PAU scientists awarded
FacebookTwitterEmailPrint
|
Feb
2, 2019, 7:11 AM; last updated: Feb 2, 2019, 7:11 AM (IST)
Tribune News
Service
Ludhiana,
February 1
The Indian
Society of Agricultural Engineers, New Delhi conferred ‘ISAE TEAM AWARD 2018’
to scientists of Department of Farm Machinery and Power Engineering, PAU. The
team comprising Manjeet Singh, Manpreet Singh, HS Sidhu, Rajesh Goyal, GS
Manes, Aseem Verma and JS Mahal have been awarded for their work ‘Super straw
management system (SMS): An innovative solution for in-situ management of paddy
residue in rice-wheat system’.
The award was presented by Dr Trilochan
Mohapatra, Secretary DARE and Director General ICAR during 53rd annual
convention of ISAE and International Symposium on Engineering Technologies for
Precision and Climate Smart Agriculture’ held at Institute of Agricultural
Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi (India) from January 28-30. Navtej
Singh Bains, Director of Research, PAU, and Dr Ashok Kumar, Dean College of
Agricultural Engineering and Technology, PAU congratulated the team for its
achievement.
Jay Byrne: Meet the Man Behind
the Monsanto PR Machine
Monsanto’s former Director of
Corporate Communications Jay Byrne, president of the public relations
firm v-Fluence, is
a key player in the covert propaganda and lobbying campaigns of the world’s
largest agrichemical companies. Emails obtained by U.S. Right to Know, posted in the
UCSF Chemical Industry Documents Archive, reveal a range of deceptive tactics Byrne
and other industry allies are using to promote and defend GMO foods and
pesticides.
The examples here showcase some
of the ways companies are moving their messaging into the public arena from
behind the cover of neutral-sounding front groups, government helpers and
academics who appear to be independent as they work with corporations or their
PR consultants.
Clients are top agrichemical, agribusiness and drug companies
and tradegroups
Byrne’s client list has included a range of the largest
agribusiness and pharmaceutical companies and business groups, including the
American Chemistry Council, Syngenta, AstraZeneca, Monsanto, Pfizer, the
International Rice Research Institute, the American Farm Bureau, National Corn
Growers Association, Grocery Manufacturers Association, Rohm & Haas and the
pesticide industry trade group CropLife.
Cooked up academic front group to attack Monsanto critics
A key strategy of the
agrichemical industry, as the New York Times reported, is to deploy “white hat”
professors to fight the industry’s PR and lobbying battles from behind the
cover of the “gloss of impartiality and weight of authority that come with a professor’s
pedigree.”
In March 2010, Byrne and
University of Illinois Professor Bruce Chassy discussed setting up a front group
called “Academics Review” that could attract donations from corporations while
appearing to be independent. Byrne compared the idea to the Center for Consumer
Freedom (a front group run by infamous corporate propaganda front-man Rick Berman), which
“has cashed in on this to the extreme; and I think we have a much better
concept.” Byrne described an “‘opportunities’ list with targets” they could go
after. Byrne wrote to Dr. Chassy:
All those groups, people and
topic areas “mean money for a range of well heeled corporations,” Byrne wrote.
He said he and Val Giddings, PhD, a
former vice president for the biotech trade group BIO, could serve
as “commercial vehicles” for the academics.
In November 2010, Byrne wrote to Chassy again, “It will be good to
get the next phase of work on Academics Review going – we’ve got a relative
slow first quarter coming up in 2011 if business remains the same.” Byrne
offered to “schedule some pro bono search engine optimization time” for his
team to counter a GMO critic’s online influence. Byrne concluded the email, “As
always, would love to find the next topic (and sponsor) to broaden this while
we are able.”
In 2014, Academics Review
released a report attacking the organic industry as a
marketing scam; in its own marketing materials for the report, Academics Review
claimed to be independent and did not disclose its agrichemical industry
funding.
For more information:
·
Monsanto Fingerprints Found All Over Attack on Organic Food,
by Stacy Malkan, Huffington Post (6.30.2016)
“US government-GLP-Byrne projects” to sway journalists
Byrne’s lobbying and PR
operations for the GMO and pesticide industry intersect at many points with the
work of Jon Entine, another key figure in agrichemical
industry defense campaigns. Entine directs the Genetic Literacy Project, which
he launched in 2011 when Monsanto was a client of his PR firm. (Entine’s PR firm ESG
MediaMetrics listed Monsanto as a client on its website in 2010, 2011, 2012 and
up to January 2013, according to internet archives still available
online.)
In December 2013, Entine wrote to Max T. Holtzman, who was then acting
deputy undersecretary at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, to propose
collaborating on a series of what he described as “US government-GLP-Byrne
projects” to promote GMOs. Entine wrote to Holtzman:
Entine’s proposed “US government-GLP-Byrne” projects included a “Boot
Camp and Response Swat Team” to prepare third-party academics for “potential
legislative engagement on [GMO] labeling and related issues,” a “journalism
conclave” to bolster media coverage about food security challenges and “provide
coaching to younger journalists,” a global media outreach campaign to promote acceptance
of biotechnology, and “multi-media content and placements from credible
sources” reinforcing key themes “with segments and footage made available on
U.S. government websites, GLP and other platforms.”
Holtzman responded, “Thanks Jon.
It was great meeting you as well. I think your outline below provides natural
intersection points where usda/USG messaging and your efforts intersect well.
I’d like to engage further and loop other folks here at usda not only from the
technical/trade areas but from our communications shop as well.”
