Nigeria shuts part of porous border with Benin to curb rice smuggling
Aug 28, 2019
-
ABUJA, Aug 28 – Nigeria has
partially closed its western border with Benin to curb rice smuggling that is
threatening the country’s attempt to boost local production, the government
said on Wednesday.
The government wants Nigeria to
be self-sufficient in rice and has imposed import controls but these have kept
prices high and led to smuggling from Benin into Nigeria.
President Muhammadu Buhari has
introduced policies since taking office in 2015 that are aimed at curbing
imports to boost local production and conserve foreign exchange reserves.
He said rice smuggling across the
western border threatened his policy of self-sufficiency.
“The country has saved huge sums
of money which would otherwise have been expended on importing rice using our
scarce foreign reserves,” Buhari was quoted as saying in a statement issued by
his spokesman. “We cannot allow smuggling of the product at such alarming
proportions to continue.”
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The statement did not say when
the border was partially closed.
Buhari also said there would be a
meeting with Benin and Niger, Nigeria’s northern neighbours, to determine
measures to check smuggling across the borders.
He said the border closure was
limited to allow security forces stem the trend and that he would consider
fully re-opening the border in the future.
The government has said Nigeria’s
imports of rice and wheat together cost almost $4 billion a year but its 190
million people rely on imports for most of what they consume due to limited
manufacturing capacity.
The country has considered
developing agriculture for export to earn more hard currency and to increase
revenues from outside its dominant oil industry.
Earlier this month, Buhari told
the central bank to stop providing foreign exchange for food imports as part of
his drive to bolster the country’s agriculture sector
Agriculture Minister Candidate Says Imports of Rice for Boiling Are
Inevitable
·
By Michael
Herh
·
August
29, 2019, 11:58
More than 300 South Korean
farmers hold a protest in Seoul in May 2015 to block imports of rice for
boiling.
U.S.
President Donald Trump recently made an issue of South Korea’s developing
country status in the WTO. Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Minister
candidate Kim Hyun-soo said on Aug. 28 that the U.S. president’s remarks can be
a chance for South Korea to change the framework of its agricultural industry.
Specifically, the candidate said that a prudent approach
to reform is necessary in view of potential impacts on future WTO
negotiations and reviews need to be made on issues such as agricultural
subsidies and industrial competitiveness enhancement.
At present, South Korea’s developing country status in
the WTO is being maintained in the agricultural industry and the country is
enjoying benefits with regard to tariff reduction and subsidy policy. As a
result, up to 1.49 trillion won can be spent a year in aggregate measurement of
support (AMS). According to the candidate, the subsidy structure has to be
modified once South Korea loses the status.
When it comes to imports of rice for boiling, the
candidate remarked that imports of such a type of rice are inevitable to
some extent in view of ongoing trade issues and WTO rules. The United States
and China are currently demanding that South Korea increase imports of
that type of rice. “Commercial rice imports are likely to become difficult
once the rice tariff rate reaches 513 percent,” he said.
Nigerian Leader Says Rice
Smuggling on Benin Border Alarming
By Elisha Bala-Gbogbo
August 28, 2019, 8:31 PM GMT+5 Updated on August 28, 2019, 9:52 PM GMT+5 Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari said large quantities of rice and other goods are
being smuggled into the country through its western border with Benin and that e
frontier was “partially closed” by the security forces to curb the trend.
“The country has saved huge sums of
money which would otherwise have been expended on importing rice using our
scarce foreign reserves,” an emailed presidency statement quoted Buhari as
saying during a meeting in Yokohama, Japan, with Benin President Patrice Talon.
“We cannot allow smuggling of the product at such alarming proportions to
continue.”
Though there was no formal
announcement of a border closing, travelers have reported restrictions since
Aug. 20, with long lines of trucks laden with goods waiting on both sides of
the border.
Buhari, who won re-election in
February, is seeking to boost agricultural production as a means of
diversifying the country’s economy away from its oil dependence, with
self-sufficiency in rice production a key target.
As imports by Africa’s most
populous country of more than 200 million people plunged 95% in the last four
years under government curbs, imports by Benin, which has only 11 million
people, jumped to make it the biggest buyer from Thailand, the world’s number
two producer, according to the Thai Rice Exporters Association.
Another
25-basis point cut in BSP rates seen
By: Doris Dumlao-Abadilla - Reporter / @philbizwatcher
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:24 AM August 29,
2019
The
country’s inflation rate likely eased further to 2 percent this month, seen to
give the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) the leeway to slash its key
interest rates by 25 basis points in the next monetary policy setting on Sept.
26.
This is according
to Union Bank chief economist Ruben Carlo Asuncion, who said August inflation
was likely to cool further from 2.4 percent in July because of slower annual
increases in the prices of rice and other food items.
“Lower fuel
prices and electricity costs may have also contributed to the slowdown.
Weather-related impact on prices may have been muted, though,” he said.
With the
inflation rate coming from a high of 6.4 percent in August last year, Asuncion
said consumer prices might had been largely influenced by lower rice prices,
lower average pump prices for August and lower electricity cost. Specifically,
he noted that Meralco’s electricity rates had gone down for the fourth straight
month due to lower spot market prices.
“As rice
prices were noted to have dropped in the last three months starting May, this
(easing of inflation) has been traced to the rice tariffication law signed in
February,” he said.
Signed by
President Duterte into law on Feb. 14, 2019, the law amended the two-decade-old
Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996 and replaced the quantitative
restrictions on rice imports with tariff. It liberalized the
importation of rice, which had been a monopoly of the state-run National Food
Authority for decades.
UnionBank’s
economic research unit now sees this benign inflation trend as a huge window
for the BSP to ease monetary policy further. Asuncion’s economic team expects
the BSP to “continue its rate-cutting to the tune of 25 basis points on
Sept. 26.”
In a forum
with the Economic Journalists Association of the Philippines on Wednesday, BSP
Governor Benjamin Diokno had said he was open to another 25-basis point
interest rate cut by the end of the year.
The BSP has
so far slashed its overnight borrowing rate by a total of 50 basis points so
far this year, the last 25-basis point of which was sanctioned earlier this
month.
Diokno noted
that “price pressures have continued to dissipate, while prospects for global
economic activity are likely to remain weak amid sustained trade tensions among
major economies.”
“Looking
ahead, we expect inflation to remain on a target-consistent path for 2019 and
2020. The latest baseline forecasts indicate that inflation is projected to
average 2.6 percent for 2019 and 2.9 percent for both 2020 and 2021,” Diokno
said.
The desolation of
PHL agriculture: Can Secretary Dar reverse its continuing stagnation?
August 29, 2019
Indicators
of the collapse of Philippine agriculture are not difficult to
find. Official statistics indicate growing agricultural trade deficits,
declining GDP share, and grinding rural poverty everywhere. Most
worrisome, there are reports in various regions that there is an acute shortage
of agricultural workers because majority of the millennials and those belonging
to the younger generation Z have been avoiding farm work like a
plague. The Philippine farming population is aging and fading away.
The agricultural sector is facing
an existential sustainability issue. How will the newly-appointed DA
Secretary William Dar handle this challenge? Will he end up like Secretary
Manny Pinol, who waged a losing fight against the economic technocrats who
pushed for the all-out liberalization of the rice sector without any clear
transition program for the domestic palay producers?
The desolation of the
agricultural sector started in the 1980s. The government, during the last
years of the Marcos Administration and the second half of the decade under
President Corazon Aquino, surrendered to the IMF-World Bank’s “structural
adjustment policy” (SAP) conditionality: deregulate the agricultural sector and
phase out government credit and price support to the sector. DA Secretary
Arturo Tangco, architect of the Masagana 99, was bitter as the rice
self-sufficiency program quickly wilted. Under the SAP austerity, funding for
rural infrastructures and irrigation systems also dried up, further weakening
the productivity of the sector. The 1980s was a disaster decade for the
agricultural sector.
In the 1990s, the desolation of
the agricultural sector continued under the SAP-driven agricultural
deregulation program. This time, the deregulation program was reinforced by the
decision of the government to be one of the founding members of the World Trade
Organization (WTO). As part of its commitment to the WTO, the government placed
the whole sector under the tariff regime, meaning the private sector can come
in and import any agricultural product.
However, the WTO allowed rice to
be temporarily exempted from the coverage of the tariffication program. The
rationale given: the Philippines needed some time to transform its rice sector
to become globally competitive. In this regard, Congress rushed the passage of
the Agricultural Fisheries and Modernization Act (AFMA) to help modernize the
fishery sector and the production of rice and other crops. And yet, AFMA
turned out to be a disaster itself. Poorly funded and poorly implemented,
AFMA failed to stop the downward collapse of agriculture.
Meanwhile, another
poorly-implemented agricultural program came into being – the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Program (CARP). The CARP’s enabling law was passed in
1988, and yet, three decades after, DAR is still in process of “completing”
CARP’s implementation. Worse, majority of the agrarian reform beneficiaries
(ARBs) have remained poor, or just a little better than the landless rural
poor. Incidentally, the latter (e.g., ambulant agricultural workers, camote
miners, slash-and-burn hillside farmers, coastal fisherfolks, etc.) are more
numerous than the ARBs. And yet, there are no clear alternative programs
for these landless rural poor.
