.)
- Top Health Ingredients Inc. (Canada)
Golden rice receives food safety
approval
February 27, 2018 - by
Holly Demaree-Saddler
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GR2E Golden Rice passes FSANZ safety standards. Photo
courtesy of IRRI.
FSANZ is responsible for carrying
out safety assessments of GM foods on behalf of the Australian government, the
state and territory governments of Australia, and the government of New
Zealand.
In doing so, FSANZ takes a cautious
approach based on concepts and principles developed over more than two decades
by international organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), the
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, the Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the Codex Alimentarius
Commission.
Upon completion of its assessment
of GR2E rice, FSANZ concluded that “No potential public health and safety
concerns have been identified in the assessment of GR2E. On the basis of
the data provided in the present Application, and other available information,
food derived from GR2E is considered to be as safe for human consumption as
food derived from conventional rice varieties.”
A flagship product of IRRI’s Healthier Rice program, GR2E Golden
Rice is the first nutritionally enhanced GM rice to receive regulatory approval
for use in food. Healthier rice varieties have the potential to reach many
people because rice is widely grown and eaten. IRRI is developing rice varieties
that have more iron, zinc, and beta-carotene content to help people get more of
these important micronutrients. These healthier rice varieties can complement
current strategies to reduce micronutrient deficiencies.
http://www.world-grain.com/articles/news_home/World_Grain_News/2018/02/Golden_rice_receives_food_safe.aspx?ID={202F921B-102A-4CE9-9655-42BBA57224FE}&cck=1
A case for
building up NFA’s buffer stock
February 27, 2018
IT has come to this: an agency
mandated to ensure food security and stabilize rice prices is practically
begging farmers to sell their paddy to the government. In a statement dated
February 22, the National Food Authority (NFA) exhorted farmers to let the
food agency buy their produce. The appeal is NFA’s last-ditch effort to shore
up its procurement program, which has managed to add only 7,469 50-kilogram
bags equivalent to 373.45 metric tons (MT) to its stockpile since January. In milled
terms, this translates to only 261.45 MT, which is not even enough to meet the
country’s average daily rice requirement, pegged at 31,000 MT.
Harvest in major palay-producing
areas, such as Nueva Ecija, would begin soon. Sans an increase in its buying
price, the NFA could forget its goal of cornering a bigger chunk of farmers’
dry season crop. The NFA again requested the NFA Council (NFAC) to raise the
government’s palay-buying price to P22 per kilogram (kg), but the council has
yet to decide on the matter. The NFAC said it decided to reject the proposal in
January because the National Economic and Development Authority had warned
about its effect on inflation. Raising the palay-buying price would also
encourage private traders to do the same and cause commercial rice to become
more expensive.
But rice could still become more
expensive even if the government decides not to increase the NFA’s buying
price. The poor—the primary customers of the NFA—would be forced to purchase
commercial rice. The increase in demand for the commercial variety could cause
prices to go up as traders know that the NFA’s stockpile has been depleted and
that Filipinos would be willing to pay for rice. Unfortunately for the
government, the NFA no longer has stocks that could counter the spikes in rice
prices.
While the government can invoke
Republic Act (RA) 7581, or The Price Act, it is often difficult to prove price
manipulation, hoarding and collusion among rice retailers and traders. As for
price controls allowed under RA 7581, the government can only implement it if
an area is declared under a state of calamity; the privilege of the writ of
habeas corpus was suspended; it is under martial law; or a state of rebellion
or a state of war is declared in that area. But the law permits the President,
upon the recommendation of the implementing agency or the Price Coordinating
Council, to impose a price ceiling on any basic necessity or prime commodity,
such as rice. Section 7 of RA 7581 states that the President may impose a price
ceiling “whenever the prevailing price of any basic necessity or prime
commodity has risen to unreasonable levels.”
Congress is currently working on
a bill that would amend Republic Act (RA) 8178 to convert rice import caps into
tariff. Lawmakers are fast-tracking the measure to lift the quantitative
restriction (QR) on rice so the Philippines could meet its commitment to the
World Trade Organization and avoid trade sanctions. With the removal of the
import caps, Dr. Flordeliza H. Bordey of the Philippine Rice Research Institute
said more cheap imported rice could enter the country. And even with a
35-percent tariff, the landed cost of imported rice from Vietnam with
25-percent broken grains is only around P27 per kg.