Taxpayer-funded, Monsanto-aligned videos to promote GMOs
A series of taxpayer-funded videos produced
in 2012 to promote genetically engineered foods provide another example of how
academics and universities push corporate-aligned messaging. Byrne’s PR firm
v-Fluence helped create the videos that were “designed to appear a little low
budget and amateurish,” according to an email from University of Illinois
Professor Bruce Chassy.
Dr. Chassy wrote to Monsanto employees on April 27, 2012:
Monsanto’s Eric Sachs responded:
Sachs offered to assist with messaging
of future videos by sharing the results of focus group tests Monsanto was
conducting. Dr. Chassy invited Sachs to offer suggestions for future video
topics and asked him to send along the Monsanto focus group results.
Training scientists and journalists to frame the debate about
GMOs and pesticides
In 2014 and 2015, Byrne helped
Jon Entine organize the Biotech Literacy Project boot camps funded by
agrichemical companies and co-hosted by two industry front groups, Entine’s Genetic Literacy Project and Bruce Chassy’s Academics Review. Organizers
misleadingly described the funding for the events as coming from a mix of
academic, government and industry sources, but the only traceable source of funding was the agrichemical industry,
according to reporting by Paul Thacker in The Progressive. The purpose of the boot
camps, Thacker reported, was “to train scientists and journalists to frame the
debate over GMOs and the toxicity of glyphosate.”
Byrne was on the organizing team,
along with Cami Ryan (who now works for Monsanto) and Bruce Chassy (who was
receiving funds from Monsanto that weren’t publicly
disclosed), according to emails from Entine and Ryan.
For more information:
·
Flacking for GMOs: How the Biotech Industry Cultivates Positive Media—and
Discourages Criticism, by Paul Thacker, The Progressive
(7.21.17)
Bonus Eventus: the agrichemical industry’s social media echo
chamber
A key service Byrne provides to
agrichemical promotional efforts is his “Bonus Eventus community” that supplies
academics and other industry allies with talking points and promotional
opportunities. Internal documents (page 9) describe Bonus Eventus as “a
private social networking portal that serves as a communication cooperative for
agriculture-minded scientists, policy makers and other stakeholders.” Members
receive Byrne’s newsletter, plus access to his reference library of
agribusiness topics, “stakeholder database” of influential people in the GMO
debate, and trainings and support for social media engagement.
Examples of the newsletter can be
found in this cache of emails from Byrne to Peter Phillips, a
University of Saskatchewan professor who has been criticized by colleaguesfor his close ties to Monsanto. In the Nov. 7, 2016
newsletter, Byrne urged Phillips and other recipients to share content about
the “flaws and omissions” in a New York Times story that reported on the failure
of GMO crops to increase yields and reduce pesticides, and the “mounting
questions” facing an international group of cancer scientists who reported
glyphosate is a probably human carcinogen (see our reporting about documents
describing how Monsanto coordinated attacks on the cancer panelvia
their “industry partners”).
Byrne urged the Bonus Eventus
community to share content on these themes from industry-connected writers,
such as Julie Kelly, Dr. Henry Miller, Kavin Senapathy, The Sci Babe and Hank Campbell of the American Council on Science and Health, a group
Monsanto was paying to help discredit the
cancer scientists. In 2017, Forbes deleted dozens of articles by Dr. Miller –
including several he co-authored with Kelly, Senapathyand
Byrne – after the New York Times reported that Dr. Miller had published
an article in Forbes under his own name that had been ghostwritten by Monsanto.
Gatekeeper for attack on Greenpeace
When a group of Nobel laureates
called on Greenpeace to stop opposing genetically engineered rice, it looked
like an independent effort. But behind the curtain of impressive credentials
were the helping hands of two key players in the agrichemical industry’s PR
lobby: Jay Byrne and a board member of the Genetic Literacy Project.
Byrne was posted at the door at a National Press Club
event promoting a group called Support Precision Agriculture.
The .com version of that website redirects to the Genetic Literacy Project, a
front group that works with Monsanto on PR projects without disclosing
those ties.
Sir Richard Roberts, a biochemist
who said he organized the Nobel laureate letter, explained the backstory in an FAQ on the website.
Dr. Roberts said the “campaign has been pretty inexpensive so far,” consisting
mostly of his salary paid by his employer New England Biolabs, and
out-of-pocket expenses paid by Matt Winkler. Winkler, chairman of the Winkler
Foundation, is a funder and board member of
Genetic Literacy Project. Dr. Roberts explained that Winkler “enlisted a
friend, Val Giddings,” (the former biotech trade group VP) who “suggested Jay
Byrne,” who offered pro bono logistical support for the press event.
Byrne and Giddings also helped
orchestrate the industry-funded Academics Review;
in those emails, Byrne named Greenpeace on the “targets” list he was compiling for Monsanto. Another
of Byrne’s clients, the
International Rice Research Institute, is the main industry group trying to
commercialize GMO Golden Rice, the product at the center of the Greenpeace
critique. Research by Glenn Davis Stone of Washington University in St. Louis
has found that low yields and technical difficulties have held
up Golden Rice, not opposition from environmental groups.
In his FAQ, Dr. Roberts dismissed
Dr. Stone’s research as “not an accurate representation of the state of
affairs,” and instead pointed to industry-connected sources who will be
familiar to readers of Byrne’s Bonus Eventus newsletter: Julie Kelly, Henry Miller and Academics Review.
The press event took place at a
critical moment for industry, and generated a helpful story in the Washington Post, a week before
Congress voted to prohibit states from labeling GMOs.
Fiber composition in rice coproducts revealed in Illinois study
URBANA, Ill. - Rice coproducts in
pig diets add fat and fiber, but too much fiber can decrease energy absorption
and digestibility. A recent study from the University of Illinois characterizes
the chemical composition of fiber in rice and rice coproducts, which could lead
to diet interventions for improved digestibility.