One reason for the continuing
poverty of the ARBs is the failure in transformation. Secretary DAR mentioned
the importance of making farmers “agri-preneurs”. Yes, farming is business
and should be managed in a professsional and business-like manner. For
this, the ARBs and small farmers should possess the skills and knowhow on how
to prepare and implement a farm business plan. But who will help them
acquire these skills and knowhow? The agricultural extension officers? These
extension officers have been placed under the command of the LGUs, no thanks to
the Local Autonomy law. It is also doubtful if these extension officers are
trained to become trainers in this field.
Partnership with the big
corporations? This is a controversial proposition. The “corporative”
proposal during the time of President Joseph Estrada was severely criticized by
farmer leaders, who believed that the proposal is a gift to the big
corporations that want to access and manage the lands of the small farmers
without being dragged into excruciating land cases under CARP. For example,
there are numerous land and employment conflicts over the contract growing
arrangements that big banana exporters in Mindanao have concluded with the
small farmers holding the certificates of land ownership or CLOAs over these
lands.
To summarize, one does not need
rocket science to determine the root causes of agricultural stagnation.
Foremost among these is the SAP-driven and WTO-reinforced agricultural
deregulation program, aggravated by the mangled and never-ending implementation
of CARP and various modernization programs.
Also, most of the government
programs for agriculture in the past have been criticized to be graft-ridden,
e.g., distribution of fertilizer and farm inputs intended for small farmers
ending in the hands of LGUs in the cemented cities of Metro Manila. One will
not be surprised if the green light given to the big rice importers under the
Rice Tariffication law will be used by the unscrupulous to under-declare
imports and avoid paying the right amount of duties. Is this one explanation
why rice prices have not gone down substantially, and yet, palay prices have
been diving down at or below production cost, pushing palay farmers out of
farming.
To complete the picture on the
desolation of the agricultural sector, one must add here the environmental
problems: continuing erosion of the resource base, deforestation, soil
degradation and the weak fortification of the countryside against climate
change risks.
May kinabukasan ba ang ating
agrikultura at magsasaka? Does agriculture have a future? More in the next issue.
Siege on
smugglers’ paradise
One week into the “Exercise
Swift Response’, the heat bites harder on Nigeria’s neighbouring countries, as
economic activities are gradually grinding to a halt, MUYIWA LUCAS reports
Travellers on the Seme-Krake route have tales of woes to tell.
The rigorous stop-and-search operation at all the over 12 roadblocks counted
between Igboelerin and Seme axis presents more than enough pains for commuters.
The roadblocks, mounted by men of the Customs, Immigrations, the police and
Army, have created long queues of vehicles and passengers who ply the route.
There are long queues of vehicles and human traffic arising from the intensive
check at the Igbaji checkpoint.
With the intense searching, and security operatives pursuing
smugglers into unconventional roads to effect the arrest, activities at the
Seme-Krake border in the last week have further buttressed the position that
smuggling activities are what makes the axis tick.
Nigerians, as well as other nationals at the border, have
continued to groan in hardship over the ongoing exercise. From the Okada
riders, transporters, currency traders (black market) to Cross-Border traders,
tales of woes is on everybody’s lips.
When The
Nation visited the Seme-Krake border on Wednesday, economic
activities were at its lowest ebb. At the border post, the Customs scanner
section remained closed, while petrol attendants at the ConOil filling station
at the border were on holiday.
A visit to the ECOWAS building in Seme revealed the extremely
low level of economic activities. At the immigration section of the building,
less than 15 travellers were seen processing their travel documents either into
or out of the country. Pedestrians trying to go through the border without
valid travel documents were turned back at both ends.
Over 1000 trucks carrying different goods were also seen parked
at the huge landmass around the ECOWAS building. The trucks were those waiting
for clearance but the restriction of movement at the border. At the scanning
section of the Customs, not a single consignment was seen, just as trucks
parked at the examination bay of the Service were left unattended to. As a
result of this, banking activities at the border is also suffering. With no
duties to be paid, and travel restricted, the First Bank office at the border
remained virtually on holiday yesterday.
A truck driver, Ibrahim Zana, said he and his colleagues have
been stranded at the border since the restriction of movement commenced. He
explained that some perishable items some of his colleagues conveyed from Benin
republic have gone bad. He added that one of his colleagues require medical
attention but cannot get the same because they have run out of cash.
Official position
Joseph Attah, Deputy Comptroller, Nigeria Customs Service (NCS)
and National Public Relations Officer, said: “The Office of the National
Security Adviser (ONSA), which is coordinating the exercise is already
recording large numbers of seizures and arrests from the four sectors
comprising the Northwest, Northcentral, South-West, and Southsouth geopolitical
zones. As at 26th August 2019, 33 illegal migrants have been arrested while
seizures include: 3,560-50kg bags of parboiled foreign rice; 59 bags of NpI
(fertilizer); 15 vehicles; 12 drums filled with PMS; three engine boats; 61
drums of groundnut oil; four trucks; 75 gallons of PMS; 29 motorcycles; six
gallons of vegetable oil; 70 jerricans of PMS; among other items,” he said in a
statement.
or Attah, this feat is a positive for the operation, which is
barely a week old and seen as a strong resolve by the Nigerian security
agencies to better secure the country’s territorial integrity, particularly the
land and marine borders against transborder security concerns. The exercise has
led to the partial closure or restriction in movement between the country’s
borders and those of the Republic of Benin, Niger and Chad as well as that of
the Central African country of Cameroon.
The exercise, led by the NCS and the Nigerian Immigration
Service (NIS), in collaboration with the Armed Forces as well as the police and
other Security and Intelligence agencies, may have started yielding dividend in
terms of securing the country’s borders, but it has continued to inflict pains
on the economy of not only Nigeria but also that of other neighbouring
countries whose economy depends on that of Nigeria. The joint exercise is
taking place in four geopolitical zones, namely; Southsouth, Southwest,
Northcentral and Northwest.
Ripple effect
A peep across the border towards the Krake (Benin Republic) end
also shows the near-comatose economic activity on the side. A Nigerian
traveller from Togo, shortly after completing his documentation at the Nigerian
Immigration, told The Nation that business activities from Togo are at a
standstill. He said several trucks are parked at the entry points of the two
countries of Togo and Benin Republic, waiting to enter Nigeria with their
consignment.
Security sources at the Seme-Krake border told The Nation that
the ongoing exercise has further shown that Nigeria is the main economic power
of its neighbours. For instance, the sources explained that the ripple effect
of the exercise in Nigeria has taken a toll on the price of petrol in the Benin
Republic, which is said to have risen by about 150 per cent.
Already, sources from across the various borders warn that if
the border closure continues, the Bennoise, Nigeriens and Chadians economies
will be the worse for it. The situation is believed will be worse off in
Republic of Benin, where the people are said to be getting agitated over the
closure. This is for no other reason but the dwindling fortunes of their
income.
Sources in security circles told this reporter that the flagrant
disrespect for trade agreement led the Federal Government to decide on her
borders. For instance, it is believed that the country had taken advantage of
their business relationship with importers from Niger and Chad, both landlocked
countries, to allow their transit cargos, particular, foreign parboiled rice,
which pass through Benin Terminal, Cotonou and Bollere seaport, to end up in
the Nigerian market. This has weakened the government’s resolve on the ban on
foreign importation of some commodities into the country and disrupting the
policy on local rice production.
t is worthy of note that the volume of rice importation into the
Republic of Benin had risen over time. The country’s rice imports are handled
by four multinational companies and between 20 to 30 smaller small rice
importers. These importers include African Agro Foods, with Headquarters in Pan
Lebanese Group, Dubai, United Arab Emirate, UAE, Di Fezi Fils, Sonam linked to
the Stallion Group in Dubai, which also have an operational base in Lagos, and
ABC Enterprises.
A breakdown of these companies share of rice import into the
Benin Republic indicate that African Agro Foods Imports 360, 000 MT or 30
percent of the rice needed in the country; Di Fezi Fils, 300, 000 MT or 24
percent; Sonam, 240,00 MT and 20 percent ABC enterprises, 10,000 MT or one
percent while other rice importers bring into the country 290,000 or 24 percent
of the total rice imports of the country.
ith a small population, experts explained that the country can’t
consume such volume of rice. Since June 2015, market watchers say, rice imports
into the Benin Republic has increased tremendously, finding its way into the
Nigerian market notwithstanding that the Central Bank of Nigerian (CBN), led by
Godwin Emefiele, included the prohibition of foreign exchange to rice and 43
other products. Virtually all the parboiled rice imports into the Republic of
Benin are smuggled into the Nigerian market through unapproved routes.
A Nigerian returning from Togo, en route Benin, who simply
identified himself as Fatai, explained that the economy of Togo and Benin
Republic are already in comatose as a result of the situation. He disclosed
that some consignment of bulk rice cargoes that had arrived at the Benin
terminal and Bollere ports are still waiting to be discharged. He said
practically all the warehouses in the two countries are filled with rice
awaiting evacuation to Nigeria.
