Tripura to procure paddy from farmers at
Rs 18.15 per kg
Law
Minister Ratan Lal Nath Wednesday said the state government would spend Rs
41.63 crore to procure the second crop of the Kharif season.
Written by Debraj Deb |
Agartala | Updated: May 20, 2020 7:19:29 pm
X
Tripura’s BJP-IPFT government
procured paddy from farmers at an MSP of Rs 17.50 for the first time in 2018.
(File/Wikimedia Commons)
In an effort to boost the primary
sector as part of its lockdown exit strategy, the Tripura government has
announced it will procure 20,000 MT paddy from farmers at Minimum Support Price
(MSP).
Law Minister Ratan Lal Nath
Wednesday said the state government would spend Rs 41.63 crore to procure the
second crop of the Kharif season. Farmers would be provided Rs 18.15 per kg
paddy under the MSP rates during the procurement drive.
The state food department was asked
to open 22 procurement centers across Tripura in phased manner in different
parts of the state from May 26 till August 31.
On the issue, Chief Minister Biplab
Kumar Deb tweeted: “The state government will purchase 20,000 MT additional
paddy directly from farmers of the state at Rs 18.15 per Kg from May 26. This
initiative will reach Rs. 36.30 crore directly to farmers of the state”, Deb
wrote.
The government invited e-tenders
earlier on May 2 from local rice millers to minimise the expenditure burden.
Tripura’s BJP-IPFT government procured
paddy from farmers at an MSP of Rs 17.50 for the first time in 2018. They have
procured 10,000 MT and 16,870 MT paddy in two procurement phases since then.
Earlier on April 27, the Chief
Minister had appealed to people to increase primary sector activities like
agriculture, horticulture, fisheries, dairy etc. as an alternative to tackle
the adverse impact of the lockdown on the economy.
The state government has also
announced it will recruit 63 agriculture officers on group-B gazetted posts in
a recent cabinet meeting.
Along with this, the state cabinet
approved the State Fire Service to undergo a change of nomenclature to Tripura
Fire and Emergency Service.
Problem of plenty for solvent extractors
Huge inventory of by-product cause
for concern
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Posted: May 21, 2020 07:53 AM (IST)
Vijay C Roy
Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, May 20
Edible Oil Biz
· No of units in Punjab & Haryana:
100
Raw
material used: Rice bran, mustard
Over 100 edible oil refineries or
solvent extractors in Punjab and Haryana are pinning hope on the revival of
poultry industry. Sounds confusing? But it’s true. Though the lockdown failed
to have any material effect on refineries dominated by the MSMEs (95%), they
are sitting on a huge inventory of de-oiled cake (by-product), which is used as
a raw material for poultry and cattle feed industry. The demand for cake
crashed amid steep fall in demand of poultry products.
“There was hardly any impact on the
solvent extractors as they were allowed to operate during the lockdown being in
the essential industry category. However, the poultry industry crashed and it
led to decline in demand for poultry feed,” said AR Sharma, Chairman, Sangrur
District Industrial Chamber. The price
of de-oiled cake crashed by almost 30% amid the slump in demand. According to
Sharma, because of huge inventory their precious working capital has been
blocked. The liquidation of the stock would depend on how fast the poultry
industry revives.
The extractors use rice bran and
mustard for processing oil. Rice bran oil is produced from rice chaff — an oily
layer between the paddy husk and the rice grain. The process involves a long
chain where farmers sell paddy to rice millers. Millers sell the chaff to
solvent extractors, who further sell it to the refiners. The refiners process
it into oil.
As the units were operational during
the lockdown, the industry was able to retain the migrant manpower. However,
they witnessed shifting of labour from one job to another, leading to some
disruption in production.
“Solvent extractors across the two
states had to reduce their operating capacity to 30-40% initially due to
disruption in raw material supply and labour shortage. The daily-wage workers
preferred to work in mandis to earn more during the wheat procurement season,”
said another extractor requesting anonymity.
With the procurement season almost
over, many labourers have returned to extractors and as a result their capacity
utilisation has reached 60%.
The processors are of the view that
there is a huge potential for solvent extractors in Punjab and Haryana. If
Punjab aims at producing just 10-20% of domestic market potential for vegetable
oils, the entire area of Punjab under rice and wheat cultivation will get
shifted to oilseeds’ cultivation.
BV Mehta, Executive Director,
Solvent Extractors’ Association of India, said India’s total consumption of
edible oils is 23 million tonnes, of which domestic production stands at 7.5
million tonnes and the rest is met through import.
The increase in oilseeds’
cultivation will not only save precious foreign exchange worth Rs 73,000 crore
annually but also provide the much-needed raw material to the extraction
industry, which is currently operating at 35% capacity, said Sharma.
Since oilseeds crushing and
extraction industry is a labour-intensive industry, additional capacity
utilisation will provide job opportunities to a large number of people.
New rice collaboration inked
Sok Chan / Khmer Times
IRRI’s support for Cambodia’s rice sector began in the 1960s, when it trained Cambodian scientists and collected more than 4,000 local rice varieties for conservation in the International Rice Genebank. Then in the late 70s and early 80s, many traditional rice varieties were lost because of conflict and famine. The IRRI was able to repatriate 766 varieties to replenish the country’s rice diversity.
