Saturday, May 16, 2020

15th May,2020 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter




Global cooling event 4,200 years ago spurred rice's evolution, spread across Asia
Scientists use genomics, archeology, and climate data to reconstruct history of rice
Date:
May 15, 2020
Source:
New York University
Summary:
A major global cooling event that occurred 4,200 years ago may have led to the evolution of new rice varieties and the spread of rice into both northern and southern Asia, an international team of researchers has found.
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FULL STORY

A major global cooling event that occurred 4,200 years ago may have led to the evolution of new rice varieties and the spread of rice into both northern and southern Asia, an international team of researchers has found.
Their study, published in Nature Plants and led by the NYU Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, uses a multidisciplinary approach to reconstruct the history of rice and trace its migration throughout Asia.
Rice is one of the most important crops worldwide, a staple for more than half of the global population. It was first cultivated 9,000 years ago in the Yangtze Valley in China and later spread across East, Southeast, and South Asia, followed by the Middle East, Africa, Europe, and the Americas. In the process, rice evolved and adapted to different environments, but little is known about the routes, timing, and environmental forces involved in this spread.
In their study, the researchers reconstructed the historical movement of rice across Asia using whole-genome sequences of more than 1,400 varieties of rice -- including varieties of japonica and indica, two main subspecies of Asian rice -- coupled with geography, archaeology, and historical climate data.
For the first 4,000 years of its history, farming rice was largely confined to China, and japonica was the subspecies grown. Then, a global cooling event 4,200 years ago -- also known as the 4.2k event, which is thought to have had widespread consequences, including the collapse of civilizations from Mesopotamia to China -- coincided with japonica rice diversifying into temperate and tropical varieties. The newly evolved temperate varieties spread in northern China, Korea and Japan, while the tropical varieties and spread to Southeast Asia.
"This abrupt climate change forced plants, including crops, to adapt," said Rafal M. Gutaker, a postdoctoral associate at the NYU Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and the study's lead author. "Our genomic data, as well as paleoclimate modeling by our collaborators, show that the cooling event occurred at the same time as the rise of temperate japonica, which grows in milder regions. This cooling event also may have led to the migration of rice agriculture and farmer communities into Southeast Asia."
"These findings were then backed up by data from archaeological rice remains excavated in Asia, which also showed that after the 4.2k event, tropical rice migrated south while rice also adapted to northern latitudes as temperate varieties," said Michael D. Purugganan, the Silver Professor of Biology at NYU, who led the study.
After the global cooling event, tropical japonica rice continued to diversify. It reached islands in Southeast Asia about 2,500 years ago, likely due to extensive trade networks and the movement of goods and peoples in the region -- a finding also supported by archeological data.
The spread of indica rice was more recent and more complicated; after originating in India's lower Ganges Valley roughly 4,000 years ago, the researchers traced its migration from India into China approximately 2,000 years ago.
While the researchers had thought that rainfall and water would be the most limiting environmental factor in rice diversity, they found temperature to be the key factor instead. Their analyses revealed that heat accumulation and temperature were very strongly associated with the genomic differences between tropical and temperate japonica rice varieties.
"This study illustrates the value of multidisciplinary research. Our genomic data gave us a model for where and when rice spread to different parts of Asia, archaeology told us when and where rice showed up at various places, and the environmental and climate modeling gave us the ecological context," said Purugganan. "Together, this approach allows us to write a first draft of the story of how rice dispersed across Asia."
Understanding the spread of rice and the related environmental pressures could also help scientists develop new varieties that meet future environmental challenges, such as climate change and drought -- which could help address looming food security issues.
"Armed with knowledge of the pattern of rice dispersal and environmental factors that influenced its migration, we can examine the evolutionary adaptations of rice as it spread to new environments, which could allow us to identify traits and genes to help future breeding efforts," said Gutaker.

Story Source:
Materials provided by New York University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

Journal Reference:
  1. Rafal M. Gutaker, Simon C. Groen, Emily S. Bellis, Jae Y. Choi, Inês S. Pires, R. Kyle Bocinsky, Emma R. Slayton, Olivia Wilkins, Cristina C. Castillo, Sónia Negrão, M. Margarida Oliveira, Dorian Q. Fuller, Jade A. d’Alpoim Guedes, Jesse R. Lasky, Michael D. Purugganan. Genomic history and ecology of the geographic spread of rice. Nature Plants, 2020; 6 (5): 492 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-020-0659-6

Cite This Page:
New York University. "Global cooling event 4,200 years ago spurred rice's evolution, spread across Asia: Scientists use genomics, archeology, and climate data to reconstruct history of rice." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 15 May 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/05/200515115646.htm>.

Tackling food insecurity in the midst of food security

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Description: Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. -NSTP/AMRAN YAHYA
Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. -NSTP/AMRAN YAHYA
Malaysia needs to revamp the way it addresses food production if it serious about achieving food security.
After four Agricultural Policies, including the latest National Agrofood Policy (2011 – 2020), the agriculture sector still lags behind the manufacturing, food and ICT sectors.
This is in spite of having dedicated agencies for agriculture and volumes of research data and output from their research centres and universities. For example, local rice production has stagnated in the last 30 years and between 2016 to 2018, rice production decreased by 6.20 percent.
Today, Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. Among the questions are why half the hectarage of available paddy fields are left idle and why new strains that produce high quality grains and innovations in fertilisers and culture systems from decades of research, failed to enhance production.
At the same time, almost 100 per cent of raw materials such soybean meal, fishmeal and corn meal needed to support the feed industry for livestock and fish culture are imported. In the case of poultry and fish, between 2016 to 2018 saw a paltry increase of 1.96 percent in poultry production and a 15.61 and 1.41 percent decrease in aquaculture and wild fish landings, respectively.
Our inability to increase self sufficiency in rice production and reliance on imported raw materials and protein staples leave us vulnerable. Indeed a crisis now looms as the WHO and WTO issued warnings recently of an impending food crisis in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and the possibility that governments will impose export restrictions on food supplies which will impact food security of importing countries.
The establishment of a Cabinet Committee on Food Security, though timely, may not suffice. The agenda should be spearheaded by an independent Council on Food Security comprising of high level experts on food production, economists, social scientists and the industry. This is due to the interconnectedness between food production, environmental sustainability, economics, entrepreneurship, rural development as well as research and development.
Research, for example, is currently carried out by agencies in the several ministries of agriculture, higher education, as well as science and technology. The dots still remain to be connected regarding what foods/products to focus on, what technologies to develop or translated for large scale testing, and what socio-economics to study.
There is also our readiness to use artificial intelligence and Big Data for smart farming on a scale than can elevate the agriculture sector. Thus, the council will be responsible for making recommendations on all matters related to food such as food supply, crop diversification, food reserves, and evaluation of technologies, including funding for research.
Although there is no shortage of food, disruptions in the food supply chain began to emerge as the crisis unfolded but these were resolved speedily because online shopping became a lifeline. However, the pandemic also saw the emergence of a new group of families who lack the financial resources to buy food due to the abrupt loss of employment and income.
Hence, although there was technically no problem about food supply, the same cannot be said about access to and affordability of food. In other words, in spite of the availability of sufficient food, there are segments of society who experienced food insecurity. This insecurity existed prior to the pandemic, merely underscored its potential severity.
Indeed, children in food insecure households are prone to suffer not only health related problems but run a greater risk of developmental and educational delays. Therefore, the proposed National Council for Food Security must make a distinction between the production of affordable and sufficient food staples such as rice, fish and poultry
for internal consumption versus the production of high value food for trade.
It needs to take cognisance of factors such as demographic trends and diversity, job preferences, infrastructure, access as well as availability of labour, water and land resources, and be designed within a Malaysian context to ensure the issue of food insecurity is appropriately addressed.
Ultimately, what is needed is high level political commitment and prioritisation to produce food economically that will accommodate the food secure and food insecure members of our society. This should be Malaysia's agricultural new normal.
Prof. Datuk Roshada is from the Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM) while Noor Khalidah is from the School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM)

As long as he doesn't ask ... what does this button do?