Similarly, across the other regions, a report by The Value News,
an online publication, has it that indigenes of the Border Communities in the
Northwest and Northeast are also severely hit by the exercise. The report says
that from Matamaye, Magarya, Babura, Mai mujiya, Tikim, and other Border
communities in Kano and Jigawa states which fall within the Zandar region
directly linking Niger and Nigeria in the south, are now a shadow of itself:
low economic activities of buying and selling of traded goods.
According to the report, Nigerien traders’ major worries was
that between Wednesday, August 23 when the exercise starts and now, they have
not been able to access the ancient city of Kano, which is the commercial nerve
centre of northern Nigeria, to buy goods because of the tight security. It is
imperative to say that it is only from these border communities that transit
cargoes from Benin could be supplied Niger.
A bureau de change operator, who identified himself as Gilli, a
resident of Amaimujiya, a border community, said his business had been at the
lowest ebb since last Wednesday when the exercise began.
‘’My Bureau de Change business has virtually closed because of
lack of patronage,’’ he said.
Nigerians also cry
he lawmaker representing Badagry constituency in the House of
Representatives, Babatunde Hunpe, has urged residents to remain calm and supportive
over the ongoing Joint Border Security Exercise in the area.
“It is not only the Seme border that is affected by the Federal
Government’s directive, but it also affects many communities in 25 states
across Nigeria. I want to appeal to my people to let peace reign by going about
their normal daily activities peacefully. Badagry communities should cooperate
with the special task force created by the Federal Government to enable them to
achieve their aims,” Hunpe said.
But while the focus is on security, the promoters of the partial
closure of the border, or restriction of movement at the border, as Attah
prefers to call it, seem to have ignored the breach of trade agreements between
ECOWAS countries.
Trade and market integration are at the heart of ECOWAS’ aims
and objectives. Article (3) of the Revised Treaty of ECOWAS stipulates the
removal of trade barriers and harmonisation of trade policies for the
establishment of a Free Trade Area, a Customs Union, a Common Market and an
eventual culmination into a Monetary and Economic Union in West Africa.
The ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS) adopted in 1979
with an agreement on agricultural, artisanal handicrafts and unprocessed
products, and extended to industrial products in 1990, is the main framework
for trade and market integration in ECOWAS as it addresses protocols on the
free movement of goods, persons and transportation. The ETLS main pursuit of
consolidating the free trade area is guided by the National Approval Committees
that informs the member States.
For this purpose, ECOWAS established an ETLS website to ease
harmonisation and usage of it. In this regard, ECOWAS thus implemented a
Customs and Connectivity programme to simplify the movement of goods in the
region. The ECOWAS Common External Tariff has thus been operational since 2015.
Moreover, member states are increasingly implementing the ECOWAS Single Customs
Declaration Form for their customs administrations. The World Bank-sponsored
Abidjan-Lagos Trade and Transport Facilitation Programme for Benin and Nigeria
is one such example. Burkina Faso and Togo are likewise operationalising the
scheme. Nevertheless, there are said to be challenged in regards to poor
domestication of the ETLS, which needs to addressed for deepened trade and market
integration in the ECOWAS region.
But how long will this calmness remain given the increasing
economic hardship being experienced? Are there no means of ensuring security
while trade continues? Time, only time, will tell.
Navy arrests five suspects, seizes 424 bags of contraband rice
By Iniabasi Umo, Uyo | Published
Date Aug 28, 2019 16:32 PM TwitterFacebookWhatsAppTelegram The Nigerian Navy,
Forward Operating Base, Ibaka, Mbo local government area, Akwa Ibom State, has
arrested five suspects and seized 424 bags of smuggled rice in two different
operations. Speaking on Wednesday in Ibaka during the hand-over of the items to
the Nigeria Customs Service, Commanding Officer, FOB, Captain Toritseju
Vincent, said navy officials on patrol arrested five suspects with 294 bags of
rice on August 17, 2019. ADVERTISEMENT The CO said in the second operation, the
suspects escaped on sighting the navy gunboats, and left behind their wooden
boat with 130 bags of rice which they seized. ADVERTISEMENT OVER 5,000 NIGERIAN
MEN HAVE OVERCOME POOR BEDROOM PERFORMANCE SYNDROME DUE TO THIS BRILLIANT
DISCOVERY He said the Navy has made various arrests over the months in line
with its constitutional role to check smuggling on the water ways, adding that
it would not rest on its oars and warned smugglers to desist from the act. The
5 suspects and 294 bags of rice were handed over to the Deputy Superintendent
of Nigeria Customs, K. Alabi, while the 130 bags of rice were handed over to
the Assistant Controller, NCS, Ali Garko. “On Friday, the 24th of August at
about midnight, our gun boats on routine patrol at Effiat and Ayewa accosted a
wooden boat with 130 bags of illegally smuggled rice from Cameroon. The
suspects on sighting the gun boats dived into the water, abandoned the boat and
were able to escape, but we were able to retrieve the boat back to the base.”
“This is in line with our continuing constitutional role for anti-smuggling of
contraband goods. As you are well aware in conjunction with the Navy, over
the past months, we have continued to make various arrests of these illegally
smuggled goods into the country.” “We will not rest on our oars but will
continue to perform this role as we send out this stern warning to these
illegal smugglers to desist from this act which is economic sabotage to the
nation.” “On behalf of the flag officer commanding the Eastern Naval Command, I
hereby hand over these 130 bags of rice and the wooden boat to the Nigeria
Customs Service,” he said. Receiving the suspects and items from the Nigerian
Navy, Assistant Controller, Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Ali Garko said, “On
behalf of the Comptroller, Eastern Marine Command, I hereby take over 130 bags
of 50kg rice from the Nigerian Navy, Forward Operating Base, Ibaka. “It is a
constitutional role given to us, and like we say all the time, we thank the
Nigerian Navy for this wonderful effort and we wish they will continue to give
us the support needed,” he stated.
Nizamabad: Convert ration rice to
broken rice Bhagyanagar Bhaskar Kumar Hans News Service
28 Aug 2019 9:36
PM IST File photo of PDS rice
caught by Civil Supplies officials at Manik Bhandar checkpost in Maklur tehsil
HIGHLIGHTS Smugglers always find new ways to carry on their business whenever
the government tightens its grip on them. The smuggling of PDS rice has become
a major issue for the government and increased vigilance. Nizamabad: Smugglers
always find new ways to carry on their business whenever the government
tightens its grip on them. Smuggling of PDS rice has become a major issue for
the government and increased vigilance. This has stopped the ration rice
smuggling to some extent. But the smugglers find new ways to smuggle the rice.
They are converting the PDS rice into broken rice and crossing the borders and
the officials are unable to recognise the smuggling. Advertise With Us The
price of broken rice in neighbouring States ranges from Rs 2,000 to Rs 2,200
per quintal. The smugglers will buy rice from the ration cardholders from Rs 10
to Rs 12 per kg and will recycle this rice into broken rice or flour. Broken
rice is packed into gunny bags and transported to other States in the name of the rice mill. If police or revenue
officials stop and check, they will show the papers of the rice mill as broken
rice business is legal. Smuggling of PDS rice from Kamareddy and Nizamabad
districts in the form of broken rice to other States is going on unabated. It
was reported that large quantities of ration rice is being shipped to
Rayalaseema region and Karnataka and Tamil Nadu States. No one stops the
shipment because the people on the vehicle will show all the documents related
to broken rice. Advertise With Us Sometimes people use another method where the
ration rice is polished to make them fine rice. And then it will be smuggled.
Broken rice business is legal for rice. The government converts paddy into rice
at mill during every Kharif and Rabi seasons. During the process, the
government will not the by-product and the millers are free to use it. Since
there is no scientific method to calculate the quantity of broken rice than can
be produced from one quintal of rice, for example. In fact, only a small amount
of broken rice can be produced after custom milling process. But there are
allegations that the rice mills will sell more than 10 times of broken rice. A
comprehensive investigation should be conducted over the transport of broken
rice.
https://www.thehansindia.com/telangana/convert-ration-rice-to-broken-rice-559041
https://www.thehansindia.com/telangana/convert-ration-rice-to-broken-rice-559041
IN DEFENSE OF THE MPCA’S SCIENCE
·
Top of Form
Part 3: Other Factors, Other
Studies, Conclusion
The MPCA study was criticized for
not considering other factors that affect wild rice, such as water depth and
temperature. The authorizing legislation, however, directs the MPCA specifically
to “address water quality standards for waters containing beds of natural wild
rice” and to assess the impacts of sulfates and other substances on the growth
of wild rice. The MPCA did recognize that other factors besides sulfide
influence the abundance of wild rice. But the fact that other factors are
important does not negate the need to protect wild rice from excess sulfide.
A number of critics of the MPCA’s
science pointed to studies conducted by Fort Labs that were sponsored by the
Minnesota Chamber of Commerce. An EC10 of 963 micrograms per liter sulfide was
calculated from the Fort Labs hydroponic experiments, but an EC10 of only 106
micrograms per liter sulfide was estimated from the MPCA-sponsored hydroponic
experiments (plants are grown without soil with nutrients provided in a water
solution), but. (EC stands for “effect concentration.” An EC10 is the sulfide
concentration that would result in a 10% reduction in plant mass compared to
controls.) As a protective level of sulfide, 963 micrograms per liter compares
very unfavorably with the MPCA’s estimate of 120 micrograms per liter obtained
by considering data from multiple sources, a method the EPA consistently
recommends, called a “weight-of-evidence” approach: A laboratory (hydroponics)
experiment, an outdoor container experiment (mesocosms), and field surveys.