Given this scenario, the Duterte
administration must now seriously think about what it intends to do with the
NFA. After the QR on rice is removed, the next order of business should be to
pass a measure that would define the role of the NFA. If the idea is to let the
market dictate the price of rice, then it is time for the food agency to get
out of buying and trading rice. It could still continue to monitor rice sellers
to prevent prices from skyrocketing whenever supply is thin.
For now, the President must help
the food agency beef up its rice stockpile again. Until and unless the food
agency attached to the Office of the President gets out of buying and trading
the staple, the Duterte administration will continue to be saddled with the
problem of volatile rice prices, especially when the NFA runs out of buffer
stock
Now Nigeria Can Develop Rice Varieties As
Response To Large Methane EmissionPublished 1 min ago on
February 28, 2018
By CHIKA IZUORA A recent
report by World Resources Institute (WRI) and Food and Agricultural
Organisation, (FAO) says that Green House Gas released by rice farms alongside
other agricultural practices are major environmental polluters. In this piece,
CHIKA IZUORA dissects experts’ opinions on a way out, as Nigerian economy
shifts to agriculture. When the administration of Muhammadu Buhari took office
in Nigeria in May 2015 against a backdrop of mounting economic crises, it
realized that in just one year earlier, Nigeria had overtaken South Africa to
become the continent’s biggest economy, but optimism quickly faded as oil
prices fell and production declined due to renewed militant activities in the
Niger Delta.
The resulting economic
slowdown, which was confirmed as a recession in the summer of 2016, focused
minds on the long-neglected task of reducing Nigeria’s reliance on the
petroleum sector, which accounts for 11 percent of GDP but 95 percent of the
nation’s export revenue. Included in the election manifesto that brought
President Buhari and his All Progressives Congress (APC) to power was a pledge
to move the economy away from oil in part by reviving the agriculture sector.
Analysts believe there are good reasons for the administration to focus on
agriculture.
First, it is a sector with
high growth prospects, particularly if value chains can be developed that turn
raw commodities into processed goods for domestic consumption or export.
Second, although agriculture already employs more than 70 percent of the
population, there are opportunities to expand both the number and variety of
jobs in the sector by making it easier and more attractive to farm. In
addition, by diversifying the agriculture sector, it can be made more appealing
to a vast youth population that is turned off by farming but might be attracted
to processing, marketing, and other business opportunities along the value
chain.
When the opportunity finally
came, in June 2016, the government launched then Agriculture Promotion Policy
(APP) which emphasized the importance of continuing and building upon the
efforts of the previous administration. In the new agriculture policy specific
goal was set to exit rice import by 2018 which throws up more activities in the
area of rice cultivation. A confirmation of this came from Lai Mohammed the
minister of information who told the media last year that the Nigerian
government will soon attain its goal of self-sufficiency in rice production for
the country, come 2018.
Muhammad, said this in a
press conference in Abuja while briefing journalists on the administration’s
growing achievements to revamp the economy and that Nigeria is inching closer
to self-sufficiency in rice production, due to the successes recorded in the
local production of rice. He cited a report by a Thai rice export association
to support his claim, saying “In fact, the Thailand Rice Exporters Association
has recently revealed that within a spate of just two years – from September
2015 to September 2017 – Nigeria’s rice importation dropped from 644,131 Metric
Tonnes to just about 21,000MT.
“There is more good news to
report: As a result of this administration’s success in local production, some
investors from Thailand have shown interest in establishing rice milling plants
in Nigeria, and this is sure to further boost rice production in Nigeria. “The
increased rice production has, in turn, led to the establishment of rice mills,
including the 120,000MT WACOT Mill in Kebbi and the 1,000,000MT Dangote Rice
Mill,” Mr. Mohammed said. He added that Nigeria targets the production of seven
million metric tons of rice in 2018’. “So what does the increased production of
rice portend for the country? It means, as I said earlier, that Nigeria is very
close to achieving self-sufficiency in rice.