by Robert Galvin Mail Tribune
Description: https://mailtribune.com/resources/media/538be198-7df7-4b90-8014-29b9cc83b61b-large16x9_galvin_lawn.jpg?1589480267223
Robert Galvin
One of the more bizarre, and issue-raising, entertainment items to shoot across the horizon recently might have evaded your attention, as you were no doubt busy attending to more pressing matters here on Planet Earth.
It seems that Thomas Mapother IV — the artist otherwise known as Tom Cruise — is in talks to shoot a movie on location that cost $100 billion to construct.
The talks are with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration — otherwise known as NASA — and the location for the proposed film is the International Space Station.
The actual Space Station, the one orbiting 254 miles above the New Mexico sound stage where they faked the moon landing.
According to reports, Cruise and two (film) crew members would make the 48-hour journey, shoot their scenes on the 354-foot long station, then return.
The first American who wasn’t an astronaut or scientist paid $20 million for a seven-day visit back in 2013. Just last year, NASA said that a round-trip tourist ticket would cost $58 million ... plus $35,000 a night in expenses for items such as food and water.
And, oh yes, “life support.”
You might think that the last thing NASA would want rummaging around the intricate interior of the most expensive object ever built is a film crew going through the motions for the sake of “realism.”
As always when we think such things ... we’d be wrong.
“NASA is excited to work with @TomCruise on a film aboard the @Space_Station!” tweeted NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine, making sure to use both the primary parties Twitter handles.
“We need popular media to inspire a new generation of engineers and scientists to make @NASA’s ambitious plans a reality.”
Now I know what I’m thinking: We’ve really sunk so low in our ability to inspire the “new generation of engineers and scientists” that we believe sending the guy who jumped up and down on Oprah’s interview couch — expressing his love for the artist otherwise known as Joey Potter — will get those young, bright minds excited?
But that’s where my mind goes in such matters. There certainly are more important questions to be answered by this possibility.
Like, say, oh, I don’t know, how about ... ARE THEY OUT OF THEIR MINDS?
(And by “THEY,” let the record show I’m including everyone with a stake in this cockamamie concept — except for the insurance company likely to charge
$58 million plus $35,000 a night to write a policy that will cover every contingency.)
But the answer to that is easy. Yes, yes they are.
The entertainment value of the exercise is what truly should concern us here ... and it raises its own fundamental question.
Why?
As I said earlier, they still have that secret base in New Mexico at which they can certainly create a replica of the station — one longer than a football field and change — where the filming process would allow for the presence of a full crew ... room enough for a gaffer, a grip, a dolly grip, a key grip and a best boy.
Cruise is a known adrenaline junkie when it comes to stunts. He’s hung off the side of a plane (while harnessed) during takeoff, performed his own rock climbing (while harnessed), and scaled (while harnessed) a portion of the world’s tallest building — the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
But what is there to gain, in terms of authenticity, with a trip to the Space Station? This isn’t Buster Keaton riding the front of a train in Cottage Grove, or Harold Lloyd hanging onto the hand of a clock over Broadway. Even those famed shots were augmented by artifice.
This isn’t even trained martial artist Jackie Chan performing fight sequences that are rehearsed and choreographed so that every wall climb, every leap, every punch is orchestrated to the nth degree.
“Forrest Gump” was on television the other night and not once did I wonder how they got that shot of Tom Hanks sitting between John Lennon and Dick Cavett, or whether Gary Sinise actually sacrificed his legs so that Lt. Dan would look realistic in (or out of) his wheelchair.
If they could pull those off (the effects, not Sinise’s legs), then they can certainly make it look like Tom Cruise is aboard the Space Station.
For evidence, look at another movie that Hanks and Sinise starred in ... the NASA drama “Apollo 13.”
As the crew in the capsule and the crew in Houston worked to pull off a remarkable, and somewhat unlikely, rescue effort, tension and realism where achieved the old-fashioned way — through technical skill and humanization of characters.
The 1982 film “Fitzcarraldo” depicted the efforts of a madman to have a 320-ton steamship hauled over a mud-caked, 40-degree hillside in the Amazon to reach a waterway on the side.
The documentary “Burden of Dreams,” also released in 1982, depicted the efforts of director Werner Herzog to get “Fitzcarraldo” made — including his insistence that a real 320-ton steamship be hauled over a mud-caked, 40-degree hillside in the Amazon.
Disasters struck during the making of both films. There were a pair of plane crashes, attacks by regional tribes, injuries and deaths from the working conditions (including one crew member who cut off his own leg with a chainsaw to prevent the spread of venom after being bit by a poisonous snake.)
“If I abandon this project, I would be a man without dreams, and I don’t want to live like that,” Herzog says in “Burden of Dreams.” “I live my life, or I end my life, with this project.”
Heck, it’s not my money. (Thank goodness, for I could barely afford an hour of “life support.”) If NASA wants to shoot Tom Cruise (and a camera operator and sound engineer) into space — and they want to go — do they really need a reason?
Do we really need to ask?
Mail Tribune news editor Robert Galvin, who once spent $30 on an unfilmed trip to the International House of Pancakes, can be reached at rgalvin@rosebudmedia.com


Breaking wheat-paddy cycle a must to save groundwater: CSSRI study

Flood-based irrigation in Haryana, Punjab a threat to groundwater which is depleting over 3 feet every year

cities Updated: May 14, 2020 23:19 IST
Description: Neeraj Mohan
Neeraj Mohan
Hindustan Times, Chandigarh
Description: https://www.hindustantimes.com/rf/image_size_960x540/HT/p2/2020/05/14/Pictures/_5e23168e-95f3-11ea-b40c-d7c2b81d84c3.jpg
Breaking the traditional wheat-paddy cycle is the need of the hour to preserve groundwater for the future generations, reveals a research conducted by scientists of the Central Soil Salinity Research Institute (CSSRI), Karnal (Haryana).
Asserting that the rice crop alone consumes about 50% of the total irrigation water, the researchers have suggested radical changes in the agricultural use of available water.
‘OPT FOR ROOT ZONE IRRIGATION’
With five million hectares under rice cultivation in the country’s Indo-Gangetic plains of north west, including Punjab, Haryana and parts of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, it is the most important production area for India’s two staple cereals -- rice and wheat. The crops in this region are harvested on the cost of natural resources that leads to groundwater depletion and deterioration in soil and environmental quality, the scientists said. They have also advised the farmers to adopt root zone irrigation (RZI) over flood irrigation to save the groundwater.
The research has suggested that RZI not only saves about 50% water, but also improves yields up to 20% by eliminating surface water evaporation with similar management practices over flood irrigation.
OVER 3FT DECLINE IN GROUNDWATER EVERY YEAR
The report also reveals that the decline of about 3-feet every year in the groundwater table between 1973 and 2001 has accelerated by five-fold between 2000 and 2006 in central Punjab and parts of Haryana. Moreover, during 2008-2012, the total freshwater withdrawals in India were about 761 billion cubic metre of which about 90% was used for agriculture. By 2050, the share of water for agricultural use will be less than 50% of the total water from the present share of 70%, the report read.
‘MAIZE A GOOD ALTERNATIVE’
Director of ICAR-CSSRI, Karnal, PC Sharma, said, “There is an immediate need to break the wheat-paddy cycle to save groundwater for the future generations.” He said that maize could be a better option for both wheat and paddy as it consumes 50% less water, but there is a need of assured marketing of maize such as wheat and paddy to divert farmers.
“Both rice and wheat need 20% less nitrogen-based fertilisers under a subsurface drip fertigation (injection of fertilisers) system. It can improve ecosystem’s health and cut the emission of greenhouse gases,” he said.


Chinese company donates living materials to needy families in Pakistan
By
A leading company in China’s seed industry said it donated living materials to 1,000 impoverished households in Pakistan.
Yuan Longping High-tech Agriculture Co., Ltd, based in central China’s Hunan Province, has purchased materials worth over 3 million rupees (about 30,000 U.S. dollars) with the assistance of its local partner to offer 20 kg of flour, 10 kg of rice, 5 kg of sugar and 3 liters of cooking oil to each family.
Liu Linhui, a manager of the company, said many local residents lost their source of income as production halted due to the COVID-19 outbreak, and the company has been sending living necessities to difficult households in the Pakistani cities of Golarchi and Pakpattan since May 8.
The company has been developing, promoting and localizing hybrid rice in Pakistan since 2000. The planting area of its hybrid rice in Pakistan has exceeded 2 million hectares, the yield in those fields also doubled. 

Pakistan: COVID-19 – Situation Report (As of 14 May 2020)

Source
·         OCHA
Posted
Originally published
Origin

Attachments

Highlights
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan has risen to 35,788 as of 14 May. Increase of 1,452 new cases in the last 24 hours. The most affected province due to COVID-19 virus is Punjab 13,561, followed by Sindh 13,341. A report released by United Nations has named Pakistan among 10 countries where deaths from preventable diseases in children under five could rise by almost 45% over the next six months as the coronavirus pandemic could divert scarce health resources. The number of confirmed patients has been increasing in Rawalpindi with each passing day as on Wednesday 133 more tested positive for Covid-19 in the garrison city while a person died and three recovered. Pakis­tan sees a record jump in Covid-19 cases only days after the reopening of markets, as blatant violation of the government’s standard operating procedures (SOPs) continued despite repeated warnings by the relevant authorities and sealing of some overcrowded shopping areas. The government on Wednesday al­lowed air transportation of Covid-19 infected bodies to bring back to the country the bodies of Pakistanis who died of the coronavirus abroad. To many farmers in southeast Pakistan, an impending locust attack when summer crops of cotton, sugarcane and rice are being sown, and fruit and vegetables are ready to be picked is a much bigger problem than the coronavirus pandemic.
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
To learn more about OCHA's activities, please visit https://www.unocha.org/.

India Grain: Basmati prices up on firm bulk demand; maize down
Thursday, May 14

NEW DELHI – Prices of Pusa 1121 basmati paddy continued to rise across major spot markets today as bulk demand from millers remained firm amid weak supply, traders said. 

Arrivals are usually lower during this time of the year as most farmers and stockists exhaust their stocks. Curbs on movement amid the nationwide lockdown have also limited supply this season, Amritsar-based trader Ashok Sethia said.    

Anticipation of another extension to the nationwide lockdown is also seen helping prices as most millers are procuring stocks required for some weeks in advance, he said. Currently, the lockdown is in place till Sunday. India has so far reported 78,003 COVID-19 cases, with the death toll at 2,549.  

However, prices at spot markets are unlikely to rise sharply due to an anticipated decline in demand from West Asian countries, Delhi-based trader Anand Goyal said. Usually, demand for basmati picks up during this time due to Ramzaan. The restrictions on movement and recent steps by Iran to withdraw subsidy on rice imports may also hit India's exports, Goyal said. Iran is a major buyer of Indian basmati rice.

On the Indian Commodity Exchange, the May basmati paddy contract ended at 3,428 rupees per 100 kg, up 0.9%. 

Maize prices fell further in major spot markets as bulk demand from feed makers remained subdued, traders said. Arrivals in Nashik were pegged steady at 700-800 bags (1 bag = 100 kg) and supply in Nizamabad was also largely unchanged at 700-800 bags.

Bulk purchases by the poultry industry and animal-feed makers have been subdued as consumption of poultry products declined on rumours that broilers and eggs are carriers of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, Nizamabad-based trader Amrutlal Kataria said.   

An outbreak of African Swine Fever in Assam is also seen hitting demand in northeastern states as culling pigs is the only option, he said.

