Explained: Why Basmati export has come to a standstill in Punjab
Anju Agnihotri Chaba
The
Indian Express13 December 2019
Explained:
Why Basmati export has come to a standstill in Punjab?
More
Major Basmati growers and exporters —
Punjab and Haryana, which account for 80 to 90 per cent of total Basmati export
— have failed to pass mandatory certification despite restrictions on
pesticides. (Express archive)
After restricting the usage of nine
pesticides for Basmati crop (fine-quality aromatic rice) this year, Punjab
Agriculture Department was hoping to harvest EU and US complaint
pesticide-residue Basmati crop. But post-harvest, the export of the crop has
come to a halt as most samples from Punjab, and even Haryana, have failed
“mandatory testing and certification of inspection” due to the presence of
“residue of unregistered pesticides” in the import-bound countries.
The Indian Express explains why both
major Basmati growers and exporters — Punjab and Haryana, which account for 80
to 90 per cent of total Basmati export including 50 per cent export from Punjab
alone — have failed to pass mandatory certification despite restrictions on
these pesticides.
What is mandatory testing
and certification?
For the first time this year,
Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), under the Union Ministry of
Commerce and Industry, issued a notification on November 4, while the Basmati
crop was being harvested in Punjab and Haryana, making it mandatory for Basmati
exporters to get their Basmati tested and certified prior to its export to the
European Union (EU). The crop will now require a certificate of inspection from
the Export Inspection Council (EIC)/Export Inspection Agency (EIA) with
immediate effect. EIC is the official export certification body of India that
ensures quality and safety of the products exported from here. There are total
five EIA labs including in Delhi, Kochi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata.
Why this certification was
made compulsory?
The EU, which has 28 countries in the
union, had brought down Maximum Residue Limit (MRL) for Tricyclazole, a
fungicide used for Basmati crop, from 0.03 mg to 0.01 mg per kg a couple of
years back. EU has started rejecting Basmati having MRL beyond this level as a
result of which India’s four lakh tonnes Basmati export to the EU earlier had
come down to 1.85 lakh tonnes this year due to the MRL limit. To avoid
rejection from there, the Centre made this test compulsory here before export.
Which are countries our
Basmati crop is exported to?
India exports Basmati to 80-90
countries including EU, USA, Middle East, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey, Azerbaijan,
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. Iran was a major importer,
but not any more.
Why has Basmati export come
to a halt when certification is mandatory only for EU?
Punjab alone grows over 20 lakh tonnes
of Basmati every year. But for the past one month not more than 200 to 300
tonnes of Basmati could be exported. All India Rice Exporters Association
president Nathi Ram Gupta said that following the notification, majority of
samples from Punjab and Haryana states failed in EIA labs. But Gupta added that
all these “failed samples” got passed in other government’s certified labs.
“Who should we believe? Also, why tests should be conducted by EIA labs, which
are charging 5-6 times more than the government certified labs?” he questioned.
“It is surprising that Centre has
included 40 more countries along with EU in this list including Russia,
Ukraine, Azerbaijan and other Commonwealth of Independent State (CIS) countries
while they are not part of EU,” said Arvinder Pal Singh, president of PRMEA
(Punjab Rice Millers Exporters Association), adding that every country has its
own parameters for MRL of different pesticides but now every country is
expecting the same.
“My 70 containers to non-EU countries,
which should not be included in EU by our government, are stuck awaiting
certification and export to other countries has also come to standstill,” said
Ashok Sethi, Director PRMEA.
How the certification test
is conducted?
Around one kg of rice is taken from a
container, which carries 18-20 tonnes, and then tests related to various
pesticides are conducted. If the quantity of banned pesticides is found more
than the MRL, then such shipments are rejected and penalty can be imposed on
such exporters prohibiting them from exporting their other containers for 15
days. Also, due to only five EIA labs the test process is quite slow, said
exporters.
Unemployment:
ILO restates importance of Nigerian forum
Published
14 hours ago
on
December 13, 2019
By
Following the growing youth
unemployment in Africa, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) has
declared that the forum organised in Nigeria in August was apt to address the
unfortunate development.
Speaking on the challenges
facing Africa as regards unemployment at the 14th African Regional Meeting in
Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, the Director-General, (ILO) Guy Ryder, said that despite
opportunities to be proud of within the continent, a number of challenges are
also there to contend with.
According to him, “our meeting
is taking place at a time when the global economy is stalling: estimates for
next year will show growth to be only three per cent worldwide, and about 4
percent to the continent. It is in this context that the challenge of
employment in Africa will have to be met: to create 26 million productive jobs
every year in order to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
“It is also in this context
that the $68 billion annual financing gap will have to be filled in order to
finance the investments needed to make universal social protection a reality in
Africa.”
The ILO boss said that it was
estimated that by 2035 the labor force would grow by more than 60 per cent in
Africa, adding that “it is a tremendous demographic dividend for growth and
development, provided that all the jobs that it needs can be created, without
which this development will lead to more economic, social and migratory
pressures.
“That is why it was
particularly timely for Nigeria to host the Global Forum on Youth Employment in
Abuja in August, and I was very pleased to be able to participate.”
He pointed out that new
technologies opened up entirely new perspectives for development in Africa,
with real breakthroughs if these technologies can be applied and deployed
successfully.
“However, the danger is that
digital divide and marginalization will become worse if the necessary
investments and innovation are lacking.
“Africa has a unique renewable
energy potential, which gives it an extraordinary advantage in the transition
more than ever necessary to climate neutrality. At the same time, we are
witnessing the continent’s vulnerability to climate change, which gives rise to
fears of large-scale population displacement and the destruction of their
livelihoods.
“Experience has shown us that
the benefits globalization brings to Africa depend entirely on the conditions
in which it integrates into the global systems of trade, investment, finance,
migration and technologies. Hence, ladies and gentlemen, the imperative need to
strengthen the global foundations for sustainable, balanced and just
development for Africa’s future prosperity.
“This is to say how important
are the issues of the discussions that we will have this week here in Abidjan.
It is about how to apply in Africa the approach to the future of human-centered
work enshrined in the Declaration of the Centenary adopted in June by the
International Labor Conference.”
On her part, the ILO’s head of
employment and labour markets, Sukti Dasgupta, described the youth unemployment
crisis in Africa as a reflection of ineffective development strategies, saying
that serious and honest political will was needed to avoid a disaster.
Of the over 226 million youth
on the continent, 13.4 million are unemployed, while 52.2 million are not in
employment education or training.
Dasgupta said the biggest
problem that has exacerbated the youth unemployment crisis was a lack of
opportunities and that drastic action is needed to fix this.
“There is a time bomb about to
explode, I would say. The number of youth in the labour market is rising. By
2040 you will have a labour force size on the African continent which will be
the combined size of the labour market in India and China,” she noted.
Cambodia
morning news for December 13
Advertisement
Cambodia Responds to EU over Human Rights Concern
Cambodia’s government said on Thursday it had responded to the European Union over human rights and political concerns and urged the bloc to consider that nearly one million female workers would be affected if it suspended trade benefits.
— VOA
Cambodia’s government said on Thursday it had responded to the European Union over human rights and political concerns and urged the bloc to consider that nearly one million female workers would be affected if it suspended trade benefits.
— VOA
Ministries Must Monitor for Cheap Rice Price, Hun Sen Says
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday ordered government ministries to monitor rice millers to ensure that they used government-funded loans to help rice farmers profit rather than lower the price of rice, following the announcement of a $50-million government rice subsidy last week.
— VOD
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Wednesday ordered government ministries to monitor rice millers to ensure that they used government-funded loans to help rice farmers profit rather than lower the price of rice, following the announcement of a $50-million government rice subsidy last week.
— VOD
PM Hun Sen: Government Takes Measures on RFA Journalist over
Pornography, Not Publications
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen strongly denounced the allegations made by the oppositions, accusing the Royal Government of oppressing right to freedom of press following the arrests of reporters of Radio Free Asia (RFA).
— Fresh News
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen strongly denounced the allegations made by the oppositions, accusing the Royal Government of oppressing right to freedom of press following the arrests of reporters of Radio Free Asia (RFA).
— Fresh News
PM committed to meet Trump during Asean-US Summit
Despite recent diplomatic setbacks with the United States, Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday said he was committed to attending the Asean-US Summit in the United States early next year to hold talks with President Donald Trump.
— Khmer Times
Despite recent diplomatic setbacks with the United States, Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday said he was committed to attending the Asean-US Summit in the United States early next year to hold talks with President Donald Trump.
— Khmer Times
Kingdom implores EU to consider reform efforts as part of EBA
review
Improvements to gender equality and labour rights were among initiatives highlighted by the government in its official response yesterday to a European Commission report on the possible suspension of the Kingdom’s Everything-but-arms trade status.
— Khmer Times
Improvements to gender equality and labour rights were among initiatives highlighted by the government in its official response yesterday to a European Commission report on the possible suspension of the Kingdom’s Everything-but-arms trade status.
— Khmer Times
Inside Taraba
booming local rice business By Magaji Isa Hunkuyi,
Jalingo | Published Date Dec 13, 2019 4:26 AM TwitterFacebookWhatsAppTelegram
Inside Taraba booming local rice business Local rice business is booming in
Taraba State following the closure of Nigerian borders, which has drastically
reduced foreign rice coming into the country. North-East Trust’s finding revealed
that both farmers and local rice dealers are reaping from the booming market
across farming communities in the state. ADVERTISEMENT Hundreds of merchants
from across the country including rice millers now source rice paddy and
locally processed rice from the state. ADVERTISEMENT HOW OVER 5000 NIGERIA MEN
HAVE PERMANENTLY OVERCOME TERRIBLE BEDROOM PERFORMANCE DUE TO THIS RECENT
BRILLIANT DISCOVERY BY MEDICAL CONSULTANTS Potential of the state in rice
production was not fully exploit until recently when demands for both paddy and
locally processed rice increased. The state has vast fertile land suitable for
rice production during wet and dry seasons and thousands of farmers engaged in
rice farming, turning out thousands of tonnes of rice paddy annually. Findings
further revealed that the three major rivers in the state-River Benue, River
Taraba and River Donga have fertile wet land stretching hundreds kilometers and
is suitable for both wet and dry season rice farming. It was further gathered
that only about 25 percent of these lands are being utilized while the
remaining lay fallow. Major areas where rice farming is taking place include
Tau,Yalwan Tau,Donada,Lau,and Didango. Others are Sheka, Kambari,Amar, Gassol,
MutumBiyu,Donga, Chinkai,Ibbi,Sansani,Ibbi sarkin Kudu,Bali and several
other areas. North East Trust’s investigation also revealed that currently
there are about seven major markets for paddy and locally processed rice in the
state. The markets are located in MutumBiyu, Bantaje, Didango, Lau, Donga,
Jalingo and Tella. It was further discovered that majority of rice milling
companies in the country sourced paddy rice from MutumBiyu paddy market. At
Mutum-Biyu paddy rice, there are depots with pyramid of rice paddy purchased by
major rice milling companies in the country. Similarly, some millers also
purchased locally processed rice from the state and package them for sale after
reprocessing and packaging. The booming rice market in the state also gave rise
to increasing number of local rice milling business. There are over 14 local
rice milling facilities across seven local government areas of the state. A
local rice miller, Mallam Habibu Jalingo, told North East Trust that every day
over 3000 bags of 100kg bags of rice paddy is being processed locally in the
state and there was a ready market. According to him, customers from Abuja,
Kano, Lagos and many other parts of the country come to buy local rice from the
state on daily basis. He said price of local rice has come down because of mass
production of rice paddy, adding that the closure of border is a blessing to
both rice farmers and local millers In Jalingo town, there are two major rice
milling factories –AL-Ganzaki rice mill and Mophido rice mill, which process
more than 35 tonnes of paddy daily. Alhaji Aliyu Sarkin Noma, owner of
AL-Ganzaki rice mill told North East Trust that the closure of border has
brought good market for both rice growers and the millers. He said there were
increasing demands for local rice, resulting to increase in its production. The
chairman of Taraba state Rice Farmers Association (RIFAN), Alhaji Tanko Bobbo
Andami, said presently there were over 300,000 rice farmers in the state. He
said the Anchor borrower scheme introduced by the federal government through
the central Bank allows the farmers to access soft loans. He said demand for
local rice following closure of borders also boost business in both paddy and
locally processed rice in the state. The National President of Rice Farmers
Association (RIFAN), Alhaji Aminu Goronyo, said Nigerians now eat fresh and
healthy rice and that farmers are now getting value for their produce.