When considering all the available data, as critics have demanded, the value of
963 micrograms per liter is an outlier and its inclusion in any data set used
for further analysis must be seriously questioned. Recall also the warning from
the peer review panel that establishing a sulfide level of 300 micrograms per
liter as a threshold for the onset of effects is not supported by the data and
“would likely result in ecologically significant adverse effects to wild rice.”
However, the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce and others with similar interests,
continue to push for the higher sulfide level obtained from the Fort Labs
studies.
The demand made by several people
that the MPCA consider all the data does not reasonably require that all the
data be accepted uncritically. Including outliers in the data may bias results
and could lead to faulty conclusions, and as the MPCA’s critics have said, it’s
important to get this right. The MPCA did not, in fact, ignore or reject the
Fort Labs study as they were accused of doing. The results were discussed in
the TSD and the SONAR published by the MPCA. The MPCA did put less weight on
that study but they also put less weight on some of their own MPCA-sponsored
studies. It should also be pointed out that the wild rice in the Fort Labs
study was grown in only 1 centimeter of water, allowing the plant to quickly
emerge from the water, obtain oxygen from the room air, and use that oxygen to
detoxify sulfide.
The MPCA also received a number
of comments about a second, unpublished, Fort Labs study. This study was not
identical to the previous study, as claimed, differing in duration and light
exposure, and considered germination as the only biological endpoint. (In response
to the MPCA’s criticism, water depth was increased to 6 centimeters, which is
still far short of the 15 centimeter depth considered a typical minimum for
natural stands of wild rice.) Perhaps the most significant finding from the
Fort Labs studies is that germination is not a growth stage that is very
sensitive to high sulfide concentrations.
Based on the comments I have read
from the six public hearings, the rebuttals put forward by the MPCA, the
documents published on-line by the MPCA, the articles that have been published
in peer-reviewed journals, and the findings of the Administrative Law Judges,
it seems reasonable to conclude that the MPCA’s findings are grounded in
peer-reviewed science, and the claim that the standard is based on “flawed science”
is unfounded.
At a fundamental level, it is
hard to believe that an agency staffed with experienced, qualified,
professional scientists could be as incompetent or as nefarious as they are
accused of being. On a number of occasions, while reading the hearing
transcripts, I came across the phrase, “it makes no sense” expressed as
criticism of the science and the proposed standard. So, let me make a
comparable “common-sense” argument in support of the science: it makes no sense
that trained, experienced, professional scientists would do “flawed science.”
The objections being raised are
really about equity and differences in values, not about the science. Different
stakeholders hold different values: Industry values profits; labor values good
jobs; environmentalists value healthy ecosystems; anglers value abundant,
healthy fish; native and non-native wild ricers value abundant harvests; Native
Americans have strong cultural values associated with wild rice; science values
the search for truth and understanding. Attacking the science is not an
appropriate way to resolve values differences. Following the opinions of the
Administrative Law Judges, the EPA, and the MPCA’s responses to all criticisms,
should lead stakeholders to accept the science and move on to an honest,
open-minded discussion about how to resolve the problems of equity and
conflicting values so that meaningful progress can be made.
Doug Pribyl holds a Ph.D. in Soil
Science from the University of Minnesota in St. Paul, with a minor in public
policy from the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. During his time at the
University he taught biogeography and soil science, including wetland soils and
wetland delineation. Much of his research centered on the origin and
interpretation of iron-based soil features. Since moving to Pengilly, he has
produced several reports on lake and stream water quality for the local Swan
Lake Association. During his career, he has maintained an interest in the
relationship between science and public policy.
Paddy farming:
Telangana, IRRI may join hands
The IRRI
proposed project will result in water and time saving technologies being
implemented in paddy cultivation - S Niranjan Reddy, Agriculture Minister
By Author | Published: 27th Aug 2019 7:57 pmUpdated: 28th Aug 2019 12:20 am
Agriculture
Minister Singireddy Niranjan Reddy felicitating Dr Jacquelin Hughes, Deputy
Director General, Research, IRRI, at PJTSAU on Tuesday.
Hyderabad: The State government will explore joining hands with International
Rice Research Institute (IRRI) to implement methods for improving profitability
of paddy farmers in Telangana. The proposed programme also seeks to increase
nutritional security through rice-based agri food system in the State.
Agriculture Minister Singireddy
Niranjan Reddy on Tuesday said he would place the proposals mooted by IRRI
before Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao. The IRRI proposed project would be
helpful to farmers and result in water and time saving technologies being
implemented in paddy cultivation, he said.
The Minister was speaking at
Professor Jayashankar Telangana State Agricultural University on Tuesday at an
interaction with IRRI scientists led by Deputy Director General, Research,
IRRI, Dr Jacquelin Hughes. The State government was spending more than Rs 20,000
crore on the agriculture sector to make farming a profitable activity in
Telangana in addition to implementing several programmes for welfare of the
farming community, he said.
Dr Hughes said the proposed project
would ensure doubling of farmers’ income, sustainable water management in
agriculture, developing of stress tolerant rice varieties for sustainable
farming and developing of low glycemic index varieties of rice which are
particularly suitable for consumption by diabetic patients.
IRRI, she said, was ready to
provide, through the project, mechanisation and post-harvest business models,
capacity development and knowledge exchange to scholars, staff, and farmers. It
will also be possible to implement these methods to increase yields of other
crops such as pulses, she said.
University Vice-Chancellor Dr V
Praveen Rao said the programme would be a good opportunity for the university
scientists to gain international exposure. Director, IRRI Varanasi Centre, Dr
Aravind Kumar, several IRRI scientists, Director of Research Dr R Jagadeeshwar,
scientists from PJTSAU and university officers attended the meeting.
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from Telangana Today on WhatsApp /Telegram everyday. Click these links to subscribe and save this number
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Traders seek more
regional export markets via Thailand
29 AUG 2019
Policemen
search around trucks loaded goods waiting for check-up near the gate of
Myawaddy border trade zone. Photo - EPA
Myanmar should consider exporting agriculture products such as
rice, nuts, beans and nuts to Malaysia via Thailand, said Daw Thin Thin Myat,
chair of Myawaddy Border Traders Association.
Currently, these products are being exported only to Laos and
Vietnam via Thailand. The government does not have an agreement with the
Malaysian government, but one should be explored to extend the reach of
Myanmar’s overland exports via Thailand, she said at the latest meeting between
the government and Private Sector Development Committee.
Currently, export volumes to Thailand at the Myawady border are
much lower than import volumes from Thailand, said Daw Thin Thin Myat. Between
October 1, 2018 and August 16, 2019, exports from Myanmar to Thailand totaled
US$181 million, while imports from Thailand to Myanmar totalled US$648
million.
As such, more should be done to raise exports to Thailand, she
said.
Importantly, Myanmar truckers also face difficulties when
transporting goods back from Thailand, as under current cross border transport
arrangements with its neighbour, Myanmar trucks are not permitted to enter
Thailand without cargo. This has made it hard for Myanmar traders to transport
good purchased in Thailand back into Myanmar. – Translated
Tags:
Ebro Foods purchases premium rice
brand from Hain Celestial
08.28.2019
MADRID, SPAIN — Ebro Foods S.A. has
acquired premium specialty rice brand Tilda from The Hain Celestial Group, Inc.
for $342 million in cash. The transaction includes two plants in Rainham, U.K.,
and a workforce of 326 employees.
Founded in the earlier 1970s, Tilda
offers a range of grains and rice, primarily basmati rice. The brand’s
portfolio includes steamed, dry and specialty rices as well as Super Grains,
featuring grains such as quinoa, millet and rice combined with coconut,
cranberries and pumpkin seed; Blends, which combine basmati rice with wild rice
or quinoa; Pulses and Rice, which pair pulses such as chickpeas and edamame
with basmati rice in such flavors as harissa and lemon or spring onion and
wasabi; and Tilda Kids, which blend steamed rice with vegetables.
Tilda’s net sales in the fiscal
year ended June 30 totaled £152.6 million ($200 million), 60% of which was in
the U.K.
“Through this acquisition, Ebro not
only enhances its portfolio of global premium brands in the rice sector, but
also acquires a strong foothold in the British market, where it has to date had
only a token presence,” Ebro Foods said. “In addition, Ebro believes that
Tilda’s international nature will pave the way for extensive development with
other group products.”
Hain Celestial plans to use a
portion of the Tilda sale proceeds to pay down debt and is evaluating
distribution alternatives.
“We are pleased to complete the
strategic sale of Tilda, which is consistent with our transformational plan to
simplify our portfolio, strengthen our core capabilities and expand margins and
cash flow,” said Mark L. Schiller, president and chief executive officer of
Hain Celestial. “Tilda has been a strong business for us, primarily in the
United Kingdom, and under new strategic ownership, we expect the brand to
continue to thrive. We believe this transaction represents a significant
premium to a majority of other European food and global rice and pasta industry
transactions over the last several years. In addition, this divestiture will
enable us to reduce our exposure to marketplace disruption associated with the
uncertainty of Brexit and additional future potential foreign currency
fluctuations.”
