How humans changed the face of Earth
Summary
Scientists across disciplines
have been debating potential dates for the beginning of the Anthropocene—the
period during which human activity has become a dominant influence on climate
change and the global environment (1, 2). Recorded history has provided
information with which to chart Earth's environmental changes during recent
centuries. But how can it be determined if and when human activities
transformed Earth during the time before written records? This question is
prompted in part by the hypothesis that prehistoric deforestation and rice
farming might explain the preindustrial upturn in atmospheric methane and
carbon dioxide concentrations after ∼7000 years ago (3). On page 897 of this issue,
Stephens et al. (4)
describe efforts by the ArchaeoGLOBE Project to crowdsource information from
the global archaeological community, synthesize the data, and generate
semiquantitative estimates of how various types of land use have altered Earth
during the past ten millennia.
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under the terms of the Science Journals Default License.
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How
humans changed the face of Earth
Getting to the
root of how plants tolerate too much iron
Scientists uncover a gene responsible for
helping plants thrive in stressful environments
Date:
August 29, 2019
Source:
Salk Institute
Summary:
Scientists
have found a major genetic regulator of iron tolerance, a gene called GSNOR.
The findings could lead to the development of crop species that produce higher
yields in soils with excess iron.
Share:
FULL STORY
Iron is essential for plant
growth, but with heavy rainfall and poor aeration, many acidic soils become
toxic with excess iron. In countries with dramatic flood seasons, such as in
West Africa and tropical Asia, toxic iron levels can have dire consequences on
the availability of staple foods, such as rice.
Despite dozens of attempts in the
last two decades to uncover the genes responsible for iron tolerance, these
remained elusive until recently. Now, Salk scientists have found a major
genetic regulator of iron tolerance, a gene called GSNOR. The findings,
published in Nature Communications on
August 29, 2019, could lead to the development of crop species that produce
higher yields in soils with excess iron.
"This is the first time that
a gene and its natural variants have been identified for iron tolerance,"
says Associate Professor Wolfgang Busch, senior author on the paper and a
member of Salk's Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory as well as its
Integrative Biology Laboratory. "This work is exciting because we now
understand how plants can grow in stressful conditions, such as high levels of
iron, which could help us make more stress-resistant crops."
In plants such as rice, elevated
soil iron levels cause direct cellular damage by harming fats and proteins,
decreasing roots' ability to grow. Yet, some plants appear to have inherent
tolerance to high iron levels; scientists wanted to understand why.
"We believed there were
genetic mechanisms that underlie this resistance, but it was unclear which
genes were responsible," says first author Baohai Li, a postdoctoral
fellow in the Busch lab. "To examine this question, we used the power of
natural variation of hundreds of different strains of plants to study genetic
adaption to high levels of iron."
The scientists first tested a
number of strains of a small mustard plant (Arabidopsis thaliana), to observe
if there was natural variation in iron resistance. Some of the plants did
exhibit tolerance to iron toxicity, so the researchers used an approach called
genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to locate the responsible gene. Their
analyses pinpointed the gene GSNOR as the key to enabling plants and roots to
grow in iron-heavy environments.
The researchers also found that
the iron-tolerance mechanism is, to their surprise, related to the activities
of nitric oxide, a gaseous molecule with a variety of roles in plants including
responding to stress. High levels of nitric oxide induced cellular stress and
impaired the plant roots' tolerance for elevated iron levels. This occurred
when plants did not have a functional GSNOR gene. GSNOR likely plays a central
role in nitric oxide metabolism and regulates the plants' ability to respond to
cellular stress and damage. This nitric oxide mechanism and the GSNOR gene also
affected iron tolerance in other species of plants, such as rice (Oryza
sativa) and a legume (Lotus japonicus), suggesting that
this gene and its activities are likely critical in many, if not all, species
of plants.
"By identifying this gene
and its genetic variants that confer iron tolerance, we hope to help plants,
such as rice, become more resistant to iron in regions with toxic iron levels,"
says Busch. "Since we found that this gene and pathway was conserved in
multiple species of plants, we suspect they may be important for iron
resistance in all higher plants. Additionally, this gene and pathway may also
play a role in humans, and could lead to new treatments for conditions
associated with iron overload."
Next, Li will be starting his own
laboratory at Zhejiang University, in China. He plans to identify the relevant
genetic variants in rice and observe if iron-tolerance variants could increase
crop yields in flooded Chinese fields.
Story Source:
Materials provided
by Salk Institute. Note:
Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
1. Baohai Li, Li Sun, Jianyan Huang, Christian Göschl,
Weiming Shi, Joanne Chory, Wolfgang Busch. GSNOR provides plant tolerance to iron toxicity
via preventing iron-dependent nitrosative and oxidative cytotoxicity. Nature
Communications, 2019; 10 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11892-5
Cite This Page:
Salk Institute. "Getting to the root of how plants tolerate
too much iron: Scientists uncover a gene responsible for helping plants thrive
in stressful environments." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 29 August 2019.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190829122142.htm>.
§ Botany
§ Nature
GenomeWeb, 2011
GenomeWeb, 2011
GenomeWeb, 2012
GenomeWeb, 2011
GenomeWeb, 2012
GenomeWeb, 2012
GenomeWeb, 2011
GenomeWeb, 2012
AfDB Spends $2bn To Train 6m African
Scientists
By
The African Development Bank (AfDB)
says it has committed $2 billion to the education and training of six million
science students in Africa from 2005 to date.
A statement by the bank’s Communication and External Relations Department yesterday in Abuja, said the AfDB’s president, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, disclosed this at the Tokyo International Conference of African Development (TICAD) in Japan.
Adesina said the bank was strongly supporting Africa to train and develop the next generation of scientists.
“Since 2005, we have provided financing of over two billion dollars to support education; this has provided education opportunities for six million students.
“We are proud of our investment in supporting the establishment of the Regional Center of Excellence in Kigali, in conjunction with the Carnegie Mellon University, which is providing world class Masters degree training in ICT.
“I am delighted that all the students that have graduated from the university have 100 per cent employment, including setting up their own businesses.
“The bank has supported the establishment of ICT digital parks in Senegal and Cape Verde.
“We are working with the Rockefeller Foundation, Microsoft, Facebook, LinkedIn and Safaricom to establish coding centers in several countries” he said.
Adesina thanked the Government of Japan for its strategic partnership with the bank in promoting science and technology in Africa.
He said the bank supported the establishment of the Egypt-Japan University of Science and Technology in Egypt, the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, and the African University of Science and Technology in Nigeria.
According to him, in partnership with Japan, the Education for Sustainable Development in Africa (ESDA) has supported inter-university partnerships between eight African and four Japanese universities.
He added that the Japan Africa Dream Scholarship Programme between the AfDB and Japan had supported African students to study in diverse fields of specialisation, including energy, agriculture, health, environmental sciences and engineering.
He said the collaboration also promoted university-industry partnerships.
“We greatly appreciate the support of the Government of Japan for the Science, Technology and Innovation Forum.
“As we look toward the future, I would like to suggest seven key areas to prioritise on Africa’s drive in science and technology.
“Africa must establish more universities of science and technologies, especially regional centers of excellence and ensure they are very well funded.
“There’s an urgent need to increase the share of GDP that is devoted to science and technology to help Africa boost its competitiveness.
A statement by the bank’s Communication and External Relations Department yesterday in Abuja, said the AfDB’s president, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, disclosed this at the Tokyo International Conference of African Development (TICAD) in Japan.
Adesina said the bank was strongly supporting Africa to train and develop the next generation of scientists.
“Since 2005, we have provided financing of over two billion dollars to support education; this has provided education opportunities for six million students.
“We are proud of our investment in supporting the establishment of the Regional Center of Excellence in Kigali, in conjunction with the Carnegie Mellon University, which is providing world class Masters degree training in ICT.
“I am delighted that all the students that have graduated from the university have 100 per cent employment, including setting up their own businesses.
“The bank has supported the establishment of ICT digital parks in Senegal and Cape Verde.
“We are working with the Rockefeller Foundation, Microsoft, Facebook, LinkedIn and Safaricom to establish coding centers in several countries” he said.
Adesina thanked the Government of Japan for its strategic partnership with the bank in promoting science and technology in Africa.
He said the bank supported the establishment of the Egypt-Japan University of Science and Technology in Egypt, the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, and the African University of Science and Technology in Nigeria.
According to him, in partnership with Japan, the Education for Sustainable Development in Africa (ESDA) has supported inter-university partnerships between eight African and four Japanese universities.
He added that the Japan Africa Dream Scholarship Programme between the AfDB and Japan had supported African students to study in diverse fields of specialisation, including energy, agriculture, health, environmental sciences and engineering.
He said the collaboration also promoted university-industry partnerships.
“We greatly appreciate the support of the Government of Japan for the Science, Technology and Innovation Forum.
“As we look toward the future, I would like to suggest seven key areas to prioritise on Africa’s drive in science and technology.
“Africa must establish more universities of science and technologies, especially regional centers of excellence and ensure they are very well funded.
“There’s an urgent need to increase the share of GDP that is devoted to science and technology to help Africa boost its competitiveness.
Group urges government to notify WTO of rice tariff process
August 30, 2019
A
rice farmer walks on the field at the International Rice Research Institute in
Laguna in this BusinessMirror file photo taken in January.