Read more: https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/inside-taraba-booming-local-rice-business.html
Read more: https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/inside-taraba-booming-local-rice-business.html
Govt.
to reduce duty on wheat flour imports
13 December 2019 09:06
am - 0 - 37
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The government will reduce duty on wheat flour
imports for a limited period in order to ease the cost of living amid a hike in
rice prices, Cabinet Spokesperson Dr. Ramesh Pathirana said.
“The Cabinet has decided to cut import duties on wheat flour for a short period of time to keep prices down during the festival season and ease cost of living,” Pathirana added.
“This will break the monopoly on wheat flour.”
Sri Lanka maintains higher duties on wheat flour imports and lower taxes on wheat grain imports.
Sri Lanka’s wheat grain market is controlled by two multinational millers.
Pathirana said a gazette notice on the new import tax will be notified shortly. However it was not clear for how long the reduced import duties will be maintained.
Meanwhile, rice prices in the market shot up since the new government came into power as several large rice millers, who store the bulk of the rice paddy in Sri Lanka raised prices of their branded rice.
The government plans to release 42, 000 metric tonnes of stored rice to small rice millers to maintain the retail rice prices at Rs.98 per kilogram during the festive season.
Christmas
rush: Controversy over Nigerian rice re-bagging
Published
13 hours ago
on
December 13, 2019
By
Following massive rush to buy rice for Yuletide and New Year
celebrations, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control
(NAFDAC) has warned business owners involved in sharp practices of revalidating
expired rice and also repackaging Nigerian rice as foreign to desist from the
act in the interest of the economy. Taiwo Hassan reports
Already, the hierarchy of the
Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) led by Comptroller-General, Col. Hameed Ali (rtd),
had raised the alarm over existence of expired rice in circulation.
Ali, who made this known when
the customs destroyed containers of foreign rice smuggled into the country
recently, warned that Nigerians were eating expired rice without knowing.
The comptroller-general blamed
importers of the commodity for not saying the truth on the state of what was
being imported into the country.
He, however, applauded the
country’s border closure policy of the Federal Government, saying that the
closure would benefit the nation in future.
However, despite the attempt to
take the minds of Nigerians away from foreign rice consumption, it was learnt
that the preference is still outweighing that of local rice as investigations
carried out by this newspaper showed that Nigerians are desperately looking for
foreign rice to buy for Christmas and New Year celebrations.
Amid this mass rush for foreign
rice by Nigerians, there are insinuations that business owners involved in the
country’s rice value chain are now secretly bagging local rice with foreign
labels and also jerking up the price tag following Nigerians preference for
foreign commodity.
In fact, the fallout of rice
conversion from local to foreign ones is mind blowing.
Why foreign rice patronage
Recently, a survey on the rice
market across the six geo-political zones in the country by the Economic
Confidential team observed that foreign rice such as Mama Gold, Royal Stallion,
Rice Master, Caprice, Falcon Rice and Basmati were sold alongside Nigerian rice
such as Umza and Fursa Crown from Kano, Mama Happy from Niger, Labana Rice from
Kebbi, Olam Rice from Nasarawa, Abakaliki Rice from Ebonyi, Ofada Rice from
Ogun State, Swomen Dama from Plateau, Lake Rice of Lagos/Kebbi States among
others.
The reason for the sale can be
attributed to the fact that the desire for Nigerian rice is still low, thereby
raising doubt as to Nigerians’ preferences for local rice.
Stakeholders in the rice
sub-sector, Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Rice Millers
Association of Nigeria (RIMAN) and Rice Processors Association of Nigeria
(RIPAN) had given kudos to the Central Bank of Nigeria for the timely
intervention and banning of rice import into the country since 2015 without
issuing of Form M, a development that has seen growth in local production,
thereby saving foreign exchange for the country.
On-the-spot checks by the
magazine showed that the preponderance of foreign rice in these markets by
merchants who said that profits coming from foreign rice far out-weigh the
local rice which majority of those interviewed believed has more nutritional
value than the foreign rice.
However, what cannot be
fathomed is why still preference for foreign rice by Nigerians despite the
border closure, ban and aggressive local production of rice milling?
Locally fabricated rice
de-stoner machine
Speaking on the changes that
need to embrace by local millers to bring sanity to the country’s rice value
chain, an agriculture expert, Mrs. Bridget Obi, charged the three tiers of
government to embrace and adopt the locally fabricated rice de-stoner
innovation machine to boost local rice production in Nigeria.
Obi, also the former
Commissioner for Women Affairs and Youths Development in Anambra State,
disclosed this at the unveiling ceremony of three agricultural devices by the
Nigerian Association of Technologists in Engineering (NATE) in Oshodi, Lagos
recently.
According to her, the
agricultural devices were: scale down rice de-stoner,castor oil de-husking
machine and automated mains failure device.
Obi pointed out that these rice
machines would ensure accelerated production and reduces drudgery, especially
in the processing of agricultural produces in the country.
“We don’t need to import rice
again. The Federal Government should support various institutions to help in
driving technology that will help our nation to achieve our agricultural goals.
“Without technology, we can do nothing; it helps to save cost, manpower and man
hour,” she added.
She said local rice production
should henceforth be encouraged with the devices to assist in addressing the
major challenge of local rice.
“With huge amount released by
CBN toward increasing rice production, the NATE scale down rice de-stoner will
increase mass production of quality rice to ensure availability in the farming
communities. “I urge governments to give necessary assistance in ensuring mass
production of the machines at subsidised rate.
“They should be made available
to farmers at a very low interest rate with long term repayment plan,” Obi
said.
NAFDAC’s warning
However, NAFDAC has read the
riot act warning business owners involved in sharp practices of revalidating
expired rice and repackaging local rice as foreign to desist from the act.
The Director General, National
Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Christiana
Adeyeye, in a statement made available to New Telegraph recently, called on
Nigerians to be vigilant, and exercise discretion when purchasing rice and
other food items.
“NAFDAC is fully alive to her
responsibilities of assuring the safety, wholesomeness and quality of foods and
other regulated products offered for sale to the public,” she noted.
She said the Ogun State office
of NAFDAC received a report from the Department of State Services (DSS) in the
state of ongoing food fraud at Oke-Aje market in Ijebu Ode
“We, in company of men of the
Nigeria Police Force proceeded to the scene of the illegal activity. On
arrival, the suspected perpetrators of the food fraud instigated unnamed
persons to unleash mayhem on the team of investigators
“However, enforcement officers
of the agency and its Federal Task Force team stormed the market in company of
DSS officials. They sighted miscreants at the market who took to their heels.
“Bags of expired rice, caked
rice, bags of local rice, bags of popular foreign rice and sealing machines
were found in the shops the NAFDAC enforcement team finally gained access into.
“Three shops were sealed during
the operation. It is instructive to note that expired and caked rice are
unwholesome as they contain moulds and microorganism that cause diseases which
are of immense public health concern,” she added.
She called on Nigerians to
report cases of re-bagging and sale of caked and expired rice or other food
items to the nearest NAFDAC office across the federation.
Last line
With this disturbing report of
re-bagging, sale of caked, expired rice or other food items in the country, it
has shown that government needs to do more in its monitoring activities by
extending its searchlight beyond borders as perpetrators are ready to make more
gains on Nigerians through re-bagging of Nigerian rice as foreign ones.
Rice:
Integrated millers boost production value to N288bn
Published
13 hours ago
on
December 13, 2019
By
●Deficit crashes by 64.3%
As consumption climbed to
N1.2billion daily, value of rice production by integrated mills in Nigeria has
increased by 1.8million tonnes or N288billion this year.
The boost in production has
made the grain fall by 64.28 per cent from 2.8million tonnes to one million
tonnes.
It was learnt that Nigeria
currently boasts of 40 integrated milling machines of world standard procured
through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s Anchor Borrowers Programme.
After the border closure,
Nigeria suddenly experience rise in milled rice production from 4.9million
tonnes to 6.7million tonnes. Currently, a bag of the grain is N16,000 in the
market.
Before August, 2019, milled
rice production had fallen by 800,000 metric tonnes from 5.7million tonnes to
4.9million tonnes despite CBN’s N55billion anchor borrowers support.
According to the Rice
Processors Association of Nigeria (RPAN), the 1.8million tonnes produced by the
integrated mills are different from millions of metric tonnes produced annually
by small scale millers and local millers.
The processors noted that they
had the capacity to meet the country’s demand during and beyond the Yuletide.
The Chairman of the
association, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, noted that the positive impact of the
Federal Government’s border closure was responsible for the huge production,
saying that it was enormous to the rice millers.
He explained that the combined
capacity of integrated mills produced about 150,000 truck load of rice on a daily
basis and 1.8 million metric tonnes annually.
Abubakar said in Abuja that the
figure was different from millions of metric tonnes produced annually by small
scale millers and local millers.
The chairman stressed that
there would be no scarcity of rice during the Christmas period as there would
be enough supply of rice in the country.
He noted the country relied on
one mill in operation for 10 year until recently rice processing was up to 40.
Abubakar added that before the
border closure, members of the association had been complaining that they could
not sell the grain in their various warehouses.
However, the chairman explained
that they had exhausted their stock, noting that that some RPAN members, who
closed their factories due to lack of patronage, were now back in business
because of border closure.
The chairman said that he had
gone to CBN on behalf of his members to seek grants for expansion of their rice
business.
Farmers in Ghana under the aegis of Peasant Farmers Association of Ghana (PFAG) have also
advised their government to adopt the Nigerian model of ban by making it
immediate instead of waiting for 2022.
The Association in a statement
signed by Abdul- Rahman Mohammed, National President and Board Chairman of PFAG
called for a show of commitment and steps to be put in place for immediate ban
rather than wait until 2022.
It said adopting Nigeria’s food
importation ban concept would not only help to reduce Ghana’s import bill but
create employment opportunities in Ghana and stabilise the cedi.
In 2018, top rice importers,
like Olam and Stallion, embarked on rice cultivation to remain in business as
Federal Government concluded plans to end importation of the grain.
Major rice merchants, Dangote
Group, Stallion Group, Olam International, Cosharis Group and Miva, have
invested $1billion (N360billion), N50billion, N20 billion, N2billion and NI.369 billion
respectively to acquire farms and mills to end the nation’s huge import bill on the grain running into
$3billion annually.