The partnership was formalised with the first memorandum of understanding in 1986 and, through the IRRI’s continued support, Cambodia was able to significantly increase its rice production from 2.4 million tonnes of in 1993 to 10.8 million tonnes in 2019. Transformation in rice-based farming systems have also played a key role in the country’s recent economic development and growth.
According to the collaborative work plan 2020-2023, the IRRI seeks to boost its collaborations with the ministry along with other national partners to achieve key goals.
These include enhancing the commercialisation of the rice sector through value chain assessment and strengthening, and productivity and resiliency through germplasm conservation and utilisation, crop improvement and seed system development.
Veng Sakhon, Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and fisheries, said that over the next four years, both parties will drive the crops production chain and attempt to boost exports.
Sakhon added that the IRRI would help Cambodia to research new types of rice breeding. He added that Cambodia has to find the new rice seedlings to ensure resilience against both climate change and pests.
“While some seedling is of low quality, we also have to further strengthen, and improve our ability to produce the seedling response to market needs and exports,” he added
Multidisciplinary
Study Tracks Spread of Rice Farming
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
NEW
YORK, NEW YORK—According to a statement released by New York University, researchers Michael D. Purugganan,
Rafal M. Gutaker, and their colleagues combined information about the genomes
of more than 1,400 varieties of rice with geographical, archaeological, and
historical climate data to trace the spread of rice farming across northern and
southern Asia.
It had been previously thought that
rice diversity was based upon the amount of available water, but the study
suggests that temperature may have been the key factor. The researchers
determined that the japonica subspecies of Asian rice, which was first
cultivated in China some 9,000 years ago, was mainly farmed in China for some
4,000 years, until a global cooling event some 4,200 years ago. At that point,
japonica rice split into temperate and tropical varieties. The temperate
varieties were grown in northern China, Korea, and Japan, while the tropical
varieties spread to Southeast Asia.
The researchers explained that this change in
varieties of rice some 4,200 years ago is reflected in the archaeological
record. The genetic analysis and archaeological record also indicate that
tropical japonica rice reached islands in Southeast Asia some 2,500 years ago through
trade networks. The indica subspecies of rice, on the other hand, originated in
India’s lower Ganges Valley some 4,000 years ago, and was probably first
transported to China some 2,000 years ago. To read about how rice terraces
might have helped the Ifugao resist Spanish colonization, go to "Letter
from the Philippines: One Grain at a Time."
Divergence in flowering time contributes reproductive isolation between wild rice species
Speciation is the process by which new species forms and is the driving force of biodiversity. Since Darwin published On the Origin of Species, great efforts have been performed without interruption to explore the pattern and mechanism of speciation. It is well acknowledged that determining the forms of reproductive isolation and their relative importance in species divergence is of critical importance for our understanding of speciation. Although substantial investigations on reproductive isolation have been made on numerous model species, relatively limited work has been focused on natural systems that evolve in the wild. Previous studies have shown that, as the direct ancestors of Asian cultivated rice, Oryza rufipogon and O. nivara are a progenitor-daughter species pair and diverged very recently (roughly 150 thousand years) and provide a feasible model to study reproductive isolation and the underlying mechanism.
Here, researchers chose three pairs of sympatric populations of the two species from Nepal, Cambodia and Laos to have performed 238 combinations of artificial crossing, including the combinations between species, between populations within species, and between individuals within populations. On this basis, they estimated the seed set of crossing pollinations, F1 viability and fertility to evaluate the post-zygotic reproductive isolation. In addition, researchers collected the flowering time data of these populations censused in their previous common experiment to assess the pre-zygotic reproductive isolation. The results showed that O. nivara flowered on average 80 earlier than O. rufipogon with non-overlap in flowering peak between sympatric populations. By contrast, no significant reduction was found in seed set of crossing pollinations, F1 viability and fertility relative to the estimates of the two parents. Researchers also found that interspecies crossing with O. nivara as the mother showed higher seed sets than the combinations with O. rufipogon as the mother and that artificial emasculation during hand pollinations affected the seed set to some extents. Together, this study demonstrated that divergent flowering time caused nearly complete reproductive isolation between two wild rice species and the change of flowering time of the new species O. nivara is an adaption to shifted environments
.
New pygmy seahorse discovered, first of its kind in Africa
“It’s like finding a kangaroo in Norway,” says a researcher of the new species of lentil-size fish, found 5,000 miles from its nearest cousins.
By
In rough, boulder-strewn waters off eastern South Africa, researchers have found a new species: a pygmy seahorse about the size of a grain of rice.
The finding shocked them because all seven species of pygmy seahorse, except for one in Japan, inhabit the Coral Triangle, a biodiverse region of more than two million square miles in the southwestern Pacific. This one lives 5,000 miles away, the first pygmy seahorse seen in all of the Indian Ocean and the continent of Africa.
“It's like finding a kangaroo in Norway,” says Richard Smith, a marine biologist based in the United Kingdom and co-author of a new study on the species, known as the African or Sodwana Bay pygmy seahorse. The second name refers to the location where it was found, a popular scuba-diving spot close to the Mozambique border.
© NGP, Content may not
reflect National Geographic's current map policy.
The new species looks somewhat similar to other pygmy seahorses, except that
it has one set of spines on its back that have sharp, incisor-like points on
the tips, says co-author Graham Short,
an ichthyologist at the California Academy of Sciences and the Australian
Museum in Sydney. In contrast, the other similar pygmy seahorses have
flat-tipped spines.“We really don't know what these spines are used for,” Short says. “Many species of seahorses in general are spiny, so their presence could be possibly due to sexual selection—the females may prefer spinier males.” (Related: Strange mating habits of the seahorse.)