A decline in feed consumption due to the virus may also hit demand for maize, a key component of animal feed, in the region, Patna-based trader Avinash Kumar said. So far, over 13,000 pigs have died of the virus in Assam.    

On the National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange, the most-active May contract fell 0.3% to close at 1,175 rupees per 100 kg.

Prices of mill-quality wheat in Jaipur were unavailable today as spot markets in Rajasthan are shut. Traders in Rajasthan are protesting against the state government's decision to impose a 2% farmers' welfare fee on the purchase of agricultural produce, particularly grains. 

Markets in Indore and Kanpur have been shut because of the lockdown. 

Prices of the staple foodgrain are seen declining further in the coming days as the slower pace of government procurement is exerting supply pressure on spot markets, Kota-based trader Aniket Mehta said.  

In Jaipur, prices of bajra were largely steady due to lack of cues, traders said.

Following are today's prices of wheat, maize, paddy, and bajra in rupees per 100 kg, in key wholesale markets, and the change from the previous day of trade:

Commodity
Market
Price
Change
Wheat
Indore
1,830-1,860*
Wheat
Jaipur
1,700-1,720*
Maize
Nashik
1,39-1,420
(-)20-30
Maize
Nizamabad
1,370-1,400
(-)20-30
Pusa 1121 basmati paddy
Amritsar
3,010-3,080
30-50
Bajra
Jaipur
1,750-1,800
* Spot markets for wheat in Indore and Jaipur were shut today

End

Edited by Subham Mitra

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Send comments to feedback@cogencis.com
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This copy was first published on the Cogencis WorkStation


Tackling food insecurity in the midst of food security

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Description: Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. -NSTP/AMRAN YAHYA
Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. -NSTP/AMRAN YAHYA
Malaysia needs to revamp the way it addresses food production if it serious about achieving food security.
After four Agricultural Policies, including the latest National Agrofood Policy (2011 – 2020), the agriculture sector still lags behind the manufacturing, food and ICT sectors.
This is in spite of having dedicated agencies for agriculture and volumes of research data and output from their research centres and universities. For example, local rice production has stagnated in the last 30 years and between 2016 to 2018, rice production decreased by 6.20 percent.
Today, Malaysia imports between 30 to 40 per cent of its rice consumption mainly from Vietnam, India and Thailand. Among the questions are why half the hectarage of available paddy fields are left idle and why new strains that produce high quality grains and innovations in fertilisers and culture systems from decades of research, failed to enhance production.
At the same time, almost 100 per cent of raw materials such soybean meal, fishmeal and corn meal needed to support the feed industry for livestock and fish culture are imported. In the case of poultry and fish, between 2016 to 2018 saw a paltry increase of 1.96 percent in poultry production and a 15.61 and 1.41 percent decrease in aquaculture and wild fish landings, respectively.
Our inability to increase self sufficiency in rice production and reliance on imported raw materials and protein staples leave us vulnerable. Indeed a crisis now looms as the WHO and WTO issued warnings recently of an impending food crisis in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and the possibility that governments will impose export restrictions on food supplies which will impact food security of importing countries.
The establishment of a Cabinet Committee on Food Security, though timely, may not suffice. The agenda should be spearheaded by an independent Council on Food Security comprising of high level experts on food production, economists, social scientists and the industry. This is due to the interconnectedness between food production, environmental sustainability, economics, entrepreneurship, rural development as well as research and development.
Research, for example, is currently carried out by agencies in the several ministries of agriculture, higher education, as well as science and technology. The dots still remain to be connected regarding what foods/products to focus on, what technologies to develop or translated for large scale testing, and what socio-economics to study.
There is also our readiness to use artificial intelligence and Big Data for smart farming on a scale than can elevate the agriculture sector. Thus, the council will be responsible for making recommendations on all matters related to food such as food supply, crop diversification, food reserves, and evaluation of technologies, including funding for research.
Although there is no shortage of food, disruptions in the food supply chain began to emerge as the crisis unfolded but these were resolved speedily because online shopping became a lifeline. However, the pandemic also saw the emergence of a new group of families who lack the financial resources to buy food due to the abrupt loss of employment and income.
Hence, although there was technically no problem about food supply, the same cannot be said about access to and affordability of food. In other words, in spite of the availability of sufficient food, there are segments of society who experienced food insecurity. This insecurity existed prior to the pandemic, merely underscored its potential severity.
Indeed, children in food insecure households are prone to suffer not only health related problems but run a greater risk of developmental and educational delays. Therefore, the proposed National Council for Food Security must make a distinction between the production of affordable and sufficient food staples such as rice, fish and poultry
for internal consumption versus the production of high value food for trade.
It needs to take cognisance of factors such as demographic trends and diversity, job preferences, infrastructure, access as well as availability of labour, water and land resources, and be designed within a Malaysian context to ensure the issue of food insecurity is appropriately addressed.
Ultimately, what is needed is high level political commitment and prioritisation to produce food economically that will accommodate the food secure and food insecure members of our society. This should be Malaysia's agricultural new normal.
Prof. Datuk Roshada is from the Faculty of Science and Technology, Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM) while Noor Khalidah is from the School of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM)

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of the New Straits Times


World Market Price Meeting Goes Virtual  

ALL AROUND RICE COUNTRY, USA -- Today the USA Rice World Market Price (WMP) Subcommittee held its May meeting via videoconference due to COVID-19 precautions.  The full Subcommittee beamed in via Zoom to discuss projected plantings, supply and demand, and rough rice stocks.

Subcommittee members agreed that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) planting projections were on target, and the industry as a whole is looking forward to a larger crop than in 2019.

"The May World Market Price meeting is important for gathering information about the current state of the U.S. rice industry and dialoguing that information with USDA about the rest of the current marketing year and sharing our latest thoughts on rice acreage for the 2020 crop," said WMP Subcommittee Chair Keith Glover.  "Even though we were unable to conduct our normal in-person meeting in Washington, DC, we, nevertheless, accomplished our objective today using a new meeting platform."

Following the Subcommittee meeting, Glover and USA Rice staff held another virtual meeting with the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) to review committee members' feedback on projected plantings, and supply and demand estimates.

Members also held a virtual meeting with USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service staff to talk about the impact of COVID-19 on global rice production and exports, market access issues, and ongoing and upcoming trade negotiations.

"In this time of global uncertainty, it was very beneficial for USA Rice members and staff to discuss the global rice situation with experts at USDA," said USA Rice President & CEO Betsy Ward.  "As the COVID-19 pandemic continues around the globe, we were able to hold productive, informative, virtual discussions."
Farmers threaten stir over curbs on paddy cultivation
To hold kisan panchayat tomorrow; millers extend support

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  • Posted: May 14, 2020 07:29 AM (IST)
Description: Farmers threaten stir over curbs on paddy cultivation
Tribune News Service
Kurukshetra, May 13
Unhappy with the government decision of restricting paddy cultivation, the Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) has threatened to launch an agitation and called a kisan panchayat on May 15 in Shahabad grain market to decide the future course of action.
Rakesh Bains, spokesman of BKU (Charuni), said “We strongly oppose the Haryana Government’s decision of restricting paddy cultivation in 19 blocks. The government has put the entire blame for depleting water table on farmers, which is wrong. It has denotified Dadupur Nalvi canal, even when it is vital for recharging groundwater. There are flooded areas where no crop, except paddy, can be cultivated. The transplantation work will start from June 15 and we don’t have much time, thus it has been decided to hold a kisan panchayat.”
Meanwhile, the rice millers’ association has also come out in support of the farmers and has appealed to the state government to withdraw its decision.
Jewel Singla, chairman of the association, said “The decision taken by the government wouldn’t only affect the farmers but will hit the rice industry too. The government has asked the farmers to grow maize, but its demand is very poor in the market. The government should make efforts to bring SYL water rather than putting restrictions on paddy cultivation.”


Minister Jagadish Reddy feels coronavirus chain broken in Suraypet Deekonda Ravi Shankar

Hans News Service | 13 May 2020 1:30 PM IST AddThis Sharing Buttons Share to Facebook  to More Minister Jagadish Reddy feels coronavirus chain broken in SuraypetMinister jagadish reddy interacting with a vendor after inaugurating new mini vegetable market at junior college in suryapet Highlights Minister Jagadish reddy felt that Corona pandemic chain was broken in suryapet with the support of people who sincerely followed government lockdown norms and medical department instructions. Suryapet: Minister Jagadish Reddy felt that the Corona pandemic chain was broken in Suryapet with the support of people who sincerely followed government lockdown norms and medical department instructions. On Wednesday, he inaugurated new vegetable markets near the junior college and Afzal rice mill, later he distributed essential commodities to 400 private car drivers in a program held at rice millers association located at jammigadda in the town

https://www.thehansindia.com/telangana/minister-jagadish-reddy-feels-coronavirus-chain-broken-in-suraypet-622261


3,130 Bags, 1,300 Cartons Of Commodities Recovered

Description: 3,130 bags, 1,300 cartons of commodities recovered

During the ongoing crackdown on hoarding, the assistant commissioners have recovered 3,130 bags of various commodities and 1,300 cartons of ghee from different godowns during the past 12 hours

FAISALABAD, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 13th May, 2020 ) :During the ongoing crackdown on hoarding, the assistant commissioners have recovered 3,130 bags of various commodities and 1,300 cartons of ghee from different godowns during the past 12 hours.
A spokesman for the local administration said on Wednesday that Assistant Commissioner City Syed Ayub Bukhari took action against hoarding at Sitiana Road and seized 3,350 bags of flour, sugar, ghee and rice at the godown of Khalid Mahmood Grocery Store.
The AC said that 2,200 bags of flour, 150 bags of sugar, 80 bags of rice and 900 cartons of ghee were stored at godown which was sealed.
Meanwhile, Assistant Commissioner Chak Jhumra Imtiaz Baig raided a godown at Barnala and recovered 700 bags of sugar and 400 cartons of ghee and sealed the godown.