Central
American and Dominican Rice Buyers Attend USA Rice Outlook Conference
LITTLE ROCK, AR -- A delegation of USA Rice members and
representatives from the Central American Rice Federation (FECARROZ) met here
ahead of the USA Rice Outlook Conference to talk about the Central
America-Dominican Republic-U.S. free trade agreement (CAFTA-DR).
CAFTA-DR is on the verge of entering the agreement's fifteenth year since enactment and has been largely beneficial for both the U.S. domestic industry and the Central American and Dominican processors.
The delegations spent several hours discussing the trade agreement, providing updates on USA Rice international promotion efforts within the region and U.S. efforts to improve U.S. rice quality.
Additionally, a report was given on the Agriculture Review Commission, established last month as a requirement for the fourteenth year of the free trade agreement. Membership of the Commission is made up of government representatives from all seven CAFTA-DR countries tasked with conducting a review of the operation and implementation of the free trade agreement as it relates to trade in all agricultural goods, including rice.
"Central America is a top destination for U.S. rice and helps keep our export market thriving," said USA Rice Chairman Charley Mathews, Jr. "We are pleased that FECARROZ has given thought to how this trade can be sustained and continues to nurture the relationship with our U.S. exporters through these periodic meetings."
FECARROZ is interested in pursuing additional research that looks toward the future of the trading relationship between the U.S. and their countries to help provide insight for future discussions.
"USA Rice is supportive of reviewing potential research on the future of our trading relationship," said Todd Burich, chair of the USA Rice Latin American Trade Policy Subcommittee. "We will take a closer look at their proposal next month during the USA Rice International Promotion Planning Conference, and be in continued conversations with FECARROZ during this process."
CAFTA-DR is on the verge of entering the agreement's fifteenth year since enactment and has been largely beneficial for both the U.S. domestic industry and the Central American and Dominican processors.
The delegations spent several hours discussing the trade agreement, providing updates on USA Rice international promotion efforts within the region and U.S. efforts to improve U.S. rice quality.
Additionally, a report was given on the Agriculture Review Commission, established last month as a requirement for the fourteenth year of the free trade agreement. Membership of the Commission is made up of government representatives from all seven CAFTA-DR countries tasked with conducting a review of the operation and implementation of the free trade agreement as it relates to trade in all agricultural goods, including rice.
"Central America is a top destination for U.S. rice and helps keep our export market thriving," said USA Rice Chairman Charley Mathews, Jr. "We are pleased that FECARROZ has given thought to how this trade can be sustained and continues to nurture the relationship with our U.S. exporters through these periodic meetings."
FECARROZ is interested in pursuing additional research that looks toward the future of the trading relationship between the U.S. and their countries to help provide insight for future discussions.
"USA Rice is supportive of reviewing potential research on the future of our trading relationship," said Todd Burich, chair of the USA Rice Latin American Trade Policy Subcommittee. "We will take a closer look at their proposal next month during the USA Rice International Promotion Planning Conference, and be in continued conversations with FECARROZ during this process."
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(© Antonioguillem - stock.adobe.com)
No Bread In Bed: Study Suggests Refined
Carbs Can Trigger Insomnia
NEW
YORK — Sleep seems to happen almost instantly on some nights, while
others are spent endlessly tossing and turning in pursuit of some rest.
Insomnia can be caused by a variety of factors, but it is indisputably a common occurrence nowadays. In fact, an
estimated 30% of adults experience insomnia regularly. If you’ve been having
trouble falling asleep lately, a new study says you may want to examine your eating habits. Research performed at
Columbia University found that post menopausal women consuming a diet high in
refined carbohydrates, specifically added sugars, are more likely to deal with
insomnia.
Conversely, women eating more vegetables, fiber, and whole fruit were
less likely to experience trouble sleeping. While this study focused solely on
older women, the research team theorize that the same holds true for men and
younger women as well.
“Insomnia is often treated with cognitive behavioral therapy or
medications, but these can be expensive or carry side effects,” comments senior
study author James Gangwisch, PhD, assistant professor at Columbia University
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, in a release. “By identifying other factors that
lead to insomnia, we may find straightforward and low-cost interventions with fewer
potential side effects.”
This isn’t the first time researchers have investigated a
possible connection between refined carbohydrates and insomnia, but prior
studies had ultimately yielded inconclusive results. For example, none of those
previous studies had followed participants over an extended period of time,
making it impossible to definitively say if a high-carb
diet led to insomnia, or if insomnia actually caused some
individuals to eat more carbs and sweets.
So, for this study, researchers utilized data collected from
over 50,000 women who had filled out diet diaries. They then analyzed this
information to see if women with diets high in refined carbs were
more likely to develop insomnia.
Now, different types of carbs have varying effects on blood
sugar. Refined carbs, including added sugars, white rice, soda, and white bread, entail a higher glycemic index, which
really just means they induce a more rapid and pronounced increase in blood
sugar after consumption.
“When blood sugar is raised quickly, your body reacts by
releasing insulin, and the resulting drop in blood sugar can lead to the
release of hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol, which can interfere with
sleep,” Gangwisch explains.
As predicted, the study’s authors found that the more carbs women ate with a high
dietary glycemic index, specifically foods with added sugars or processed
grains, the more likely they were to experience insomnia.
“Whole fruits contain sugar, but the fiber in them slow the rate
of absorption to help prevent spikes in blood sugar,” Gangwisch comments. “This
suggests that the dietary culprit triggering the women’s insomnia was the highly processed foods that contain larger
amounts of refined sugars that aren’t found naturally in food.”
Of course, postmenopausal women aren’t the only individuals who
experience an increase in blood sugar levels after eating refined carbs. With
this in mind, the research team are fairly confident that similar findings
would appear among more diverse population samples.
“Based on our findings, we would need randomized clinical trials
to determine if a dietary intervention, focused on increasing the consumption
of whole foods and complex carbohydrates, could be used to prevent and treat
insomnia,” Gangwisch concludes.
Biologist develops new model for analyzing photosynthesis in
vivo
Credit: RUDN University
A RUDN University biologist has developed a model for the
analysis of photosynthesis in vivo. This method calculates the absorption
coefficient of light by chlorophyll based on its reflectivity. Analysis of
light absorption is important for assessing ecosystem productivity, which
affects the state of the biosphere and the global climate. The article is
published in the journal Remote Sensing of Environment.
Measurements of the efficiency of photosynthesis in living systems are necessary because they allow
scientists to estimate the carbon cycle, and therefore the impact on the
climate. To study photosynthesis in vivo, researchers use the vegetation absorption coefficient, a value that shows how deeply the incident
radiation penetrates the canopy. It depends on biochemical, structural and
external factors, so its evaluation is very difficult. Alexei Solovchenko, an
employee of RUDN University, and his colleagues from the U.S. and Israel have
found a new way to assess this indicator.
First, biologists calculated the ratio of absorption and
transmission coefficients for individual leaves and canopy in general.
Measuring these coefficients for the canopy "in sum" is difficult,
but for a single leaf it is simple, so by knowing the ratio between them,
scientists can calculate the absorption and transmission of canopy from the coefficients
for a single leaf. Then the researchers of RUDN University obtained an equation
that connects the canopy absorption coefficient to the pigments absorption
coefficient—primarily that of chlorophyll—in leaves. It turned out that the
canopy, unlike a single leaf, can absorb light in the infrared range, and that
the absorption coefficients of pigments for plants with different densities of
canopy may differ. Therefore, the biologists had to make appropriate changes to
the final model.
The researchers tested this mathematical model describing the canopy absorption coefficient on crops with
different types of photosynthesis—corn (C4 photosynthesis), soybeans and rice
(C3 photosynthesis), measuring the spectra of absorbed and reflected solar
radiation.
The model showed that in the blue spectral region, the canopy of
rice reflects more than the canopy of other crops. Scientists believe it is
because rice grows in water. Also, absorption curves for plants with C3-type
photosynthesis (soybeans and rice) obtained with the model differed from those
of plants with C4-type photosynthesis (corn), due to biochemical differences.
Thus, the model created by biologists can predict the absorption
of light by different types of plants with different types of photosynthesis,
different canopy architectures and
different pigment content in the leaf.
India's October rice exports drop 42%
y-o-y on weak demand from Africa
Smaller shipments from India could help rivals such as
Thailand, Vietnam and Myanmar to increase their exports, according to Indian
exporters
Reuters | Mumbai Last Updated at December 5, 2019
18:07 IST
14
Representative
Image
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residue
Indian rice exports face threat from Asian peers, including
Pakistan
·
India's rice exports in October
fell 42% year-on-year to 485,898 tonnes, government data showed on Thursday,
due to weak demand from African countries for non-basmati rice.
Smaller shipments from India
could help rivals such as Thailand, Vietnam and Myanmar to increase their
exports, according to Indian exporters.
"Export demand is very
subdued," said Nitin Gupta, vice president of Olam India's rice business.
New Delhi mainly exports
non-basmati rice to Bangladesh, Nepal, Benin and Senegal, and premier basmati
rice to Iran, Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
India is the world's biggest rice
exporter but its shipments have plunged 28% in the first seven months of the
2019/20 financial year, which started April 1, to 4.85 million tonnes, the data
showed.
Indian rice has been losing
competitiveness in the world market due to higher local prices, said B V
Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters Association (REA).
The government needs to provide
subsidies for the overseas sales or exports would remain weak, he said.
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Source: www.ghanaweb.com
Standards would be set out to make foreign rice unattractive in
Ghana - GSA boss
The Ghana Standards Authority
(GSA) says talks are ongoing with the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) to set out
the modalities for high requirements and standards that will make foreign rice
unattractive in Ghana.
According to the Executive Director of the GSA, Professor Alex Dodoo, the move is expected to give more prominence to locally produced Ghanaian rice unto the market as well as protecting Ghanaian consumers and businesses.
“I have had a conversation with the lead campaigner of ‘Buy Made in Ghana Rice’ and what we have told them is that we (GSA and FDA) will ensure that Ghanaians set a standard that will make it unattractive for foreign rice to enter into the country. Now that there is a campaign and the ability to produce rice locally, the question we should ask is why do we want to import rice that has been kept for some 10 years, we have started those discussions and we are very keen that we set out the requirements for rice so high that Ghana made rice will compete way above any other rice.”
Professor Alex Dodoo made this known in an interview with GhanaWeb on Wednesday, December 11 in Accra.
He, however, says the notion that some people may think it is rather setting a barrier on the rice market is a wrong one, but rather protecting the Ghanaian public by setting these high standards.
“For me and for most people in the field, having rice which is so old that it’s been treated with chemicals for years is harmful to our health so why should we patronize it. We’re looking at these requirements and definitely it will change soon to project the Ghanaian consumer and Ghanaian businesses,” he concluded.
Buy Ghana Rice Campaign
Earlier, local rice producers and dealers across the country have expressed worry over the difficulty in accessing market avenues for the purchase of their production of local rice in large quantities.
According to them, there’s been an influx of foreign imported rice flooding the market and destroying their businesses.
Recently, President Nana Akufo-Addo in his speech at the 35th National Farmers’ Day celebration appealed to Ghanaians to consume local rice just like he does with his family, arguing that if Ghanaians consumed more local rice, it would boost production and lead to self-sufficiency.
According to the Executive Director of the GSA, Professor Alex Dodoo, the move is expected to give more prominence to locally produced Ghanaian rice unto the market as well as protecting Ghanaian consumers and businesses.