The surprising discovery, described in a study published May 19 in the journal ZooKeys, shows how little we know about the ocean, particularly when it comes to tiny creatures, the authors say—and that there are likely many more pygmy seahorse species to be identified.
“A gift from the sea”
Dive instructor Savannah Nalu Olivier first stumbled upon the creature in Sodwana Bay in 2017, while examining bits of algae on the seafloor. The bay is known for having many species of rare fish, sharks, and sea turtles.She shared photographs of the fish with her colleagues, and in 2018 they made their way to Smith, who, with colleague Louw Claassens, collected several specimens of the animal at depths of 40 to 55 feet.
The researchers have named the new seahorse Hippocampus nalu, after Olivier, whose nickname is appropriately “Fish.” (She’s also a Pisces.) In the South African languages Xhosa and Zulu, “nalu” roughly translates to “here it is.”
“I told her that this was a gift from the sea,” says Louis Olivier, Savannah’s father, who owns a scuba diving outfit called Pisces Diving Sodwana Bay. He adds he’s “super stoked about her discovery.”
Mysterious anatomy
Smith sent several specimens of the new species to Short, who analyzed their genetics and body structures using a CT scanner.His research revealed that, like other pygmy seahorses, the newly found animal has two wing-like structures on its back, rather than one, as in larger seahorses. These “wings” in general serve an unknown purpose for seahorses.
Also like other pygmy seahorses, the African species has only one gill slit on its upper back, instead of two below each side of the head, like larger seahorses—another mystery.
That would be “like having a nose on the back of your neck,” Short says.
But the new seahorse is unique from its tiny kin in that it was found living in turf-like algae, amid boulders and sand. Sodwana Bay has large swells, and the little seahorses appear to be comfortable being swept about, says Smith, who observed a pygmy seahorse get covered in sand and then wriggle its way out.
“They regularly get sand-blasted,” Smith says. Other pygmy seahorses, which stick to the calmer waters around coral reefs, “are more dainty. But this [species] is built of sturdier stuff.”
Like other pygmy seahorses, the African version is thought to eat tiny copepods and crustaceans. It also is well camouflaged to match its surroundings.
·
Consumers
in China are worried about further repercussions from the pandemic as it
continues to spread globally. “We expect food stockpiling to continue
especially in cities exposed to logistic disruption,” said Kaho Yu, senior Asia
risk analyst at Verisk Maplecroft, a consultancy.
·
Likewise,
China has been building up its crude oil stockpile, and went on a buying
spree in the first quarter of this year, data show.
·
The
pandemic has underscored concerns about food and energy security in China.
A
customer wearing face mask buys flour at a supermarket on May 12, 2020 in
Taiyuan, Shanxi Province of China.
Zhang
Yun | China News Service | Getty Images
China has been building up its food
and energy stockpile this year, taking advantage of slumping crude oil prices even before the coronavirus pandemic
disrupted supplies.
The world’s second largest economy,
which has limited arable land, is facing pressure to shore up its food supplies
as prices for food started ticking higher last year, prior to the virus
outbreak.
Lockdowns
and movement restrictions aimed at containing the coronavirus have triggered
transportation and logistics bottlenecks.
Those blockages have highlighted
the vulnerability of global supply chains, and fears of food shortages have
come to the forefront of countries, both in developed and emerging economies.
Fear is a powerful motivator. It’s driving
policy in China currently. Fits well with those hardliners that want to rebuild
food reserves.
Arlan
Suderman
CHIEF COMMODITIES ECONOMIST AT
INTL FCSTONE
Consumers in China are worried
about further repercussions from the pandemic as it continues to spread
globally.
“People there (in China) are
panicked that coronavirus will eventually shut down the world’s ports, making
it impossible for them to import,” said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities
economist for INTL FCStone in a tweet on Monday. “As such, they are hoarding
supplies now while they are cheap and available.”
“Fear
is a powerful motivator. It’s driving policy in China currently. Fits well with
those hardliners that want to rebuild food reserves,” he added.
Food prices surge
China is the world’s largest
consumer of pork, a staple protein for the country.
In the first four months of the
year, meat imports in China rose 82%
compared to a year ago. These include pork, beef and poultry.
“We expect food stockpiling to
continue especially in cities exposed to logistic disruption. The confluence of
expected food price increases alongside an economic contraction and rising
unemployment will push up the risk of civil unrest,” said Kaho Yu, senior Asia
risk analyst at Verisk Maplecroft, a consultancy.
Already, food inflation in the
country has been ticking higher.
Last Tuesday, China announced that food
prices rose 14.8% in April from a year ago. Even though it was lower than
the 18% increase in March, it was still at a high level.
Pork prices rose almost 97% in
April in what has been a persistent trend since
early 2019 due to the African swine fever epidemic in pigs that
decimated China’s hog herds.
In comparison, non-food prices rose
just 0.4% in April, official government data showed.
Soybean supplies are particularly vulnerable to supply shocks as
China, the top importer of the commodity, needs the oilseed to make animal feed
and cooking oil.
In April, China’s soybean imports fell 12% from a
year earlier, customs data showed, due to bad weather causing the delay of
cargoes from top supplier Brazil.
As for rice, China is the world’s
largest producer of the staple grain with most of its supplies being consumed
domestically.