Consumer Behavior
Unmasked at Outlook Conference
ARLINGTON, VA -- Sam Walton said,
"There is only one boss. The customer - and he can fire everybody in
the company from the chairman on down, simply by spending his money somewhere
else." It's humbling, which is why companies spend hundreds of
millions of dollars each year trying to convince consumers to spend money with
them - to keep the lights on and the doors open.
But all the money in the world spent on advertising, marketing, and even packaging won't make a bit of difference if you don't understand what consumers actually want. Understanding how consumers are behaving, and how technology is causing seismic shifts in consumer behavior, is paramount to commercial success.
Building on last year's wildly popular session, "The Future of Retail," USA Rice has added a can't miss session to this year's Outlook Conference that will look at grocery shopper trends.
In "Customers Also Viewed This: Unpacking Consumer Retail Behavior," David Fikes, vice president, communications and consumer/community affairs for the Food Marketing Institute (FMI), will present the results of FMI's 2019 U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends that builds on more than four decades of research into customer attitudes and practices.
"Before you can market well, you need to understand," said Fikes. "Consumer approaches to shopping and food are constantly shifting, and our research identifies those changing expectations, so the food industry can more effectively address shoppers' concerns, dietary needs, and appetites."
Fikes' fast moving session will take a deep dive into customer personalization and consumer expectations on food safety, sustainability, ingredients, and values.
If you're in the business of food, or a consumer of food - and you are - this session is for you!
The USA Rice Outlook Conference is the largest rice specific event in North America. The 2019 Conference will take place from December 8-10 at the Statehouse Convention Center in Little Rock, Arkansas. Check here for updates.
But all the money in the world spent on advertising, marketing, and even packaging won't make a bit of difference if you don't understand what consumers actually want. Understanding how consumers are behaving, and how technology is causing seismic shifts in consumer behavior, is paramount to commercial success.
Building on last year's wildly popular session, "The Future of Retail," USA Rice has added a can't miss session to this year's Outlook Conference that will look at grocery shopper trends.
In "Customers Also Viewed This: Unpacking Consumer Retail Behavior," David Fikes, vice president, communications and consumer/community affairs for the Food Marketing Institute (FMI), will present the results of FMI's 2019 U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends that builds on more than four decades of research into customer attitudes and practices.
"Before you can market well, you need to understand," said Fikes. "Consumer approaches to shopping and food are constantly shifting, and our research identifies those changing expectations, so the food industry can more effectively address shoppers' concerns, dietary needs, and appetites."
Fikes' fast moving session will take a deep dive into customer personalization and consumer expectations on food safety, sustainability, ingredients, and values.
If you're in the business of food, or a consumer of food - and you are - this session is for you!
The USA Rice Outlook Conference is the largest rice specific event in North America. The 2019 Conference will take place from December 8-10 at the Statehouse Convention Center in Little Rock, Arkansas. Check here for updates.
If You Like Chewing On
Straws, This M’sian Co. Makes Halal Rice Straws That’re Actually Edible
Sade Dayangku
1
We’ve seen an increase in the
popularity of plastic straw alternatives like metal, bamboo and paper straws in
the last year or so in the name of saving the earth. Those are the common
alternatives, but have you heard of edible rice straws before?
One company capitalising on the alternative straws industry is
Penang-based NLYTech Biotech formed
in December 2018. They recently launched a product called RiceStraws,
which is, as the name suggests, rice straws that are also Halal-certified for
consumption by Muslims.
The founders behind the company
are CEO Law Yee Tee, Business Director Kenzo Lim, and IT Director Anddrew Loh.
They’re bringing rice straws to the table because they believe they’re one of
the more affordable alternatives available.
Familiar Straw Alternatives Aren’t As
Eco-Friendly As You Think
NLYTech Biotech wants to do their
part in reducing plastic use and wastage by introducing products (with
RiceStraws being their first one) that are 100% biodegradable, made of natural
ingredients and are edible.
Their rice straws are made of
rice and tapioca—rice which makes up the bulk of the material with tapioca used
as a coagulant. According to them, rice straws hold advantages over not just
plastic ones (clearly), but also polylactic acid (PLA) ones which are
vegetable-based bioplastic and even paper straws.
Kenzo said, “Paper straws are
made from trees and has harmful environmental impacts due to deforestation. PLA
straws and other PLA products become another form of plastic that will take
years to break down in landfills and the ocean. PLA straws need to be composted
under specific conditions and most countries do not yet have common facilities
to compost PLA-based products, forcing them to end up in landfills.”
Image Credit: NLYTech Biotech
While metal straws can be used
for a long time and bamboo straws can be used for a slightly extended period of
time compared to paper ones, the former can lead to self-inflicted injuries if
used carelessly and the latter brings up hygiene concerns.
If you own an F&B
establishment, presenting your customers with metal straws could be risky as
they’re a more expensive reusable straw option that tends to get stolen, and
cleaning the metal straws properly takes more effort than simply throwing out
used plastic ones, which could lead to a lack of hygiene by irresponsible
F&B operators.
NLYTech Biotech believes that
RiceStraws combats these issues by being easily compostable (they don’t require
a commercial composting facility like PLA does and they decompose completely in
90 days), edible and because they’re made from resources that are bountiful in
our region.
While they don’t exactly dissolve
in drinks, they do soften up after a while. The rice straws can last for 2 to 3
hours in hot drinks and 4 to 10 hours in cold drinks.
Keeping The ASP Of RiceStraws Low
The company keeps the average
selling price (ASP) of their rice straws relatively low at RM0.08 per piece
based on volume (for comparison, plastic straws generally cost around 3 sen per
piece). They’re able to do this by using fully-automated production lines as
NLYTech Biotech is an extension of NLYTech Solution Sdn Bhd that deals with
equipment and has an automation division.
In an exclusive video interview with
Food Manufacture, CEO Law Yee Tee said that this means they’re
able to design their own equipment that can produce “at least 100,000 pieces
per hour” leading to a total of 2.4 million pieces produced per day if there is
appropriate market demand.
The biggest challenge for the
company so far has been convincing consumers to switch from plastic straws to
biodegradable ones as the latter might cost more. “This is the major challenge
we face when we try to penetrate into developing countries in the region. The
next challenge in line will be custom regulatory, hence, we need help from our
local distributors who are familiar with this.”
In Malaysia itself, Kenzo said
that the reception of RiceStraws has been good because “the Malaysian
government is gradually implementing plastic ban throughout the nation.
However, creating awareness amongst the general Malaysians are also essential
as not many are prepared to pay more to contribute to a more plastic-free
environment.”
Striving To Become As Eco-Friendly As Possible
RiceStraws won in Asia Food
Innovation Awards 2019’s Best Sustainable Packaging category, and they plan to
take the eco-friendliness of their product one step further by recollecting
used RiceStraws to be re-processed into animal food for chickens, fish, birds
and other animals.
Image Credit: NLYTech Biotech
Some of the added benefits of
RiceStraws according to Kenzo are that you have the option of buying them in an
array of food-grade colours, the taste of them can be altered, and you can
customise the diameter, length and logo print on them.
They also have a shelf life of 2
years, so buying them in bulk shouldn’t be a worry. Of course, these seem like
options that cater to F&B establishments instead of your average Malaysian
who carries around their own reusable straw.
For those concerned about the
food safety certifications of RiceStraws, the product is certified according to
HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points) standards and complies with
ISO 22000 (a food safety management standard developed by the International
Organization for Standardization).
With the good response RiceStraws
has received in major urban areas like Klang Valley, Selangor, Penang and Johor
Bahru, Kenzo said they plan to expand their product range by producing cutlery
made of rice and tapioca in the year 2020.
Celestial sells
Tilda rice business to Spain's Ebro Foods ahead of earnings results
By Simon Harvey | 28 August 2019
|
Deal
was done for $342m in cash
|
US food group Hain Celestial has sold its Tilda basmati
rice brand to Spain-based Ebro Foods for US$342m in cash as it
continues with a programme to trim its portfolio.
Nasdaq-listed Hain, which has also
recently sold its Pure Protein divisionincluding Plainville
Farms, as well as WestSoy Tofu, announced the deal ahead of its
full-year results expected tomorrow (29 August). The company said the
transaction represents an adjusted EBITDA multiple of 13.5 times.
Tilda will contribute around $200m to net sales and $25m to
adjusted EBITDA for the fiscal year ended on 30 June, Hain added in a
statement.Based in New York, Hain has been immersed in the process of cutting its SKU count to boost profits under chief executive Mark Schiller and the Project Terra 2020 initiative put in place by his predecessor before the CEO came on board last November. The latest deal will enable the business to reduce its debt.
Schiller said: "We are pleased to complete the strategic sale of Tilda, which is consistent with our transformational plan to simplify our portfolio, strengthen our core capabilities and expand margins and cash flow. Tilda has been a strong business for us, primarily in the United Kingdom, and under new strategic ownership, we expect the brand to continue to thrive."