“I have had a conversation with the lead campaigner of ‘Buy Made in Ghana Rice’ and what we have told them is that we (GSA and FDA) will ensure that Ghanaians set a standard that will make it unattractive for foreign rice to enter into the country. Now that there is a campaign and the ability to produce rice locally, the question we should ask is why do we want to import rice that has been kept for some 10 years, we have started those discussions and we are very keen that we set out the requirements for rice so high that Ghana made rice will compete way above any other rice.”
Professor Alex Dodoo made this known in an interview with GhanaWeb on Wednesday, December 11 in Accra.
He, however, says the notion that some people may think it is rather setting a barrier on the rice market is a wrong one, but rather protecting the Ghanaian public by setting these high standards.
“For me and for most people in the field, having rice which is so old that it’s been treated with chemicals for years is harmful to our health so why should we patronize it. We’re looking at these requirements and definitely it will change soon to project the Ghanaian consumer and Ghanaian businesses,” he concluded.
Buy Ghana Rice Campaign
Earlier, local rice producers and dealers across the country have expressed worry over the difficulty in accessing market avenues for the purchase of their production of local rice in large quantities.
According to them, there’s been an influx of foreign imported rice flooding the market and destroying their businesses.
Recently, President Nana Akufo-Addo in his speech at the 35th National Farmers’ Day celebration appealed to Ghanaians to consume local rice just like he does with his family, arguing that if Ghanaians consumed more local rice, it would boost production and lead to self-sufficiency.
Iran’s
payment default leaves rice traders apprehensive about further export
As per information, Iran owes about ₹1,200 crore to the state’s farmers
CITIES Updated: Dec 12, 2019 22:53 IST
With Iran
failing to clear their pending dues for the last eight months, rice traders in
Haryana are reluctant to export this season’s produce to the country, fearing
more defaults. As per information, Iran owes about ₹1,200 crore to the state’s
farmers. Adding to their apprehension is the fact that Basmati price have seen
a steep fall this season.
This
development is likely to affect rice traders of the country, especially
Haryana, adversely as Iran is the biggest consumer Indian aromatic Basmati rice
as it imports about 20-25% of India’s total rice exports of 4.5 million tonnes
every year.
Haryana’s
rice traders say that payment of about ₹1,200 crore was stuck in Iran since May
this year when India stopped importing oil from the country due to US
sanctions. Though the Iran government had started to clear pending payments, it
stopped after clearing dues to the tune of ₹100 crore.
The traders
say that the delay has caused them huge losses and the Indian government did
not intervene to help them clear their dues.
As per
members of the All India Rice Exporters Association (AIREA), most of the
affected traders belong to Haryana and Punjab. They further said the farmers
had to sell their produce for around ₹2,500 per quintal, the lowest in the past
five years.
“Since Iran
is the largest basmati importing market for Indian traders and the annual the
basmati exports to Iran in the past three years had increased to 14.83 lakh MT
(₹10,790 crore) in 2018-19 from 7.16 lakh MT (₹3,778 crore) in 2016-17. But the
delay in payments has left farmers not wanting to take any risks next year,”
said Vijay Setia, former president of AIREA.
AIREA
president Nathi Ram Gupta said, “The delay in payment has affected the big rice
exporters of the country. They will now have to focus on the local market,
which may lead to a fall in prices, affecting both traders and farmers.”
“The bad
trade with Iran has also affected farmers during this harvesting season.
Affected traders could not purchase paddy this year and farmers had to sell
their produce at ₹2,000 to ₹2,800 per quintal this season against ₹3,000 to
₹4,500 per quintal last year,” said Gurdev Singh, a rice trader of Kurukshetra.
Sri Lanka to cut wheat flour
import duty to relax oligopoly as rice prices spike
Thursday December 12, 2019 10:27:23
Sri Lanka in the past kept wheat flour prices high
ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka
will cut import taxes to temporarily break a wheat milling and duopoly and
bring prices down, as rice prices spiked, cabinet spokesman Minister Ramesh
Pathirana said.
“The cabinet decided to
cut import duties on wheat flour temporarily to keep prices down in the
festival season,” Minister Pathirana said.
“This will break the
monopoly on wheat flour.”
Sri Lanka has a
government sponsored duopoly on wheat flour high maintained by a high tax on
wheat flour and a by a lower tax on wheat grain to give high profits (rents) to
a milling oligopoly and block a free market in wheat.
Wheat grain has a
general duty of 15 percent, while milled flour is taxed at 30 percent.
Minister Pathirana said
a gazette notice on the new import tax will be issued shortly.
It is not clear for how
long the duopoly would be broken and when it will be re-instated.
“Our stance is that
there should not be a monopoly on any essential food,” Minister Dulles Akahapperuma
said.
The high prices on wheat
flour has also generated the background for an oligopoly of rice millers to
keep rice prices high.
Rice prices rose sharply
over the last month, with several large millers, who store most of the rice
paddy in the country, raising retail prices of their branded rice.
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on banking and finance
Opposition politicians
have charged that the blocking of un-husked paddy from government stores to
small millers had pushed up prices.
The government hoped to
quickly release 42,000 metric tonnes of stored rice to millers.
Pathirana said the
government hoped to keep retail rice prices at 99 rupee a kilogram.
Rice prices soared from
around 85 to 90 rupees a kilogram at the beginning of November to over 110
rupees by the first week of December. (Colombo/Dec12/2019 – Update II)
ay Also Like
A farmer harvests
rice on Nov. 7 in the northern Thai village of Mae Rim. | AFP-JIJI
BUSINESS
Thai rice farmers shun pesticides
and fight climate change
AFP-JIJI
- DEC
12, 2019
MAE RIM, THAILAND – Battling drought, debt and ailments blamed on pesticides, rice farmers
in northern Thailand have turned to eco-friendly growing methods despite
powerful agribusiness interests in a country that is one of the top exporters
of the grain in the world.
Walking through a sea of green
waist-high stalks, farmer Sunnan Somjak said his fields had been “exhausted” by
chemicals, his family regularly felt ill and his profits were too low to make
ends meet.
But that changed when he joined a
pilot agricultural project for the SRI method, which aims to boost yields while
shunning pesticides and using less water.
“Chemicals can destroy
everything,” the 58-year-old said, adding that the harvest in his village in
Chiang Mai province has jumped 40 percent since employing the new method.
There have been health benefits
too: “It’s definitely better, we don’t get sick anymore,” he added.
SRI was invented in the 1980s in
Madagascar by a French Jesuit priest, and the technique has spread globally.
It works by planting crops wider
apart — thus drawing in more nutrients and light — and limiting the amount of
water that gets into fields, which helps microorganisms flourish to act as
natural fertilizers.
In a plus for debt-laden farmers,
it also uses fewer seeds, and farmers are encouraged to use plants and ginger
roots that naturally deter insects rather than using chemical alternatives —
meaning fewer expenses.
Traditional Thai rice farmers
earn around 3,000 baht a month ($100), but Sunnan was able to increase his
income by 20 percent after adopting the SRI method.
“I’ve finally gotten rid of my debts,”
he said.
Rice is a staple in the diet of
around 3 billion people globally.
But agricultural workers are
locked in a vicious cycle. Beset by drought and floods brought on by climate
change, farmers contribute to the disruption as their fields release methane
and nitrous oxide, two greenhouse gases.
With SRI, paddy fields are not
permanently flooded, which reduces methane emissions by 60 percent, according
to Tristan Lecomte, founder of Pur Projet, a French company supporting the
technique.
The project also helped Sunnan
plant trees around his crops to reinforce the water table.
According to Lecomte, rice yields
can jump from 20 percent to more than 100 percent compared to the traditional
method.
Southeast Asia, where agriculture
supports millions, is slowly embracing SRI.
The U.S.-based Cornell University
created a center specializing in the technique in 2010; more than 2 million
farmers in the region — especially from Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos —
have been trained.
In Bac Giang province in Vietnam,
net profits for farmers were as much as 226 percent higher after adopting the
SRI method than when using traditional ones, according to Abha Mishra, who led
a large project on behalf of the Asian Institute of Technology.
The Philippines, which grows rice
but is also one of the world’s leading importers, is also interested in this
method, and the Ministry of Agriculture has started training farmers.
The method is also used in parts
of India, China and Africa. But though there is support from NGOs, as well as
some scientists and authorities, it has a long way to go before widespread
adoption.
It faces resistance domestically
from agribusiness because there is no new hybrid seed or fertilizer to sell.
Industry lobbies are very active
in Southeast Asia — particularly in Thailand, one of the largest users of
pesticides in the world.
And they recently won a big
battle over chemical use in agriculture.
Thai authorities, who had
committed to ban controversial glyphosate, backtracked at the end of November,
deciding that “limited” use would eventually be allowed. The use of two other
herbicides has also been extended.
Lecomte says the other challenges
potentially affecting the rate of adoption are that the SRI method is quite
complex to learn and that it is labor-intensive.
“You have to plant one by one and
closely control the amount water,” he explained, adding that the extra manual
effort required means some farmers don’t want to try the method, and others
give up early on.
Local
rice farmers face challenging 2019 season resulting in low rice yields
by: Sylvia Masters
Posted: Dec 11, 2019 / 06:45 PM
CST Updated: Dec
12, 2019 / 09:07 AM CST
ACADIA PARISH, La. (KLFY)-
The 2019 rice season was difficult for rice production in Southwest Louisiana
because of poor growing conditions throughout the year.
In Acadia Parish, they’re the
number one rice producing parish in the State of Louisiana.
Rice yields were much lower
this year because of the challenging season many local farmers faced.
Dustin Harrell, Extension Rice Specialist for the State of Louisiana and a Rice Research Agronomist for the LSU Ag Center Rice Research Station in Crowley, said, “When you look at the state as a whole, we are probably about 17% lower in our rice yields this year than we were in 2018.”
Dustin Harrell, Extension Rice Specialist for the State of Louisiana and a Rice Research Agronomist for the LSU Ag Center Rice Research Station in Crowley, said, “When you look at the state as a whole, we are probably about 17% lower in our rice yields this year than we were in 2018.”
Harrell said this year,
yields were around 39 barrels of rice per acre. Compare that to last year of
well over 40 barrels per acre.
All because of the challenging
season rice farmers endured.
Harrell added, “Last year was
pretty difficult for us as far as rainfall events. We actually had three
different rainfall events throughout the growing season that caused trouble for
our growers.”
Had Hurricane Barry dumped
more rain as forecasted, Harrell said it would’ve been a complete disaster for
rice farmers.
Still, many yields were lost.
“What happened was we didn’t
get as much rain, but the rice was flowering and the flower was open, and
that’s when it sheds pollen and it pollinates that grain, and if you get rain
and wind during that time, that can disrupt that pollination process. It’ll
actually blank the grain and you can lose yield that way,” explained Harrell.
Acadiana farmers told Harrell
their rice yields were about 30% lower than previous years.
“Another thing that hurt our
yield potential last year was smuts, and it’s a type of disease that’ll hit the
rice as it’s maturing and it’s a disease that we really haven’t worried about
in the past, but we had epidemic levels of it this year,” said Harrell.
This past year, Louisiana saw
415,000 acres of rice with Acadia Parish producing 80,000.