"Because of rice fiber's low
fermentability, there's a high upside potential for increased digestibility if
we can find specific enzymes that can help degrade those fibers. For pigs, the
most important thing is to be able to get more energy out of each
ingredient," says Hans Stein, professor in the Department of Animal
Sciences and the Division of Nutritional Sciences at U of I, and co-author of
the study published in Animal Feed Science and Technology.
A former doctoral researcher
working with Stein, Gloria Casas, analyzed the carbohydrate composition of
several ingredients - brown rice, broken rice, full-fat rice bran, defatted
rice bran, and rice mill feed - in a laboratory in Denmark. She also evaluated
the digestibility of each ingredient by simulating the environments of the pig
stomach, small intestine, and large intestine, including fermentability by gut
microbes.
The ingredients varied widely in
starch, cellulose, lignin, and fiber content, among other specific carbohydrate
fractions, but for all ingredients, the primary carbohydrates were
arabinoxylans.
"Arabinoxylans are
relatively complex fibers that consist primarily of two sugars, arabinose and
xylose, though there are many others in there, too," Stein says.
"That is true for all the rice coproducts, but the ratio between arabinose
and xylose differs among the ingredients. That ratio, to some degree,
influences the functionality of the fibers."
Simulated (in vitro)
digestibility was higher in brown rice and broken rice than for all other
coproducts, which Stein and Casas expected, given that full-fat rice bran,
defatted rice bran, and rice mill feed were much higher in insoluble fibers.
The results confirm earlier digestibility studies the researchers completed
with the same ingredients in pigs.
Stein notes the results don't
just apply to pigs.
"Humans consume rice and
rice bran all over the world. Knowing the specific fiber composition of these
products will allow us to figure out which gut microbes are affected," he
says. "In humans, one of the major problems in terms of nutrition in our
part of the world is that we don't get enough fiber. If we consume these
fibers, how will they affect our gut microbes?"
###
The article, "Arabinoxylan
is the main polysaccharide in fiber from rice coproducts, and increased
concentration of fiber decreases in vitro digestibility of dry matter," is
published in Animal Feed Science and Technology [DOI:
10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2018.11.017]. Authors include Gloria Casas, Helle Lærke,
Knud Bach Knudsen, and Hans Stein. The work was supported by the Office of
International Programs in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and
Environmental Sciences at U of I, and the Bill and Mary Lee Dimond Fund
P
New
studies suggest that white rice alone doesn’t increase the risk of diabetes
Back
in 2017, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong urged Singaporeans to start replacing
white rice with brown or mixed-grain rice for a healthier diet. White rice, he
said, would cause your blood sugar to rise up, implying that eating white rice
would increase a person’s risk of developing diabetes – a major health concern
in Singapore. He suggested switching to brown rice instead.
In
fact, Singapore's Health Promotion Board in 2016 cited studies by the Harvard
School of Public Health in the United States which showed that each plate of
white rice eaten daily on a regular basis raises the risk of diabetes by 11 per
cent in the overall population.
However,
the PM and the SHPB might want to rethink their advice upon reading two new
studies that suggest white rice on its own isn’t linked to increased risk of
diabetes.
Professor
Koh Woon Puay, director of the Centre for Clinician-Scientist Development at
Duke-NUS Medical School and co-author of the studies said that the risk of
getting diabetes depends on what the rice is substituted with and the overall
quality of a person’s diet.
Both
studies used data from the ongoing Singapore Chinese Health Study, which was
started in 1993 by the National University of Singapore (NUS).
One
study, by researchers from NUS and Duke-NUS Medical School, found no link
between the quantity of white rice consumed and the risk of Type 2 diabetes
when other variables like age, sex, body mass index (BMI), and other food
intake were controlled for.
"Even
over a relatively wide range of rice intakes, from half a bowl to several bowls
a day, we didn't see much of an increase in the risk of diabetes," said
Professor Rob Martinus van Dam, domain leader of epidemiology at the Saw Swee
Hock School of Public Health in NUS and one of the study's co-authors.
When
someone eats less rice, they are likely to eat more of something else to
maintain their calorie intake, says Prof van Dam. So researchers found that
people who ate different foods in rice were affected differently.
For
example, switching to noodle dishes would mean a higher salt and oil in take.
Others might eat more meat to feel full.
These
can affect their risk of developing diabetes.
The
study also found that substituting white rice with whole grains does actually
decrease the risk. So PM Lee did get that part right – switching to brown rice,
a whole-grain rice, would reduce your risk of developing diabetes.
In
the second study, researchers found that whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts
and a moderate amount of dairy were associated with lower risks of cancer,
diabetes, heart disease and stroke. This is in line with other established
dietary studies from mostly Western countries.
On
the other hand, researchers found that sugar-sweetened drinks, processed meat
and red meat - including beef, pork and even the darker portions of poultry
like chicken thigh meat - were associated with higher risks of the same
diseases.
It
is the first such study to examine local food specifically.
Additionally,
Prof Koh also noted that the amount of food consumed played a bigger role in
the risk of developing diabetes than the absolute intake of calories.
Basically, you can eat everything in moderation – yes, even unhealthy foods
like red meat and sugar.
These
studies also suggest that the top 20% of participants who had ‘higher quality’
diets were 20% less likely to develop diabetes compared to the bottom 20%.
Diet
quality was ranked based on how often and how much of a specific food that each
participants ate on average. So those who consumed more whole grains, low-fat
dairy, nuts, seeds, legumes, fruits and vegetables were ranked higher.