The CEO added that the Tilda deal will reduce Hain's exposure to Brexit ahead of the 31 October deadline for the UK to leave the European Union and the uncertainty around exchange rates that goes with it.
Schiller continued: "We believe this transaction represents a significant premium to a majority of other European food and global rice and pasta industry transactions over the last several years. In addition, this divestiture will enable us to reduce our exposure to marketplace disruption associated with the uncertainty of Brexit and additional future potential foreign-currency fluctuations."
Ebro, which has recently been focused on buying up organic food businesses, said the purchase of Tilda would give it a "strong foothold in the UK market, where it has to date had only a token presence".
The company, which has rice businesses in the US and in Europe in its portfolio, added: "Ebro believes that Tilda's international nature will pave the way for extensive development with other group products."
The Spanish firm added Tilda generated sales of almost GBP153m (US$187.8m) in the year through June, with 60% of that coming from the UK market and 92% generated from basmati rice sales.
Tilda has two plants in Rainham, Essex, in the south-east of England, employing around 326 people..
Thailand to spend over 1 bln USD on
rice, oil palm price guarantees
Bangkok (VNA) – The Thai Government has approved a package worth 34.8 billion baht (over 1 billion USD) to ensure rice and oil palm prices at suitable levels for farmers.
A deputy government spokesperson said the rice price guarantee scheme worth 21.5 billion baht will be disbursed for 892,000 farming households, while the remaining 13.3 billion baht will be provided for 300,000 others farming oil palm.
The budget for palm farmers will be carried out from now to September 2020.
Meanwhile, the rice price guarantee scheme will be applied in one year starting this October. It will cover five types of rice: white rice paddy with 15-percent moisture, glutinous rice paddy, Thai hom mali rice paddy, provincial fragrant rice paddy, and fragrant Pathum Thani rice paddy.
Additionally, the Thai Government also approved 25.8 billion baht to subsidise production costs for 4.3 million rice farming households.-VNA
Bumper
Aush rice output likely despite floods in Rangpur
·
Published at 12:50 am August 28th, 2019
Photo: Dhaka Tribune
The Department
of Agriculture Extension (DAE) officials said farmers have already completed
harvesting Aush rice crop on 43,645 hectares of land producing over 1.37-lakh
tonnes of clean rice (2.06-lakh tonnes of paddy) in the region
Despite notable
damages caused to standing Aush rice crop by recent floods, officials are
expecting its bumper production as harvesting is nearing completion this season
in Rangpur agriculture region.
The Department
of Agriculture Extension (DAE) officials said farmers have already completed
harvesting Aush rice crop on 43,645 hectares of land producing over 1.37-lakh
tonnes of clean rice (2.06-lakh tonnes of paddy) in the region.
Before floods
in July last, farmers cultivated Aush rice on 55,530 hectares of land, higher
by 755 hectares than the fixed farming target on 54,775 heaters of land to
produce 1.54-lakh tonnes of clean rice (2.34-lakh tonnes of paddy) in the
region.
“Last year,
farmers produced 1.23-lakh tonnes of Aush rice from 40,618 hectares of land
against the fixed production target of 68,969 tonnes from 26,159 heaters,”
Horticulture Specialist of the DAE at its regional office Khondker Md. Mesbahul
Islam said.
Despite causing
production loss of 28,665 tonnes of Aush rice worth Taka 59.30 crore on 7,754
hectares of land by recent floods, farmers are harvesting the remaining Aush
rice crop on 47,776 hectares of land this season in the region.
“After
harvesting on 43,645 hectares of land so far, farmers are continuing harvesting
Aush rice on reaming more 4,131 hectares of land now,” Islam said.
After
completion of Aush rice harvest soon in the region, the total Aush rice output
might be around 1.49-lakh tonnes of clean rice this season, higher by 26,000
tonnes of Aush rice than last year.
Talking to BSS,
Deputy Director of DAE for Rangpur region M Moniruzzaman said farmers exceeded
the fixed Aush rice cultivation target this time following various realistic
programs taken by the government.
The programs
include distribution of special intensives, providing technical support to
farmers and conducting motivational campaigns.
Under the
programs, the government distributed special incentives in terms of Aus rice
seed and fertilisers worth Taka 5.75 crore among 34,029 small and marginal
farmers of all five districts in Rangpur agriculture region this season.
“Each of the
beneficiary farmers got 5 kg high yielding variety Aush rice seed, 15 kg
Di-ammonium phosphate and 10 kg Murrieta of Potash fertilisers free of costs to
cultivate Aush rice on one bigha of land,” he said.
Additional
Director of DAE for Rangpur region Muhammad Ali said the profitable Aush rice
cultivation regained popularity among farmers in last ten years as a result of
special steps taken by the present government.
“The farmer are
reaping more profits through cultivation of Aush rice at lower costs using
unused seasonal rain water during May, June and July as an additional crop on
the lands those remain fallow during the off season,” Ali said.
“After
harvesting Aush rice by August, farmers can easily cultivate T-Aman rice on the
same land to further increase rice production for attaining sustainable
national food security,” Ali added.
Talking to BSS,
local farmers Hossain Ali and Mofizar Rahman said they had already harvested
their Aush rice crop and got excellent yield rate of 3.15 tonnes of clean rice
per hectare of land on an average this season.
They also
expressed satisfaction over the current excellent market price between Taka 650
and 750 per mound (every 40 kilogram) of the newly harvested Aus paddy in local
markets
India's monsoon rains 14% below
average this week - weather office
AUGUST 28, 2019 / 5:28 PM /
·
MUMBAI, Aug 28 (Reuters) -
Monsoon rains in India were below average for the first time in five weeks in
the week through Wednesday, the weather office said, as the rice-growing
north-western parts of the country received lower rainfall.Monsoon rains are
crucial to farm output and economic growth as the agricultural sector accounts
for about 15% of India’s $2.5 trillion economy.India received 14% less rainfall
than the 50-year average in the week to Aug. 28, data from the India
Meteorological Department (IMD) showed, with rice-growing north-west India
receiving 36% less rain.Overall, India has received 1% more rain than average
since the start of the monsoon season on June 1. (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav;
Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices
Open- August 29, 2019
AUGUST 29, 2019
* * * * * *
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices – APMC/Open Market-August 29, 2019 Nagpur,
Aug 29 (Reuters) – Gram and tuar prices firmed up again in Nagpur Agriculture
Produce and Marketing Committee (APMC) here on increased festival season demand
from local millers amid thin supply from producing regions. Reports about weak
monsoon in the region, good recovery on NCDEX in gram and fresh rise in Madhya
Pradesh pulses also boosted prices. About 450 bags of gram and 200 bags of tuar
reported for auction, according to sources.
GRAM
* Gram varieties ruled steady in open market here but demand was
poor.
TUAR
* Tuar gavarani reported higher in open market here on good demand
from local
traders.
* Major rice varieties declined in open market here on lack of demand
from
local traders.
* In Akola, Tuar New – 5,600-5,800, Tuar dal (clean) – 8,100-8,200,
Udid Mogar (clean)
– 7,200-7,800, Moong Mogar (clean) 7,900-8,700, Gram – 4,000-4,200,
Gram Super best
– 5,600-6,000 * Wheat and other foodgrain items moved in a narrow
range in
scattered deals and settled at last levels in thin trading
activity.
Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100
kg
FOODGRAINS Available prices Previous close
Gram Auction 3,800-4,285 3,700-4,100
Gram Pink Auction n.a. 2,100-2,600
Tuar Auction 5,000-5,600 5,000-5,590
Moong Auction n.a. 3,950-4,200
Udid Auction n.a. 4,300-4,500
Masoor Auction n.a. 2,200-2,500
Wheat Lokwan Auction 2,000-2,095 2,000-2,110
Wheat Sharbati Auction n.a. 2,900-3,000
Gram Super Best Bold 6,000-6,300 6,000-6,300
Gram Super Best n.a. n.a.
Gram Medium Best 5,600-5,800 5,600-5,800
Gram Dal Medium n.a. n.a
Gram Mill Quality 4,350-4,450 4,350-4,450
Desi gram Raw 4,250-4,350 4,250-4,350
Gram Kabuli 8,300-10,000 8,300-10,000
Tuar Fataka Best-New 8,400-8,500 8,400-8,500
Tuar Fataka Medium-New 8,000-8,200 8,000-8,200
Tuar Dal Best Phod-New 7,600-7,800 7,600-7,800
Tuar Dal Medium phod-New 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,500
Tuar Gavarani New 5,900-6,000 5,850-5,950
Tuar Karnataka 6,200-6,300 6,200-6,300
Masoor dal best 5,600-5,700 5,600-5,700
Masoor dal medium 5,100-5,300 5,100-5,300
Masoor n.a. n.a.
Moong Mogar bold (New) 8,200-8,800 8,200-8,800
Moong Mogar Medium 7,000-7,500 7,000-7,500
Moong dal Chilka New 6,500-7,600 6,500-7,600
Moong Mill quality n.a. n.a.