DECEMBER 13, 2019 / 6:32 AM / UPDATED 13 HOURS AGO
RPT-Asia Rice-India prices rebound, Vietnam sees uptick in
demand
Karthika Suresh Namboothiri
3 MIN READ
(Repeats from Thursday)
* Indian rupee hits more-than one-month high
* India’s exports in October fall 42% year-on-year
* Stronger baht continues to weigh on Thai demand
By Karthika Suresh Namboothiri
BENGALURU, Dec 12 (Reuters) - Indian rice export prices
rebounded this week from three-year lows as exporters increased rates to
compensate for a rising rupee, while low supply and an uptick in demand from
Cuba, Iraq and Philippines pushed up Vietnamese rates.
Top exporter India’s 5% broken parboiled variety
RI-INBKN5-P1 was quoted around $358-$363 per tonne this week, up from last
week’s $356-$361, which was the lowest since January 2017.
The appreciation in the rupee has been forcing traders to
raise prices, but demand is still subdued, said an exporter based at Kakinada
in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.
The Indian rupee on Thursday rose to its highest level in
more than a month, trimming exporters’ margin from overseas sales.
India’s rice exports in October fell 42% year-on-year to
485,898 tonnes, government data showed, due to weak demand from African
countries for non-basmati rice.
In Vietnam, rates for 5% broken rice RI-VNBKN5-P1 were
quoted at $350 a tonne on Thursday, up slightly from $345 last week.
“Supply has run very low now as the harvest has ended while
demand from exporters to fulfil shipments to Cuba and Iraq is still high,” said
a trader in Ho Chi Minh City, adding demand from Philippines had also been
picking up in the past two weeks.
Another trader said local supplies would increase from late
next month when the winter-spring harvest begins.
Meanwhile, prices of 5% broken Thai rice RI-THBKN5-P1 were
little changed at $397-$411 a tonne on Thursday versus $397-$410 the week
before.
“We were expecting the price to drop with new supply this
month but prices have not changed much,” a Bangkok-based trader said.
Prices for the Thai variety have been high relative to
competitors throughout the year, largely due to the strength of the local
currency.
“I have not been able to sell any for more than two months
now because of the high prices,” another trader in Bangkok said. “My usual
customers say they have been buying from Vietnam and Myanmar. Rice from those
countries are of similar quality to ours and more importantly, their rice is
cheaper.”
Bangladesh, the world’s fourth largest rice producer, could
face severe damage to its growth in agricultural output due to climate change
and rising sea-levels, the World Bank said in a report this week.
The country produces around 35 million tonnes of rice
annually. (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Phuong
Nguyen in Hanoi and Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok; editing by Arpan Varghese and
Jane Merriman) https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL4N28M34Q
December 12,
2019
More
than 30,000 hectares of rice paddy hit by drought
Sen David /
Khmer Times Share:
More than 30,000 hectares of rice
paddy in nine provinces have been hit by drought and are in dire need of water,
according to the Ministry of Water Resources.
Ministry spokesman Chan Youttha
yesterday said that about 30,000 hectares of rice paddy were hit in the
provinces of Prey Veng, Kandal, Kampot, Kampong Cham, Tboung Khmum, Kratie,
Kampong Chhnang, Battambang and Banteay Meanchey.
“The Ministry of Water Resources via
provincial departments helped to pump water to save 1,300 hectares of rice
paddy and about 30,000 hectares are still facing water shortages,” Mr Youttha
said.
Prime Minister Hun Sen yesterday
called on farmers to conserve water and asked farmers not to cultivate
dry-season rice twice as the country faces dry spells.
“Farmers, please plant dry-season
rice once to conserve water. You can plant vegetables instead because they need
less water,” he said.
Agriculture Ministry spokesman Srey
Vuthy yesterday said relevant authorities in the provinces are helping farmers
whose farms are facing water shortages.
“At the provincial level, water
resource departments and local authorities are using water pumps and giving
gasoline to farmers to pump water to irrigate fields,” he said, noting that the
figure of affected rice paddies will be updated on Friday.
Sim Thavirak, director of Kampong
Cham provincial agriculture department, said local authorities recently pumped
water to save 200 hectares of rice paddy in Stung Trang district’s Peam Koh Sna
commune.
“The officials are monitoring the
situation of rice paddies hit by a lack of water and they will try to find
water to save them,” he said.
According to a Kampong Cham
Provincial Hall report, 2,500 hectares of rice lack water. In Kratie, about
2,400 hectares of rice are facing water shortages.
Thai Rice Farmers Shun 'Big Agribusiness' And Fight Climate
Change
By
12/12/19 AT 12:02 AM
12/12/19 AT 12:02 AM
00:33
Battling drought, debt and ailments blamed on
pesticides, rice farmers in northern Thailand have turned to eco-friendly
growing methods despite powerful agribusiness interests in a country that is
one of the top exporters of the grain in the world.
Walking through a sea of green waist-high
stalks, farmer Sunnan Somjak said his fields were "exhausted" by
chemicals, his family regularly felt ill, and his profits were too low to make
ends meet.
But that changed when he joined a pilot
agricultural project for the SRI method, which aims to boost yields while
shunning pesticides and using less water.
"Chemicals can destroy everything,"
the 58-year-old said, adding that the harvest in his village in Chiang Mai
province has jumped 40 percent since employing the new method.
There have been health benefits too.
Battling drought, debt and ailments blamed on
pesticides, rice farmers in northern Thailand have turned to eco-friendly
growing methods despite powerful agribusiness interests in a country that is
one of the top exporters of the grain in the worldPhoto: AFP / Lillian
SUWANRUMPHA
"It's definitely better, we don't get
sick any more," he added.
SRI was invented in the 1980s in Madagascar by
a French Jesuit priest, and the technique has spread globally.
It works by planting crops wider apart -- thus
drawing in more nutrients and light -- and limiting the amount of water that
gets into fields, which helps micro-organisms flourish to act as natural
fertilisers.
In a plus for debt-laden farmers, it also uses
fewer seeds, and they are encouraged to use plants and ginger roots that
naturally deter insects rather than chemical alternatives -- meaning fewer
expenses.
Traditional Thai rice farmers earn around
3,000 baht a month ($100) but Sunnan was able to increase his income by 20
percent after adopting the SRI method.
"I've finally got rid of my debts,"
he told AFP.
With SRI, paddy fields are not permanently
flooded, which reduces methane emissions by 60 percent, according to Tristan
Lecomte, founder of Pur Projet, a French company supporting the techniquePhoto: AFP / Lillian
SUWANRUMPHA
Rice is a staple in the diet of around three
billion people globally.
But agricultural workers are locked in a
vicious cycle: beset by drought and floods brought on by climate change, the
farmers contribute to the disruption as their fields release methane and
nitrous oxide, two greenhouse gases.
With SRI, paddy fields are not permanently
flooded, which reduces methane emissions by 60 percent, according to Tristan
Lecomte, founder of Pur Projet, a French company supporting the technique.
Farmers harvesting rice in the village of Mae
Rim in the northern Thai province of Chiang MaiPhoto: AFP / Lillian
SUWANRUMPHA
The project also helped Sunnan plant trees
around his crops to reinforce the water table.
According to Lecomte, rice yields can jump
from 20 percent to more than 100 compared to the traditional method.
Southeast Asia, where agriculture supports
millions, is slowly embracing SRI.
The US-based Cornell University created a
centre specialising in the technique in 2010 and more than two million farmers
in the region -- especially from Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos -- have
been trained.
In Bac Giang province in northern Vietnam, net
profits for farmers were as much as 226 percent higher after adopting the SRI
method than when using traditional ones, according to Abha Mishra, who led a
large project on behalf of the Asian Institute of Technology.
The Philippines, which grows rice but is also
one of the world's leading importers, is also interested in this method and the
Ministry of Agriculture has started training farmers.
The method is also used in parts of India,
China, and Africa.
But, while there is support from NGOs, as well
as some scientists and authorities, it still has a long way to go before
widespread adoption.
It faces resistance domestically from
agribusiness as there is no new hybrid seed or fertilizer to sell.
Industry lobbies are very active in Southeast
Asia, particularly in Thailand, one of the largest users of pesticides in the
world.
And they recently won a big battle over
chemical use in agriculture.
Thai authorities, who had committed to ban
controversial glyphosate, backtracked at the end of November, deciding that
"limited" use would eventually be allowed. The use of two other
herbicides has also been extended.
Lecomte says the other challenge potentially
impacting the rate of adoption is the SRI method is quite complex to learn and
it is labour intensive.
"You have to plant one by one and closely
control the amount water," he explained, adding that the extra manual
effort required means some farmers don't want to try the method, and others
give up early on.
Sunnan admits that his workload is heavier but
the financial and health benefits make it worth it in the end.
He added: "It is safe for our body, and
the environment."
Copyright
AFP. All rights reserved.
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LATEST NEWS
DECEMBER 12,
2019 / 9:06 PM / UPDATED A DAY AGO
IMF board to meet on Dec. 19 to review
Pakistan funds release
1 MIN READ
·
·
WASHINGTON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - The
International Monetary Fund’s board will meet on Dec. 19 to review a
staff-level agreement with Pakistan to release about $450 million from the
Fund’s $6 billion financing program with the south Asian country, IMF spokesman
Gerry Rice said on Thursday.
“What that indicates is that all prior actions
and performance criteria under the program with Pakistan have been met and that
the financing assurances needed for the program to go forward are in place,”
Rice told a regular news briefing. (Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama)
nsurers Sue Shipper Over
Damaged Rice Cargo
Law360,
London (December 12, 2019, 3:11 PM GMT) -- AXA and AIG and several other
insurers have filed a suit against a Swiss shipping giant for allegedly damaging a 521 kilogram shipment of rice that was heading from Pakistan to Madagascar. MSC Mediterranean Shipping breached a contract to load, handle and discharge 20 containers of rice from Karachi, Pakistan to Diego Suarez in Madagascar, the insurers allege. They are suing the Geneva-based shipping company for £76,000 ($100,000) plus fees, according to the filing at the High Court. The insurers said in their claim, which was dated Sept. 4 but only recently made public, that two vessels were intended to be carrying the. . .
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Pak-Russia agree to strengthen bilateral
trade ties
By
-
December 12,
2019 2:32 pm
142
ISLAMABAD, Dec 12 (TNS):Pakistan and Russian Federation on
Wednesday agreed to strengthen bilateral ties in all areas of mutual interest
including political, trade, economic, energy, education and people-to-people
contacts.
The agreement was made during a plenary session of 6th Pak-Russia
Inter Governmental Commission on Trade, Economic, Scientific and Technical
Cooperation here.
Minister for Economic Affairs, Muhammad Hammad Azhar led the
Pakistani delegation while Minister of Industry and trade of the Russian
Federation, Denis V. Manutov led the Russian delegation.
From Pakistan side, Secretary, Economic Affairs Division,
Foreign Secretary and senior representatives from Ministries of Foreign
Affairs, Commerce, Energy, National Food Security and Research, Industries and
Production, Planning, Development and Reforms, Aviation, Federal Board of
Revenue, Board of Investment, Ministry of Railways, Petroleum Division and
Power Division participated in the IGC.
Federal Minister for Economic Affairs Muhammad Hammad Azhar,
briefed the forum about the recent economic developments and outlooks and
highlighted improved indicators of Pakistani economy especially current account
balance.
He further apprised the Russian side of the successful
implementation of International Monetary Fund (IMF) Programme, bright future
prospects of Pakistani economy and huge potential of trade and investment
between the two sides.