A FARMERS’ group scored the
government for the delay in notifying the World Trade Organization (WTO) of the
country’s final tariff-rate equivalent for rice imports after it removed the quantitative
restriction (QR) on the staple.
The Federation of Free Farmers
(FFF) also pointed out that the government has not notified the WTO that it is
designating rice as a product that is eligible for special safeguard duty
(SSG).
The group said this deprived the
government of the power to impose SSG duties on imports at a time when millions
of tons of the staple have entered the domestic market and pulled down the
farm-gate price of local rice.
In a study by FFF obtained by the
BusinessMirror, the group said the Philippines should have been able to impose
the SSG on rice from abroad due to the surge in import volume.
However, the government,
particularly the Department of Agriculture (DA), could not do this because the
Philippines had not notified the WTO of its tariffication process.
“This notification should have
also included our designation of rice as an SSG-eligible product, since the SSG
is normally available only to products whose quantitative import restrictions
have been removed,” the study read.
“The delay has reportedly been
due to the failure of the Tariff Commission [TC] and the Neda [National
Economic and Development Authority] to come up with the official out-quota rate
or tariff equivalent,” it added.
FFF said the TC and Neda are now
way beyond the 45-day deadline mandated by Republic Act 11203, or the rice
trade liberalization (RTL) law, to compute for the official tariff equivalent
for rice imports.
Under the RTL law, the tariff
equivalent should be calculated by the TC and approved by the Neda board 45
days upon the effectivity of the law or by April 19.
Prescriptions
FFF said the Neda and TC should
fast-track the release of the official tariff equivalent for the out-quota
bound rate for rice imports to complete the country’s schedule of tariffs that
would be notified to the WTO.
“The government must then
immediately notify the WTO of our tariffication decision and tariff rates, MAV
[minimum access volume] commitment, and the designation of rice as an
SSG-eligible product,” it added.
FFF also urged the DA to monitor
import volumes and immediately request the Bureau of Customs to impose
applicable SSG once the volume trigger has been breached, in accordance with
relevant laws.
Given the recent surge in import
volume, the group said the government may now impose an SSG “to arrest the
further inflow of imports and market displacement of local rice.”
Citing WTO rules, the Philippines
could impose additional duties of up to one-third of the current tariff rate on
the concerned products once trigger levels are breached.
SSG could be imposed if the
volume of imports exceeds a volume trigger or when import prices are lower than
price trigger levels.
FFF also said the Philippines
could only invoke the SSG if the current rice import volume exceeds the country’s
volume trigger level.
Based on FFF’s calculation, using
the formula prescribed under the Safeguard Measures Act, the country’s
estimated volume trigger for 2019 is around 1.8 million metric tons (MMT).
“If we consider imports from the
start of the year up to July 2019 of 2.363 MMT, we have clearly breached this
trigger level,” the group said.
“However, if our reference period
starts only in March, or the month when the [RTL law] was enacted, imports
total only 1.37 MMT, or about 427,000 metric tons below the volume trigger,” it
added.
Should the Philippines impose
SSG, the cost of rice imports would increase by approximately P2 per kg, FFF
said.
“This SSG can be imposed on
imports only up to the end of each year, except for imports already en route to
the country when the SSG remedy was invoked, and for imports falling within the
MAV,” FFF added.
Nigeria’s
Surging Food Prices May Rise Even Faster on Dollar Ban
By
August 30, 2019, 10:00 AM GMT+5
Move to restrict dollar access for imports to push up
costs
Insurgency and clashes are disrupting domestic supply
chains
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Nigeria’s plan to spend less on
food by restricting access to dollars for importers could have the opposite
effect by threatening food supplies and pushing up prices.
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Defend our
rice farmers now
Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:34 AM August 30,
2019
It’s a
crisis when majority of our 2.4 million rice farmers are suffering from the low
35-percent tariff under the rice tariffication law.
At that
tariff level, Philippine Rice Research Institute vice president Flordelis
Bordey says that 53 (or 65 percent) of our rice producing provinces will not
survive. This also translates to 40 percent of our farmers suffering.
Bordey has
impressive statistics to show that to survive the 35-percent tariff, the play
yield must be at least four tons per hectare. Unfortunately, too many farmers
are not achieving this level of productivity. The reason: Lack of necessary
support from the government.
What then is
an equitable tariff today? It is 70 percent. This will level the price of
imported rice with that of the average domestic rice price.
The
35-percent tariff will have too many farmers suffering because they have not
been “adequately prepared by the government, after 22 years and three
postponements of this anticipated tariff approach.”
Still, we
need to implement 35 percent because that is our government’s commitment to the
World Trade Organization (WTO). If we do not, worse things will happen.
Our
government is trying to help by legislating a P10-billion Rice Enhancement Competitiveness
Fund (RCEF), but too little, too late. This initiative should have started
years ago to prepare our farmers, not now when the tariff is already in place.
Government
officials said the rice retail price would go down by P7 to P10. It has decreased
only by P1-P2. They also said farmers would become more competitive. Yes, if
they were given the time to prepare. They are now suffering.
A Senate
report states that 200,000 rice farmers have stopped planting and that 4,000
rice mills have closed.
Farm-gate
wet prices per kilo have decreased from last year’s prices by P4.50 (according
to the Philippine Statistics Authority) and by at least P7 (according to the
Department of Agriculture). But with harvest time nearing, prices have
decreased by P10 (from P21.50 to P11.50) in many areas.
The traders
are getting all the benefits, with the consumers practically getting nothing
and the farmers losing their livelihood. Farm-gate prices are decreasing from
P4 to P10 per kilo. The RCEF is helpful, but miniscule compared to what
the farmers are losing.
For every P1
decrease in farm-gate price and at 20 million tons a year, the farmers lose P20
billion.
At this
rate, the most conservative P4 estimated price decrease, they lose P80 billion
(and P140 billion, if we assume the average P7-price decrease ).
What then
must be done? The DA must move quickly, lest dissidence and violence
replace disappointment.
The first
move is to get a higher temporary tariff.Fortunately, the WTO has made
arrangements for situations such as ours. Our Congress has wisely supported
this with the Safeguard Measures Act (RA 8800). Article III of the law states
that an agriculture special safeguard (SSG) may be initiated by a private
person or the agriculture secretary.
A private
sector leader of the Alyansa Agrikultura already wrote an official letter to
the agriculture secretary on Aug. 13. He suggested that even without a private
sector request, DA should act immediately. This is because the trigger import
volume that would allow SSG has already been surpassed (i.e, January to
July imports are at 2.3 million tons). The response time in the law is five
days. It is now 14 days, and we are still waiting.
The second
DA duty is take immediate action to alleviate the plight of the farmers by providing
them measures to cope with their lost income. One option is to make
arrangements for an entity to buy the palay at a higher price than what traders
are dictating today.
The National
Food Authority used to do this, but is unable to perform this function now. It
is important to have responsible, creatively designed cash transfers so certain
outcomes are achieved. If the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program can do it to
help poor children, why not similarly help farmers who are suffering because of
previous government inaction?
It is now up
to the DA to find solutions to defend our rice farmers from this aberration
that is causing so much suffering. We fully support Agriculture Secretary
William Dar as he brings new life to a talented but underutilized bureaucracy.
https://business.inquirer.net/277852/defend-our-rice-farmers-now#ixzz5y4s3btY7
https://business.inquirer.net/277852/defend-our-rice-farmers-now#ixzz5y4s3btY7
Is hybrid rice solution to
Africa’s food shortage?
Dr. Sanni Kayode 30th Aug 2019
11:13:11 GMT +0300
Agriculture is viewed as the key
cornerstone that drives Africa’s economies. It is a major contributor to total
gross domestic product (GDP) for many countries, according to the Africa
Agriculture Status Report 2018.
Over
half of the African population is employed in the sector and the continent has
large tracts of arable land including 60 per cent of
the world's uncultivated arable land.
Every
African government today is talking about food and nutrition security and
employment for its people especially youth and women.
Yet,
Africa is still producing too little food for its bourgeoning population to
eat. Is the continent really doing everything needed to achieve its aspirations
and visions in the agriculture sector?
As
the population grows, it is not just food that will be needed but also services
such as health and education. Jobs will be even more critical. Pressure on
natural resources will also be felt. For Africa to ensure it is well prepared,
it needs a thriving economy and agriculture is right at the center. In fact,
Kenya’s government, for example, has singled out food and nutrition security in
its Big Four Agenda, to propel the country’s development plan.
As
with most development issues, it is not just a question of what needs to be
done, it is how. For Africa to achieve desired growth in its agriculture sector
and to create jobs for the youth and achieve food security, there is a need to
put in place reforms necessary to unlock agriculture’s potential. These reforms
include access to land, improvement of infrastructure, enhancement of extension
services and farmer education, access to markets and finance and more
critically, injection of new technologies. This means investment and
commitment. It means building and committing to agricultural undertakings that
will make a difference to economies. Other continents did it, why not Africa?
For this to work, Africa needs to view agriculture differently – it needs to
expand its view and not just focus on its contribution to food security - which
is key but also really a basic expectation – but to look at agriculture
holistically – as Africa’s route to economic freedom.