Moong Chamki best 8,500-8,900 8,500-8,900
Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 7,500-8,200 7,500-8,200
Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,600-6,200 5,600-6,200
Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG) 4,400-4,800 4,400-4,800
Mot (100 INR/KG) 5,500-6,500 5,500-6,500
Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg) 4,800-5,000 4,800-5,000
Watana Dal (100 INR/KG) 5,800-6,000 5,800-6,000
Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG) 7,500-8,000 7,500-8,000
Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG) 2,200-2,300 2,200-2,300
Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG) 2,100-2,200 2,100-2,200
Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG) 2,600-2,700 2,600-2,700
Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG) 2,450-2,600 2,450-2,600
Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG) 2,250-2,350 2,250-2,350
Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG) n.a. n.a.
MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG) 3,200-3,800 3,200-3,800
MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG) 2,700-3,000 2,700-3,000
Rice Parmal (100 INR/KG) 2,200-2,300 2,200-2,300
Rice BPT best new (100 INR/KG) 3,000-3,500 3,200-3,800
Rice BPT medium new(100 INR/KG) 2,600-3,000 2,800-3,200
Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG) 2,900-3,000 2,900-3,000
Rice Swarna best new (100 INR/KG) 2,600-2,750 2,600-2,750
Rice Swarna medium new (100 INR/KG)2,300-2,400 2,300-2,400
Rice HMT best new (100 INR/KG) 3,600-4,200 3,800-4,400
Rice HMT medium new (100 INR/KG) 3,300-3,500 3,400-3,600
Rice Shriram best new(100 INR/KG) 5,500-5,600 5,500-5,800
Rice Shriram med new (100 INR/KG) 4,200-4,500 4,500-4,800
Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG) 8,500-13,500 8,500-13,500
Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG) 5,000-7,500 5,000-7,500
Rice Chinnor best new 100 INR/KG) 5,600-5,800 5,800-6,000
Rice Chinnor medium new(100 INR/KG)5,200-5,400 5,500-5,600
Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG) 2,350-2,550 2,350-2,550
Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG) 2,050-2,250 2,050-2,250 WEATHER (NAGPUR)
Maximum temp. 32.2 degree Celsius, minimum temp. 24.8 degree Celsius Rainfall :
Nil FORECAST: Generally cloudy sky with moderate rains. Maximum and minimum
temperature likely to be around 32 degree Celsius and 25 degree Celsius
respectively. Note: n.a.—not available (For oils, transport costs are excluded
from plant delivery prices, but included in market prices)
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
TICAD7: PM
Shinzo Abe says Japan will help double Africa’s rice production by 2030
“We must end hunger in Africa. Yes, we must! Hunger diminishes
our humanity.” - Adesina urges
- The Sasakawa Association will
work with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), to help double
rice production to 50 million tonnes by 2030. Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe made the announcement at the Sasakawa Africa Association (SAA)
symposium held on Wednesday during TICAD7.
“Japanese technology can play a
key role in innovation which is key to agriculture,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
told delegates.
We want to help shift the
mindset of small-holder farmers from producing-to-eat to producing-to-sell. We
are hopeful that Africa’s youth can take agriculture to a new era, and that
they can see a career path in agriculture
Yohei Sasakawa, Chairman of the Nippon foundation
Yohei Sasakawa, Chairman of the Nippon foundation
Discussions at the Symposium focused
on Africa’s youth bulge, unemployment rates, agricultural innovations and
technologies, solutions and job creation opportunities in the agricultural
sector.
“We’ve always believed in the
agriculture potential of Africa,” said Yohei Sasakawa, Chairman of the Nippon
foundation. “We are paying more attention to income-generating
activities. We want to help shift the mindset of small-holder farmers from
producing-to-eat to producing-to-sell. We are hopeful that Africa’s youth can
take agriculture to a new era, and that they can see a career path in
agriculture,” he added.
In a keynote address, African
Development Bank Group President, Akinwumi Adesina, called for urgent and
concerted efforts to “end hunger”.
“In spite of all the gains made
in agriculture. We are not winning the global war against hunger. We must all
arise collectively and end global hunger. To do that, we must end hunger in
Africa. Hunger diminishes our humanity,” Adesina urged.
According to the FAO’s 2019 State of Food and Security, the number of
hungry people globally stands at a disconcerting 821 million. Africa alone
accounts for 31% of the global number of hungry people – 251 million people.
Commending the Sasakawa
Association’s late founder, Ryochi Sasakawa, for his tireless efforts in
tackling hunger, Adesina said: “Passion, dedication and commitment to the
development of agriculture and the pursuit of food security in our world has
been the hallmark of your work.”
Between 1986 and 2003, Sasakawa
Association in Africa, operated in a total of 15 countries including – Ghana,
Sudan, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Benin, Togo, Mali, Guinea, Zambia, Ethiopia,
Eritrea, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi and Mozambique.
Harnessing the potential of new
technologies
Adesina expressed confidence in
the ability of technology to deliver substantial benefits in agriculture. To
accelerate Africa’s agricultural growth, the African Development Bank has
launched the Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) to
deliver new technologies to millions of farmers. ‘TAAT has become a game
changer, and is already delivering impressive results, Adesina said.
Working with 30 private seed
companies, the TAAT maize compact produced over 27,000 tons of seeds of
water efficient maize that was planted by 1.6 million farmers.
Tackling climate change: a top
priority
Hiroyuki Takahashi, founder of
Pocket Marche, a platform that connects Japanese farmers and producers with
consumers, shared insights and lessons learnt from Japan’s experiences,
historic cycles of climate disasters and the country’s rebound.
“The power to choose what we eat
is the power to stop the climate crisis and bring sustainable happiness to a
world with limited resources,” Takahashi said.
It is estimated that Africa will
heat up 1.5 times faster than the global average and require $7-15 billion a
year for adaptation alone. Limiting the impacts of climate change is expected
to become a top priority for Africa.
“Africa has been short changed by
climate change. But, it should not be short changed by climate finance,”
Adesina said in his concluding remarks.
“Let’s be better asset managers
for nature. For while we must eat today, so must future generations coming
after us. It is our collective responsibility to ensure that we do not leave
empty plates on the table for generations to come,” Adesina concluded.
Nafissatou Diouf is Communication and
External Relations Department, African Development Bank
Rice exports
dip but earnings up during first half of 2019 –GRDB
Venezuela a key market
Nizam Hassan
August 28, 2019
Despite a dip in rice exports within the first six months of the
year as compared to 2018, the Guyana Rice Development Board (GRDB) says more
revenue has been earned during the same period by way of the sale of
higher-value products.Overall, from January to June, the GRDB facilitated the
exportation of 297,489 tonnes of rice, bringing in a total of US$123.1 million,
representing an increase from US$120.2 million it earned last year after
312,593 tonnes of rice was exported in the same period.GRDB Head Nizam Hassan
credited the increase in revenue to more higher-end products being exported as
compared to last year.
Hain Celestial
sells rice brand for $342 million, lowers Brexit exposure
By Tonya Garcia
: Aug 28, 2019 8:47 a.m. ET
Hain Celestial Group Inc. HAIN, +0.99% said
Wednesday that it has sold the Tilda brand of basmati and specialty rice for
$342 million in cash to Ebro Foods S.A., a deal that lowers Hain's exposure to
Brexit impact. "Tilda has been a strong business for us, primarily in the
United Kingdom, and under new strategic ownership, we expect the brand to
continue to thrive," said Hain Celestial's Chief Executive Mark Schiller
in a statement. "In addition, this divestiture will enable us to reduce
our exposure to marketplace disruption associated with the uncertainty of
Brexit and additional future potential foreign currency fluctuations."
Hain says it will use a portion of the proceeds to pay down debt. The company
is scheduled to report fiscal fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday. Hain
Celestial shares edged up 0.4% in Wednesday premarket trading, and have gained
14.6% for the year to date. The S&P 500 indexSPX, +0.65% is
up 14.5% for 2019 so far.
Stronger baht
pounding rice exports, say traders
Aug 26. 2019
By Wichit Chaitrong
The Nation
The Nation
Charoen Laothamatas, president of
the Thai Rice Exporters Association, has expressed concern over the impact the baht’s
appreciation is having on his sector.
The baht
has risen about 6 per cent against the US dollar since January, whereas the
Vietnam dong has held study and the Indian rupee has even weakened, Charoen
noted, citing Thailand’s chief competitors in the global rice trade.
“The
stronger baht has largely made Thai rice more expensive than those of our
competitors,” he said. “Homali fragrant rice, for example, currently cost
$1,200 per metric tonne, while Vietnam jasmine is only $520.”
The
association puts the price of Indian basmati at between $1,030 and $1,140 per
tonne and Cambodia’s pkha malis at $935.
Thailand
exported 4.4 million tonnes between January and June, down 19.6 per cent year
on year, and the value plunged 17 per cent to Bt72.2 billion.
Charoen
said total rice exports this year are expected to reach 9 million tonnes, down
from 11.2 million last year.
Severe
drought this past season might not greatly affect the first crop now that rain
has appeared, he said, but the second crop will be hit because there’s so
little water in reserve at the dams.
Rice
vendors have meanwhile been complaining about the rising cost of glutinous
rice.
Charoen
pointed out, though, that glutinous rice is for domestic consumption rather
than export and its price is quite sensitive to local demand and supply.
Farmers
in the Northeast have given up growing it as preferences shift to
fragrant rice, he said, resulting in a diminished supply.