Even so, concerns about food
security of the staple grain have led to panic buying and spurred the state to
acquire more stocks from the market for its national reserve.
In April, Chinese authorities assured the
population that it was stepping up state buying of rice and that there were
enough stocks, state news agency Xinhua reported.
“We expect China to continue
stockpiling crops to ensure sufficient supply over the next six months by
scouring the globe for available supplies,” said Yu in a recent
report.
The consultancy puts China in its
“high risk” category in terms of food import security, which means that its
food imports risk being subjected to disruption.
Crude oil reserve building
Likewise, China has been building up its crude oil
stockpile, and went on a buying spree in the first quarter of this year, data
show.
Although crude oil imports fell in April compared
to a year ago, they still rose from March. But analysts say limited storage
facilities could put a cap on imports.
China is expected to continue importing crude to
fill its reserves taking advantage of lower oil prices.
Lei
Sun
SENIOR CONSULTANT AT WOOD
MACKENZIE
“Major crude oil importers such as
China have been known to build their strategic reserves when prices are low, as
seen in previous oil price routs,” Lei Sun, senior consultant at Wood
Mackenzie, said in a March report. “China is expected to
continue importing crude to fill its reserves taking advantage of lower oil
prices.”
However, the country has less room
to import than it did in the last two years, due to limitations in storage
capacity, he said.
As supply lines continue to be
disrupted due to the coronavirus outbreak, Yu at Verisk Maplecroft said he
expects Beijing to double down on building more storage capacity, on top of
energy development at home.
“Energy is also core to the
country’s economic engine. Throughout the pandemic, Beijing has been
prioritising maintaining a stable coal supply with an eye on power generation
for industrial activities,” said Yu. “We also expect Beijing to speed up the
resumption of large scale energy infrastructure projects.”
Putting food and energy first
Food and energy security have
always been important for China, but the pandemic has underscored these
concerns.
In April, President Xi Jinping spoke
about food and energy supply security several times, noted Yu.
In the same month, state agencies —
such as China’s National Development and Reform Commission, the National
Food and Strategic Reserves Administration and other ministries — issued a
policy notice aimed at ensuring adequate food production, storage capacity and
logistics, Yu noted.
Also in April, China’s National
Energy Agency issued a list of policy areas to focus on this year. They
included power supply, grid networks, oil and gas infrastructure, and coal
projects.
The developments underscored the
government’s concerns, he said.
“Both Xi’s rhetoric and associated
policy announcements from various ministries show how food and energy security
are high on the government’s agenda,” said Yu.
“All of them are aiming to avoid
potential pandemic-linked supply shortages and to increase self-sufficiency of
critical resources over the long term. The COVID-19′s disruption on trade and
industrial activities has reignited Chinese leadership’s long-running concerns
over resource security.”
Rice, palay prices continue to rise
By: Karl R. Ocampo - Reporter / @kocampoINQ
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 04:11 AM May 20, 2020
Prices of both rice and palay continued to rise as the persistence of the new
coronavirus pandemic triggered local government units and households to stock
up on their rice reserves.
Palay prices
at the farm-gate increased to P18.81 a kilo during the first week of May, data
from the Philippine Statistics Authority showed, up from P15.79 a kilo at the
start of the year.
ADVERTISEMENT
Similarly, a kilo of regular milled rice and well-milled rice rose by 3.75
percent and 2.15 percent, respectively, to P37.90 and P42.34 a kilo during the
same period.
The
pandemic, while an unlikely source of reprieve, ended the slump in prices that
started in January last year following the implementation of the rice
tariffication law.
Farmers are
expected to enjoy this favorable outlook for the rest of the year, unless the
arrival of contracted imports by the private sector and the government would
coincide with the country’s harvest season.
The
extension of the lockdown in Metro Manila and other parts of the country has
led prices to consistently go up as demand for the staple soared after LGUs,
national agencies and numerous nonprofit organizations intensified relief
efforts.
A lot of
families—whose incomes are tied to nonessential industries that were ordered to
close or operate on a skeleton staff—still rely on aid, which always include
rice.
The highest
quotations for a kilo palay were recorded in the provinces of Negros Occidental
(P25.70), Bohol (P24), Zamboanga del Sur (P24.09), Bukidnon (P23.55), Davao del
Sur (P23.50) and North Cotabato (P23.80).
Other
provinces whose palay rates were still below the NFA support price of P20 a
kilo included Kalinga (P16), Ilocos Sur (P15), and Bukidnon, Bulacan, Davao
City and Iloilo (P13).
Globally,
rice prices have surged to their highest in seven years as governments beef up
their respective stocks.
Countries in
Asia, including the Philippines, have pushed for programs that would
aggressively bring up rice production to ease dependence on what has become a
volatile global rice market. INQ
Đồng Tháp improves irrigation works to water summer – autumn rice
Update: May, 20/2020 - 11:04
Sowing the summer – autumn rice in Đồng
Tháp Province’s Thanh Bình District. — VNA/VNS Photo Nguyễn Văn Trí
ĐỒNG
THÁP — The Cửu Long (Mekong) Delta province of Đồng Tháp has built new
pumping stations for irrigation and upgraded existing ones to ensure there is
sufficient water for the summer-autumn rice crop.
The
province plans to grow the grain on more than 180,000ha. It has a
dense river and canal network and an open irrigation system with more than
4,000km of irrigation canals, 2,200 sluices and more than 1,200 electric
pumping stations, according to its Department of Agriculture and Rural
Development.