Food
security and hunger are at a very basic level of human survival. Other
continents are working towards goals that Africa can only imagine e.g use of
agricultural robots and drones to monitor plant growth and the health of the
crops to increase yields. Africa’s agricultural concerns need to shift
gears to go beyond hunger and food security to the sustainability of Africa as
a community through growing and sustainable economies. That is what agriculture
can do for Africa.
Done
right, agriculture can deliver the economic goals, saving the continent
billions of forex spent on food imports that could be availed to other efforts
such as industrialization that would create more jobs. It will generate incomes
at the individual and national levels that will improve people’s standards of
living.
The
continent’s bill for importing rice only is currently estimated to stand at
over $ 5 billion which is about 40 per cent of the continent’s rice
requirements. Rice consumption in Africa is rising at about 8 per cent against
a yield increase of less than 6 per cent per year creating a deficit of over 12
million metric tonnes. Among the 43 rice-producing countries in Africa, more
than one-half are rice importers, with varying degrees ranging between 10 – 93
per cent, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). Kenya,
that produces a meagre 150 000 metric tonnes, consumes 600 000 metric tonnes
annually. This means the importation of more than 70 per cent of rice that is
consumed locally. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Nigeria’s
rice import was slated to jump 13 per cent this year to 3.4 million metric
tonnes, making the country Africa’s biggest rice importer. There is, therefore,
an urgent need for Africa to increase its rice production otherwise the
shortage is estimated to rise to more than 30 million metric tonnes by 2035.
This
scenario can change. Africa can start its own agricultural revolution with low
hanging fruits – embracing new agricultural technologies that can improve
productivity. China, for example, that is doing a lot of business with the
continent, revolutionized rice production in Asia through the use of hybrid
rice technology. Currently, the share of hybrid rice in Asian markets is about
60 per cent. If Africa is going to bridge its rice deficit, then the rice
hybrids offer an opportunity. For this to happen, we need to increase the land
that farmers use for production to meet Africa’s rice demand and even export at
competitive prices. Accordingly, this calls for the adoption of suitable
technologies and best agronomic practices to revolutionize rice production in
Africa to match the consumption rate while at the same time reducing the
dramatic increase in total imports. This will not only boost the economies of
African countries but also ensure food security among the bourgeoning Africa
population and create employments.
The
hybrid rice varieties offer higher yields currently giving farmers over 10
tonnes per hectare under irrigation compared to 4 tonnes that other producers
are getting. The rice, produced locally by Africa Agricultural Technology
Foundation (AATF), Hybrid East Africa Ltd (HEAL), Kenya Agricultural Livestock
and Research Organisation (KALRO), Tanzania’s Agricultural Research Institute
and private seed companies in East Africa offers an opportunity to contribute
to private sector growth through the involvement of seed companies. So far,
five new rice hybrids have been released in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.
For
Africa to deliver on its economic goals including job creation for the youth
and women and to develop a competitive agricultural sector to improve people’s
standards of living, the continent needs to adopt the critical use of new
technologies such as the hybrid technology to boost Africa’s rice productivity.
The writer is the Rice Project Manager at the
Africa Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF)
Nigeria partially closes border with Benin to curb rice smuggling
August 29, 2019
Benin
President Patrice Talon and his Nigerian counterpart Muhammadu Buhari speak
during a meeting on the sidelines of the Tokyo International Conference for
African Development (TICAD) summit in Japan. COURTESY: TWITTER/Bashir Ahmad
Nigeria on Wednesday said that it
partially closed its border with Benin in a bid to curb massive smuggling
activities, especially of rice, occurring in that area.
Nigerian President Muhammad
Buhari spoke to his Benin counterpart Patrice Talon about the measure on the
sidelines of the seventh Tokyo International Conference for
African Development (TICAD) summit
in Japan.
“Our people in the rural areas
are going back to their farms and have saved huge sums of money which would
otherwise have been expanded on importing rice using our scarce foreign
reserves. We cannot allow smuggling of the product at such alarming proportions
to continue,” Buhari said according to a statement sent out by his spokesman.
Though no date of when the border
was partially closed was given, Buhari indicated that it was restricted to
allow security personnel to contain the situation and he would consider fully
re-opening the border in the future.
Buhari added that Nigeria is due
to hold a meeting with Benin and Niger to discuss ways to tame cross-border
smuggling.
Nigeria imports nearly $4 billion
of rice and wheat annually, according to the government due to an
underdeveloped manufacturing industry.
Earlier this month, Buhari
pledged to strengthen his administration’s focus on agriculture announcing
policies that will support the cultivation and
consumption of locally produced food items.
He also instructed the central
bank to stop availing foreign exchange for food imports in an attempt to
improve Nigeria’s agriculture sector.
Additionally, Buhari encouraged
more young Nigerians to take up agriculture seriously noting that the country
had the potential to feed its entire population.
Nationwide round-up
August 29, 2019 | 8:39 pm
BTr assures remaining P4B RCEP fund will be released within the year
THE BUREAU of Treasury (BTr) on
Thursday assured that it will be able to determine the source for the remaining
P4 billion Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) as early as next month,
and that it will be released within the year.
National Treasurer Rosalia V. De
Leon told BusinessWorld the P4 billion remaining RCEF funds
might be sourced from income in investments, interest, fees and charges and
other excess money remitted back to the agency.
Republic Act No. 11203, the Rice
Tarrification Law, mandates a P10 billion annual funding for RCEF in the next
six years from tariffs collected on rice imports, to support farm
mechanization, seed and fertilizer acquisition.
“We’re looking at if there would
be excess income already that we can generate. We’ll see, next month or around
October. Kasi (Because) by October, depending on our investments,
usually du’n nagpapasok ng (that’s when the) coupon payments
(come in), mag-ge-generate namin (we can generate
our) interest income,” Ms. De Leon said in an ambush interview after the Senate
hearing on the 2020 budget.
At the hearing on Wednesday, Department
of Budget and Management (DBM) Assistant Secretary Rolando U. Toledo also said
they will release the remaining P4 billion to complete the P10 billion RCEF
funding for this year. Mr. Toledo said the release will depend on BTr, which
will have to look at ”excess” government money.
Meanwhile, DBM Undersecretary
Janet B. Abuel said they will continue to monitor the utilization rate of RCEF
before releasing more. ”Let’s see with the agencies like PhilMech (Philippine
Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization) anong(what is
the) status na before we add more release,” Ms. Abuel said.
She noted that sometimes the challenge is agencies get “choked” by too much
funds. — Beatrice M. Laforga
KAPA founder’s wife slapped with tax evasion charge
THE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) has filed a tax evasion
case against Kapa Community Ministry International, Inc.’s (KAPA) corporate
secretary, Reyna L. Apolinario, for undeclared income sources for taxable years
2017 and 2018. In a statement, BIR said the total income tax liability of Ms.
Apolinario, wife of KAPA founder Joel Apolinario, for those two years is P168.2
million. This total includes surcharges and interests, broken down into: 2017 —
₱163.9 million; and 2018 — ₱4.3 million. BIR said Ms. Apolinario did not file
an income tax return (ITR) from 2012-2015, but did so in 2016, declaring an
income of ₱207 million. In 2017 and 2018, Ms. Apolinario declared incomes of
₱171.10 million and ₱12.06 million, respectively. By 2018, her declared
beginning capital from audited financial statements climbed to P306.9m,
pointing to undeclared sources of income of P307.7 million for taxable year
2017. This includes cash amounting to P140 million, luxury vehicles worth
P27.60 million, heavy equipment totalling P65.7 million, real properties worth
P45.1 million, and other assets paired with P9.18 million for taxable year
2018.
REYNA
Called ‘Madam Reyna’ by followers of the supposedly religious group, Ms. Apolinario owned nine vehicles under the name of REYNA in 2017 and 2018 that were not declared in her financial statements, BIR investigators said. Moreover, information from the bureau’s Integrated Tax System (ITS) showed that REYNA owns 13 businesses under her name, including retail-construction materials/garments/metals, gasoline stations and convenience stores, computer and printing services, quarry, convention center, fishing boat, bakeshop & refreshment, media & marketing network, and hotel. Ms. Apolinario along with her husband and several other KAPA officials are facing separate complaints filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Bureau of Investigation over their alleged involvement in the investment scam operated under KAPA. SEC has revoked KAPA’s registration.
Called ‘Madam Reyna’ by followers of the supposedly religious group, Ms. Apolinario owned nine vehicles under the name of REYNA in 2017 and 2018 that were not declared in her financial statements, BIR investigators said. Moreover, information from the bureau’s Integrated Tax System (ITS) showed that REYNA owns 13 businesses under her name, including retail-construction materials/garments/metals, gasoline stations and convenience stores, computer and printing services, quarry, convention center, fishing boat, bakeshop & refreshment, media & marketing network, and hotel. Ms. Apolinario along with her husband and several other KAPA officials are facing separate complaints filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Bureau of Investigation over their alleged involvement in the investment scam operated under KAPA. SEC has revoked KAPA’s registration.