While both sides exchanged views on the prospects of the mutual
economic cooperation in multiple sectors especially energy, trade, transport, industries
and production, railways, agriculture and science and technology. Prospects of
Russian Investment for revival of Pakistan Steel Mills were also discussed.
The Russian side expressed keen interest in Energy Sector such
as North South Gas Pipeline.
Discussions were held on removing the temporary ban on
Pakistan’s agriculture exports including rice and potatoes.
The both sides resolved to increase volume of bilateral trade
from the present levels to its true potential through greater cooperation and enhanced
business activities by the private sector of the two countries.
The Russian side invited Pakistan to organize a road show in
Moscow to provide an opportunity to the Russian private companies to explore
new avenues in Pakistan.
Pakistani side on the other hand invited Russia for their
presence in trade expos held in Pakistan.
The Russian side was apprised that Pakistan held the bilateral
and economic relations with the Russian Federation in high esteem which was
evident by the recent settlement of the long standing “Settlement of mutual
Financial Claims” between the two countries.
The Pakistan side appreciated that Russian had supported in
laying foundation for its Industrial growth by extending support in
establishing the Pakistan Steel Mills and expressed firm resolve to continue
such interactions at higher level to better understand the development needs,
opportunities of cooperation and investment in the emerging sectors and remove
any obstacles in trade and investment.
The 7th session of IGC will be held in Moscow on mutually agreed dates.
Pakistan-Russia Inter-Government Commissions (IGC) on Trade, Economic, Scientific and Technical Cooperation are held alternately in the capitals of both the countries.
Sixth Session of Pakistan-Russia IGC was held in Islamabad.
Addressing to Press briefing on the occasion, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs, Muhammad Hammad Azhar said that Pakistan and Russia had agreed for Joint Venture to enhance the cooperation for the up gradation and modernization of Pakistan railways infrastructure.
“I believe that Russia have expertise in this sector and we will expand the cooperation for introducing the modern locomotive in local trains for resolved the issues of design and speed of trains,” he added.
He said that Pakistan and Russia relations had now entered in new phase of development to search the new avenues for economic integration and business to business ties.
He said that “we are negotiating for Russian investment in local market and the government has invited them to bring investment in mines sector”.
Meanwhile Minister of Industry and trade of the Russian Federation, Denis V. Manutov said that Pakistan and Russian federation were committed to enhance the bilateral traded and further cooperation in aviation, professional training and capacity building of the local industrial sector.
He said that Russian investment groups were keenly interested to invest Pharmaceutical sector , medical machinery and aviation.
The 7th session of IGC will be held in Moscow on mutually agreed dates.
Pakistan-Russia Inter-Government Commissions (IGC) on Trade, Economic, Scientific and Technical Cooperation are held alternately in the capitals of both the countries.
Sixth Session of Pakistan-Russia IGC was held in Islamabad.
Addressing to Press briefing on the occasion, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs, Muhammad Hammad Azhar said that Pakistan and Russia had agreed for Joint Venture to enhance the cooperation for the up gradation and modernization of Pakistan railways infrastructure.
“I believe that Russia have expertise in this sector and we will expand the cooperation for introducing the modern locomotive in local trains for resolved the issues of design and speed of trains,” he added.
He said that Pakistan and Russia relations had now entered in new phase of development to search the new avenues for economic integration and business to business ties.
He said that “we are negotiating for Russian investment in local market and the government has invited them to bring investment in mines sector”.
Meanwhile Minister of Industry and trade of the Russian Federation, Denis V. Manutov said that Pakistan and Russian federation were committed to enhance the bilateral traded and further cooperation in aviation, professional training and capacity building of the local industrial sector.
He said that Russian investment groups were keenly interested to invest Pharmaceutical sector , medical machinery and aviation.
Bugs
are eating into Pakistan’s economic prospects
Thank you for your reading and interest in the news Bugs are eating into
Pakistan’s economic prospects and now with details
Aden - Yasmin Abdel Azim - Karachi: Pakistan’s efforts to turn around its
economy after winning bailout funds from the International Monetary Fund face a
new threat - from crop-eating pests.
Swarms of locusts are fanning out through the South Asian nation, gorging
on wheat, cotton, mustard and other crops. That, together with unseasonal rain
and a scourge of low quality seeds, has hit major crops in the country’s
largest producing regions of Punjab and Sindh.
Cotton production in the current crop year is forecast at 10.2 million
bales, or 20 per cent short of the 12.7 million bales target, according to the
state-run Pakistan Central Cotton Committee.
The pest outbreak has the potential to hurt farm production that accounts
for about a fifth of the economy’s output. While cotton is Pakistan’s top farm
export, wheat is the main staple food crop in the country where more than 40
per cent of the labour force depends on agriculture for a living.
Among the top five cotton producing nations, Pakistan may find itself
importing a record quantity of the fibre. Islamabad will this year have to
spend more than $1.7 billion to purchase about 6 million cotton bales,
according to Naseem Usman, chairman of Karachi Cotton Broker’s Forum.
Authorities tasked with protecting crops are in the process of hiring
aircraft to spray pesticides in the worst-affected regions in at least 13
districts, including Khairpur, Tharparkar and Sukkur.
“We are having an emergency-like situation,” said Falak Naz, director
general of crop protection at the Ministry of Food Security and Research.
Naz said last week Pakistani authorities also met their Indian
counterparts at Khokhrapar-Munabao border point to deal with these crop-eating
insects also threatening crops in the Indian state of Rajasthan.
A lower-than-expected crop output will weigh negatively on Pakistan’s
external account, once again pushing it into deficit, according to Sulaiman
Mehdi, the chairman of Pakistan Stock Exchange. The nation’s current account
turned into a surplus for the first time in four years in October.
“Based on these weak production, your imports are going to go high,” Mehdi
said.
Pakistan’s central bank Governor Reza Baqir is pinning hope on rice output
to offset the impact of cotton.
“Cotton is doing less than what we have previously thought but other areas
are doing better,” Baqir said in an interview. “We right now feel reasonably
confident about the projections that we have on growth.”
These were the details of the news Bugs are eating into Pakistan’s
economic prospects for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you
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It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at Gulf News and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.
It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at Gulf News and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.
Govt trains more rice farmers under
RCEF-backed program
By
-
December 13,
2019
The Department of Agriculture (DA) said 22 batches of rice
planters are currently undergoing training on seed production and machine
operation to improve their productivity and help them compete against their
Southeast Asian counterparts.
The government is training farmers through the Rice Extension
Services Program (RESP), a key component of the Rice Competitiveness
Enhancement Fund. Republic Act (RA) 11203 had mandated the set up of the
P10-billion RCEF, which consists of tariffs from rice imports.
Since the implementation of the RESP, the DA said 77 batches of
rice planters have completed the training. Aside from farmers, the training
program also covers regional focals, agricultural extension workers, farmers
and farmworker, including members of cooperatives and associations.
Of the P10-billion RCEF, the DA said 10 percent or P1 billion
was allotted to skills training in developing new education modules, and other
related extension efforts.
The money is being used by implementing agencies that include
the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), Philippine Center for Postharvest
Development and Mechanization (PhilMech), Philippine Rice Research Institute
(PhilRice), and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (Tesda).
The DA said 70 percent of the extension funds go to Tesda, while
PhilMech, PhilRice, and ATI get 10 percent each to carry out their tasks
related to the rice fund program.
Among the topics covered for the training include high-quality
inbred rice production, farm mechanization, high-quality rice seed production,
seed certification and analysis, rice machinery operation and maintenance, and
management of agri-machinery pool.
“We are conducting the training using a top-down approach,
meaning we train the specialists first, these are experts who will then train
the agricultural extension workers who will later become the ‘trainers’ who
will teach the farmers and farmworkers on the ground,” Agriculture Secretary
William D. Dar said in a statement.
Also under RESP, communication campaigns, accreditation of farm
schools, and granting of scholarships are being undertaken.
To date, 96,382 copies of information, education and
communication materials have been reproduced and distributed including farmer’s
guides and references. Technical briefings were also conducted for 154 batches
of participant-beneficiaries.
Out of the 43 farm schools targeted for this year, 20 have
already been accredited. Tesda is implementing the scholarship program for
farmers and farmworkers listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in
Agriculture to enroll in a farmers’ field school which is being conducted by
the accredited farm schools. To date, 8,945 scholarships have been granted.
“We see to it that training modules are harmonized to ensure the
timely delivery of services intended for the rice farmers under RCEF,” said
Dar.
Aside from rice extension service, the other three components of
RCEF are rice seed development, propagation and promotion; rice farm machinery
equipment; and expanded rice credit assistance.
The training program was rolled out after RA 11203, which
removed the quantitative restriction on rice, took effect on March 5. The law
also eased the rules on importing rice and limited government intervention in
the domestic rice market.
Govt trains more rice farmers under
RCEF-backed program
By
-
December 13,
2019
The Department of Agriculture (DA) said 22 batches of rice
planters are currently undergoing training on seed production and machine
operation to improve their productivity and help them compete against their
Southeast Asian counterparts.
The government is training farmers through the Rice Extension
Services Program (RESP), a key component of the Rice Competitiveness
Enhancement Fund. Republic Act (RA) 11203 had mandated the set up of the
P10-billion RCEF, which consists of tariffs from rice imports.
Since the implementation of the RESP, the DA said 77 batches of
rice planters have completed the training. Aside from farmers, the training
program also covers regional focals, agricultural extension workers, farmers
and farmworker, including members of cooperatives and associations.
Of the P10-billion RCEF, the DA said 10 percent or P1 billion
was allotted to skills training in developing new education modules, and other
related extension efforts.
The money is being used by implementing agencies that include
the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), Philippine Center for Postharvest
Development and Mechanization (PhilMech), Philippine Rice Research Institute
(PhilRice), and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (Tesda).
The DA said 70 percent of the extension funds go to Tesda, while
PhilMech, PhilRice, and ATI get 10 percent each to carry out their tasks
related to the rice fund program.
Among the topics covered for the training include high-quality
inbred rice production, farm mechanization, high-quality rice seed production,
seed certification and analysis, rice machinery operation and maintenance, and
management of agri-machinery pool.
“We are conducting the training using a top-down approach,
meaning we train the specialists first, these are experts who will then train
the agricultural extension workers who will later become the ‘trainers’ who
will teach the farmers and farmworkers on the ground,” Agriculture Secretary
William D. Dar said in a statement.
Also under RESP, communication campaigns, accreditation of farm
schools, and granting of scholarships are being undertaken.
To date, 96,382 copies of information, education and
communication materials have been reproduced and distributed including farmer’s
guides and references. Technical briefings were also conducted for 154 batches
of participant-beneficiaries.
Out of the 43 farm schools targeted for this year, 20 have
already been accredited. Tesda is implementing the scholarship program for
farmers and farmworkers listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in
Agriculture to enroll in a farmers’ field school which is being conducted by
the accredited farm schools. To date, 8,945 scholarships have been granted.
“We see to it that training modules are harmonized to ensure the
timely delivery of services intended for the rice farmers under RCEF,” said
Dar.
Aside from rice extension service, the other three components of
RCEF are rice seed development, propagation and promotion; rice farm machinery
equipment; and expanded rice credit assistance.
The training program was rolled out after RA 11203, which
removed the quantitative restriction on rice, took effect on March 5. The law
also eased the rules on importing rice and limited government intervention in
the domestic rice market.