Those
who ate more processed and red meats, sugary drinks, and sodium were given
lower scores. Foods like fish and refined grains such as white rice were not
scored.
Group
director of policy, research and surveillance at the Health Promotion Board, Dr
Annie Ling said these studies are timely given the findings of the National
Nutrition Survey 2018.
The survey showed that there have
been gradual improvements in the dietary habits of Singaporeans but there was
still room for improvement. Dr Lin said, "While Singaporeans are consuming
more whole grains, fruits and vegetables, high sugar and sodium intake remains
a cause for concern.”
Fiber in rice co-products characterized for swine diets
Rice co-products in pig diets add fat and fiber, but too much
fiber can decrease energy absorption and digestibility.
A recent study from the
University of Illinois characterized the chemical composition of fiber in rice
and rice co-products, which could lead to dietary interventions for improved
digestibility for swine.
"Because of rice fiber's low
fermentability, there's a high upside potential for increased digestibility if
we can find specific enzymes that can help degrade those fibers. For pigs, the
most important thing is to be able to get more energy out of each
ingredient," said Hans Stein, professor in the department of animal
sciences and the Division of Nutritional Sciences at the University of Illinois
and co-author of the study published in Animal
Feed Science & Technology.
Gloria Casas, a former doctoral
researcher working with Stein, analyzed the carbohydrate composition of several
ingredients — brown rice, broken rice, full-fat rice bran, defatted rice bran
and rice mill feed — in a laboratory in Denmark. She also evaluated the
digestibility of each ingredient by simulating the environments of the
pig's stomach, small intestine and large intestine, including fermentability by
gut microbes, the University of Illinois announcement said.
The ingredients varied widely in
starch, cellulose, lignin and fiber content, among other specific carbohydrate
fractions, but for all ingredients, the primary carbohydrates were
arabinoxylans.
"Arabinoxylans are
relatively complex fibers that consist primarily of two sugars, arabinose and
xylose, though there are many others in there, too," Stein said.
"That is true for all the rice co-products, but the ratio between
arabinose and xylose differs among the ingredients. That ratio, to some degree,
influences the functionality of the fibers."
Simulated (in vitro)
digestibility was higher in brown rice and broken rice than for all other
co-products, which Stein and Casas expected, given that full-fat rice bran,
defatted rice bran and rice mill feed were much higher in insoluble fibers. The
results confirm earlier digestibility studies the researchers completed with
the same ingredients in pigs.
Stein noted that the results
don't just apply to pigs.
"Humans consume rice and
rice bran all over the world. Knowing the specific fiber composition of these
products will allow us to figure out which gut microbes are affected," he said.
"In humans, one of the major problems in terms of nutrition in our part of
the world is that we don't get enough fiber. If we consume these fibers, how
will they affect our gut microbes?"
Source: University of Illinois, which is solely responsible for
the information provided and is wholly owned by the source. Informa Business
Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content
contained in this information asset.
Analysts push for long-term
policies to arrest cedi depreciation
It is time for government to focus on policies that will
encourage the production of goods that the country is capable of while adding
value to exports as a sustainable means of reducing imports and strengthening the local currency, financial and economic analysts have
said.
The cedi has currently crossed GH¢5 to a dollar compared to GH¢4.42 in the same period last year and GH¢4.27 in January 2017 – a situation many fear will get worse if long-term measures are not put in place.
This essentially means that the cedi has depreciated 10.6 percent against the US$ since January 2018.
Head of Finance Department at the University of Cape Coast (UCC), Prof. John Gatsi, told the B&FT that until managers of the economy focus on long-term policies that will reduce the import of products that can be easily produced in the country, the cedi’s woes will never cease.
“The Bank of Ghana report shows that rice importation has increased to US$300million, while sugar imports also increased to US$123million. We already have policies for reducing rice importation; we already have policies toward reducing sugar import in the form of the Komenda Sugar Factory. So, it means we are not implementing policies that should limit the demand of certain commodities.
“We also know that some agriculture produce is part of the items we import into this country. So, the question is: what is our agricultural policy achieving? What is it directed toward? It should be targetted toward sustainable food production and dealing with key imports that we have the ability to produce. But it seems we are not managing the agriculture sector as part of the policies to address depreciation of the currency,” he said.
He further debunked the idea that the local currency is suffering from external shocks, particularly the strength of the US economy – saying if the country focuses more on the things it has control over, the impact of external shocks will not be felt.
“Even though we may explain this with some factors such as performance of the US dollar, the point is that most countries trade with the US dollar but their currencies are not depreciating the way the cedi is. We need to deal with the factors that we have control over; and after we have done so, then we will see that international developments have minimal effects on our economy,” he said.
His view is also shared by an economics professor at the University of Ghana, Peter Quartey, who said the currency depreciation is a result of excess demand for foreign currency over-supply, which is caused mainly by the high level of importation.
“There is excess demand over supply for forex. And what is causing this is that our imports continue to be a challenge: we tend to import quite a lot.
“A sustainable way of managing the exchange rate is to export more value-added products, not raw materials. We have to add value to all things we export – like cocoa, gold etc., before they are exported,” he said in an interview with the B&FT.
He further urged the central bank to enforce its regulation on forex trading, as he argues all efforts to address the depreciation will be in vain if forex trading is not properly regulated.
“[In Ghana] you can walk to any corner and exchange money without any identification. In most countries you cannot do that; you need a passport or some identification to do that. But in our case, people walk in from neighbouring countries and come and load the dollars into suitcases and go.
“So, if we don’t address this problem, no matter how much Bank of Ghana pumps in, it will leak. I heard the Bank of Ghana has started it, but I want to see more effort,” he said.