TOP BELAGIO
In another case, BIR also filed a criminal complaint against Binondo-based wholesaler Top Belagio Super Sales Corporation, along with its president, Stanley C. Kho, and treasurer, Sherrie Ann R. Dael. They are charged for attempting to evade their annual income tax and quarterly value-added tax (VAT) as well as for failure to pay improperly accumulated earnings tax for 2016, amounting to a liability of P555.4 million in total. The wholesaler is facing violation of Sections 254 and 255, in relation to Sections 253 and 256 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 as investigations found that the amounts declared in their Annual Income Tax Return and Quarterly Value-Added Tax Returns are lower than actual sales. — Luz Wendy T. Noble
In another case, BIR also filed a criminal complaint against Binondo-based wholesaler Top Belagio Super Sales Corporation, along with its president, Stanley C. Kho, and treasurer, Sherrie Ann R. Dael. They are charged for attempting to evade their annual income tax and quarterly value-added tax (VAT) as well as for failure to pay improperly accumulated earnings tax for 2016, amounting to a liability of P555.4 million in total. The wholesaler is facing violation of Sections 254 and 255, in relation to Sections 253 and 256 of the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 as investigations found that the amounts declared in their Annual Income Tax Return and Quarterly Value-Added Tax Returns are lower than actual sales. — Luz Wendy T. Noble
Food imports gulped $14bn in five
years — CBN
’Femi Asu
Food product imports gobbled up $14.05bn of the foreign exchange
supplied by the Central Bank of Nigeria in the last five years, according to
data obtained from the apex bank on Thursday.
The CBN’s breakdown of sectoral utilisation of forex showed that
food imports accounted for about 13.12 per cent of the $107bn utilised for
imports in the country from 2014 to 2018.
The apex bank, in June 2015, excluded importers of 41 goods and
services, including some food products, from accessing forex at the nation’s
foreign exchange markets in a bid to conserve the foreign reserves as well as
encourage local production of those items.
The slump in crude oil prices in mid-June 2014 hammered
government finances and the naira, causing chronic dollar shortages.
Following the forex restriction, the amount of foreign currency
used for imports in the country plunged to $24.718bn in 2015 from $34.202bn in
2014. It further fell to $17.154bn in 2016 and $15.161bn in 2017 but rose to
$15.87bn last year.
Forex utilised for food imports also dropped to $3.42bn in 2015
from $5.03bn in 2014. It dipped further to $1.79bn in 2016 and $1.51bn in 2017
but increased to $2.31bn in 2018.
The CBN said a total of $14.73bn was supplied into the forex
market last year, adding that the supply figure included forex sold to Bureaux
de Change operators which started from April 2006.
According to the data, $589.7m was used for food imports in the
first quarter; $469.8m in Q2; $553.8m in Q3, and $692.5m in Q4.
In December 2018, the CBN included fertiliser on the list of 41
items classified as ‘not valid for foreign exchange’ in the Nigerian forex
market.
The items are rice, meat and processed meat products, chickens,
eggs, tomatoes and tomatoes paste, and vegetables and processed vegetable
products.
The central bank said in July that it had restricted the sale of
forex on the importation of milk from the Nigerian forex market.
“Arising from the success of the restriction policy, we
approached some milk importers, like we did for rice, tomato and starch and asked
them to take advantage of the CBN’s low-interest loans to begin local milk
production instead of relying endlessly on milk imports,” it added.
Two weeks ago, President Muhammadu Buhari disclosed that he had
directed the CBN to stop providing foreign exchange for importation of food
into the country, based on “the steady improvement in agricultural production,
and attainment of full food security.”
The President said foreign reserves would be conserved and
utilised strictly for diversification of the economy, and not for encouraging
more dependence on foreign food import bills.
Rice
production in Ghana to reach 750,000
Source:
BusinessGhana
Rice production in Ghana is
estimated to increase to 750,000 metric tonnes from 450,000 metric tonnes by
2020 according to Nana Kwabena Adjei Ayeh II as demand for the product
continues to increase in Ghana. He made these remarks at the signing of a
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX),
the Ghana Rice Inter Professional Body (GRIB) and the John Agyekum Kufuor
(JAK) Foundation in Accra.
Nana Ayeh II said that the
MoU is meant to improve rice production in Ghana at a time when farmers are not
getting produce at the right time and storage at the rice prices.
He disclosed that rice production
is currently 70 percent rain fed which poses as a major problem and
contributes to post harvest losses in the country.
He noted that the move will not only address post harvest losses but also address the issue of ware housing and storage for farmers as well as provide funds to purchase rice products. "We will continue with farming mobilization and sensitization of issues on production, standards and the GCX warehouse receipt system" he said.
He noted that the move will not only address post harvest losses but also address the issue of ware housing and storage for farmers as well as provide funds to purchase rice products. "We will continue with farming mobilization and sensitization of issues on production, standards and the GCX warehouse receipt system" he said.
Chief Executive Officer of the
Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX), Dr. Kadri Alfah said that the rice industry is
currently plagued with problems such as cheap rice imports, poorly co-ordinated
and promoted rice value chain, lack of well developed strategies to promote
rice value chain among others.
He noted that in order for them to support government policies such as the Planting for Food and Jobs and the One district One Factory as well as help farmers export produce to improve revenue, the potential of rice has to be leveraged on.
He noted that in order for them to support government policies such as the Planting for Food and Jobs and the One district One Factory as well as help farmers export produce to improve revenue, the potential of rice has to be leveraged on.
Dr Alfah said that the GCX will
offer farmers access to a structured market system through an electronic
platform to other producers such as those in the maize and soya value chain to
offer them services such as grain testing, grain aggregation, grading and
certification, quality control , re-bagging services and opportunities to sell
on diverse markets through their world class trading platform.
He announced that farmers will
aso have access to low cost loans using their products as sole collateral while
they wait for better market prices.
Dr Alfah emphasized that the GCX will ensure they bridge the gap between rice production, consumption and imports.
In line with His Excellency, Former President John Agyekum Kufuor's desire to improve agriculture in Ghana, Professor Baffuor Agyeman-Duah, Chief Executive Officer of the JAK Foundation was also a signatory of the MoU.
Dr Alfah emphasized that the GCX will ensure they bridge the gap between rice production, consumption and imports.
In line with His Excellency, Former President John Agyekum Kufuor's desire to improve agriculture in Ghana, Professor Baffuor Agyeman-Duah, Chief Executive Officer of the JAK Foundation was also a signatory of the MoU.
He said that the foundation has
been working on a Comprehensive Africa Rice Initiative with four other African
countries including Nigeria with support from Deutsche Gesellschaft für
Internationale Zusammenarbei (GIZ) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
The JAK foundation is again working closely with 15 other countries to promote
rice production in the Sub-Saharan region.
Prof. Agyeman-Duah noted that the
foundation will continue to create awareness among farmers to increase their
yield.
The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) which is also supporting the initiative assured farmers that as major beneficiaries of the MoU they will always have a ready market for their produce.
The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) which is also supporting the initiative assured farmers that as major beneficiaries of the MoU they will always have a ready market for their produce.
The signing of the MoU will
provide an estimate of 2000 jobs in both skilled and unskilled labor
JUST IN:
Processors peg bag of rice at N15,000
In order to show support for
government’s decision to close the country’s border at Seme to rice smuggling,
rice processors in Nigeria have pegged the retail price of rice at not more
than N15,000. Addressing journalists in Abuja on Thursday on the development,
national Chairman of Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RIPAN), Alhaji
Mohammed Abubarkar Maifata said the association will sanction any rice
processor (Millers) who sells above the stipulated price.
The RIPAN Chairman stated that the ex-factory price of
per-boiled rice, which Nigerians consume has been pegged at between N13,300 and
N14,000 while the final retail price has been marked off at N15,000.
The association, he noted, has written to the federal government
to express commitment to keeping the price of rice down to the barest minimum
and vowed to support the government with intelligence by putting the reports of
its surveillance team at the disposal of the government.
The RIPAN executives said Nigeria risks the losing over $400
million to rice smuggling if the over one million metric tonnes of the
commodity is allowed to enter the country from Benin Republic.
Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar Maifata and his vice chairman, Mr Paul
Eluhaiwe disclosed that they have carried out intensive border and port survey.
The RIPAN boss disclosed that about half a million metric tonnes
of the commodity have already been booked in Thailand for onward journey to
Nigeria preparatory to the Christmas season.
This, according to the chairman, would no doubt have a crippling
effect on rice processors in the country as their activities would be hampered
if this impending illegal importation is not checked with the attendant
colossal loss of over $400 million.
According to him, the closure of the Nigerian Benin Republic
border would go a long way to curb the menace of rice smuggling so that local
producers would have a breather, adding that the association supports the
current border closure by government.
The association assured Nigerians that they have tasked themselves
to close the gap in rice supply in the market as a result of the border
closure, stating that the nation’s demand for rice which is 4 million metric
tonnes per annum can be surpassed with the over 5 million metric tonnes jointly
supplied by members of the association and outgrowers.
Mohammed Abubarkar lamented that “from January to date over 1
million metric tonnes of rice have been brought into Benin Republic from
Thailand and India most of which end up in Nigeria illegally.
He noted that almost all of the rice imported into Benin
Republic end up in Nigeria because Benin Republic nationals eat white rice
while Nigerians eat per-boiled rice which are imported into Benin Republic.
By closing the border, RIPAN members say “rice mills are now
back in operation at almost 100% installed capacity and given the favourable
rainfall this year, we expect improved paddy production.”