The pumping stations can, in the normal course,
supply water to irrigate nearly 100 per cent of the summer-autumn rice, whose
planting is underway.But this year there could be a water shortage, and 6,700ha of lands under various crops this summer-autumn could lack irrigation because the rainy season has been delayed and is forecast to be deficient, according to the province’s Centre for Hydro-Meteorology Forecasting.
To mitigate this, the province People’s Committee has ordered localities to focus on checking and repairing pumping stations and building more of them.
Farmers are encouraged to adopt efficient irrigation methods to save water.
Tháp Mười District, a locality with an efficient pumping system, has 129 stations to irrigate 37,500ha.
Nguyễn Minh Tâm, deputy chairman of its People’s Committee, said the district’s communes and towns have been instructed to inspect and dredge irrigation canals and draw up appropriate pumping schedules.
The Mỹ Đông 2 Agricultural Service Co-operative in Mỹ Đông Commune has, for instance, spent more than VNĐ30 billion (US$1.3 million) on building a pumping station, irrigation ditches, roads, and smart irrigation systems for its members’ 170ha of rice paddies.
This has helped them conserve water, reduce costs and improve yields.
Under a 2014-20 plan to develop pumping stations the province has invested VNĐ367 billion ($15.7 million) to provide irrigation for 203,500ha of land.
The 2019-20 winter-spring crop saw farmers in the province grow rice on 200,000ha and harvest 1.4 million tonnes of paddy to earned incomes of VNĐ18 - 20 million ($770 - 860) per hectare, VNĐ5 million higher than a year earlier. The province plans to grow a total of 490,000ha of rice this year.
Last year it had planted 521,000ha for an output of 3.34 million tonnes. VNS
Organic rice gets trade boost
PUBLISHED : 20 MAY 2020 AT 08:05
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
WRITER: PHUSADEE ARUNMAS
The
Commerce Ministry has registered a domain for Thai farm and food products,
TraceThai.com, with local organic rice chosen as the pilot product given its
high value, strong market demand and export potential.
Pimchanok
Vonkorpon, director-general of the Trade Policy and Strategy Office under the
Commerce Ministry, said the registration is part of an ongoing project of the
office in supporting Thai farmers and Thai organic rice exporters.
A
blockchain system will shorten the processing time for obtaining licences,
facilitate trade and promote trust among foreign partners, she said.
According
to Ms Pimchanok, the office picked organic rice as the pilot product because of
its high value and export potential, as well as its well-established
verification and standardisation processes.
The
goal of the project is to provide systematic verification for buyers and
importers in Thailand and abroad using the blockchain system because of its
transparent, secure and trustworthy character, which will generate stronger
trust and better responses to the demands of consumers.
The
project will support trade facilitation in the digital era, increase efficiency
of cross-border trade, reduce costs and elevate the whole value chain of Thai
agriculture, Ms Pimchanok said.
"The
office is confident that having a pilot blockchain traceability system for Thai
food and farming will allow partner countries to keep track of Thai food and
farming products with full trust," she said. "Blockchain technology
is especially apt as the baseline of this traceability system, since it
provides the highest degree of transparency while protecting trade secrets and
information of farmers and stakeholders through its data-editing protection.
Thus it creates stronger assurance in Thai food and agricultural goods, and the
system can be further applied to other products in the future."
Participants
in TraceThai.com's blockchain are required to provide certificates issued by
organic standards certified bodies. The system does not issue certificates for
farmers' land; it just distributes and shares certified information to other
stakeholders in the system, including importers, who can all review the
information at the same time.
This
process should tremendously reduce processing time for all parties.
"The
system is considered the government's first Thai traceability system for
agricultural and food products," Ms Pimchanok said. "We have chosen
highly valued organic rice as the pilot product, and we will be monitoring and
evaluating the process to observe any difficulties or challenges regarding data
input in the blockchain system."
In
2019, Thailand's global agricultural exports were worth 675.136 billion baht.
Arkansas Game and Fish touts Waterfowl Rice Incentive
Conservation Enhancement program
by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net) May
19, 2020 12:02 pm 269 views
The
Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is accepting applications from rice field
owners to enroll in its expanded Waterfowl Rice Incentive Conservation
Enhancement program.
Landowners
may receive as much as $150 per acre annually while still maintaining the
current production of rice fields by following post-harvest guidelines and allowing
permit-based hunts during waterfowl season on their properties. The program is
aimed at enrolling rice fields within 10 miles of many AGFC wildlife
management areas popular with duck hunters.
Now
in its third year, the AGFC’s WRICE program has been awarded a grant from the
National Resources Conservation Service’s Voluntary Public Access and Habitat
Incentive Program. The grant will boost the program to the tune of $2.1
million, distributed during the next three years to participating landowners.
“The
first year, we focused on paying landowners to leave the waste rice in the
fields instead of tilling before spring and flooding the land to make that food
more available to waterfowl,” said Luke Naylor, waterfowl program coordinator
for the AGFC. “Last year, we added the public access requirement to the program
and still saw great interest from landowners. This grant will let us expand
that opportunity for landowners and hunters even more.”
Arkansas
Rice Federation member Sam Whitaker of Monticello participated in the program’s
public access component last year.