The cedi has currently crossed GH¢5 to a dollar compared to GH¢4.42 in the same period last year and GH¢4.27 in January 2017 – a situation many fear will get worse if long-term measures are not put in place.
This essentially means that the cedi has depreciated 10.6 percent against the US$ since January 2018.
Head of Finance Department at the University of Cape Coast (UCC), Prof. John Gatsi, told the B&FT that until managers of the economy focus on long-term policies that will reduce the import of products that can be easily produced in the country, the cedi’s woes will never cease.
“The Bank of Ghana report shows that rice importation has increased to US$300million, while sugar imports also increased to US$123million. We already have policies for reducing rice importation; we already have policies toward reducing sugar import in the form of the Komenda Sugar Factory. So, it means we are not implementing policies that should limit the demand of certain commodities.
“We also know that some agriculture produce is part of the items we import into this country. So, the question is: what is our agricultural policy achieving? What is it directed toward? It should be targetted toward sustainable food production and dealing with key imports that we have the ability to produce. But it seems we are not managing the agriculture sector as part of the policies to address depreciation of the currency,” he said.
He further debunked the idea that the local currency is suffering from external shocks, particularly the strength of the US economy – saying if the country focuses more on the things it has control over, the impact of external shocks will not be felt.
“Even though we may explain this with some factors such as performance of the US dollar, the point is that most countries trade with the US dollar but their currencies are not depreciating the way the cedi is. We need to deal with the factors that we have control over; and after we have done so, then we will see that international developments have minimal effects on our economy,” he said.
His view is also shared by an economics professor at the University of Ghana, Peter Quartey, who said the currency depreciation is a result of excess demand for foreign currency over-supply, which is caused mainly by the high level of importation.
“There is excess demand over supply for forex. And what is causing this is that our imports continue to be a challenge: we tend to import quite a lot.
“A sustainable way of managing the exchange rate is to export more value-added products, not raw materials. We have to add value to all things we export – like cocoa, gold etc., before they are exported,” he said in an interview with the B&FT.
He further urged the central bank to enforce its regulation on forex trading, as he argues all efforts to address the depreciation will be in vain if forex trading is not properly regulated.
“[In Ghana] you can walk to any corner and exchange money without any identification. In most countries you cannot do that; you need a passport or some identification to do that. But in our case, people walk in from neighbouring countries and come and load the dollars into suitcases and go.
“So, if we don’t address this problem, no matter how much Bank of Ghana pumps in, it will leak. I heard the Bank of Ghana has started it, but I want to see more effort,” he said.
Philippines -
Government may allow more sugar imports once rice tariffs approved
Published: 01 February 2019 11:40 AM
The government might allow more
sugar imports to the Philippines to reduce prices of the commodity as soon as
the rice tariffication bill becomes law, the National Economic and Development
Authority said.
Socioeconomic Planning Secretary
Ernesto Perni
We now require all subscribers to
register with us the first time they log into the site. It only takes a minute
and you only have to do it once.
If you need assistance please
contact our Technical Support team on:
Tel: +44 (0)20 701 76242
Email: agrahelp@informa.com
Email: agrahelp@informa.com
If you are not a subscriber, you can sign up here
To find out more, request a free demo
To find out more, request a free demo
Ask The Analyst
Do you have follow up questions from
this article? Don’t forget that as part of your subscription you can contact
our experienced analysts who will endeavour to answer your questions and help
you understand the impacts of the latest trends in this sector (terms and conditions apply to this
service). Click here to submit your question.
VN loses out on global market
without rice brand
Update: February,
01/2019 - 09:00
Vietnamese rice exporters often ship in 50-kilogramme bags under
the labels of their foreign distributors. — VNS Photo Hoàng Nguyên
|
LONG AN — Trung An Hi-tech Farming JSC in the Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta has been exporting rice under foreign brand names for many years though it is itself one of the biggest rice exporters in Việt Nam.
Speaking to the media on the sidelines of the third Vietnamese Rice Festival in Long An Province last December, Phạm Thái Bình, the company’s director, said to let consumers know about Vietnamese rice products, exporters like his company have to be able to show consumers their brand logos.
“But at the moment we still depend on buyers, which means they decide the packaging and labelling and we only have to follow instructions.
“Some markets allow the phrase ‘origin in Việt Nam’ to be written on the package, and that is already quite generous.”
He said foreign buyers usually order in bulk and want 50kg packaged under their name.
“They do not have to introduce Vietnamese rice to consumers, they just want to promote their own brands.”
According to the Ministry of Agricultural and Rural Development (MARD), Việt Nam exports to 150 markets yet global recognition of Vietnamese rice brands is still very low.
Last December, it unveiled the official Việt Nam rice brand logo hoping to create a firm foothold in the global market.
Bình said it was an important move because it would help consumers identify Vietnamese rice since the logo is on the package.
But having a national brand does not mean it would automatically enhance the value of Vietnamese rice, he said.
“Whether or not we can increase the value depends on the quality of the product. Quality decides everything. Even the national rice brand can only be successful if companies and farmers collaborate to improve product quality.”
Nguyễn Quốc Toản, acting director of MARD’s Deparment of Agricultural Market Processing and Development, had emphasised the importance of quality at the launch of the national brand logo.
“The main issue [when building a brand for Vietnamese rice] is product quality because no brand will be accepted when the quality is poor.
“First and foremost, we need to improve the quality of our rice grain to not only meet the requirements of traditional rice markets but also niche markets in future.”
He said enterprises and farmers must work together very closely to enhance the value of Vietnamese rice.