Mohammed Abubarkar said the association has been clamouring for
the closure of the borders to smugglers for over two years and promised that
they “will not hike the price of rice.”
Mr Femi Adesina, the President’s spokesman in a statement in
Abuja on Wednesday, said President Buhari expressed great concern over the
smuggling of rice when he met with President of Benin Republic in Japan.
The president said the activities of the smugglers threatened
the self-sufficiency already attained due to his administration’s agricultural
policies.
According to Buhari “now that our people in the rural areas are
going back to their farms, and the country has saved huge sums of money which
would otherwise have been expended on importing rice using our scarce foreign
reserves. We cannot allow smuggling of the product at such alarming proportions
to continue,” he said.
The Nigerian President said the limited closure of the country’s
western border was to allow Nigeria’s security forces develop a strategy on how
to stem the dangerous trend and its wider ramifications.
Earlier, President Talon of Benin Republic had said he called on
the Nigerian President as a result of the severe impact the closure of the
Nigerian border was having on his people.
Japan Pledges to Help Double Rice
Output in Africa by 2030
Yokohama, Aug. 28 (Jiji
Press)--Japan will help double annual rice production in Africa to 56 million
tons by 2030, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Wednesday, ahead of the start of
the Seventh Tokyo International Conference on African Development, or TICAD 7.
At a symposium on the future of
African agriculture, held in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Abe stressed that
Japan's carefully managed and patiently continued assistance, as well as
Japanese companies' advanced technical capabilities, will contribute to
long-sustained growth of Africa.
The Japanese leader called for
reform of the African agriculture industry so that it will be attractive to
investors and young workers.
Meanwhile, Abe started a series of
separate meetings with a total of about 50 leaders from African nations and
international organizations on the sidelines of TICAD 7 in Yokohama.
Ahead of the opening of the
three-day conference on Wednesday afternoon, Abe and Egyptian President
Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi, who currently serves as chairman of the African Union,
affirmed their cooperation to achieve success at the conference.
[Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.
Indian Food 101
We present a beginner’s guide to this spice-forward cuisine that
ranks among the world’s best.
By Mary Murray
August 28, 2019
The Background
India is home to more than 1.3
billion people living across 29 states. This results in a plethora of regional
cuisines that are primarily divided into two categories: north and south.
Northern Indian food features a lot of influences from the Middle East, as seen
in its favoring of flatbreads and spice-heavy, oft-creamy stews (curries).
Southern Indian food is more tied to Hindu culinary traditions, with a heavier
reliance on rice, legumes, and vegetables. Throughout the subcontinent, and
across Indian menus, beef is not as prevalent as it is in America because cows
are sacred to Hindus, and pork is also scant because Muslims do not eat it. The
most common meats are chicken, goat, and lamb, in addition to fish.
indian
saag paneer curry in balti dish with cilantro garnish
The Dishes
For the sake of brevity, let’s
focus on a few of the most common appetizers and entrees on Indian menus.
Samosas—fried dumplings filled with veggies or meat—are universally beloved.
Also fried, pakoras are vegetable fritters made with chickpea batter. Speaking
of chickpeas, these legumes reach new heights of deliciousness in Indian
cooking. You’ll see them labeled as chana on menus, and a great introductory
delicacy is chana masala. Perhaps the most well-known Indian dish in the U.S.
is chicken tikka masala, wherein marinated chicken is served in a creamy sauce
that frequently features tomatoes. Tandoor-cooked meats are also prevalent, as
well as vindaloo (a pepper-centric curry), rogan josh (typically lamb or goat
braised in an aromatic gravy), and dosas (rice and lentil crepes packed with
spiced veggies or meat).
The Veggies
Vegetarians will find a lot to
love about Indian food, given its array of veg-centric entrees, apps, and
sides. For those who eat dairy, paneer—a mild, soft cheese—is the star of many
preparations, including enveloped in a tomato-based gravy, known as mattar, and
stewed in spinach, known as saag. For a completely vegan option, go with aloo
gobi, a turmeric-laded, hearty combination of cauliflower and potatoes. Another
common vegetarian option across the subcontinent is dal. Literally meaning
“dried legume,” dal is often the name used to refer to the thick stew made from
legumes, such as lentils or peas.
The Sides
Regardless of what you order,
you’ll most likely receive basmati rice. Native to India and Pakistan, this
long-grain rice boasts nutty, floral undertones, making it the perfect
accompaniment to Indian food. If you enjoy rice as an entree, then try biryani,
which is spiced with mixes like garam masala, dotted with meat or fish, and
topped with nuts, onions, and maybe fresh fruits or herbs, depending on the
regional influence. Breads are also key to the experience. Baked in a clay oven
(or tandoor), naan is by far the most common flatbread. You’re also likely to
come across roti, which is unleavened; paratha, which is basically a layered
roti often stuffed with a sweet or savory filling; and fried variations such as
poori.
The Condiments
Indian chutneys are endlessly
versatile and abundant. Some favorites are hari, a cilantro condiment often
served with fried bites like samosas, and tamarind, which lends a
sweet-and-sour flavor. There’s also an onion relish that pairs well with
papadums, crispy wafers made from lentil or chickpea flour. A yogurt sauce
known as raita is another mainstay; be sure to request this if you accidently
order a spice level that leaves you hot and bothered.
Indian
spicy sauce raita with herbs and cucumber
The Drinks
Need something to wash it all
down? Tea is ubiquitous in India, and masala chai is a delicious, spice-forward
rendition to try. For something tamer, sample lassi, a drink made of yogurt,
water, and spices. Fruit, such as mango, also pops up in lassi, and it can turn
the drink into the dessert of your dreams.
The Desserts
While India is not known for its
sweets, there are a few options to choose from. The most common offerings
you’re likely to see at Indian restaurants are rice pudding—made with basmati
rice, often spiced with cardamom and saffron, and topped with nuts and
raisins—and gulab jamun, a sticky sweet most akin to a doughnut.
The Eating
Feel ready to give Indian food a
go? The best way to test the water is by visiting a lunch buffet. Aroma Indian
Cuisine in West Palm Beach serves a vast and comprehensive
smorgasbord daily.
Founder Group makes clean sweep in REAP MC elections
The Founder Group made a clean sweep by securing all
the Corporate and Associate class seats in elections 2019-20 for the Management
Committee of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP). According to
details, Wednesday was the last date for receipt of nomination papers on vacant
seats of Corporate and Associate class in North and South Zones for annual
elections of the Associations. As no one else filed their nomination papers
except candidates of the founders' group, all were declared elected unopposed
for a term of two years i.e., 2019-21.
Those elected in Corporate class (North Zone) are Shahjahan Malik, Khalid Mahmood, Ahsan Saeed and Fahad Jahangir. Ashfaq Ali Khan was declared elected unopposed in Associate class under the leadership of Shahzad Ali Malik, Group leader of North Zone. Similarly, Mohammad Asif Polani, Subhan Khalil Malik, Faisal Masood Chaudhry, Gurmukh Das (Corporate Class) and Sheeraz Ahmad Sheikh (Associate class) were elected unopposed from the South Zone under the leadership of Abdur Rahim Janoo, group leader South Zone.
Sitting REAP Chairman Safder Hussain Mehkri, Senior Vice Chairman Ali Hussam Asghar, Shahzad Ali Malik and Pir Nazim Hussain Shah congratulated all the elected Managing Committee members and expressed the hope that they would continue serving for the strengthening of the national economy through enhanced rice exports.
Elections for the post of Chairman, Senior Vice Chairman and Vice-Chairman are due next month. The group also nominated Shahjahan Malik as the new chairman for the next year.
In a ceremony at the REAP headquarter, nominated chairman Shahjahan Malik said that no stone will be left unturned to take the rice exports from the current level of US 2 billion dollars to US 5 billion dollars in next five years.
For this purpose, he said that he along with his other colleagues will make efforts for upgrading the rice value chain in the country.
Outgoing Senior Vice Chairman Ali Hussam Asghar threw light on the efforts done by the current body for increasing rice exports and resolving the issues being faced by the rice exporters.
Those elected in Corporate class (North Zone) are Shahjahan Malik, Khalid Mahmood, Ahsan Saeed and Fahad Jahangir. Ashfaq Ali Khan was declared elected unopposed in Associate class under the leadership of Shahzad Ali Malik, Group leader of North Zone. Similarly, Mohammad Asif Polani, Subhan Khalil Malik, Faisal Masood Chaudhry, Gurmukh Das (Corporate Class) and Sheeraz Ahmad Sheikh (Associate class) were elected unopposed from the South Zone under the leadership of Abdur Rahim Janoo, group leader South Zone.
Sitting REAP Chairman Safder Hussain Mehkri, Senior Vice Chairman Ali Hussam Asghar, Shahzad Ali Malik and Pir Nazim Hussain Shah congratulated all the elected Managing Committee members and expressed the hope that they would continue serving for the strengthening of the national economy through enhanced rice exports.
Elections for the post of Chairman, Senior Vice Chairman and Vice-Chairman are due next month. The group also nominated Shahjahan Malik as the new chairman for the next year.
In a ceremony at the REAP headquarter, nominated chairman Shahjahan Malik said that no stone will be left unturned to take the rice exports from the current level of US 2 billion dollars to US 5 billion dollars in next five years.