46 provinces receive rice seeds from
RCEF
December 12, 2019
SOME 46 out of 57 target provinces have received
341,203 bags (20 kilogram/bag) of inbred rice seeds under the seed program of
the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF), according to the Department
of Agriculture’s Philippine Rice Research Institute. In its latest program
report, it said the 46 provinces, which make up 81 percent of the
accomplishment, included 282 municipalities and cities with high potential
for competitiveness in rice production. “The provinces have been
identified based on the size of area harvested, yield level, cost of production
and share of irrigated area…have an annual area planted of more than 500
hectares for dry season 2019–2020,” said Agriculture Secretary William Dar,
adding that the two-million bags of certified seeds will translate to planting
around one million hectares of rice land, which can contribute to increasing
the yield up to six tons per hectare in high-yielding provinces by 2024.
Female scientists receive L’Oreal - UNESCO
awards
|
Thursday,
2019-12-12 22:16:34
|
|
Font
Size: |
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NDO/VNA – Three outstanding female scientists of Vietnam on
December 12 received L’Oreal - UNESCO awards for their research.
|
The annual 'L’Oreal - UNESCO for Women in Science Award' was
launched in Vietnam in 2009. The programme encourages women’s intelligence,
creativity and passion for science.
Over the past 10 years, the programme has recognised 32 female
scientists from different provinces and cities across the country.
Their studies are in different fields such as rice production,
pharmaceuticals, genetics and physics.
The three excellent female scientists this year include
Associate Professor Dr Ho Thi Thanh Van from the HCM City University of
Natural Resources and Environment; Dr Tran Thi Hong Hanh from the Vietnam
Academy for Science and Technology; and Dr Pham Thi Thu Ha from the HCM
City-based Ton Duc Thang University.
The three scientists were chosen among hundreds of applicants
across the country. The selection is based on their achievements, the
publication of their research in international magazines and the scientific
activities that they have taken part in so far.
Each received an award of VND150 million (US$6,500) so that
they can conduct further research and then ensure benefits for the country.
Speaking at the award ceremony, Valery Gaucherand, country
managing director of L’Oreal Vietnam, said Vietnamese female scientists had
contributed to methods, measures and answers for important scientific
questions.
L’Oreal committed to support the scientists to achieve
excellent results and participate equally in resolving problems that face
humankind.
The women proved that scientific research could change the
world, he said.
|
Refined carbohydrates like white bread, pasta and rice may trigger
insomnia
Yahoo Style UKDecember 12, 2019
High-GI
foods cause blood sugar levels to spike, disturbing sleep. [Photo: Getty]
More
Refined carbohydrates may trigger
insomnia, research suggests.
Scientists from
Columbia University in New York looked at the
food diaries of more than 50,000 women.
They found those whose diets had a
higher glycemic index (GI) were more likely to struggle to nod off.
GI is a measure of how
carbohydrate-rich foods raise blood glucose levels. High GI produce - like
white bread, pasta or rice - cause sugar spikes.
“When blood sugar is raised quickly,
your body reacts by releasing insulin, and the resulting drop in blood sugar
can lead to the release of hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol, which can
interfere with sleep,” study author Dr James Gangwisch said.
Insomnia affects a third of people in
the UK, Bupa statistics show.
In the US, 30% of adults struggle to
nod off, with 10% battling chronic insomnia, according to the
American Sleep Association.
Medical conditions like asthma, back
pain and depression can be to blame, as well as shift work, napping and certain
medications, the National Sleep
Foundation reports.
When it comes to our diet, alcohol,
caffeine and heavy meals are all recognised triggers.
Studies have suggested refined
carbohydrates may cause insomnia, however, results were mixed.
With most trials being short lived, it
was unclear if refined carbs triggered the condition or those who struggled to
nod off ate more sugary foods to “get them through the day”.
To learn more, the scientists analysed
tens of thousands of post-menopausal females who took part in the Women's
Health Initiative.
Results, published in The American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, suggest a higher consumption of refined
carbohydrates with a high GI raises the risk of insomnia.
Compared to those with the lowest
intake, the women who ate the most high-GI foods were 11% more likely to
suffer.
Added sugars and processed grains were
found to be particularly responsible, while vegetables and whole fruits - not
juices - reduced the risk.
“Whole fruits contain sugar, but the
fibre in them slows the rate of absorption to help prevent spikes in blood
sugar,” Dr Gangwisch said.
“This suggests the dietary culprit
triggering the women's insomnia was the highly-processed foods that contain
larger amounts of refined sugars that aren't found naturally in food.”
The scientists hope their study will
help insomniacs overcome the issue without resorting to treatments.
“Insomnia is often treated with
cognitive behavioural therapy or medications, but these can be expensive or
carry side effects,” Dr Gangwisch said.
“By identifying other factors that lead
to insomnia, we may find straightforward and low-cost interventions with fewer
potential side effects.
“Based on our findings, we would need
randomised clinical trials to determine if a dietary intervention, focused on
increasing the consumption of whole foods and complex carbohydrates, could be
used to prevent and treat insomnia.”
Although the scientists only looked at
post-menopausal women, they expect the results to apply to other populations.
China-Pak Symposium On Genomics
Selection Held
The National Agricultural
Research Centre here on Thursday organized one day Sino-Pak Symposium on
"Genomic Selection for Productivity Enhancement of Crops including rice,
wheat, sugarcane and cotton
ISLAMABAD, (APP -
UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 12th Dec, 2019 ) :The National Agricultural
Research Centre here on Thursday organized one day Sino-Pak Symposium on
"Genomic Selection for Productivity Enhancement of Crops including
rice, wheat, sugarcane and cotton.
The symposium was held at National Institute of
Genomics and Advanced Biotechnology (NIGAB) at National.
Eminent
scientists led by Professor Dr. Zhikang Li, Chief Scientist CAAS, Founder of
GSR, PR China shared their
research experiences on new breeding technologies for crop improvements.
Syed
Fakhar Imam, prominent politician, Dr. Muhammad Hashim Popalzai, Federal Secretary for
Ministry of National food Security and
Research , Dr. Muhammad Azeem Khan Chairman, PARC, Dr. Muhammad
Ali,
DG, NARC and other prominent scientists participated and highlighted the
importance of the event.
The
experts made discussions on related aspects, such as germplasm, transgenic
against insect and herbicide, transformation technology as well as the
mechanized planting.
They
also discussed the concept, theory and practices for Genomics and
biotechnology, sugarcane genetic improvement through breeding, the genetic
basis of cotton fiber quality and
yield related traits and its utilization for variety development, Selective
introgression lines-based QTL mapping and QTL-designed molecular breeding
in wheat.
The experts of both countries agreed the
China-Pak Joint Cooperation has made plentiful achievements.
They
hope to further deepen cooperation field and will strive to promote the
development of two countries agriculture industries.
The event provided the
opportunity of collaboration among academia, researchers, industry and progressive
growers to address the issues related to rice, eheat, sugarcane and cotton production for
enhancing the production of better crops.
The
symposium aims to bring together academia, scientists, researchers, progressive
farmers, industry and students
to share and enhance the
knowledge about innovations in breeding and biotechnology of these crops and to
solve the problems faced by cotton for improving
yield and quality.
Dr.
Muhammad Azeem Khan expressed on the occasion that Sino-Pak Symposium on
innovation in ricce, wheat, sugarcane and cotton breeding and
biotechnology brought together scientists and research scholars to discuss the
enhance the knowledge about recent advanced technologies in major crops and to
find the solutions of the contemporary issues in crop production through recent
technological advances in genetics and to provide the valuable awareness about
technological advances in agriculture to cope with the
current rising problems of crops production.
Rice:
Integrated millers boost production value to N288bn
Published
15 hours ago
on
December 13, 2019
By
●Deficit crashes by 64.3%
As consumption climbed to
N1.2billion daily, value of rice production by integrated mills in Nigeria has
increased by 1.8million tonnes or N288billion this year.
The boost in production has
made the grain fall by 64.28 per cent from 2.8million tonnes to one million
tonnes.
It was learnt that Nigeria
currently boasts of 40 integrated milling machines of world standard procured
through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s Anchor Borrowers Programme.
After the border closure,
Nigeria suddenly experience rise in milled rice production from 4.9million
tonnes to 6.7million tonnes. Currently, a bag of the grain is N16,000 in the
market.
Before August, 2019, milled
rice production had fallen by 800,000 metric tonnes from 5.7million tonnes to
4.9million tonnes despite CBN’s N55billion anchor borrowers support.
According to the Rice
Processors Association of Nigeria (RPAN), the 1.8million tonnes produced by the
integrated mills are different from millions of metric tonnes produced annually
by small scale millers and local millers.
The processors noted that they
had the capacity to meet the country’s demand during and beyond the Yuletide.
The Chairman of the
association, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, noted that the positive impact of the
Federal Government’s border closure was responsible for the huge production,
saying that it was enormous to the rice millers.
He explained that the combined
capacity of integrated mills produced about 150,000 truck load of rice on a
daily basis and 1.8 million metric tonnes annually.
Abubakar said in Abuja that the
figure was different from millions of metric tonnes produced annually by small
scale millers and local millers.
The chairman stressed that
there would be no scarcity of rice during the Christmas period as there would
be enough supply of rice in the country.
He noted the country relied on
one mill in operation for 10 year until recently rice processing was up to 40.
Abubakar added that before the
border closure, members of the association had been complaining that they could
not sell the grain in their various warehouses.
However, the chairman explained
that they had exhausted their stock, noting that that some RPAN members, who
closed their factories due to lack of patronage, were now back in business
because of border closure.
The chairman said that he had
gone to CBN on behalf of his members to seek grants for expansion of their rice
business.
Farmers in Ghana under the aegis of Peasant Farmers Association of Ghana (PFAG) have also
advised their government to adopt the Nigerian model of ban by making it
immediate instead of waiting for 2022.
The Association in a statement
signed by Abdul- Rahman Mohammed, National President and Board Chairman of PFAG
called for a show of commitment and steps to be put in place for immediate ban
rather than wait until 2022.
It said adopting Nigeria’s food
importation ban concept would not only help to reduce Ghana’s import bill but
create employment opportunities in Ghana and stabilise the cedi.
In 2018, top rice importers,
like Olam and Stallion, embarked on rice cultivation to remain in business as
Federal Government concluded plans to end importation of the grain.
Major rice merchants, Dangote
Group, Stallion Group, Olam International, Cosharis Group and Miva, have
invested $1billion (N360billion), N50billion, N20 billion, N2billion and NI.369 billion
respectively to acquire farms and mills to end the nation’s huge import bill on the grain running into
$3billion annually.
Govt.
to reduce duty on wheat flour imports
13 December 2019 09:06
am - 0 - 39
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The government will reduce duty on wheat flour
imports for a limited period in order to ease the cost of living amid a hike in
rice prices, Cabinet Spokesperson Dr. Ramesh Pathirana said.
“The Cabinet has decided to cut import duties on wheat flour for a short period of time to keep prices down during the festival season and ease cost of living,” Pathirana added.
“This will break the monopoly on wheat flour.”
Sri Lanka maintains higher duties on wheat flour imports and lower taxes on wheat grain imports.
Sri Lanka’s wheat grain market is controlled by two multinational millers.
Pathirana said a gazette notice on the new import tax will be notified shortly. However it was not clear for how long the reduced import duties will be maintained.