“The
WRICE program gives more people the opportunity to experience the outdoors
and enables the public to be more involved in conservation efforts as
a result of their participation,” said Whitaker. “Many farmers are already
engaged in the cultivation of waterfowl habitat through the post-harvest
flooding of rice fields, which can provide a completely different hunting
environment than flooded timber.”
Naylor
says landowners with land already enrolled in Wetland Reserve Program easements
also can apply for some of these funds if they are willing to allow public
access for hunting and wildlife-viewing on their property.
The
program’s main goal is focused on increasing waterfowl resources on rice
fields, a critical component of Arkansas’s rich duck-hunting
history. According to recent research, only about 20% of the 2
million acres of harvested rice fields in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley are
flooded each year, and fall tillage appears to be on the increase in many parts
of Arkansas. “Getting farmers to suspend fall tillage and flood more of those
fields could have a major impact on realized waterfowl food values,” Naylor
said.
“Interested
landowners will work with us to provide improved waterfowl habitat and public
hunting opportunities on their fields through a managed draw system,” Naylor said.
“The hunts are highly controlled, and hunters have shown incredible respect for
this great new opportunity. We hope to expand from last year’s 941 acres of
huntable WRICE fields to 3,750 acres this year.”
Landowners
interested in becoming part of this innovative conservation and hunter access
program can visit www.agfc.com/wrice or
contact their local private lands biologist through the website www.agfc.com/habitat to
learn more.
Arkansas
Incentivizes Rice Farmers for Waterfowl Habitat and Hunting Access
LITTLE
ROCK, AR -- The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) is accepting
applications from rice field owners to enroll in its expanded Waterfowl Rice
Incentive Conservation Enhancement (WRICE) program. Landowners may
receive as much as $150 per acre annually while still maintaining the current
production of rice fields by following post-harvest guidelines and allowing
permit-based hunts during waterfowl season on their properties. The
program is aimed at enrolling rice fields within 10 miles of many AGFC wildlife
management areas popular with duck hunters.
Now in its third year, the AGFC's WRICE program has been awarded a grant from the National Resources Conservation Service's Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program. The grant will boost the program to $2.1 million, distributed during the next three years to participating landowners.
"The first year, we focused on paying landowners to leave the waste rice in the fields instead of tilling before spring and flooding the land to make that food more available to waterfowl," said Luke Naylor, waterfowl program coordinator for the AGFC. "Last year, we added the public access requirement to the program and still saw great interest from landowners. This grant will let us expand that opportunity for landowners and hunters even more."
Arkansas rice farmer Sam Whitaker, of Monticello, participated in the program's public access component last year.
"The WRICE program gives more people the opportunity to experience the outdoors and enables the public to be more involved in conservation efforts as a result of their participation," said Whitaker. "Many farmers are already engaged in the cultivation of waterfowl habitat through the post-harvest flooding of rice fields, which can provide a completely different hunting environment than flooded timber."
Naylor says landowners with land already enrolled in Wetland Reserve Program easements also can apply for some of these funds if they are willing to allow public access for hunting and wildlife-viewing on their property.
The program's main goal is focused on increasing waterfowl resources on rice fields, a critical component of Arkansas's rich duck-hunting history. According to recent research, only about 20 percent of the 2 million acres of harvested rice fields in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley are flooded each year, and fall tillage appears to be on the increase in many parts of Arkansas.
"Getting farmers to suspend fall tillage and flood more of those fields could have a major impact on realized waterfowl food values," Naylor said.
"Interested landowners will work with us to provide improved waterfowl habitat and public hunting opportunities on their fields through a managed draw system," Naylor added. "The hunts are highly controlled, and hunters have shown incredible respect for this great new opportunity. We hope to expand from last year's 941 acres of huntable WRICE fields to 3,750 acres this year."
Landowners interested in becoming part of this innovative conservation and hunter access program can visit www.agfc.com/wrice or contact their local private lands biologist at www.agfc.com/habitat to learn more.
Now in its third year, the AGFC's WRICE program has been awarded a grant from the National Resources Conservation Service's Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program. The grant will boost the program to $2.1 million, distributed during the next three years to participating landowners.
"The first year, we focused on paying landowners to leave the waste rice in the fields instead of tilling before spring and flooding the land to make that food more available to waterfowl," said Luke Naylor, waterfowl program coordinator for the AGFC. "Last year, we added the public access requirement to the program and still saw great interest from landowners. This grant will let us expand that opportunity for landowners and hunters even more."
Arkansas rice farmer Sam Whitaker, of Monticello, participated in the program's public access component last year.
"The WRICE program gives more people the opportunity to experience the outdoors and enables the public to be more involved in conservation efforts as a result of their participation," said Whitaker. "Many farmers are already engaged in the cultivation of waterfowl habitat through the post-harvest flooding of rice fields, which can provide a completely different hunting environment than flooded timber."
Naylor says landowners with land already enrolled in Wetland Reserve Program easements also can apply for some of these funds if they are willing to allow public access for hunting and wildlife-viewing on their property.
The program's main goal is focused on increasing waterfowl resources on rice fields, a critical component of Arkansas's rich duck-hunting history. According to recent research, only about 20 percent of the 2 million acres of harvested rice fields in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley are flooded each year, and fall tillage appears to be on the increase in many parts of Arkansas.
"Getting farmers to suspend fall tillage and flood more of those fields could have a major impact on realized waterfowl food values," Naylor said.