By 2018, the administration
targets rice production of 7 million MT. As at 2015, rice demand in Nigeria
stood at 6.3 million MT,” he added. Agriculture As A Major Environmental
Polluter While Nigeria is focusing effort in this direction, a report points to
environmental challenges from the agriculture sector. It says that when people
think about threats to their environment, what comes to their mind is
industrial pollution and car emission, not the food they eat but the truth is
that, our efforts in poverty reduction and finding solution to end hunger, are
making agriculture a major ‘killer’ of the mother earth.
Agriculture is posing one of
the biggest dangers to the planet with carbon dioxide emission the main
contributor to global warming. An analysis by the World Resources Institute,
WRI, and the UN Food and Agricultural Organization, UN FAO, estimated that
between 14 and 18 percent of all man-made emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) are
associated with the agricultural sector. Even the lowest estimate (14 percent)
is still equal with WRI’s estimated emissions for the transportation sector
(13.5 percent).
This means that, agriculture
is among the greatest contributors to global warming, emitting more greenhouse
gases (GHG) than all our cars, trucks, trains, and airplanes combined. The GHG
in agricultural sector is largely from methane (CH4) released by cattle and
rice farms, nitrous oxide (N2O) from fertilized fields, and carbon dioxide from
the cutting of rain forests to grow crops or raise livestock. So, are we being
naïve to feed the rapidly growing global population, and threaten our own
existence. As in most other sectors, agricultural carbon footprint is fast
increasing, since farming is expanding to produce more food for a growing world
population. In fact, food production will need to double from current levels if
projections of more than 9 billion people in 2050 prove correct.
So meeting the growing
demand for food by using more land would have serious impacts on the environment
and the climate. Remember that areas that are most suitable for agriculture in
most countries are already cultivated to a large extent, making fertile
agricultural land a limited resource across the world. The fact is that massive
unguided farming is never the solution to end poverty, because the more we
engage in such activities, the more climate change continue to affect the
quality and quantity of food we Production. The uplifted living standard and
spread of prosperity across the world, especially in the world’s most populated
countries –
China and India, is driving
an increased demand for balance diet such as meat, eggs, and dairy. This has
added pressure to cultivate more foods and engage in more animal husbandry more
livestock husbandry. Unfortunately, key resources such as land and water needed
to produce these foods are scarce globally. While the majority of global
warming activities give off carbon dioxide – the main contributor to global
warming, but it is not the only greenhouse gas to worry about, the next two
most common GHG in the atmosphere are methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O),
primarily emitted by agricultural sector. Most of this methane are emitted by
cows, which also are more damaging to the environment.
For instance, ruminant
animals (cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, and camels) produce methane as part of
their normal digestion system – a process known as enteric fermentation. In
fact, according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, the
CH4 produced from “enteric fermentation” (cows farting) represents almost
one-third of the emissions from the U.S. agricultural sector. Also, United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) report on ‘Agriculture,
Forestry and Other Land Use Emissions by Sources and Removals by Sinks’ shows
that, around 40 per cent of agricultural emissions came from methane produced
by livestock between 2001 and 2011, not including emissions from manure (25 per
cent of agricultural emissions).
Together, these gases plus
CO2 make up about 99 percent of all GHG in the atmosphere. It is not just the
actual farming that makes agriculture so detrimental to the environment. In
almost every case, land use changes such as deforestation to clear space for
agriculture, is also a contributor to carbon emissions and land degradation.
Records indicate that 75 per cent of global deforestation comes from
agriculture. So when we clear areas of grassland and forest for farms, we lose
crucial habitats and make agriculture a major driver to the loss of biodiversity.
Similar to many other land-use changes, converting forest areas into
agricultural land is not the right solution to end hunger.
This process is a source of
greenhouse-gas emissions and undermines nature’s ability to cope with climate
change impacts, such as absorbing heavy rainfall, that threaten food security
globally. For instance: Solution for Sustainable Agriculture How can the rapid
growing global population be fed and the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals (UN SDG) to end poverty and hunger be met with minimal environmental
footprints?