Vietnam and IRRI explore collaborations to enhance rice sector
productivity
Thursday, 29 August 2019 06:15
Dr Matthew Morell, director-general
of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) met with Dr Nguyen Xuan
Cuong, Vietnam’s minister of agriculture, to discuss ways to increase the
resilience of domestic agriculture to climate change, enhance the productivity
and access to markets of rice farmers
Minister Cuong discussed with Dr
Morell the priority areas where Vietnam, specifically the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) and its attached agencies, would like
support from IRRI.
Minister Cuong stressed, “MARD will
coordinate with the IRRI Vietnam country office to work on our agricultural
policies to help improve the lives of our farmers.” Several existing and
pending collaborative programs between IRRI and MARD will also push through in
the coming years.
To address the impacts of climate
change, Minister Cuong commended IRRI for its continued support of the national
breeding program of Vietnam to produce climate change-tolerant rice varieties.
Minister Cuong requested for IRRI’s
help in studying and developing Vietnam’s rice market such as exploring
non-traditional markets in Africa and Latin America.
Dr Morell shared that the 50-year
longstanding partnership between Vietnam and IRRI has produced significant
gains including boosting yields of southern Vietnamese farmers by an average of
9.8 per cent per year.
Minister Cuong agreed that IRRI’s
support to Vietnam helped them achieve a lot of successes in the agriculture
sector, particularly in increasing rice sufficiency and knowledge expertise.
Minister Cuong expressed to Dr
Morell Vietnam’s gratitude for the 50 years of collaboration between IRRI and
MARD, with the ministry agreeing to the joint hosting of an event in Hanoi to
celebrate this fruitful partnership.
After meeting with the minister, Dr
Morell proceeded to visit Dr Cao Duc Phat, the former minister of agriculture
and a member of the IRRI Board of Trustees. They discussed several issues
concerning the Vietnamese agriculture sector such as climate change impacts and
rice production. Dr Phat suggested that IRRI should design a program package of
research and technology development that addresses productivity as well as
climate change adaptation and mitigation.
Are Snack Bars
for Kids a Healthy Choice?
Many companies now offer 'healthy' snack bars
for kids. But are they actually good for them?
By Consumer Reports
August 29, 2019
Small stomachs and high energy
needs mean that kids are often hungry, so keeping snack bars on hand seems like
a good idea. There’s no doubt they’re convenient, and many snack bar companies
have recently come out with kid versions of their "adult" snack bars.
But are these bars really a nutritious choice for kids?
Our nutrition experts evaluated the
ingredients and nutritional information for 12 different childrens’ snack bars
and found that some can make for a healthy snack. “When it comes to kids,
calories aren’t the main concern,” says Amy Keating, R.D., a CR nutritionist.
Instead, our testing and scoring weighed factors such as natural vs. added
sugars and whole vs. refined grains.
We noted three additional
ingredients to look out for:
Rice. We determined whether any of the bars contained rice
products, such as brown rice flour or brown rice syrup, because CR research has
shown that rice may contain worrying amounts of arsenic. Nine out
of 12 bars we evaluated contained some kind of rice products.
Chicory root fiber. Also known as inulin, chicory root fiber is a processed
ingredient. It’s best when filling, heart-healthy fiber in a bar comes from
minimally processed whole foods such as oats or other grains, rather than from
processed sources. Three of the 12 bars contained this ingredient.
Soy/whey/pea protein
isolates. These processed substances help
manufacturers inflate the protein level on the label, but it’s better for kids
to get protein from whole food ingredients such as nuts or seeds. Only two of
the 12 bars contained at least one of these protein ingredients.
According to the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics, children and teens need to eat every three to four hours
to fuel their growth and provide energy for study and play. A bar can be a
reasonable choice, but it doesn’t have to be one marketed specifically for
kids. For example, our top-rated regular snack bar—Pure Organic Wild Blueberry
Fruit & Nut—got the same nutrition score as the top-scoring kids bar, and
could also be appealing to youngsters. (See our energy bar ratings here.) But think outside the
bar, too, and serve whole foods for your child’s other snacks. Easy options
include whole fruit, dried fruit, nuts, popcorn, carrot sticks, and bell pepper
slices. (For additional ideas,
When you’re buying snack bars,
choose the healthiest ones you can by looking at the ingredients and nutrition
information. Our two top-rated bars contained no rice, no (or fewer) added
sugars, and no processed protein or fiber. Several others aren’t as healthful
as the wrapper vibe might suggest. Below, our results for all 12 bars.
Sticky rice discounts to
B35 next week
published : 28 Aug 2019 at
18:05
writer: Phusadee Arunmas
A
trader shows sticky rice at New Happy Land market on Monday. (Photo by Varuth
Hirunyatheb)
The government will discount sticky rice packs to 35
baht per kilogramme late next week to ease consumer burdens following a steep
rise in prices.Whichai Phochanakij, director-general of the Internal Trade
Department, who on Wednesday met representatives of packaged rice producers,
millers and retailers, said in the preliminary stage the ministry will offer
about 200,000 to 300,000 glutinous rice packs ranging from 2kg to 5kg.
The rice packages will be offered at 35 baht per kg,
which is lower than the market price of 50 baht per kg. The discounted rice
will be sold mainly to low-income earners through the state-initiated Thong Fah
low-priced shops focusing on the north, the northeast and the central regions.
Purchases will be limited to three packs per person
for 2kg packs and two packs per person for 5kg packs.
Mr Whichai said the department is set to offer more
discounted rice packs if the amount is insufficient.
“We believe the problem will start easing late next
month when the new supply enters the market,” he said.
Mr Whichai warned farmers not to rush growing
glutinous rice, noting the market is limited compared with white rice and hom
mali fragrant rice.
In a move to tackle rising glutinous rice prices, the
government last week ordered millers, traders and exporters to report their
stocks.
The department also ordered nationwide inspection of
glutinous rice to check hoarding and price gouging.
Millers, traders and exporters who refuse to submit
their stock reports or submit inaccurate stocks will be subject to up to five
years in jail or a fine of not more than 5,000 baht, or both.
For hoarding or price gouging, perpetrators are
subject to seven years of imprisonment, a fine of up to 140,000 baht, or both.
According to Mr Whichai, 660 operators in 57
provinces have report glutinous rice stocks at a combined 42,096 tonnes.
The domestic price of sticky rice rose sharply to 50
baht per kg from 35 baht last month.
The surge was attributed to the widespread drought
and lower production over the last two years, as farmers shifted to grow more
hom mali fragrant rice as the latter has a higher price.
Thailand normally produces an average of 3.5-3.6
million tonnes of milled rice, with 3.3-3.4 million tonnes for domestic
consumption.
Key export markets include China, the US, Malaysia
and Japan.
Cabinet okays schemes for
rice, oil palm
published : 28 Aug 2019 at 08:22
newspaper section: Business
writer: Chatrudee Theparat
A farmer cultivates rice in Pathum
Thani province. Five types of rice are covered by the rice price guarantee
scheme. (Photo by Pongpat Wongyala)
The cabinet on Tuesday approved a package worth 59 billion baht
in price guarantees and subsidy schemes for rice and oil palm.
Of the total budget, 13.3 billion baht is for the price
guarantee programme for rice, 21.4 billion for oil palm and the remaining 25
billion is to subsidise production costs for rice farmers.
Rachada Dhnadirek, a deputy government spokeswoman, said the
rice price guarantee scheme will cover five types of rice: white rice paddy
with 15% moisture, Thai hom mali rice paddy, fragrant
Pathum Thani rice paddy with 15% moisture, glutinous rice paddy with 15%
moisture, and provincial fragrant rice paddy.
Under the scheme, which will run from October this year to October
2020, farmers will see the price of white rice paddy with 15% moisture
guaranteed at 10,000 baht per tonne, but the guaranteed rice cannot exceed 30
tonnes per family or 40 rai.
The guaranteed price is set at 15,000 baht a tonne for Thai hom
mali rice paddy, but limited to 14 tonnes per family or 40 rai, while fragrant
Pathum Thani rice paddy with 15% moisture is set at 11,000 baht a tonne with a
limit of 25 tonnes per family or 40 rai.
The price of glutinous rice paddy with 15% moisture is set at 12,000
baht a tonne for a limit of 16 tonnes or 40 rai, while the price of provincial
fragrant rice paddy is set at 14,000 baht at tonne for a limit of 16 tonnes per
family or 40 rai.
The scheme will be run by the state-owned Bank for Agriculture
and Agricultural Cooperatives (BAAC).
Under the programme, farmers will be paid the differences only
when the prices fall below the benchmark prices.
Ms Rachada said the cabinet also acknowledged the 25 billion
baht allocated from fiscal 2019 to subsidise rice farmers' production costs
during the 2019-20 main crop at 500 baht per rai, for a limit of 20 rai per
family.
For palm, the cabinet agreed to set the guaranteed price for
fresh palm nuts at four baht a kg, for a limit of 25 rai per family.
Commerce Minister Jurin Laksanawisit said the government
expected 300,000 farmers to participate in the project, which will run from
August this year to September 2020. To be eligible, planters must register with
the Agriculture Extension Department and the money will be deposited directly
into their BAAC accounts.
sticky