"Interested landowners will work with us to provide improved waterfowl habitat and public hunting opportunities on their fields through a managed draw system," Naylor added. "The hunts are highly controlled, and hunters have shown incredible respect for this great new opportunity. We hope to expand from last year's 941 acres of huntable WRICE fields to 3,750 acres this year."
Landowners interested in becoming part of this innovative conservation and hunter access program can visit www.agfc.com/wrice or contact their local private lands biologist at www.agfc.com/habitat to learn more.
The
world’s largest basmati rice producer is now one of India’s top loan defaulters
Member
exclusive by Prathamesh Mulye
A lesser-known
brother duo has beaten some of India’s most infamous loan defaulters.
On April 24,
the Reserve Bank of India released a
list of the top 50 wilful defaulters in the country. While most names on
the list were the usual suspects such as Vijay Mallya’s Kingfisher Airlines and
T Venkattram Reddy’s Deccan Chronicle Holding, an unlikely contender, REI Agro,
beat them with a Rs4,314 crore ($575 million) default.
Established in
1994 by Kolkata-based brothers Sanjay and Sandip Jhunjhunwala, REI Agro was
once the world’s largest basmati rice processing and marketing firm
accounting for 22%
of the market during its prime in 2013.
Pakistan is getting ready for second battle against locusts
Tomany farmers in the south-east of Pakistan, an impending locust attack is a much bigger problem than the current pandemic. Their summer crops of cotton, sugarcane and rice are being sown, and fruit and vegetables are ready to be picked, but this now means they are in jeopardy."If the crops are eaten up by the locusts, we will have a dire food security issue on our hands," said Zahid Bhurgri, a farmer from Mirpur Khas district in Sindh province. "The price of flour and vegetables will sky-rocket," making staple foods hard for some to afford, added Bhurgri, who is also general secretary of the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture.
The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization estimates losses to agriculture from locusts this year could be as high as PKR 353 billion ($US2.2 billion) for winter crops like wheat and potatoes and about PKR 464 billion for summer crops.
A May update from the FAO warned it would be "imperative" to contain and control the desert locust infestation in the midst of the additional impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on health, livelihoods, food security and nutrition for Pakistan's most poor and vulnerable communities.
Last year, Pakistan suffered its worst attack of locusts since 1993, for which the country was largely unprepared. Farmers now have little confidence the government will help them fight a new wave of voracious insects threatening their harvests – though officials said extensive measures were being taken.
"Neither the central, nor the provincial government is doing anything about it," said Bhurgri, who grows vegetables, red chillies, cotton and sugarcane on about 600 acres of land.
The locust invasion was initially expected to subside by mid-November. But it has persisted due to favourable weather conditions for continued locust breeding, linked to global warming, according to FAO's Pakistan office.
Now the
time to think about genebanks
- Luigi Guarino and Charlotte Lusty Crop Trust
- May 19, 2020 Updated May 19, 2020
You might think
the middle of a global pandemic isn’t an appropriate time to be discussing seed
banks.
Think again.
While
coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is primarily a health crisis, it’s affecting all parts
of society and the economy. People are especially worried about where their
next meal will come from. With agricultural and food systems reeling globally
the focus of decision-makers is mainly on the business end of the food chain.
It’s not the virus causing large numbers of people to flee Delhi and other
large cities in the developing world; it's the fear of hunger.
But farmers
need to keep producing and selling. Middlemen need to keep buying and
processors need to keep processing. It’s too early to say how the food system
will be impacted in the long term. But one thing is certain – to
mitigate the effects and rebound from shocks of the kind we’re currently experiencing
– there must be diversity in all parts of the food chain.
We’re now
learning the hard way the benefits of having ready access to more than just one
supermarket. Food companies minimize risks by using multiple suppliers for
their raw materials. Farmers are more resilient if they grow more than one
crop; even more so if they can choose different varieties of each crop provided
by seed companies and other sources.
We often place
the beginning of the food chain at the farm. But it extends further back to
seed banks, also called genebanks. These treasure troves safeguard the
diversity of our crops and make seed available to researchers and plant
breeders. They use the seeds to develop the new varieties that farmers and
consumers need.
Properly dried
and stored at low temperatures seeds of most crops can be kept for decades. If
their condition is properly monitored they can be thawed and multiplied before
they lose viability. If data on their characteristics are easily available
researchers can request samples they need for their work at the click of a
mouse button.
Our crops are
just as vulnerable to a multitude of pathogens as we are to the coronavirus.
Researchers use diversity in genebanks to breed varieties that can withstand
pathogen attacks, better cope with a changing climate, are more nutritious,
keep longer and taste better. Genebanks underpin the resilience of farmers and
our food system.
We don’t think
much about the raw materials behind food as we live our daily lives. But we
should. There are hundreds of genebanks around the world. But among the
largest, most widely used and most globally important are the 11 genebanks
managed by a global agricultural research consortium called CGIAR, formerly the
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research. They conserve and
make available to users, free of charge, more than 700,000 different types of
seeds and other materials.
The group’s
genebanks are undergoing a difficult time at the moment. With social distancing
and other restrictions on movement, genebank staff members are scrambling to
collect harvests before they’re lost. They’re tending to vulnerable plants in
laboratories, greenhouses and fields. And they’re working to maintain other
critical conservation measures that are keeping diversity alive. It’s an
all-hands-on-deck crisis, but maintaining safety paradoxically means human help
also must be limited.