Reduce quantity to improve quality
Dr Nguyễn Đức Thành, director of the Institute of Economic and Policy Research, told Việt Nam News that consumers are now more demanding than ever.
“They want to buy clean and organic rice whose production is traceable.”
He said farmers have to meet those requirements but cannot do it by themselves.
Việt Nam introduced a national rice brand logo last December as
part of efforts to get a foothold in the global market. — VNS Photo Hoàng
Nguyên
|
“Only by joining hands can farmers and enterprises tap foreign markets.”
He also pointed out that due to low productivity, farmers have to grow three rice crops a year instead of two as recommended by scientists for sustainability, which leads to low quality and almost no value addition.If the non-agricultural sector grows further, farmers could abandon the third crop, he said.
“Production may decrease but quality will improve and bring more value.”According to Dr Nguyễn Văn Sánh, former director of the Mekong Delta Development Research Institute, the delta, the country’s rice basket, has been hit by climate change in recent years, which has brought challenges such as changing water flows, low market competitiveness and overexploitation of agricultural resources.
Besides, production costs increase while quality deteriorates, he said.
“To develop a sustainable rice industry, farmers, enterprises and administrators must be ‘smart’ in production and trading.”
It can be done by selecting appropriate rice varieties, making use of ecological advantages through regional and sub-regional integration, improving production techniques, and adopting effective mechanisms and policies, he added.
Domestic market
Dr Thành
noted that enterprises need to pay more attention to communication and
advertising to build their brands in the domestic market first before expanding
overseas.He said though advertising is costly, without communication consumers cannot know and would continue to think that foreign rice is better than Vietnamese rice though it is not always the reality.
He said high-income families prefer to buy imported rice from Japan, Thailand or South Korea, and so building rice brands should not only be for international markets but also the domestic market.
“We can sell Vietnamese rice at supermarkets overseas but on a small scale. At the moment the biggest market for us is the domestic market.
“It has 100 million people who eat rice every day.
“Only a small number of highly selective consumers care about rice brands while the majority are indifferent.
“The domestic market is very sustainable for us as it is familiar and we have knowledge about the local market and consumers.” — VNS
https://vietnamnews.vn/economy/484891/vn-loses-out-on-global-market-without-rice-brand.html#bTKUqGlfvIMMhd1D.97
Indian, Thai rice markets quiet;
Bangladesh clamps down on hoarders
(Reuters)
- Top Asian rice exporters India and Thailand saw muted activity this week,
while a government clampdown on hoarding pushed down local prices of the staple
in Bangladesh.
Thailand’s
benchmark 5 percent broken rice prices were unchanged from last week at
$390–$402 per tonne, free on board Bangkok. “Right now the stronger baht is the
main factor influencing prices, but that hasn’t helped us sell rice,” a
Bangkok-based trader said. While demand has hardly changed, supply is expected
to jump next month, traders said.
The
baht has gained nearly 3.4 percent versus the dollar so far this year. “The
Philippines remain the market that Thai exporters look to, but so far things
have been quiet,” another trader in Bangkok said. Thai exports are expected to
fall 14 percent this year as a stronger currency makes shipments more expensive
for overseas buyers, the country’s rice exporters association said. Thai
growers have also faced increased competition from India, the world’s biggest
rice exporter, and Vietnam, the third biggest, Chookiat Ophaswongse, the
association’s honorary president, told a news conference.
Prices
for India’s benchmark 5 percent broken parboiled variety were also unchanged,
at $381-$386 per tonne, due to sluggish demand.
Export
prices in India had shot up after the central state of Chhattisgarh, a leading
rice producer, raised minimum paddy buying prices. “African buyers are just
making inquiries, but trade is not happening,” said an exporter based at
Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh. In neighbouring Bangladesh, domestic prices of the
staple have started to drop slightly this week after the government vowed to
take punitive measures against hoarders. “Action will be taken against the
traders who had stockpiled to create an artificial crisis in the market,” said
a commerce ministry official, adding a recent spike in rates was unwarranted
given healthy reserves and good crop.
Higher
domestic prices for the staple had prompted speculation among traders that the
government would cut the import duty, which the government has ruled out.
In
Vietnam, rates for the benchmark 5 percent broken rice rose to $350 a tonne
from $340 last week, but business was quiet, traders said. “There will be
virtually no shipments from Vietnam over the next week due to the Lunar New
Year holiday,” a trader based in Ho Chi Minh City said. Government data
released on Tuesday showed Vietnam’s rice exports in January likely fell 18.5
percent from a year earlier.
Vietnamese
scientist finds anti-diabetes compounds in white rice
|
Friday, 2019-02-01 13:14:13
|
|
|
NDO – Research by Associate
Professor Tran Dang Xuan, who is working at Hiroshima University (Japan), has
discovered and successfully isolated two precious compounds of momilactones A
and B, which inhibit enzymes in white rice.
|
This announcement was published
by the MDPI International Journal of Molecular Sciences in Switzerland on
January 29.
This is the first study to
confirm the presence of momilactones A and B (MA and MB) in refined rice
seeds, and the first to find anti-diabetic compounds in white rice. Some
studies have previously found rice to have compounds that inhibit diabetes,
but only in brown or red rice, which are often of poor quality and difficult
to consume.
MA and MB compounds are very
rare in the world market and have not been fully studied for biological and
pharmacological activities. The compound was sold at US$125 per 0.1 mg on
carbosynth.com, a company that sells famous British biochemical products.
Xuan said that there are four
genes involved in the synthesis of Momilactones A and B in rice. This will help
in creating new rice varieties that can inhibit diabetes, helping to increase
the value of Vietnamese rice.