The answer lies in a sustainable agricultural
system – a form of agricultural technique that provides foods and industrial
inputs to serve the needs of the present generation without posing socio-environmental
risks and compromising the ability of the future generations to meet their own
needs. We can start to tackle food waste in economically rich countries where
food waste occurs in homes, restaurants, or supermarkets, as well as in
developing countries where food is often lost between the farmer and the market
due to unreliable storage and transportation.
A shift to increase yields
on less productive farmlands, using high-tech, precision farming systems, and
organic farming would also be effective ways to reducing agricultural
footprints. Responding to this while speaking with our Correspondent, Bekeme
Masade-Olowola, a Harvard-trained social entrepreneur and currently serves as
the Chief Executive Officer of CSR-in-Action, an organisation dedicated to
promoting the advancement and awareness of Corporate Social Responsibility,
good governance and sustainable development in Nigeria, said government effort
in protecting environment are very minimal. We tend to be playing catch up on
our previous environmental challenges and our leaders are more interested in
reeling out figures of growth without looking at the long-term implications.
It would be easier to feed the nation with
diversification to agriculture, if more of the crops we grow will end up in human
stomachs. Sometimes, some crops which should have been made available for human
consumption are diverted for feeding livestock or for industrial uses, and only
a fraction of the calories in feed given to livestock make their way into the
meat and milk that we consume. For instance, only 55 percent of the world’s
crop calories feed people directly; the rest are fed to livestock (about 36
percent) or turned into biofuels and industrial products (roughly 9 percent).
Nigeria needs to find more efficient ways to feed the livestock and grow meat
through non-agricultural means to avoid compromising the capacity of
agriculture to feed the poverty-stricken nation”.
Such an alternative, she said could be a
switch from grain-fed livestock to pasture-raised livestock which would free up
substantial amounts of food to be made available for human consumption in
Nigeria; a shift to increase yields on less productive farmlands, using
high-tech, precision farming systems, and organic farming would be effective
ways to reducing agricultural footprints; and organic farming can also greatly
reduce the use of water and chemicals—by incorporating cover crops, mulches,
and compost to improve soil quality, conserve water, and build up nutrients.
According to her, many farmers have also
gotten smarter about water, replacing inefficient irrigation systems with more
precise methods, like subsurface drip irrigation. Advances in both conventional
and organic farming can give us more “crop per drop” from our water and
nutrients. On rice farm pollution, Masade-Olowola stated, “We could develop
rice varieties which emit less methane. Secondly, since irrigated rice farming
is the other main agricultural source of methane accounting for about a fifth
of total man-made emissions, switching to more heat-tolerant rice cultivars,
management of water, adjusting sowing dates, adaptations to drainage regimes
and mid-season drainage can help to reduce CH4 released by rice. In this way,
yield declines due to temperature increases can largely be prevented, thereby
reducing the effect of warming on CH4 emissions per yield.
Whereas several studies have
focused on mid-season drainage (MD) to mitigate GHG emissions, early-season
drainage (ED), varying in timing and duration, has not been extensively studied.
However, such ED periods could potentially be very effective since initial
available C levels, and thereby the potential for methanogenesis, can be very
high in paddy systems with rice straw incorporation.
For instance, a study by
some scholars of the Universities of Copenhagen, Wageningen and International
Rice Research Institute titled ‘The effective mitigation of greenhouse gas
emissions from rice paddies without compromising yield by early-season
drainage’, tested the effectiveness of seven drainage regimes varying in their
timing and duration (combinations of ED and MD) to mitigate CH4 and N2O
emissions in a 101-day growth chamber experiment. It showed that emissions were
considerably reduced by early-season drainage compared to both conventional continuous
flooding (CF) and the MD drainage regime. The results suggest that ED + MD
drainage may have the potential to reduce CH4 emissions and yield-scaled GWP by
85–90 per cent compared to CF and by 75–77 per cent compared to MD only. A
combination of (short or long) ED drainage and one MD drainage episode was
found to be the most effective in mitigating CH4 emissions without negatively
affecting yield”.
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Wax market players.
Some Major Point cover in this
Rice Bran Wax Market report are: –
·
What will the market
growth rate, Overview and Analysis by Type of Rice Bran Wax in 2022?
·
What are the key
factors driving, Analysis by Applications and Countries Global industry?