Rice exports to resume

Sok Chan / Khmer Times

The government announced yesterday the private sector can resume the export of white rice to the international market on May 20 – one month after imposing an export ban – according to the Minister of Economy and Finance.
The announcement was signed by Minister of Economy and Finance Aun Pornmoniroth who stated that, based on a request
from the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF), the government is now resuming the export of white rice in order to facilitate agreements with foreign countries from May 20.
The announcement comes after Prime Minister Hun Sen, in late March, ordered the ban for all exports of white rice and paddy from April 5 until further notice. The decision was made to safeguard local supply in response to COVID-19 food shortage fears.
“Starting from April 5, we will not allow the export of any white rice or paddy to the international market. This is because we want to keep the supply for domestic demand. However, fragrant rice can be exported normally,” Mr Hun Sen said.
Over the past few weeks, the CRF has been requesting the government to revise the ban of white rice exports “as soon as possible”, so rice millers could clear old stock and pay back debt owed to paddy farmers.
Rice millers had also been concerned that an oversupply would occur and they would not be ready to buy paddy during the early July harvest.
“We have studied the current business situation and necessary measures during the outbreak of the COVID-19 situation,” the Deputy Prime Minister Aun Pornmonirath said when responding to why the government reversed the ban.
Hun Lak, chairman of CRF, told Khmer Times that he welcomed the government’s move and that Cambodia now has a food safety net.
Rice millers working at a factory silo can resume international exports from May 20. KT/Pann Rachana
“We now have enough rice and paddy to supply the domestic market. From April until now we exported on average 70,000 tonnes of rice per month, with 85 percent of this being fragrant rice, while white rice has been the other 15 percent,” he said, CRF President Song Saran said the current storage capacity of rice mills in Cambodia is running at 1.9 million tonnes per season, with silo capacity at approximately 45,000 tonnes per day.
“With the current COVID-19 situation, some of the by-products of rice have also been blocked. For example, rice bran cannot be exported. CRF is now requesting the government exempt the withholding of tax for transport of paddy and milled rice, especially, withholding tax on warehoused rents and private truck transport because this has been a burden for the mill-stunted corn.”
The federation also requested the government allocate an additional $30 million to the existing $50 million rice fund that is now totalling about $200 million, to assist millers in buying around 800,000 tonnes of paddy.
From January to April this year, Cambodia’s rice exports to China were 122,094 tonnes (41 percent), to the European Union 97,337 tonnes (32.4 percent), to Asean members 37,428 tonnes (12.5 percent) and to other destinations 43,393 tonnes (14.45 percent).
The announcement comes after Prime Minister Hun Sen, in late March, ordered the ban for all exports of white rice and paddy from April 5 until further notice. The decision was made to safeguard local supply in response to COVID-19 food shortage fears.
“Starting from April 5, we will not allow the export of any white rice or paddy to the international market. This is because we want to keep the supply for domestic demand. However, fragrant rice can be exported normally,” Mr Hun Sen said.
Over the past few weeks, the CRF has been requesting the government to revise the ban of white rice exports “as soon as possible”, so rice millers could clear old stock and pay back debt owed to paddy farmers.
Rice millers had also been concerned that an oversupply would occur and they would not be ready to buy paddy during the early July harvest.
“We have studied the current business situation and necessary measures during the outbreak of the COVID-19 situation,” the Minister Pornmoniroth said when responding to why the government reversed the ban.
Hun Lak, chairman of the CRF, told Khmer Times that he welcomed the government’s move and that Cambodia now has a food safety net.
“We now have enough rice and paddy to supply the domestic market. From April until now we exported on average 70,000 tonnes of rice per month, with 85 percent of this being fragrant rice, while white rice has made up the other 15 percent,” he said,
CRF President Song Saran said the current storage capacity of rice mills in Cambodia is running at 1.9 million tonnes per season, with silo capacity at approximately 45,000 tonnes per day.
“With the current COVID-19 situation, some of the by-products of rice have also been blocked. For example, rice bran cannot be exported. CRF is now requesting the government exempt the withholding of tax for the transport of paddy and milled rice, especially, withholding tax on warehouse rents and private truck transport because this has been a burden for the mill-stunted corn.”
The federation also requested the government allocate an additional $30 million to the existing $50 million rice fund that is now totalling about $200 million, to assist millers in buying around 800,000 tonnes of paddy.
From January to April this year, Cambodia’s rice exports to China were 122,094 tonnes (41 percent), to the European Union 97,337 tonnes (32.4 percent), to Asean members 37,428 tonnes (12.5 percent) and to other destinations 43,393 tonnes (about14 percent).

Chinese company donates living materials to needy families in Pakistan

Source: Xinhua| 2020-05-14 10:48:14|Editor: huaxia
CHANGSHA, May 14 (Xinhua) -- A leading company in China's seed industry said it donated living materials to 1,000 impoverished households in Pakistan.
Yuan Longping High-tech Agriculture Co., Ltd, based in central China's Hunan Province, has purchased materials worth over 3 million rupees (about 30,000 U.S. dollars) with the assistance of its local partner to offer 20 kg of flour, 10 kg of rice, 5 kg of sugar and 3 liters of cooking oil to each family.
Liu Linhui, a manager of the company, said many local residents lost their source of income as production halted due to the COVID-19 outbreak, and the company has been sending living necessities to difficult households in the Pakistani cities of Golarchi and Pakpattan since May 8.
The company has been developing, promoting and localizing hybrid rice in Pakistan since 2000. The planting area of its hybrid rice in Pakistan has exceeded 2 million hectares, the yield in those fields also doubled. Enditem

Wednesday River Talk Is Online

by
Lake Superior NERR
SUPERIOR, WI (KDAL) - The River Talk series will present its final program of the academic year in an online format.
The presentation called "Chasing Geese on the St. Louis River to Protect Wild Rice" will be hosted by former undergraduate research fellow with the Lake Superior National Estuarine Research Reserve, Sam Hansen.
Northern wild rice, that is native to the St. Louis River was once abundant but is now threatened by high water and feeding pressure by geese.
Hansen will describe a project to determine if low impact kayaking in wild rice bays could reduce the number of Canada geese.
Registration for the talk at 7 p-m Wednesday on Zoom is required.
Those registering will receive an email with a link and password to join the meeting.
River Talks are sponsored by the Minnesota and Wisconsin Sea Grant Programs and the Lake Superior NERR.
Register by following this link: https://uwextension.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0od-ihqDIvEtQfz-vWF3bPtsPAIdk-ULYW

Black rice fossils found to date from at least 900 years


Description: https://ancientfoods.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/b9bfd5ca-4275-4a7b-984e-c25c2ffeff1b.jpeg?w=500&h=201
The Phnom Penh Post/ANN)—-Scientific test results of black rice fossils found in the basement of the Preah Ko temple site in Thala Barivat district, Stung Treng province late last year show that Cambodians have been cultivating and producing rice since the early Neolithic period.
The Neolithic age began around 12,000 years ago and ended as civilizations started to rise around 3500BCE.
In July last year, Thuy Chanthourn, the deputy director of the Institute of Arts and Culture of the Royal Academy of Cambodia and deputy president of the Cambodian Historians Association, brought the mysterious samples of black rice fossils from Preah Ko temple to the laboratory of the Australian National University (ANU) to conduct experiments to date the fossils.
With technical support from Rachel Wood, an archaeological and anthropological specialist at the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences, Chanthourn successfully examined the rice which has since become the earliest scientific dating of early rice cultivation in Cambodia.
“We have dated a rice seed sample which we cleaned with Scalpel and types of acid. We kept it for a while and then measured it with a special machine.
“Experimental results show that the black rice fossils date from about 900 years to 1,000 years ago. Therefore, this scientific experiment has unveiled the oldest example of rice production in Cambodia,” he said.
In addition to the new evidence, Chanthourn also presented results of other studies conducted on ancient rice husks at Banteay Kou Circular Earthwork sites, east of the Mekong River at the red plateau areas, a site dating to around 2,000BC.
“The rice husks and the evidence on the temple carvings show that in Cambodia, we had a lot of rice production in the Angkor period. The inscription also mentions rice gifts evidencing that rice was not only being cultivated but had cultural value,” he said.
Chanthourn’s study showed that rice has been the mainstay cereal of Southeast Asians since the Neolithic period.
Many varieties of rice seeds come from Asia, such as Indica and Japonica rice seeds – the same variety that originated from about 8,200 to 13,500 years ago in the Pearl River valley region of China.
The black rice fossils sampled at the ANU’s laboratory came from the Tuol Ang Khmao or Preah Ko Temple located in Kaing Techo village in Thala Barivat commune of the district, behind the old district hall, about 300m away. The wonder of this rice is not decayed in water and buried for hundreds of years.
According to research books of the Stung Treng Provincial Department of Culture and Fine Arts, during French colonial era, black rice was so rich people would collect and scatter it on the ground to wish well to one another.
Thala Barivat natives have regarded the black rice sample used in the experiment as a cultural treasure left behind from the ancient ancestors since the construction of Preah Ko Temple.
The black rice is still referred to today as the ‘glorious rice’ locally.

DA-PhilRice distributes rice seeds in Ilocos region
By Hilda Austria May 13, 2020, 8:54 pm
Description: https://files.pna.gov.ph/category-list/2020/03/08/da-agriculture.jpg
SAN FERNANDO CITY, La Union – The Department of Agriculture (DA), through the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), is distributing a total of 621,988 sacks of hybrid palay (rice) seeds and 86,017 sacks of inbred seeds in the Ilocos region.

In a phone interview on Wednesday, DA 1 (Ilocos) officer-in-charge Technical Director for Operations Erlinda Manipon said the total number of hybrid seeds covers 125,000 hectares of land in the region, while the inbred seeds cover 86,467 hectares.