For this purpose, he said that he along with his other colleagues will make efforts for upgrading the rice value chain in the country.
Outgoing Senior Vice Chairman Ali Hussam Asghar threw light on the efforts done by the current body for increasing rice exports and resolving the issues being faced by the rice exporters.
Committee to recommend steps to
govt for boost in agri production: Asad Qaiser
August 29, 2019
ISLAMABAD: Speaker National
Assembly Asad Qaiser Wednesday said the Special Committee on Agricultural
Products would send its recommendations to the federal government for boost in
agriculture production and exports and for incentives to farmers.
The Speaker was addressing a
press conference at the Parliament House after the 3rd meeting of the
sub-committee of the Special Committee on Agricultural Products.
He said the provinces were
responsible for implementing the policies on agriculture sector.
A main topic of discussion during
the meeting of the sub-committee was about giving incentives to cotton growers
especially those in Sindh and Punjab, he added.
He said policy experts would be
included in committees of Parliament to strengthen their role in policy
implementation.
He told that a working group
comprising chairmen of National Assembly committees of finance and commerce was
being formed to tackle the economic challenges by suggesting policy guidelines
for different sectors.
He said the recommendations of
the committee on agriculture comprising experts and researchers would be taken
up and pursued in provinces.
The Speaker said that the problem
of increasing fuel charges for farmers would be resolved in consultation with
the stakeholders.
The Convener of the Sub Committee
of the Special Committee on Agriculture Products Syed Fakhar Imam said the
special committee was formed to work for promotion of agriculture and to
resolve basic problems of farmers.
Agriculture was the backbone of
Pakistan and its five main crops were wheat, cotton, rice, sugarcane and corn.
Cotton was a commercial crop and
60 percent of the country’s exports were based on cotton and products made from
it. Seventy percent of the cooking oil was produced from cotton seed and the
cotton seed cake was an important input in the dairy sector, he added.
He expressed concern over the
reduction in the acreage for cotton crop and falling of production from 14.7
million bales to 10.7 million bales.
He said the committee looked into
ways to revive the production of cotton whose four big producers in the world
were China, India, Brazil and Pakistan.
The local demand for cotton was
15-16 million bales and Pakistan was importing 4-5 million bales to meet its
domestic needs.
He underlined the need to rectify
policies to increase cotton production and introduce indicative price as was
set for crops of wheat and sugarcane.
It was recommended by the
committee to set indicative price of cotton to Rs 4000 per 40 kg. Minimum
support price for cotton would encourage farmers and boost their production, he
added.
Fakhar Imam said the committee on
agriculture products had engaged foreign experts, academia and researchers to
get their input for increase in cotton production. He mentioned that Bangladesh
had increased its exports to $ 38 billion by selling its garments and cotton
based products.
Pakistan could do the same and
take its exports to $ 40 billion from $ 23 billion through value addition.
Pakistan was earning $ three billion from export of rice and could further
boost its exports of this crop.
He said wrong policies of the
past had plummeted agricultural production. Fakhar Imam said the right policies
will attract investors to Pakistan and boost exports to regions of Europe,
North America and countries in Africa and South America.
He said the federal government
had allocated Rs 12 billion for agriculture sector, adding an additional one
billion would be given every year for research in the agri sector.
To a question, he said 800 seed
companies were registered and a regulatory body oversees their affairs.
Minister for Inter Provincial
Coordination Dr Fehmida Mirza said agriculture was a devolved subject and
according to last economic survey the agriculture sector growth was in
negative.
She pointed out that the cotton
growers were suffering losses and the price of cotton needed to be increased.
The stakeholders of industry and
agriculture should sit together to recommend steps to increase exports, she
added.
REAP's South Zone Group
Candidates Elected Un-opposed For 2019-20
Five Managing Committee members of Rice Export Corporation of
Pakistan's South Zone Group have been elected un-apposed for the year 2019-20
KARACHI, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 28th
Aug, 2019 ) :Five Managing Committee members of Rice Export Corporation
of Pakistan's South Zone Group have been elected
un-apposed for the year 2019-20.
Four members including Muhammad
Asif Polani, Subhan Khalil Malik, Gurmukh Dasand Faisal Masood Choudhry
are from Corporate sector and Sheeraz Shaikh is from Associate Class, said a REAP press release on
Wednesday.
Chairman, Abdul Rehman Janoo has
congratulated all the winning candidates and hoped that the new
team of office-bearers and MC would work for benefit of REAP members. The new
body would continue momentum geared up by the present Chairman Safdar Mekhri
and his team.
Russia is vying for control of
Arctic seaways and has built some 40 icebreakers. China, which is not a polar
country, has launched aggressive Arctic diplomacy. | Vladimir Isachenkov/AP
Photo
How Russia and China are
preparing to exploit a warming planet
POLITICO’s latest Global Translations podcast explores how climate
change is reshaping power dynamics among America’s adversaries.
08/29/2019 05:11 AM EDT
Hurricanes, floods, and wildfires
aside, climate change is delivering another threat: a remaking of geopolitics
that stands to empower some of America’s adversaries and rivals.
As Arctic ice melts, Russia stands
to gain access to oil and gas fields historically locked beneath northern ice —
and is building up capability to launch cruise missiles from newly navigable
waters to threaten America's coastlines.
As polar seaways open up, China is
eyeing a new “Polar Silk Road” — shorter shipping routes that could cut weeks
off of shipping times from Asia to Europe.
And as drought drives more farmers
and herders off their lands, extremist groups in Africa and the Middle East are
finding fresh recruits.
These are just some of the ways
climate change stands to reshape the power dynamics between nations that
emerged from interviews for POLITICO’s Global Translations podcast.
Climate change is “making all of our
challenges — whether it's terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, violent
extremism or great power competition between China and Russia — that much more
challenging,” said Sherri Goodman, a former deputy undersecretary of defense
who led studies of climate impacts on national security for the Center for
Naval Analyses.
Some of the biggest power shifts are
around the Arctic, which Goodman called “ground zero for the nexus of national
security and climate change. In our lifetime, a whole new ocean has opened up
because with climate change the sea ice is retreating, the oceans are warming
and the permafrost is collapsing.”
A global quest for resources is
already underway in the Arctic, said Goodman, now a senior fellow at the
Woodrow Wilson Center Polar Institute. “There are thought to be vast stores of
fossil fuels, oil and gas and minerals across the Arctic that have not yet been
tapped. Russia is doing so today across its vast Arctic coastline with the help
of China,” she said.
Russia is vying for control of
Arctic seaways and has built some 40 icebreakers — ships that can channel
through ice. “Russia envisions under Putin a northern sea route that is
essentially a toll road that requires Russian Arctic escorts in the form of
icebreakers or other patrol boats, escorting not only the Chinese but others
who want to ship across the Arctic,” she said. By contrast, the U.S. has only
two icebreakers, she said.
Meanwhile, China, which is not a
polar country, has launched aggressive Arctic diplomacy and gained non-voting
observer status for itself at the Arctic Council, the international forum that
addresses policy in the Arctic. Last year, China issued its first arctic
policy.
Global Translations
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“It envisions a Polar Silk Road that
stretches from Shanghai across potentially to Hamburg and Reykjavik and parts
of Europe across Russia's vast northern sea route hugging the Russian coastline
and both exploiting the energy resources there, potential transport
opportunities, shipping, research,” Goodman said.
President Donald Trump’s interest in
buying Greenland was driven in part by resources newly available because of
melting ice. The Danish government quickly rebuffed the idea, but the incident
could be seen as an acknowledgment of climate change from a leader who has
derided global warming as a hoax.
Climate change poses additional
security consequences. U.S. military bases at home and abroad have already been
strained by destructive hurricanes and flooding that have cost billions of dollars
to repair — and extreme weather has stretched thin the disaster response
capabilities of the military. When hurricanes hit Florida and Puerto Rico and
the East Coast of the United States in 2017 and 2018, the military had to slow
the flow of forces to Afghanistan in order to be able to provide relief at
home. Meanwhile, troops have to operate in higher temperatures across Asia and
the Middle East, where temperatures now regularly are over 100 degrees and face
a broader array of infectious diseases.
Florida’s Tyndall Air Force Base
incurred billions of dollars in damage from Hurricane Michael in 2018 when
winds tore through the roofs of hangars and destroyed buildings. Congress has
in recent years directed the Department of Defense to address the climate resilience
of military bases and climate risks to operating forces.
“The Department of Defense is
beginning to integrate these risks into its strategy plans and plans,” Goodman
said.
Another geopolitical threat is
migration — whether from low-lying island states that stand to lose fresh water
drinking supply or coastal areas susceptible to typhoons. Prolonged drought is
believed to contribute to conflicts in the Middle East.
“We know that in Syria the prolonged
drought that preceded the civil unrest there was a contributing factor to that
unrest, which became instability, which led to the violent extremism, which has
become the deadliest civil war in modern times,” she said.
Elsewhere, drought-prone countries
are buying up land to grow water-intensive crops in what is called the “virtual
water” trade. For example, China has been buying agricultural land in the U.S.
and Europe to harvest water-intensive crops such as alfalfa.
Simon Dalby, a professor of
geography and environmental studies at Wilfrid Laurier University, told the
podcast that the geopolitical consequences can be difficult to predict. He
cited the impacts of a 2010 drought in Russia which led the Kremlin to limit
wheat exports, setting off a chain reaction.