Meanwhile, rice prices in the market shot up since the new government came into power as several large rice millers, who store the bulk of the rice paddy in Sri Lanka raised prices of their branded rice.
The government plans to release 42, 000 metric tonnes of stored rice to small rice millers to maintain the retail rice prices at Rs.98 per kilogram during the festive season.
Iran’s
payment default leaves rice traders apprehensive about further export
As per information, Iran owes about ₹1,200 crore to the state’s farmers
CITIES Updated: Dec 12, 2019 22:53 IST
With Iran
failing to clear their pending dues for the last eight months, rice traders in
Haryana are reluctant to export this season’s produce to the country, fearing
more defaults. As per information, Iran owes about ₹1,200 crore to the state’s
farmers. Adding to their apprehension is the fact that Basmati price have seen a
steep fall this season.
This
development is likely to affect rice traders of the country, especially
Haryana, adversely as Iran is the biggest consumer Indian aromatic Basmati rice
as it imports about 20-25% of India’s total rice exports of 4.5 million tonnes
every year.
Haryana’s
rice traders say that payment of about ₹1,200 crore was stuck in Iran since May
this year when India stopped importing oil from the country due to US
sanctions. Though the Iran government had started to clear pending payments, it
stopped after clearing dues to the tune of ₹100 crore.
The traders
say that the delay has caused them huge losses and the Indian government did
not intervene to help them clear their dues.
As per
members of the All India Rice Exporters Association (AIREA), most of the
affected traders belong to Haryana and Punjab. They further said the farmers
had to sell their produce for around ₹2,500 per quintal, the lowest in the past
five years.
“Since Iran
is the largest basmati importing market for Indian traders and the annual the
basmati exports to Iran in the past three years had increased to 14.83 lakh MT
(₹10,790 crore) in 2018-19 from 7.16 lakh MT (₹3,778 crore) in 2016-17. But the
delay in payments has left farmers not wanting to take any risks next year,” said
Vijay Setia, former president of AIREA.
AIREA
president Nathi Ram Gupta said, “The delay in payment has affected the big rice
exporters of the country. They will now have to focus on the local market,
which may lead to a fall in prices, affecting both traders and farmers.”
“The bad
trade with Iran has also affected farmers during this harvesting season.
Affected traders could not purchase paddy this year and farmers had to sell
their produce at ₹2,000 to ₹2,800 per quintal this season against ₹3,000 to ₹4,500
per quintal last year,” said Gurdev Singh, a rice trader of Kurukshetra.
top news
Ghana wants to boost its local rice industry
Ghana imports over 1 million metric tons of rice annually to feed
local consumers. This has led to a sharp increase in demand for foreign rice
brands. But the government wants to change that.
Watch video01:42
Govt trains more rice farmers under
RCEF-backed program
By
-
December 13,
2019
The Department of Agriculture (DA) said 22 batches of rice
planters are currently undergoing training on seed production and machine
operation to improve their productivity and help them compete against their
Southeast Asian counterparts.
The government is training farmers through the Rice Extension
Services Program (RESP), a key component of the Rice Competitiveness
Enhancement Fund. Republic Act (RA) 11203 had mandated the set up of the
P10-billion RCEF, which consists of tariffs from rice imports.
Since the implementation of the RESP, the DA said 77 batches of
rice planters have completed the training. Aside from farmers, the training
program also covers regional focals, agricultural extension workers, farmers
and farmworker, including members of cooperatives and associations.
Of the P10-billion RCEF, the DA said 10 percent or P1 billion
was allotted to skills training in developing new education modules, and other
related extension efforts.
The money is being used by implementing agencies that include
the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI), Philippine Center for Postharvest
Development and Mechanization (PhilMech), Philippine Rice Research Institute
(PhilRice), and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority (Tesda).
The DA said 70 percent of the extension funds go to Tesda, while
PhilMech, PhilRice, and ATI get 10 percent each to carry out their tasks
related to the rice fund program.
Among the topics covered for the training include high-quality
inbred rice production, farm mechanization, high-quality rice seed production,
seed certification and analysis, rice machinery operation and maintenance, and
management of agri-machinery pool.
“We are conducting the training using a top-down approach,
meaning we train the specialists first, these are experts who will then train
the agricultural extension workers who will later become the ‘trainers’ who
will teach the farmers and farmworkers on the ground,” Agriculture Secretary
William D. Dar said in a statement.
Also under RESP, communication campaigns, accreditation of farm
schools, and granting of scholarships are being undertaken.
To date, 96,382 copies of information, education and communication
materials have been reproduced and distributed including farmer’s guides and
references. Technical briefings were also conducted for 154 batches of
participant-beneficiaries.
Out of the 43 farm schools targeted for this year, 20 have
already been accredited. Tesda is implementing the scholarship program for
farmers and farmworkers listed in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in
Agriculture to enroll in a farmers’ field school which is being conducted by
the accredited farm schools. To date, 8,945 scholarships have been granted.
“We see to it that training modules are harmonized to ensure the
timely delivery of services intended for the rice farmers under RCEF,” said
Dar.
Aside from rice extension service, the other three components of
RCEF are rice seed development, propagation and promotion; rice farm machinery
equipment; and expanded rice credit assistance.
The training program was rolled out after RA 11203, which
removed the quantitative restriction on rice, took effect on March 5. The law
also eased the rules on importing rice and limited government intervention in
the domestic rice market.
Christmas
rush: Controversy over Nigerian rice re-bagging
Published
15 hours ago
on
December 13, 2019
By
Following massive rush to buy rice for Yuletide and New Year
celebrations, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control
(NAFDAC) has warned business owners involved in sharp practices of revalidating
expired rice and also repackaging Nigerian rice as foreign to desist from the
act in the interest of the economy. Taiwo Hassan reports
Already, the hierarchy of the
Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) led by Comptroller-General, Col. Hameed Ali
(rtd), had raised the alarm over existence of expired rice in circulation.
Ali, who made this known when
the customs destroyed containers of foreign rice smuggled into the country
recently, warned that Nigerians were eating expired rice without knowing.
The comptroller-general blamed
importers of the commodity for not saying the truth on the state of what was
being imported into the country.
He, however, applauded the
country’s border closure policy of the Federal Government, saying that the
closure would benefit the nation in future.
However, despite the attempt to
take the minds of Nigerians away from foreign rice consumption, it was learnt
that the preference is still outweighing that of local rice as investigations
carried out by this newspaper showed that Nigerians are desperately looking for
foreign rice to buy for Christmas and New Year celebrations.
Amid this mass rush for foreign
rice by Nigerians, there are insinuations that business owners involved in the
country’s rice value chain are now secretly bagging local rice with foreign
labels and also jerking up the price tag following Nigerians preference for
foreign commodity.
In fact, the fallout of rice
conversion from local to foreign ones is mind blowing.
Why foreign rice patronage
Recently, a survey on the rice
market across the six geo-political zones in the country by the Economic
Confidential team observed that foreign rice such as Mama Gold, Royal Stallion,
Rice Master, Caprice, Falcon Rice and Basmati were sold alongside Nigerian rice
such as Umza and Fursa Crown from Kano, Mama Happy from Niger, Labana Rice from
Kebbi, Olam Rice from Nasarawa, Abakaliki Rice from Ebonyi, Ofada Rice from Ogun
State, Swomen Dama from Plateau, Lake Rice of Lagos/Kebbi States among others.
The reason for the sale can be
attributed to the fact that the desire for Nigerian rice is still low, thereby
raising doubt as to Nigerians’ preferences for local rice.
Stakeholders in the rice
sub-sector, Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria (RIFAN), Rice Millers
Association of Nigeria (RIMAN) and Rice Processors Association of Nigeria
(RIPAN) had given kudos to the Central Bank of Nigeria for the timely
intervention and banning of rice import into the country since 2015 without
issuing of Form M, a development that has seen growth in local production,
thereby saving foreign exchange for the country.
On-the-spot checks by the
magazine showed that the preponderance of foreign rice in these markets by
merchants who said that profits coming from foreign rice far out-weigh the
local rice which majority of those interviewed believed has more nutritional
value than the foreign rice.
However, what cannot be
fathomed is why still preference for foreign rice by Nigerians despite the
border closure, ban and aggressive local production of rice milling?
Locally fabricated rice
de-stoner machine
Speaking on the changes that
need to embrace by local millers to bring sanity to the country’s rice value
chain, an agriculture expert, Mrs. Bridget Obi, charged the three tiers of
government to embrace and adopt the locally fabricated rice de-stoner
innovation machine to boost local rice production in Nigeria.
Obi, also the former
Commissioner for Women Affairs and Youths Development in Anambra State,
disclosed this at the unveiling ceremony of three agricultural devices by the
Nigerian Association of Technologists in Engineering (NATE) in Oshodi, Lagos
recently.
According to her, the
agricultural devices were: scale down rice de-stoner,castor oil de-husking
machine and automated mains failure device.
Obi pointed out that these rice
machines would ensure accelerated production and reduces drudgery, especially
in the processing of agricultural produces in the country.
“We don’t need to import rice
again. The Federal Government should support various institutions to help in
driving technology that will help our nation to achieve our agricultural goals.
“Without technology, we can do nothing; it helps to save cost, manpower and man
hour,” she added.
She said local rice production
should henceforth be encouraged with the devices to assist in addressing the
major challenge of local rice.
“With huge amount released by
CBN toward increasing rice production, the NATE scale down rice de-stoner will
increase mass production of quality rice to ensure availability in the farming
communities. “I urge governments to give necessary assistance in ensuring mass
production of the machines at subsidised rate.
“They should be made available
to farmers at a very low interest rate with long term repayment plan,” Obi
said.
NAFDAC’s warning
However, NAFDAC has read the
riot act warning business owners involved in sharp practices of revalidating
expired rice and repackaging local rice as foreign to desist from the act.
The Director General, National
Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Christiana
Adeyeye, in a statement made available to New Telegraph recently, called on
Nigerians to be vigilant, and exercise discretion when purchasing rice and
other food items.
“NAFDAC is fully alive to her
responsibilities of assuring the safety, wholesomeness and quality of foods and
other regulated products offered for sale to the public,” she noted.
She said the Ogun State office
of NAFDAC received a report from the Department of State Services (DSS) in the
state of ongoing food fraud at Oke-Aje market in Ijebu Ode
“We, in company of men of the
Nigeria Police Force proceeded to the scene of the illegal activity. On arrival,
the suspected perpetrators of the food fraud instigated unnamed persons to
unleash mayhem on the team of investigators
“However, enforcement officers
of the agency and its Federal Task Force team stormed the market in company of
DSS officials. They sighted miscreants at the market who took to their heels.
“Bags of expired rice, caked
rice, bags of local rice, bags of popular foreign rice and sealing machines
were found in the shops the NAFDAC enforcement team finally gained access into.
“Three shops were sealed during
the operation. It is instructive to note that expired and caked rice are
unwholesome as they contain moulds and microorganism that cause diseases which
are of immense public health concern,” she added.
She called on Nigerians to
report cases of re-bagging and sale of caked and expired rice or other food
items to the nearest NAFDAC office across the federation.
Last line
With this disturbing report of
re-bagging, sale of caked, expired rice or other food items in the country, it
has shown that government needs to do more in its monitoring activities by
extending its searchlight beyond borders as perpetrators are ready to make more
gains on Nigerians through re-bagging of Nigerian rice as foreign ones.