Pangasinan farmers were allotted 363,188 sacks of hybrid rice; La Union farmers, 47,100 sacks; Ilocos Sur farmers, 62,100; and Ilocos Norte farmers, 149,600 sacks, Manipon said.

For the inbred seeds, Pangasinan farmers were allocated 37,382 sacks; La Union farmers, 12,137 sacks; Ilocos Sur farmers, 23,998 sacks; and Ilocos Norte farmers, 12,500 sacks, she added.

“Generally, all rice farmers enrolled in the Registry System for Basic Sectors in Agriculture. But it still depends on the list submitted by the local government units consolidated by the Office of the Provincial Agriculture,” Manipon said.

She said the number of sacks each farmer receives depends on the land area of his field and the type of seed the farmer plants.

“The hybrid seeds’ packaging is about 15 kg. to 20 kg. per sack and each hectare of land needs 15 kg. For the inbred, each sack contains 40 kg. of seeds and each hectare needs one bag or 40 kg.,” she added.

The seed distribution is part of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) Seed Program.

The DA will also distribute inbred and hybrid rice seeds with fertilizers to both rain-fed and irrigated areas on top of the RCEF and support to inbred and hybrid farmers under the National Rice Program. (PNA)


Furrow-irrigated rice handbook available
  • By Tracy Courage, U of A System Division of Agriculture
  • May 13, 2020 Updated May 13, 2020
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
Furrow-irrigated rice has been gaining ground, increasing from less than 1% to 10% of total rice acreage in Arkansas in the past five years.
A new handbook from the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture provides rice growers with the latest research and recommendations for furrow-irrigated rice.
The “Arkansas Furrow-Irrigated Rice Handbook” provides research-based information about selecting cultivars, establishing stands, and managing fertility, weeds, disease, insects and irrigation. It also provides information about budgeting and crop insurance, which became available for furrow-irrigated rice earlier this year through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency.
The publication is available on the Cooperative Extension Service website at https://bit.ly

New rice variety with promising yields

This is the first year Jewel, a high-yielding rice variety from Arkansas, is being used as a foundation seed for growers.
Jewel, a new rice variety from Arkansas, is a high-yielding variety with a good cook type and blast resistance.
Karen Moldenhauer, a professor and rice breeder for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, is one of the rice breeders for the new variety. The rice breeding program is based on the Rice Research and Extension Center near Stuttgart, Ark.
"This is the first year Jewel, a mid-season, long-grain rice cultivar, is being used as a foundation seed for growers," Moldenhauer said. "This will be the first time we get feedback on how it does in an on-farm location as opposed to the trials, which were spread all over the state. In the on-farm tests, which are the Arkansas Rice Performance Trials (ARPT) and the Producer Rice Evaluation Program (PREP), we get an idea of how a variety is going to do on a farm, but this will be the first year it's grown on any kind of farm operation with several acres."

Yield compares with Diamond

Moldenhauer says the variety stacks up nicely next to other commonly used rice varieties.
"It's been in the Arkansas performance trials and the uniform regional nursery trials from 2017 through 2019, and it'll be in this year's trials too. It yields well," she said.
Jewel's yield potential is like LaKast and Roy J, but it is also close to Diamond.
"Diamond has high yield potential, but in the Arkansas uniform rice regional nursery for the past three years, Jewel has been close to Diamond's numbers," Moldenhauer said. "Jewel was 229 bushels per acre. Diamond was 239 bushels per acre. LaKast was 208, and Roy J was 199, so Jewel did better than LaKast and Roy J.
"In the 2019 data planting date study, its average yield was 204, and Diamond was 210, so there's not a lot of difference in yield from the data. It has good yield potential."
Jewel also has genes for resistance to the common blast races in Arkansas.
"For disease resistance, it's going to act similar for sheath blight like LaKast and Roy J," she said. "It rates at MS (moderately susceptible), so it's a little better than Diamond and Wells, which are rated S (susceptible) for sheath blight. Jewel rated an S for bacterial panicle blight, which is the same as Roy J. Diamond is rated a little better at MS."

Cook type and parentage

The cooking quality is similar to Cheniere, a good cook type.
"There is interest in varieties with the Cheniere cook type," Moldenhauer said. "It has high amylose, a weak RVA (rapid visco analyser), which measures the pasting properties in rice, and intermediate gelatinization temperature. Accordingly, it cooks a little differently than our typical standard USA long-grain varieties. Another benefit is a nice kernel with low chalk.”
Jewel grows to about the same height as Diamond and LaKast, about 37 inches.
"Jewel is a cross made in 2009 and has a long list of varieties in its parentage," she said. "There were seven different crosses made to get to this point. One variety, LaGrue, was an extremely high-yielding variety when it was released in 1994, so Jewel is made from some good varieties."
The variety works in both a conventional and row crop settings.
"It may work better as a row crop than some of the others because it does have some blast resistance, which can be a problem if you get it too dry, but it should work well in both of those systems," Moldenhauer said.


New handbook offers research, recommendations for furrow-irrigated rice production

The “Arkansas Furrow-Irrigated Rice Handbook” provides research-based information about selecting cultivars, establishing stands, and managing fertility, weeds, disease, insects and irrigation.
Furrow-irrigated rice has been gaining ground, increasing from less than 1 percent to 10 percent of total rice acreage in Arkansas in the past five years.
A new handbook from the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture provides rice growers with the latest research and recommendations for furrow-irrigated rice.
The “Arkansas Furrow-Irrigated Rice Handbook” provides research-based information about selecting cultivars, establishing stands, and managing fertility, weeds, disease, insects and irrigation. It also provides information about budgeting and crop insurance, which became available for furrow-irrigated rice earlier this year through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency.
The publication is available on the Cooperative Extension Service website at https://bit.ly/ArkRiceHandbook.
In 2019, 1.1 million acres of rice were harvested in Arkansas, accounting for 46 percent of total U.S. rice production. Most of that acreage relied on flood irrigation.
Furrow-irrigated rice, also known as row rice or upland rice, has been grown in small pockets of Arkansas for more than 30 years. This method eliminates the need for constant flooding. Instead, small channels – or furrows – are dug between the rows and carry water to the crop. Five years ago, this method was used on less than 1 percent of rice acreage in Arkansas. Now, it accounts for 10 percent of rice acreage, according to Jarrod Hardke, rice extension agronomist with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.
“The practice of furrow-irrigated rice continues to surge in adoption,” Hardke said. “In 2012, there were fewer than 5,000 acres in Arkansas, but by 2019 we had well over 100,000 acres. Expectations for 2020 are that we could see 200,000 acres if weather permits planting of all intended acres.”
Similar increases in adoption are occurring in the Missouri Bootheel and northeast Louisiana, Hardke said.
The primary reasons for furrow irrigation are to simplify crop rotations and decrease time and expenses associated with flood-irrigated rice. Additional benefits could include water savings, which will prove more beneficial as water resources are further depleted.
Since rice is a semiaquatic plant, non-flooded rice production research efforts have been limited. Hardke and other researchers began compiling information in 2017 to provide producers with some limited guidance.
“This year we realized there was a need to expand on that previous information and provide something more robust as acres have continued to increase and research efforts have expanded to answer additional questions,” he said. “As research and adoption continue and we learn more, the handbook will be updated regularly to provide the best possible information to growers.”
Justin L. Chlapecka, a graduate research assistant and former extension agent, co-edited the handbook with Hardke. Additional contributors include Tom Barber, Tommy Butts, and Jason Norsworthy, extension weed scientists; Gus Lorenz and Nick Bateman, extension entomologists; Mike Hamilton, irrigation education instructor; Chris Henry, water management engineer; Ralph Mazzanti, extension rice verification coordinator; Trent Roberts, associate professor and soil fertility/soil testing specialist; Yeshi Wamishe, rice extension pathologist; and Brad Watkins, agricultural economist.

India Grain: Basmati prices up on firm bulk demand; spot maize down
Wednesday, May 13

By Sampad Nandy

NEW DELHI – Prices of Pusa 1121 basmati paddy rose today, too, across key spot markets as demand from bulk buyers, particularly millers, was robust amid subdued supply, traders said. 

The arrivals are usually subdued at this time of the year, as most farmers and stockists exhaust the stocks with them. This year, curbs on movement due to the lockdown have also limited supply, Amritsar-based trader Ashok Sethia said.    

Anticipation of a further extension in the nationwide lockdown is also seen supporting prices as millers are procuring more stocks for some weeks in advance, he said. Currently, the lockdown is in place till Sunday. India has so far reported 74,281 COVID-19 cases, with deaths crossing 2,450.  

However, prices at spot markets are not likely to rise sharply due to a possible decline in demand from West Asian countries, Delhi-based trader Anand Goyal said. Usually, demand for basmati picks up during Ramzan. Also, the restrictions on movement due to the lockdown and recent steps by Iran to withdraw subsidy on rice imports could hit exports, Goyal said.

On the Indian Commodity Exchange, the May basmati paddy contract ended at 3,410 rupees per 100 kg, up 1.7%. 

The prices of maize fell further in major spot markets as bulk demand from feed makers remained subdued, traders said. The arrivals in Nashik were pegged steady at 700-800 bags (1 bag = 100 kg) and in Nizamabad, supply was largely unchanged at 700-800 bags.

Bulk purchases by the poultry industry and animal feed makers have been subdued as consumption of poultry products declined on rumours that broilers and eggs are carriers of COVID-19, Nizamabad-based trader Amrutlal Kataria said.   

An outbreak of African Swine Fever in Assam is also seen hitting demand in northeastern states as culling pigs is the only option, he said.

A decline in feed consumption due to the virus may also hit demand for maize which is a key component of animal feed in the region, Patna-based trader Avinash Kumar said. So far, over 13,000 pigs have died due to the virus in Assam.    