·
What is Dynamics, This
Overview Includes Analysis of Scope and price analysis of top Manufacturers
Profiles?
·
Who are Opportunities,
Risk and Driving Force of Rice Bran Wax? Knows Upstream Raw Materials Sourcing
and Downstream Buyers
·
Who are the key
manufacturers in space? Business Overview by Type, Applications, Gross Margin
and Market Share
·
What are the
opportunities and threats faced by the vendors in the global market?
Price of Report: $4000 (Single
User License)
Purchase Rice Bran Wax Market
Report at- https://www.absolutereports.com/purchase/11594243
In the end, the report elaborates
the Global Rice Bran Wax overview various definitions and classification of the
industry, applications of the industry and chain structure are given.
Present-day status of the Rice Bran Wax Market in key regions is stated and
industry policies and news are analysed.
https://factsweek.com/157799/rice-bran-wax-market-2017-2022-division-revenue-price-and-gross-margin-and-feasibility-studies/
https://leadership.ng/2018/02/28/nigeria-can-develop-rice-varieties-response-large-methane-emission/
U of A
announces water management schools for 2018 growing season
Producers getting ready for the 2018 row crop growing season have opportunities
to sharpen their water management skills through schools being offered by the
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, according to a news
release.
The division is offering three
schools: one for using Multiple Inlet Rice Irrigation, one for soil moisture
sensors and the third which is both Surge and Soil Moisture Sensor School that
covers surge valve use and layout as well as the basics of soil moisture
sensors and how to use them to schedule irrigation.
The number of participants for
each school is limited to 12-15 people. The rice irrigation schools cover how
to use a mobile app and electronic levee files to design for poly pipe in rice
fields and how to get the data from the tractor to the app. There is no cost
for the rice irrigation school.
The $400 cost of the Surge and
Soil Moisture school includes eight sensors, a slide hammer installation tool
and a manual reader for those that don’t have the tools needed to use sensors.
Participants construct sensors and install them as part of the school.
Chris Henry, associate
professor-irrigation with the University of Arkansas System Division of
Agriculture, said industry has provided a deep discount on the supplies needed
to get started with sensors, so that participants can get the tools they need
to use sensors effectively for irrigation.
Surge Valve and Soil Moisture
Sensor Schools
March 1 — 9 a.m.to 3 p.m.,
STUTTGART — Rice Research and Extension Center. To register for a surge valve
and soil moisture sensor school contact Phil Horton 870-946-3231.
March 2 — 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
NEWPORT — Jackson County Extension Office; surge valve and soil moisture sensor
school. To register contact Matt Davis, 870-523-7450.
March 9 — 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
MARIANNA — Lon Mann Cotton Research Station. To register contact Stan Baker,
870-295-7720.
March 21 — 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
RECTOR — Rector Community Center; surge and soil moisture sensor school. To
register, contact Stewart Runsick, 870-857-6875,
Soil moisture sensor school
March 6 — 11 a.m., MANILA —
Manila airport auditorium; Soil moisture sensor school. To register, contact
Ray Benson, 870-762-2075.
Multiple Inlet Rice Irrigation
App School
March 5 — 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
MARIANNA — Lon Mann Cotton Research Station. To register, contact Stan Baker,
870-295-7720.
March 7 — 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
STUTTGART — Rice Research and Extension Center. To register, contact Phil
Horton 870-946-3231.
March 9 — 4:30 to 8 p.m., WYNNE —
East Arkansas Community College. To register, contact Rick Wimberley,
870-238-5745.
March 20 — 5 to 8 p.m., RECTOR
Rector Community Center. To register, contact Stewart Runsick, 870-857-6875.
For more information on
irrigation, visit https://www.uaex.edu/environment-nature/water/irrigation.aspx or
contact a county extension office.
The University of Arkansas System
Division of Agriculture is an equal opportunity/equal access/affirmative action
institution. Those who require a reasonable accommodation to participate or
need materials in another format, should contact the county extension office
listed as part of the session they plan to attend as soon as possible. Dial 711
for Arkansas Relay.
http://www.pbcommercial.com/news/20180227/u-of-announces-water-management-schools-for-2018-growing-season
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28th February,2018 daily global regional local rice e-newsletter