“International markets panicked. The
price went up quickly — and it is indeed suggested that in fact part of the
Arab Spring was partly a response to those price fluctuations. So political
disturbances across the Middle East might indeed have been related to the
drought in Russia, which was probably at least partly caused by climate
fluctuations. So this is where we see how dramatically the global economy and
the ecology is interconnected,” he said.
The world will need emergency
stockpiles of food and disaster relief aid, he said.
And, he noted, while warming may
open up certain regions to new agriculture, unpredictable rainfall and flooding
can wreak havoc on crops. “This is much trickier than simply saying, ‘Oh
because it's warmer, Russia will do better.’ It's not that simple,” he said.
Climate change is transforming
agriculture itself.
Increased concentration of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere ramps up photosynthesis and makes crops grow more
quickly. But the phenomenon has been shown to reduce nutrient density in some
crops, like rice. Researchers have begun studying how many people might be at
risk for iron or zinc deficiency as a result.
Like governments, businesses are
studying how to address long-term risks to their business models, said Gary
Litman, vice president for global initiatives at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
“We definitely need to prepare, to
adjust, to adapt to climate change to mitigate the impact of the industry on
climate,” he said. But he added that it’s part of a broader pressure on
companies to address long-term environmental sustainability and compete for
increasingly scarce resources. “We're dealing with finite resources. There's
not going to be more cobalt on this planet. There is not going to be new soil
on this planet. There is not going to be a new oxygen on this planet,” he said.
He noted that advanced technologies,
such as batteries, require rare metals. “You cannot address the climate issue —
you cannot prepare, for example, for the rise of the oceans — if you don't
invest in new construction materials. How do you build the dam? If you use the
current resources, you'll run out of gravel before you build anything. If you
don't have access to reliable supply of cobalt, you won't be able to switch to
e-mobility,” he said.
What makes
rice an essential for Ganesh Chaturthi
By - TIMESOFINDIA.COM
Created: Aug 29, 2019, 21:00 IST
facebooktwitterincom
It’s that time of the year, when every nook
and corner boasts of the festive spirit. Right from the lit up streets to the
loud cheers of Ganpati Bappa Morya! It’s time for the most grand celebration of
the year.
Ganesh Chatutrthi is around the corner and preparations are in full swing, from decorations to preparations, this festival is all about celebrations. And you simply cannot think of celebrations without the mere mention of good food, but did you know some ingredients are not only meant for eating but are an inseparable part of our culture and rituals. Well one such ingredient is rice, which plays an essential part in this festival, the 10-day long festival is no less than a celebration of a lifetime for the devotees. Right from community celebrations to bringing the idol home, Ganesh Chaturthi is one of the most widely celebrated festivals in India.
This year, Ganesh Chaturthi will start from 2nd of September 2019. Interestingly, rice plays an important role in establishment of the idol. As per the puja vidhi, rice is an essential in the puja. Rice also known as akshat is spread with kumkum or turmeric on the idol of Ganpati. It is believed that following this ritual helps in bringing happiness and prosperity.
While bringing home the idol, rice is mixed with kumkum and is showered as a welcome gesture. Also the tradition of drawing a swastika is also made with a mixture of rice and kumkum. Apart from that, there are a few essentials required for Ganesh puja and rice happens to be one of them. Some of the things needed for this puja are betel leaves, rice, haldi,roli or gulal, bukka and a kalash with a coconut placed on it.
Another popular tradition around this festival is that there should not be any darkness around the idol and this is the reason why there’s always a diya lit up around Lord Ganesha. Moving onto the significance of rice, it is believed that rice is attracts positive energy and this why it is used in most festivals. According to the mythology, rice is believed to bring positivity and energy from all Gods and Goddesses. And mixing akshat or rice with kumkum simply adds on to the positivity and makes it subh as they say in Hindi.
Amarava Rice
Mill To Double Capacity, Targets 500MT Production DailyBUSINESS NEWS
amarava rice
As the efforts towards achieving
self-sufficiency in rice production in Nigeria thickens, one of Nigeria’s
indigenous rice milling company based in Kano, Amarava Rice Mill, has said it
is targeting to double its production capacity by September 2019.
The Rice Mill which was
commissioned in 2017 by President Muhammadu Buhari, is set to receive a major
boost to its production capacity by over 100 percent to the tune of 500 metric
tonnes daily even as it is heavily investing in the expansion of its millers.
The Chairman, Fullmark Group
(parent company of Amarava Agro Processors Limited), Sriram Venkateswaran, who
revealed this while speaking with journalists, stated that the drive to boost
capacity is geared towards promoting government diversification effort, reduce
independence on the importation of rice and improve food security.
EG gets ready to
supply fine quality rice to Srikakulam Hans News Service |
30 Aug 2019 2:17 AM IST Joint Collector Dr G Lakshmisha HIGHLIGHTS
Officials of Civil Supplies department in East Godavari district have taken the
task of supplying 14, 0000 tonnes of fine quality rice from the district to
Srikakulam. Kakinada: Officials of Civil Supplies department in East Godavari
district have taken the task of supplying 14, 0000 tonnes of fine quality rice
from the district to Srikakulam. The scheme will be implemented as a pilot
project in Srikakulam district from September 1. It may be noted that the YSRC
government has assured supply of fine quality rice (sortex variety) from
September in Srikakulam and the system will be implemented in other districts
in phased manner. Advertise With Us As part of this implementation, rice packed
in 5, 10, 15 and 20 kgs with the image of Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy
on the bags are being supplied for PDS distribution. The process of packing has
been entrusted to East Godavari Rice Millers. According to Joint Collector of
EG Dr G Lakshmisha, the package system will prevent the allegations of weight
loss. Unlike the earlier system of supplying loose rice, under the modified
system, the PDS card holder gets fine quality rice in packed form and there will
be no weight loss. Advertise With Us Already we supplied more than 4, 0000
tonnes of rice in packed form and arrangements have been made for the supply of
balance quantity of rice in next two days, JC said. On the question of spending
hefty amount on packing of rice in packs in different quantities with CM's
photo for Re1-a-kilo-rice supplies, Lakshmisha clarified that there will not be
any extra cost for this .
India Grain: Spot wheat, maize prices down on
fall in bulk purchases
Thursday, Aug 29
By Sampad Nandy
NEW DELHI – Prices of mill-quality wheat fell today due to a
further decline in demand from bulk consumers and stockists, traders said. The
decline in prices was restricted due to low arrivals, they said.
"Bulk demand softened further today as mills have reduced their
purchases due to high spot prices and are unlikely to increase their buys in
the coming few days," Kota-based trader Aniket Mehta said.
Wheat futures on National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange
also fell in line with the trend in the spot markets. The most-active September
contract closed at 2,060 rupees per 100 kg, down 0.5%.
Demand is seen weak in the coming days, as most bulk buyers are
likely to move to government auctions as supply in spot markets have declined,
Indore-based trader N.K. Agarwal said.
In case of maize, prices remained weak today across spot
markets due to low purchases from bulk buyers at high prices, traders
said. Decline in supply, however, limited the fall in prices, they said.
"Demand remained weak as most purchasers avoided picking up
stocks in bulk due to very high spot prices," Purnea-based trader Sehdev
Jaiswal said.
Maize futures on NCDEX, however, ended flat today on
expectations of a rise in prices over the coming days. The most-active
September contract ended at 2,173 rupees per 100 kg.
Most bulk buyers are now awaiting the fresh kharif crop in late
September as they anticipate prices to decline due to a supply pressure,
Nizamabad-based trader Amrutlal Kataria said.
In the case of basmati paddy, prices of the Pusa 1121 variety
fell due to a decline in demand from rice millers and exporters, traders
said.
Pusa 1121 basmati paddy futures on Indian Commodity Exchange,
however, ended higher as traders anticipate a rise in demand from millers
during the festive season in October. The September contract closed at
3,525 rupees per 100 kg, up 0.4% from the previous close.
Following are today's prices for wheat, maize, and paddy, in
rupees per 100 kg, in key wholesale markets, and the change from the previous
day:
Commodity
|
Market
|
Price
|
Change
|
Wheat
|
Kota
|
2,000-2,020
|
(-)10-15
|
Wheat
|
Indore
|
2,000-2,020
|
(-)10-15
|
Maize
|
Nizamabad
|
2,420-2,430
|
(-)10-15
|
Maize
|
Purnea
|
2,350-2,360
|
(-)10-15
|
Pusa
1121 basmati
|
Amritsar
|
3,780-3,820
|
(-)10-20
|
End
Edited by Mainak Moitra
Cogencis Tel +91 (11) 4220-1000
Send comments to feedback@cogencis.com
This copy was first published on the Cogencis WorkStation
When the rain doesn’t come:
Thailand in grip of severe drought as monsoon season fails to deliver
There has been
no significant rain in this province for several months. (Photo: Jack
Board)
Jack
Board@JackBoardCNA
29 Aug 2019 06:36AM (Updated: 29 Aug 2019 12:05PM)
NAKHON RATCHASIMA, Thailand:
Suthin Noramas cannot stop his tears as he surveys the parched land around
him.