On the National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange, however, June contract rose 1.3% to end at 1,195 rupees per 100 kg.

The prices of mill-quality wheat in Jaipur were unavailable today as spot markets in Rajasthan are shut. Traders in Rajasthan are protesting against the state government's decision to impose 2% farmers' welfare fee on the purchase of agricultural produce, particularly grains. 

Markets in Indore and Kanpur were shut because of the lockdown. 

The prices of the staple foodgrain are seen declining further in the coming days as the slower pace of government procurement is exerting supply pressure on spot markets, Kota-based trader Aniket Mehta said.  

In Jaipur, prices of bajra were largely steady due to lack of cues, traders said.

Following are today's prices of wheat, maize, paddy, and bajra in rupees per 100 kg, in key wholesale markets, and the change from the previous day of trade:

Commodity
Market
Price
Change
Wheat
Indore
1,830-1,860*
Wheat
Jaipur
1,700-1,720*
Maize
Nashik
1,400-1,430
(-)20-30
Maize
Nizamabad
1,380-1,420
(-)20-30
Pusa 1121 basmati paddy
Amritsar
3,000-3,050
30-50
Bajra
Jaipur
1,750-1,800
*Spot markets for wheat in Indore and Jaipur were shut today

End

Edited by Michael Correya

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China hands out more grain import quotas to increase purchases - sources

5/13/2020

By Hallie Gu and Dominique Patton BEIJING, May 13 (Reuters) - China is allocating more low-tariff import quotas for corn this year and may expand its use of wheat quotas as it seeks to step up farm purchases from the United States and meet a pledge to comply with global trade rules, according to three sources.
China has a 95% self-sufficiency target for its rice, corn and wheat consumption, but allows a certain volume of imports through a tariff rate quota (TRQ) system.
The quotas allow importers to buy specified volumes with duties as low as 1%, compared with 65% without the quotas.
However the opaque system has been widely criticized by grain exporters who say Beijing does not issue the promised volume of quota, limiting purchases from overseas.
As part of a Phase 1 trade deal with the United States in January, China pledged to allow for the full use of its TRQs and it has issued more than 6 million tonnes of low-tariff corn quotas in 2020 so far, said two sources familiar with the matter.
The sources did not want to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.
That includes 1.5 million tonnes of quota issued in the last month, in addition to the batch issued at the start of the year when most quota is normally allocated.
Beijing may issue a total of 7.2 million tonnes of corn quotas, added one of the sources, briefed on the government plan, which would be the first time it has fully allocated its corn quota.
China's state planner, the National Development and Reform Commission, did not immediately respond to a fax seeking comment out of office hours.
PLEDGE TO USE MORE QUOTA
Beijing sets annual corn quotas at 7.2 million tonnes every year, wheat quotas at 9.64 million tonnes and rice at 5.32 million tonnes. The quotas do not specify any preferred origins.
With large portions of quota often going unused or being rolled into the following year, their allocation alone is not enough to predict China's grain import intentions.
However, after losing a World Trade Organization case brought by the United States on its grain quota system, China has also pledged to improve the way they are issued to ensure that more of the quota is used.
"China needs to buy more American farm goods. One way to do it is to expand use of import quota for grains like corn," said a manager with a state-owned firm.
So far, in the first quarter of 2020, China's corn imports totalled 1.25 million tonnes, up 27.3% on the same period a year ago, and came primarily from Ukraine, according to official data.
If quota were fully used, that would translate into $2.94 billion worth of wheat imports, and $1.52 billion of corn at current prices, according to Reuters calculations.
China's wheat quotas have also been issued "more widely" so far this year, said a source with a state-owned company, which has helped boost wheat imports by 23.1% to 1.27 million tonnes in the first quarter compared with the same period in 2019.
China used only a third of its wheat quotas last year. It stipulates that 90% of quota goes to state-owned trading companies, leaving very little for the large number of privately owned millers.
But last year Beijing said non-state companies could apply for the state quota portion using a state-owned trader as an agent. It also said all quota should be fully used "based on market conditions".
Reuters could not determine to what extent those changes are being implemented. But the source said wheat imports may hit as much as 7 million tonnes this year.
"The government might release more quota, or urge buyers to use more of the quota," he said, adding that the grain could come from both the United States and other origins. (Reporting by Hallie Gu and Dominique Patton; Editing by Alex Richardson)
https://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/china-hands-out-more-grain-import-quotas-to-increase-purchases-sources

Government okays return of rice exports

| Publication date 13 May 2020 | 21:38 ICT

The government will allow the rice industry to resume exports of white rice to global markets. Heng Chivoan
The government has decided to allow the rice industry to resume exports of white rice to global markets after a ban was issued in March.
The lifting of the ban comes as the Philippines seeks to import an additional 300,000 tonnes of milled rice from major producers in Southeast Asia.
The decision is in response to a request by the Cambodia Rice Federation (CRF) to gradually resume white rice exports from May 20, said a letter sent from the Ministry of Economy and Finance to the CRF on Wednesday and signed by Minister Aun Pornmoniroth.
In March, Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered a temporary suspension of white rice and paddy exports to ensure adequate domestic supply, food security and price stability in the Kingdom during the Covid-19 pandemic.
CRF president Song Saran told The Post on Wednesday that lifting the ban would boost Cambodia’s white rice exports to countries facing food shortages.
“I think it is the right decision,” Saran said. “We know that Covid-19 has affected food supply chains and this [Cambodian exports] will contribute to the food needs for other countries. At the same time, it will help us create jobs for millers and farmers.”
Meanwhile, the Philippines, the world’s largest rice importer, wants to order around 300,000 tonnes of milled rice from a number of rice-producing countries in the region, including Cambodia, to increase state rice stockpiles.
Secretary of Agriculture of the Philippines William Dar on Monday said the government had asked major rice producers in Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar and India to ship milled rice before the third quarter, while local harvesting yields are low, reported Reuters.
Dar said the government-to-government agreement of this volume will increase Philippine rice imports to three million tonnes this year.
As the Philippines seeks to import more rice, CRF has called on the country to order rice from Cambodia, said Saran.
“Cambodia is already focused on exporting fragrant rice, premium rice of which nearly 80 per cent is exported to international markets, so we are studying the possibility of any quantity that we can export to the Philippines.
“We hope that we will find a trade partner in the Philippines, and we call on companies in the Philippines to order rice from Cambodia,” he said.
Ministry of Commerce spokesman Seang Thay told The Post that the ministry has not received an official letter from the Philippine government. However, Cambodia will have an opportunity to export rice to the Philippine market.
“This opportunity is possible for Cambodia, because Cambodia and the Philippines have already signed a Memorandum of Agreement [MoA] on rice trade,” said Thay.
He was referring to the MoA signed between former commerce minister Cham Prasidh and then-Philippine Ambassador to Cambodia Noe Wong in April 2013.
Only 200 tonnes of milled rice was exported to the Philippines in the first four months of this year, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries data shows.
CRF data shows that total rice exports to international markets reached more than 300,000 tonnes in the first four months of the year, up 40.46 per cent over the same period last year.



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Soaring Prices, Rotting Crops: Coronavirus Triggers Global Food Crisis
Processing and transportation breakdowns, panic buying threaten vulnerable nations; ‘a food crisis with lots of food’
People lined up to receive free food in early May amid a lockdown Lahore, Pakistan. rahat dar/EPA/Shutterstock
By
in Dubai and
in Hong Kong
May 13, 2020 2:52 pm ET
The coronavirus pandemic hit the world at a time of plentiful harvests and ample food reserves. Yet a cascade of protectionist restrictions, transport disruptions and processing breakdowns has dislocated the global food supply and put the planet’s most vulnerable regions in particular peril.
“You can have a food crisis with lots of food. That’s the situation we’re in,” said Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, or FAO.
...
To Read the Full Story

Farmers’ group warns of supply glut, low palay prices

Description: Eireene Jairee Gomez


An organization of farmers on Wednesday warned of a possible rice supply glut and depressed palay (unmilled rice) farmgate prices due to the government’s unlimited importation of the staple even as it is hyping up local production. The warning comes after the Department of Agriculture (DA) issued Sanitary and Phytosanitary Import Clearances (SPSICs) for about 2.7 million tons of rice imports and expressed confidence that these would materialize after Vietnam announced that it would resume exporting rice. According to Federation of Free Farmers National Manager Raul Montemayor, the simultaneous expansion of both imports and local production would only lead to lower farmgate prices. “Based on our computations, we will have an ending inventory by December 31 of this year of 3.9 million tons of rice — good for 110 days — if both these policies are pursued. This will create a glut that will bring down prices during the main harvest season from September to November this year and will even spill over to the dry season harvest from February to April next year,” Montemayor said.