The discovery of Momilactones A
and B suggests a new concept that eating a moderate amount of rice every day
contributes to human health by reducing the risk of diabetes, gout and
obesity. Several recent reports indicate that there are more than 3 million
people in Vietnam suffering from or facing diabetes risks, so the results of
this study are particularly significant.
After only one month of appraisal
and criticism the work was published in the MDPI International Journal of
Molecular Sciences (ranking No. 1 – at Q1 – on scimagolab.com's ratings).
MDPI is a member of the Publication Ethics Committee (COPE), which is
evaluated by researchers as having a strict policy of ensuring the high
quality of published scientific works.
|
New study argues white rice by
itself not linked to increased diabetes risk, overall diet quality more
important
"Even over
a relatively wide range of rice intakes, from half a bowl to several bowls a
day, we didn't see much of an increase in the risk of diabetes," said
Professor Rob Martinus van Dam.
PHOTO: The Straits Times
REI KUROHI
Feb 01, 2019
SINGAPORE - Cutting down on white
rice may not in itself lower a person's risk of getting diabetes, two new
studies have found.
The risk depends on what the rice
is substituted with and the overall quality of a person's diet, said Professor
Koh Woon Puay, director of the Centre for Clinician-Scientist Development at
Duke-NUS Medical School, a co-author of the studies.
Both studies used data from the
ongoing Singapore Chinese Health Study, which was started in 1993 by the
National University of Singapore (NUS).
This comes after a series of
previous studies that linked white rice to diabetes. In 2016, Singapore's
Health Promotion Board cited studies by the Harvard School of Public Health in
the United States which showed that each plate of white rice eaten daily on a
regular basis raises the risk of diabetes by 11 per cent in the overall
population.
In one study, researchers from NUS
and Duke-NUS Medical School found no link between the quantity of white rice
consumed and the risk of Type 2 diabetes when controlled for other variables
like age, sex and body mass index (BMI), and various other food intakes.
Type 2 diabetes is related to
weight management, and is a result of blocked or reduced insulin receptors.
Over 90 per cent of diabetics suffer from Type 2 diabetes.
"Even over a relatively wide
range of rice intakes, from half a bowl to several bowls a day, we didn't see
much of an increase in the risk of diabetes," said Professor Rob Martinus
van Dam, domain leader of epidemiology at the Saw Swee Hock School of Public
Health in NUS and one of the study's co-authors.
Prof van Dam said the study showed
that a person who eats less rice is likely to eat more of something else to
maintain the same calorie intake.
But people who ate different foods
in place of rice were affected differently.
For example, a person may choose
more noodle dishes, which are often cooked in sauces that are high in salt and
oil, he said. Others may eat more meat to feel full.
These increase their risk of
diabetes.
Substituting rice with whole
grains, on the other hand, decreases the risk.
Another study, also involving Prof
van Dam and Prof Koh, used established diet quality indices to determine the
overall "quality" of a person's dietary pattern.
They then measured the link between
diet quality and diabetes risk.
A list of 165 food items and
beverages were identified, covering an estimated 90 per cent of what is
commonly eaten by the population in Singapore.
It is the first such study to
examine local food specifically.
The researchers said the study
found that whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts and a moderate amount of
dairy were associated with lower risks of cancer, diabetes, heart disease and
stroke, in line with other established dietary studies from mostly Western
countries.
Sugar-sweetened drinks, processed
meat and red meat - including beef, pork and even the darker portions of
poultry like chicken thigh meat - were found to be associated with higher risks
of the same diseases.
The items were scored according to
the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (Dash) diet index.
The proportion of each item as a
part of a consistent dietary pattern was found to be more important than the
absolute intake, said Prof Koh, who is also the principal investigator in the
Singapore Chinese Health Study.
This means one does not have to cut
out unhealthy foods like red meat entirely, as long as they are eaten in
moderation, she added.
READ ALSO
About 45,400 Chinese Singaporeans
who did not have diabetes, cancer or cardiovascular diseases were recruited
between 1993 and 1998 for the Singapore Chinese Health Study.
Details about their diets were
collected through questionnaires during two follow-up interviews. Over an
average of 11 years, more than 5,200 developed diabetes.
This data was then used in the two
recent studies.
The participants' diets were ranked
according to how often and how much of a given food they ate on average.
Those who ate relatively more whole
grains, low-fat dairy, nuts, seeds, legumes, fruits and vegetables were given
higher scores.
Those who had more processed and
red meats, sugary drinks and sodium in their diets were given lower scores.
Other foods like fish and refined
grains, including white rice, were not scored under the Dash index.
The researchers found that the top
20 per cent of the participants, who had relatively "higher quality"
diets, were nearly 30 per cent less likely to develop diabetes compared to the
bottom 20 per cent.
Dr Annie Ling, group director of
policy, research and surveillance at the Health Promotion Board, said the
studies are timely given the findings of the recent National Nutrition Survey
2018.
The survey showed gradual
improvements in Singaporeans' dietary habits but highlighted areas for
improvement.
She said: "While Singaporeans
are consuming more whole grains, fruits and vegetables, high sugar and sodium
intake remains a cause for concern.
"It is important to continue
encouraging Singaporeans to pay attention to the foods they choose and the
quality of their diets."
This article was first published in The Straits Times. Permission required for
reproduction.
BAU to hold Agrotech 2019 Kisan
Mela
Saturday, 02 February 2019 | PNS | Ranchi
In an attempt to increase income
of farmers Birsa Agricultural University (BAU) will organise a three-day mega
State-level farmers’ fair called Agrotech 2019 Kisan Mela to disseminate
awareness among farmers. The fair will begun on February, 2 and continue till
February, 4 with the theme of ‘Proper Agricultural Procedure for Beneficial
Farming’.