Should a
genebank lose samples there are back-ups of many of them in the Svalbard Global
Seed Vault. That’s thanks to the planning done by many people over many years
for such eventualities. Genebanks can rebuild their collections from duplicated
seeds. The International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas was
able to do so when it lost access to its facilities during the civil war in
Syria.
But the case is
different when it comes to conserving roots, tubers and some other vegetative
crops. They can’t be saved in the same manner as seeds are in a cold room. For
potato, sweet potato, cassava, banana and yam the hope is to build collections
that can be duplicated and moved around using cryopreservation. It’s a method
of cooling tissues, involving deep-freezing with liquid nitrogen.
CGIAR genebanks
will survive the crisis and revamp activities once it’s over. A significant
proportion of their funding is guaranteed, thanks to the endowment of the Crop
Trust. The International Rice Research Institute, for example, is home to more
than 100,000 different rice varieties. Its operations are funded by the
endowment for the long term. It’s immune to the vagaries of donor priorities
and financial shocks. Another $200 million in the endowment would secure the
other 10 CGIAR genebanks in the same way.
It’s less easy
to be so sanguine about the genebanks of many developing countries. At times of
crisis cash-strapped governments are likely to give genebanks even less of
their attention. They need to resist that temptation. Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is
making clear just how much we need genebanks. We’ll need them even more in the
continuing face of climate change and outbreaks of new crop pests and diseases.
So yes it's the
right time to think about genebanks. It’s always the right time.
Visit croptrust.org and @CropTrust for more
information.
The authors
both are employed by Crop Trust. Luigi Guarino is the director of science and
Charlotte Lusty is the head of programs and genebank-platform
coordinator.
Everything in a Morrisons Food Box and how far it goes
Typically the Meat Eaters box should feed two
adults for one week
Sophie Kitching
- 10:00, 19 MAY 2020
What's Onopinion
Click to play
The Morrisons Meat Eaters Food Box
"Our new Food Boxes are designed to provide you with everyday essentials, without needing to leave your home. With a choice of groceries or prepared meals, we offer convenient delivery directly to your door.
"Choose from a range of boxes including meat or vegetarian groceries together with household essentials, or opt for a Market Kitchen box – a collection of hand-finished prepared meals. Simply choose a box that best suits you."
Some of the boxes available right now are: the Vegetarian Food Box for £35; the Meat Eaters Food Box for £35; the Family Meat Box for £45; and the Ramadan Food Box for £35. Others are available too but have changed since this article was originally written.
We opted for the Meat Eaters Food Box, which is still available, because it seemed to have a range of the type of items we would use in an average week.
With some of the other boxes, I felt, unless I already had plenty of other bits in, I would still need to go shopping.
It was a Thursday when I looked online and was surprised to see there was a delivery slot available the very next day, but I knew we had enough food in for a good few days so decided to book the delivery for the coming Tuesday.
The Meat Eaters Food Box contains "a selection of food including fresh meat, plus essential household items", although you do not know exactly what you are going to get until it arrives.
The website says: "Our boxes contain a selection of items based on our current availability of products, therefore we are unable to specify exact contents of each box.
"You will however receive a variety of different foods in each box. Typically this box should feed two adults for one week."
We set about making a rough meal plan so we could make best use of the items using some of the things we already had in the cupboards too. Five days in after receiving the food box, here's what we've eaten from the box so far, what is left and how long we expect it to last us. Tuesday: Ham and cheese sandwiches for lunch. We had leftover stew from the day before for dinner but used the crust from the loaf of bread to go with it.
Wednesday: Cheese and bean toasties for lunch. For dinner, we had marinated chicken (we already had the marinade) with pittas, potatoes and carrots.
Thursday: Cheese and bean toasties for lunch (used the remainder of beans up from the day before). For dinner, we had marinated beef koftas using the beef mince (already had the marinade in) with couscous (already had the couscous but could have used the rice from the box).
Saturday: Bacon sandwiches for breakfast/lunch (we used bread we already had in), we used the rice from the box and made a chicken korma (everything apart from the rice we already had in). We snacked on the jaffa cakes throughout the past few days, so they were gone by this point.
What we have left for the coming days: majority of the onions, tomato soup, vegetable soup, tomato and basil pasta sauce, full pack of pasta, Cravendale semi skimmed milk (just under half left but have only been using it for tea and coffee), about half of the salted butter, about half of the cheese, cucumber (majority left but will use it for tuna and cucumber sandwiches), carrots (only a few left), Andrex Toilet Tissue (already had some in), Mega jumbo kitchen towel (already had some in).
We've used the box the way that works best for us, so it may last us slightly longer than a week, but we have used some items we already had in and that needed using up to go with it.
We have enough left for a couple of days for lunch (we are going to have the soups), and the pasta will do us for dinner at least two nights (we have the pasta sauce from the box for one of those nights too).
I would recommend the Meat Eaters Food Box for those unable to go out and get hold of essentials.
I am not sure what the items would amount to if they were bought individually on a normal shop (I can't actually get on the website to see how much the products received cost as there is currently a queue and I don't want to take someone else's slot) but we were pretty happy with what we got for the price considering we had it delivered too and it was hassle-free (well apart from the delivery mix up).
Morrisons has also provided some recipe ideas for those purchasing the Meat Eaters Food Box here. To view and order the Morrisons food boxes, click here - it's important to note however, that if you order a box it may come with some slight different products to mine as they aren't all the same.