Philippines to remain world's top rice importer until 2021

The Philippines is expected to import around 2.5 million MT of rice in 2020 and 3.3 million MT in 2021
Rappler.com
Published 8:15 PM, May 13, 2020
Updated 8:15 PM, May 13, 2020
RICE. Quezon City residents receive rice during the coronavirus lockdown. Photo by Darren Langit/Rappler
MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines will continue to be the world's top rice importer in 2020 and 2021 to meet demand of over 107 million people, while production of the staple is expected to dip.
According to the Global Agricultural Information Network (GAIN) report of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Philippines and Brazil are projected to have production declines, although modest, while the rest of the rice-producing countries will produce more.
The report noted that Southeast Asia will resume planting, while China will plant earlier than expected. Worldwide, production is projected to hit more than 8 million tons, a new record.
The USDA said the Philippines is set to produce 11.4 million metric tons (MT) of rice in 2020 and 11 million MT in 2021.
Consumption is projected to hit 14.3 million MT this year and 14.5 million MT next year.
"With lower production and tighter stocks, larger imports are expected to enable consumption to rise marginally," the USDA said. The Philippines is expected to import around 2.5 million MT of rice in 2020 and 3.3 million MT in 2021.
"The 2019 rice tariffication law has made imports more available in the market, depressing overall milled rice prices," the USDA added. (READ: Rice tariffication: Birth pains force farmers' kids out of school)
Rice glut
The Philippine Department of Agriculture is aiming to produce 13.51 million MT of rice for 2020.
This would bring the country's rice self-sufficiency to 93% from 87% in 2019. If achieved, it would be the country's highest palay output in at least a decade.
At the same time, the Philippines is also set to import some 300,000 MT of rice through a government-to-government arrangement.
With an ambitious production goal and importation increasing, farmers warn that oversupply would likely depress farmgate prices. (READ: [ANALYSIS] Plummeting rice prices: How will our rice farmers cope?)
"Based on our computations, we will have an ending inventory by December 31 of this year of 3.9 million tons of rice, good for 110 days, if both these policies are pursued. This will create a glut that will bring down prices during the main harvest season from September to November this year and will even spill over to the dry season harvest from February to April next year," said Raul Montemayor, national manager of the Federation of Free Farmers. – Rappler.com

With projected rise in 2021 imports, PHL seen to remain top rice buyer



Description: https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/rice-unload-nonoy-696x430.jpgWorkers unload tons of rice to be distributed to Quezon City barangays affected by the COVID-19 lockdown. (NONOY LACZA)

THE Philippines’s rice imports next year may rise by a third to a record 3.3 million metric tons (MMT), making it the world’s top rice buyer for the third straight year ahead of China, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) said.
In its monthly global grain situation report, the USDA forecast that the country’s rice purchase next year will increase by 800,000 MT from the 2.5 MMT estimated volume this year.
USDA attributed the increase to “tighter” stocks coupled by lower production, which it projected to fall by 3.5 percent to 11 MMT next year. USDA estimated the local rice milled production this year could decline by almost 3 percent to 11.4 MMT from 11.732 MMT last year.
“With lower production and tighter stocks, larger imports are expected to enable consumption to rise marginally,” it said in the report.
“The 2019 rice tariffication law has made imports more available in the market, depressing overall milled rice prices,” it added.
This is the first projection by USDA for global rice trade for 2021.
Based on USDA’s projections, the Philippines’s rice imports next year could eclipse its previous record high of 2.9 MMT recorded in 2019, when the rice trade liberalization (RTL) law was enacted.
Republic Act 11203 or the RTL law deregulated the rice industry and eased import rules for eligible traders and importers.
USDA said total world rice imports next year may reach a three-year high of 45.21 MMT, which is 5.4 percent over 42.88 MMT estimated volume this year due to higher purchase from Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia.
“The greatest import demand growth is forecast in Sub-Saharan Africa,” USDA said.
“Southeast Asia is also expected to have a large increase in imports. This is mostly driven by the Philippines, which is forecast to be the top global importer, displacing China. The Middle East is also set to expand its imports,” the USDA added.
Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) said it is too early to speculate or even assess possible total rice imports by the country for next year.
“It would really depend on the volume of rice that traders and importers will bring in this year. It depends on their appetite,” FFF National Manager Raul Q. Montemayor told the BusinessMirror.
The Philippines started and ended the previous decade as the world’s top rice importer, with the country formally overtaking China as the top buyer of the staple last year, based on USDA data.
Data from the USDA showed that the Philippines’s rice imports in 2019 rose to an all-time high of 2.9 MMT, making the country the top buyer of imported rice last year.
The last time the Philippines was regarded as the world’s top buyer of rice was in 2010, when it imported 2.4 MMT, historical USDA data showed.
The country has imported over 700,000 MT of rice from January to April, with private traders and corporations cornering bulk of the volume, latest Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI) data showed.
About 139 eligible rice importers, 86 of which are private traders, corporations and firms, brought in 728,979.07 MT of rice during the four-month period, latest BPI data analyzed by the BusinessMirror showed.
The rice imports were sourced from Cambodia, India, Italy, Myanmar, Pakistan, Spain, Thailand and Vietnam, based on BPI data.
The 86 private traders imported about 60 percent or 442,998.38 MT of the total volume, with Sodatrade Corp. leading the list with a total volume imported of 34,759.5 MT.
The remaining volume of 285,981 MT of rice was imported by cooperatives and associations, mostly led by farmers, BPI data showed


Customs intercepts N12.7bn smuggled vehicles, rice, others

On May 14, 20203:18 amIn Business
Arrests COVID-19 operational vehicle used for smuggling Importers count losses over port closure in Rivers By Godfrey Bivbere smuggled vehicles, rice, The Federal Operations Unit, FOU Zone A of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has intercepted various items of contraband worth N12.7billion between January and April 2020. The Unit also intercepted a vehicle with Covid-19 sticker used for smuggling frozen chicken into the country from Benin Republic. A statement made available to Vanguard by the Unit’s Public Relations Officer, Jerry Attah, said the vehicle was arrested along Ijebu Ode Expressway. The CAC said, “the officers were professional enough to intercept the vehicle which was believed to be used in the movement of essential commodities for the COVID-19 emergencies but was surprise to see that it was containing the contraband.
:Non-issuance of TDOs by shipping firms, terminal operators delay port operations However, speaking on the activities of the command since this year he said contraband goods worth N12.7 billion were intercepted from smugglers between January and April 2020 Losses over ports closure in Rivers Meanwhile, operators and users of the Rivers and Onne Ports have raised the alarm over loss of their investments and perishable consignments over the crises in the ports following the arrest of port workers by the Rivers State COVID-19 task force.

The state government had imposed a 24-hour lockdown on Port Harcourt and Obia/Akpor local government areas over the COVID-19 pandemic, a situation which effectively blocked port workers from the port services. This is contrary to the guidelines of the presidential task force of COVID-19 which classified port operations as essential services. Daniel Kalu, Managing Director of Africa Atlantic International Agencies, said the vessel transporting his consignment of 4,500 metric tons of frozen mackerel fish worth millions of euros have been unable to berth at the Rivers Port for about two weeks now, a situation which he said could make his company lose the entire consignment.
“Even if we get the consignment out now, we already would have lost half of our investment because the fish has lost quality and we won’t be able to sell at the standard price,” he said. “That is not to speak of the demurrage that we must pay to ship owners for keeping their vessels longer than expected. We pay a demurrage of 7800 US dollars per day.” A vessel laden with a consignment of Muriate of Potash, (blended with urea and other compounds to make fertilizer)) is unable to berth at the Onne Ports as a result of the same situation. The Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) had threatened a nationwide protest over arrest of 20 dockworkers in the state who were said to have violated the lockdown order by venturing to go to work.

 https://www.vanguardngr.com/2020/05/customs-intercepts-n12-7bn-smuggled-vehicles-rice-others/


In a first, Telangana govt plans to tell farmers what to grow basis land and climatic conditions

Farmers not following the sowing recommendation will not be offered federally determined minimum support prices, as a form of disincentive.

india Updated: May 13, 2020 18:23 IST
Description: Zia Haq
Zia Haq
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
Description: The state is poised to implement a broad plan that will suggest which crops should be grown, depending on where farmers are located.
 The state is poised to implement a broad plan that will suggest which crops should be grown, depending on where farmers are located. (Manoj Dhaka/HT file photo. Representative image)
The Telangana government is considering a new recipe to boost farm incomes: dictating farmers, depending on their land and climatic conditions, what to grow, a first in the country.
In a nod to Chinese-style regulations, the move, backed by scientific evidence and experts’ advice, could raise productivity and incomes from farming, analysts said. But it will also see the state on take a bigger role in the farm sector, rather than leaving it to the markets.
Farmers not following the sowing recommendation will not be offered federally determined minimum support prices, as a form of disincentive. They will also not qualify for various input subsidy under the state’s flagship Rythu Bandhu scheme. Input subsidies denote cheap fertilisers and agricultural chemicals, funded by the government.
Chief minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao on Sunday took a meeting with agricultural scientists and agronomists –experts in the science of crop yields– for a final set of recommendations, a statement from his office said.
The state is poised to implement a broad plan that will suggest which crops should be grown, depending on where farmers are located.
According to the plan created by agriculture scientists in the state, paddy has been allotted 8-9 million acres, while cotton is on 5 million acres. Among pulses, tur (a lentil) is sought to be grown 1 million acre and corn on 0.7 million acre. On rest of the arable land, vegetables ought to be grown on 0.35 million acres.
The state will introduce palm oil cultivation interspersed across the state because palm plantation can withstand drought.
“If this policy is followed, then the agriculture produce from the state would get good price. The government should decide on which crop the farmer should cultivate and it is important that the entire cultivation is done based on this policy,” a statement from the state said.
The policy is basically an attempt to break the practise of mono-cropping and introduce crop diversification, said KS Mani of the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University. Crop diversification and more science-based agricultural raises per-acre incomes, he said.
Since rice and wheat fetch higher MSPs, farmers tend to grow much of these and little of others, upending the output balance. This has led to surplus of cereals in the country at the cost of other food articles.
Small farmers who don’t have economies of scale because smaller farms have higher cultivation costs don’t profit from such large-scale wheat-rice systems.
According to the government’s Doubling of Farmers’ Income Report, 2017, the average income of an agricultural household during July 2012 to June 2013 was as low as Rs 6,426 against an average monthly consumption expenditure of Rs 6,223.
In 2019, Haryana started a scheme to disincentivise rice growing in the state to save water in the severely water depleted state, which saw moderate success.
The unique experiment in Haryana could well break a long-standing chokehold on the state’s seriously depleted water table: rampant paddy.
Fifteen thousand farmers in the state, who have traditionally grown only rice, will not be growing the water-intensive crop this summer, the first time in 30 years. They have signed up for a state government drive that rewards them with cash and freebies for ditching paddy for maize.
According to Haryana’s farm department, every hectare (2.4 acre) brought under maize cultivation from rice would save the state 14,000 litres of water needed for irrigation.
“The total area under maize cultivation in districts chosen for the drive now stands at 50,000 hectares,” said Suresh Gehlawat, additional director in the state agriculture department. The move is expected to save 700 million litres of water for the entire season.
In the grain-bowl states of Punjab and Haryana, a practice of paddy-wheat cycle (paddy during summers, wheat during winters) has driven aquifers to an alarmingly low levels.
The campaign worked because of a string of freebies and a state-backed guarantee that all the maize harvested by farmers, who signed up for the programme, would be bought by the state at federally fixed minimum support prices.