Jharkhand-based Indian Council of
Agriculture Research (ICAR) institutes such as Indian Institute of Natural
Resins and Gums, Namkum, Indian Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology,
Garhkhatanga, Namkum, National Bureau of Plant genetic Resources, Ranchi,
ICAR-Research Complex for Eastern Region, Research Centre Ranchi, Palandu and
Central Rainfed Upland Rice Research Station, Hazaribagh are active partner of
BAU in this three-day mega event.
Addressing media persons on
Friday, BAU Vice Chancellor Parvinder Kaushal said 10 thematic pandals and 100
commercial stalls were being put up where different colleges, departments,
units, Krishi Vigyan Kendras and Zonal Research Stations of BAU, ICAR
Institutes located in the State, Government departments, banks, dealers of
seeds, planting material, fertilizers, farm implements, NGOs and other
organizations would display their technologies, products and services.
Chief Minister Raghubar Das will
be the Chief Guest on second day of the Mela on February 3, while Governor
Droupadi Murmu will grace the valedictory session on February 4. The event will
be formally inaugurated by Randhir Kumar Singh, Minister, Department of
Agriculture, Animal Husbandry and Cooperation on February 2. Horticulture show
comprising fruits, vegetables, flowers, flower arrangements, spices,
decorative, medicinal, aromatic plants and animal-bird show consisting cattle,
buffalo, pig, sheep, goat, poultry, duck etc will be part of the exhibition.
Display and sale of seeds,
planting material, organic products, fertilizers, farm implements and value
added processed agro products, free testing of soil, water and diseased plant
samples, visit of Technology Park, experimental areas and screening of video
films on modern farm technologies are other features of the event.
Krishak Gosthi for on the spot
solution of farming related technical problems of farmers will be organized all
the three days and innovative farmers will be felicitated. BAU Director
Research DN Singh, Director Extension Education Jagarnath Oraon and Dean were
also present during media briefing.
Rice export growth may slow as demand drops from big customers
VietNamNet
Bridge - Vietnam had a prosperous rice export year in 2018, but has been warned
of a tough year in 2019.
Vietnam
exported 6.1 million tons of rice in 2018
The General Statistics Office (GSO) reported that Vietnam exported 6.1 million tons of rice in 2018, a slight increase of 270,000 tons, or 4.6 percent higher than 2017.
The slight increase in export volume was offset by the export price, $502 per ton, or 10.8 percent higher than 2017. This helped the rice export turnover exceed the $3 billion threshold, increasing by 16 percent.
Vietnam’s rice price is now equal to, and sometimes is even higher, than Thailand’s.
In 2016 and 2017, Vietnam’s average export price was higher than Thailand’s by $7 and $9 per ton, respectively. In 2018, the gap was erased, staying at $502 per ton.
This was attributed to the sharp increase in sticky and fragrant rice exports which had better prices (in 2017, the exports of these types of rice exceeded 3 million tons, accounting for 46.4 percent of total exports) and the sharp decrease in white rice exports.
The slight increase in
export volume was offset by the export price, $502 per ton, or 10.8 percent
higher than 2017. This helped the rice export turnover exceed the $3 billion
threshold, increasing by 16 percent.
|
Meanwhile,
Thailand’s proportion of fragrant Thai Hom Mali rice exports decreased from
31.7 percent to 20.1 percent. The country also focused on liquidating its
inventory rice at low prices.
As for prospects in 2019, Nguyen Dinh Bich, a trade expert, warned that 2019 could be a tough year for Vietnam’s rice exporters.
In his article on Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon, Bich said that exporters want to ‘sell rice at high prices’, and cannot export all the rice output. Controlling the rice export price to ensure reasonable price levels is a big issue for consideration.
The expert cited a report as saying that Vietnam’s rice export volume in 2018 was 6.1 million tons, while the rice equivalent output was much higher and it was estimated that 500,000 tons of rice still could not be sold.
The other problem for Vietnam is the predicted lower demand from key markets.
According to USDA, the total rice output in the world in 2018 decreased by 4 million tons, but the reserves at the beginning of the year increased sharply to a record high of 162 million tons, enough for four-month consumption. Meanwhile, the rice demand is still unchanged, at 45 million tons.
The demand from Indonesia, Vietnam’s second biggest importer in 2018, is predicted to drop sharply from 2.15 million tons to 800,000 tons this year. Meanwhile, China is tightening control over rice imports.
As for prospects in 2019, Nguyen Dinh Bich, a trade expert, warned that 2019 could be a tough year for Vietnam’s rice exporters.
In his article on Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon, Bich said that exporters want to ‘sell rice at high prices’, and cannot export all the rice output. Controlling the rice export price to ensure reasonable price levels is a big issue for consideration.
The expert cited a report as saying that Vietnam’s rice export volume in 2018 was 6.1 million tons, while the rice equivalent output was much higher and it was estimated that 500,000 tons of rice still could not be sold.
The other problem for Vietnam is the predicted lower demand from key markets.
According to USDA, the total rice output in the world in 2018 decreased by 4 million tons, but the reserves at the beginning of the year increased sharply to a record high of 162 million tons, enough for four-month consumption. Meanwhile, the rice demand is still unchanged, at 45 million tons.
The demand from Indonesia, Vietnam’s second biggest importer in 2018, is predicted to drop sharply from 2.15 million tons to 800,000 tons this year. Meanwhile, China is tightening control over rice imports.
https://english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/216442/rice-export-growth-may-slow-as-demand-drops-from-big-customers.html