PH to remain world’s top rice importer

By: Karl R. Ocampo - Reporter / @kocampoINQ
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:14 AM May 14, 2020
Despite moves by the Department of Agriculture to increase the country’s local production of palay, global projections showed that the Philippines is still on its way to become the biggest importer of the grain this year and the next.
Based on a report released by the US Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service, the Philippines is expected to import 2.5 million metric tons (MT) of rice this year and 3.3 million MT of rice in 2020—seen to be the highest in the world and the highest for the country.
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This would make the Philippines the biggest rice importer for three consecutive years, with a population of 108 million, eventually displacing China from the top spot. The economic behemoth, with a population of 1.4 billion, is only projected to import 2.3 million MT and 2.2 million MT of rice for this year and in 2021.
The Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) said the government’s decision to allow the unimpeded arrival of imports and its campaign to increase local production might sow confusion among Filipino rice farmers, adding that pursuing both policies would inevitably result in an overwhelming glut.
“Based on our computations, we will have an ending inventory by Dec. 31 of this year of 3.9 million MT of rice, good for 110 days, if both these policies are pursued,” FFF national chair Raul Montemayor said. “This will create a glut that will bring down prices during the main harvest season from September to November this year and will even spill over to the dry season harvest from February to April next year.”
DA’s own computation showed that there would be an excess supply for 94 days by the end of 2020, assuming that all import permits would be used by the private sector. According to the Bureau of Plant Industry, it has approved the entry of 2.7 million MT of rice this year, 28 percent of which have already arrived in the country.




266,000 hectares of rice, corn farms at risk as Typhoon Ambo hits PH

Published 
By Madelaine Miraflor
Nearly 266,000 hectares of rice and corn farms are at risk as Typhoon Ambo hit the country, prompting the Department of Agriculture (DA) to release portions of its Quick Response Fund (QRF).
Description: Department of Agriculture (DA)
Department of Agriculture (MANILA BULLETIN)
Based on the latest data from the DA’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (DRRM), Ambo, the first storm to make a landfall in the Philippines for this year, will affect rice and corn areas, particularly those under reproductive and maturity stages.
At risk to possible destruction by the typhoon are some 175,954 hectares of rice farms and 89,303 hectares of corn farms located in Bicol Region and Western Visayas. Agriculture Spokesperson Noel Reyes said the DA is “now prepared” and that interventions are now being positioned.
“We have funds for this under the QRF,” Reyes said in a virtual press briefing on Thursday.
However, Reyes did not specify the amount of money that will be withdrawn from QRF, which is a built-in fund allocation or stand-by budget that certain agencies can tap into immediately to assist areas stricken by natural calamities.
As for the other interventions, DA’s DRRM said rice seeds worth 75,875 bags has already been prepositioned for the affected areas, while it is 8,448 bags for corn seeds.
DA also prepositioned drugs and biologics for livestock and poultry needs, as well as funds from the Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (PCIC) to indemnify farmers.
The other day, DRRM said that despite the risks, Ambo may be beneficial to areas experiencing a dry spell, particularly to crops that are on their newly planted and vegetative stages, and to other farming operations that need moisture, including land preparation.
Ambo, it added, may also replenish any rainwater harvesting facilities such as dams and small scale irrigation projects.
For this month, an average of 12 percent, equivalent to 109,317 hectares of rice, are harvestable in CAR, Regions I, II, III, IV-A, V, VI, VII and VIII, the regions along the forecasted path of Ambo.
Farmers have been advised to harvest mature crops and mobilize post-harvest facilities; secure seed reserves, planting materials and other farm inputs to higher ground, as well as feed and water for livestock; relocate farm machineries and equipment to higher ground; and clear drainage in irrigation and rice paddies from obstructions to prevent flooding.



Typhoon Vongfong Raked Through the Philippines Bringing Damaging Winds, Storm Surge, Flooding Rain

weather.com meteorologists

Published: May 15, 2020
Typhoon Vongfong, the first typhoon of 2020, raked the central Philippines with flooding rainfall, landslides and damaging winds.
Vongfong, which was locally known as "Ambo" in the Philippines, made landfall just after midday local time on May 14 near the town of San Policarpo in the province of Eastern Samar, about 350 miles southeast of the nation's capital, Manila.



at 12:15PM (14 May 2020): Typhoon #AmboPH has made landfall over San Policarpio, Eastern Samar.
Description: Embedded video

Less than 2 hours after landfall, the U.S. Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) estimated Vongfong's maximum sustained winds were 115 mph, Category 3 equivalent on the U.S. Saffir Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale.
Description: https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/875313058511331328/PWU2G353_normal.jpg

Devastation of tropical typhoon #Ambo #AmboPH #Vongfon.
Catubig River swells. Roofs and walls of some houses are unnailed. No more electricity in the entire province as the heavier rains pour and stronger wind blows.

At Las Navas,Northern Samar, Philippines.
Description: Embedded video

Vongfong lost intensity as its center moved across the Eastern Visayas region after landfall. By the following afternoon, Vongfong was rated by JTWC as a tropical storm.
The Philippine weather service, PAGASA, issued a tropical cyclone wind signal number 3, the third highest signal on a scale of 1 to 5, for the parts of the central Philippines including the Eastern Visayas and the Bicol Region. In these areas, widespread power outages and downed trees were expected, with considerable wind damage to structures, especially those of poorer construction, possible.
Given Vongfong's small size, the Philippine capital, Manila, was only expected to have peripheral impacts, including bands of locally heavy rain and gusty winds, possibly tropical storm-force.
(MORE: News Impacts)
Vongfong is the first named storm of 2020 in the Western Pacific Ocean, and the first major hurricane strength storm in the northern hemisphere this year.
The Western Pacific Basin is Earth's most active basin for tropical cyclones due to a vast expanse of warm water, a lack of dry air that invades the Atlantic Basin.
Since these Western Pacific systems can form any time of year, there really is no season, per se.
From 1981 through 2010, an average of 26 Western Pacific named storms formed each year, 17 of which became typhoons, more than double the average of Atlantic Basin named storms (12) and hurricanes (6).
The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.




 Cambodia to lift partial ban on rice exports on May 20

Cambodia to lift partial ban on rice exports on May 20

Cambodia will lift a partial ban on rice exports that had been put in place to ensure local food security during the coronavirus crisis, the finance minister told exporters of the grain on Wednesday.
Finance Minister Aun Porn Moniroth wrote to the Cambodia Rice Federation to confirm the decision.
“I would like to inform (that) … the royal government has decided to allow exports of white rice gradually starting from May 20, 2020, onward,” the letter said.
RPT-Asia Rice-Thai prices dip as demand flows to India, Vietnam
Nakul Iyer

(This is a repeat of an item issued on Thursday)

* Thai prices fall to over 1-month low, but still most expensive

* Robust demand pushes Indian rates to more than 9-month peak

* Vietnamese rates rise to $450-$460 a tonne on low supplies

By Nakul Iyer
BENGALURU, May 15 (Reuters) - Thai rice export prices fell this week as the drought-hit country saw fresh supplies entering the market while also facing stiff competition from cheaper Indian and Vietnamese offers.Thailand’s benchmark 5% broken rice RI-THBKN5-P1 prices were quoted at $480-$485 a tonne, their lowest since March 26 and down from $515–$546 last week.
“We’re beginning to see new supply entering the market this month and forecasts for rain have eased concerns over supply generally,” a Bangkok-based rice trader said.
One of the worst droughts in decades put a strain on supplies, causing prices to soar to a seven-year high in April.
“Demand remains flat but there are hopes that buyers in places like the Philippines may be interested in Thai rice as prices dropped, although competition from Vietnam is very strong,” another rice trader in Bangkok said.
Prices for top-exporter India’s 5% broken parboiled variety RI-INBKN5-P1 edged to their highest since early August at $380-$385 per tonne this week.
Demand is better than last year as Indian rice is offered at a discount compared with exports from Thailand and Vietnam, said B.V. Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters Association.
The availability of trucks and workers, which limited exports in April, has improved, Rao added.
Exports are also getting support from a weaker rupee , raising exporters’ margin from overseas sales, exporters said.
Meanwhile, low supplies pushed rates for 5% broken rice RI-VNBKN5-P1 from Vietnam to a near one-year high of $450-$460.
“Traders are rushing to fulfil contracts signed before the export ban (introduced in March), while the government is also buying rice from farmers for its national stockpiling program,” a trader based in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta province of An Giang said.
“Supplies from the upcoming harvest will not increase sharply as the harvest will take place slowly, lasting more than two months.”

Vietnam fully resumed rice exports from May, after a ban in March to ensure adequate supplies during the coronavirus pandemic.
Preliminary shipping data showed nearly 150,000 tonnes of rice is to be loaded at Ho Chi Minh City port between May 2 and May 17, with most of it heading to the Philippines.
Elsewhere, Bangladesh will procure an additional 200,000 tonnes of paddy during the current harvest season to secure supplies for relief operations, a food ministry official said, amid the coronavirus pandemic which has infected 18,863 people and killed 283 in the country as of Thursday. (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok; Editing by Arpan Varghese and Mark Potter)
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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