His plot is about 2.25 hectares
in size and has been carefully cultivated for some crops he thought would prove
to be valuable to sell, such as durians, pepper and lemongrass.
All of them are dying or
dead.
The ochre ground is cracked from
dryness. Even the sections that look green and thriving belie the lack of rain
that has hit hard over the past few months. “I have been doing agriculture my
whole life,” the 43-year-old said, eyes wet with despondency. “This drought is
the worst.
“You can clearly see that they've
died. I have lost all courage to work. It’s all gone. Dry.”
Ask any local in this part of
Thailand and their answer will be similar: This drought is as bad as they can
remember.
image:
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/11848968/0x0/2000/1500/438de0d8f9ab925c6681e12a48732361/bh/thailand-drought-3.jpg
Rice
paddies normally green at this time of year are dry and barren. (Photo: Jack
Board)
So far this year, the entire
country has endured the least rainfall in the past decade and a
significant 25 per cent less than in the same time in 2018, according to
Thailand’s Department of Water Resources. In Issan, which covers 20 provinces
across a large swathe of the northeast of Thailand, the drop has been more
dramatic - down 30 per cent on 2018 figures, where rainfall was close to
normal.
The state of the Mekong River
this wet season - where it fell to its lowest water level in 100 years - has
been symbolic of the bigger problems facing the region.
The lack of rain has left a
visible mark on the land and raised uncertainty among people.
Suthin works his land with his
elderly father. Their only source of water for their agriculture project is a
nearby reservoir. Recently, the duo purchased an electric pump to help them
extract the precious resource. On this day, and in recent memory, there is
nothing but a dirty trickle.
“I don’t know why it is like
this. I don’t know why the gods, sky and soil are punishing me like this. What
is going on this year and why is there no rain?”
image:
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/11848992/0x0/2000/1335/5fb9b9f5c58217383e1776d33bda5353/aA/thailand-drought-5.jpg
Suthin
Noramas has watched his farm crops grow dry and die due to a lack of recent
rain. (Photo: Jack Board)
Just a few kilometres away in
Khonburi, other locals ponder that same question on the edge of another dried
up reservoir. Its capacity is about 12,000 cubic metres, or about six
Olympic-sized swimming pools. But it is empty now.
Local flower grower Karawake
Korbsungnern says he has lost 50 per cent of this year’s harvest, costing him
about US$6,500. He thinks he is lucky to have managed to salvage anything at
all in the absence of rain.
“There are so many dark clouds
coming this way but the rain doesn’t come. It rains somewhere else. It’s so
windy here, too, but no rain. I have been watching weather forecasts and they
always say there will be rain. I have yet to see any,” he said.
“If rain and water don’t come by
October. I don’t know what will we do next year.“
image:
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/image/11848964/0x0/2000/1500/3d559b61bfee0697e19654d5411fcb36/NG/thailand-drought-1.jpg
Water has become rare and precious across Issan in northeast
Thailand
CLIMATE CHANGE AND MISMANAGEMENT
In July, Thailand’s
meteorological department issued a warning about the severity of the drought.
Around the same time, the government told farmers to hold off planting rice. It
came months too late for many producers, who typically plant their main crop in
May.
Unlike in previous bad drought
years - 2015 being a recent example - it meant farmers had fully committed to
their fields, leaving them horribly exposed when the monsoon failed to form as
usually expected in May and June.
Prapas Khunsarong, a rice grower
in Non Thai district has watched his fields fail after investing huge sums of
money. He is mostly a subsistence farmer, growing rice for his own family’s
needs.
Around Baan Wang village, the
sight of dry paddies and scorched earth are the evidence of the struggle of
Prapas and many like him. They say there has not been any significant rainfall
in months.
The
heavily cracked surface of a dried reservoir in Nakhon Ratchasima
province. (Photo: Jack Board)
“At the beginning of this year
there was some rain and the rice was sprouting. After that for about three
months, there’s been no rain. They are all dead,” he said.
“Next year, we are facing the
problem of no rice to eat and no grains to grow. These are the problems. We do
lose hope. The whole sub-district feel the same way.”
Rice production in Thailand is a
critically important industry, which accounts for about a quarter of the world’s
global trade of the crop. Yet, the country has food security issues due to
climate change vulnerability, according to Dr Seree Supratid, director of the
Climate Change and Disaster Center at Rangsit University.
This year’s drought is being
blamed on a low pressure trough, bringing monsoonal rain shifting to the north,
inundating parts of India and southern China instead of Thailand. But on
top of climate conditions, Dr Seree, the former governor of the country's
Provincial Waterworks Authority and author for the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, says water mismanagement can
further explain the damaging impact.
Prapas
Khunsarong has lost thousands of baht and has been unable to harvest his rice.
(Photo: Jack Board)
“At the beginning of this year we
had quite a lot of water for the farmers. We released so much water. Why
release so much? Because we didn’t tell the farmers and all the stakeholders
before the beginning of the year that we will face some period of prolonged
drought,” he said, referring to stored water that can be freely accessed by
farmers during the normal dry months.
“We have to improve. We have to
change our way of management.”
Already this year, a study by the
Department of Agricultural Extension estimated that 1,331 square kilometres of
land has been damaged by the drought at a cost of US$320 million. The
numbers are expected to dramatically increase as the drought continues.
Dr Seree blames a lack of proper
forecasting, information spreading and risk mitigation for Thailand’s lack of
climate resilience. A lack of investment in agricultural technology or
the encouragement of adoption of high-value crops that use less water has
further contributed, he says.
These are challenges that are
only going to become more pressing in the years to come. Dr Seree says a hot
and dry climate is a new reality for Thailand and severe droughts are now being
forecast every two to three years, instead of every 10 to 15 years in the past.
Likewise, the magnitude and regularity of damaging floods is also increasing.
“We see that in the long term,
Thailand will be a very vulnerable country,” he said.
Meanwhile, the government is
taking action to deal with the current situation.
The cabinet on Tuesday (Aug 28)
approved an additional drought relief package worth US$515 million to reach 76
hard-hit provinces. Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha also proposed
waiving water bills for the public in central Surin during a visit this month.
"People are beset by
grievances. They turn on their tap only to have air come out of the pipe. Why
should they be paying for water that isn't there?" he said, as reported by
local media.
A
small camp fire built by locals in the dried out reservoir that normally
provides agricultural water. (Photo: Jack Board)
‘WE HAVE TO FIGHT’
As the Lam Chae Dam has slowly
receded, it has left boats lying on cracked mud and waterside restaurants high
up and away from their intended idyllic locations. The water level has dropped
so much, motorcycles can traverse a path right across the large
reservoir.
The dam is a critical piece of
water infrastructure serving Nakhon Ratchasima province with a capacity of 275
million cubic metres. Currently, it is only 17 per cent full. Its operators
have closed access to water collection for agricultural purposes, allowing
people only to take enough need for personal needs.
“We want to reserve some water
for next year’s dry season and we will keep water from rainfall. We closely
monitor the situation,” said Somsak Thaploka, the director of Lam Chae Water
Transmission and Maintenance Project.
A makeshift road has
been made possible through the Lam Chae Dam. (Photo: Jack Board)
Just nearby, the concerns for
villagers in Kok Kra Chai relate to drinking water. Their small reservoir will
run dry within two weeks if there is no rain. Many locals typically use ceramic
water pots to collect rainwater to drink and wash with - those are also sitting
empty.
“The water is at its lowest we
have seen. If there’s no water then villagers have to buy water,” said village
head, Prajuab Thokratoke.
The Thai government will provide
some compensation for affected farmers during this drought period but it is
likely to not even come close to covering their costs. For provinces declared
disaster relief zones, rice farmers could receive a maximum of US$36 per rai of
land (0.16 hectares). Farmers say the cost of planting one rai is about triple
that sum.
“They will give compensation but
it won’t be enough. It will only be enough to prolong us for a while, to buy
food because we don’t grow rice here so we have to buy rice. I have to help
myself first,” said fruit farmer Suthin.
A boat left sitting in
dry grass, far away from the shore of Lam Chae Dam. (Photo: Jack Board)
He is torn between holding out,
absorbing his losses and the grief it brings or packing his bags for Bangkok
and finding a construction job with a regular pay packet.
“If I really cannot cope with
this, I have to find a job in town. As for the crops, I will leave them here
for my father to look after on his own. But he’s old,” he said, before seeming
to change his mind, drawing on the grit farmers often do to survive tough times
like these.
“We have to fight. It’s true. We
have to fight. We just have to wait for rain.”
AUGUST 28, 2019 / 11:32 PM /
2 DAYS AGO
Nigeria closes
part of border with Benin to check rice smuggling
ABUJA (Reuters) - 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.
FILE PHOTO: A vendor arranges bags of rice at the Wuse market in
Abuja, Nigeria May 15, 2018. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde/File Photo
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.”
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 neighbors, 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.
Sell imported rice, DA orders NFA
SELL IMPORTED RICE, DA ORDERS NFA
THE Department of Agriculture
(DA) has ordered the National Food Authority (NFA) to immediately sell the
millions of bags of rice that have been sitting in its warehouses for months.
DA spokesman Noel Reyes told The
Manila Times that Agriculture Secretary William Dar directed NFA Administrator
Judy Dansal to unload the imported rice so the agency would have funds to
purchase more palay (unmilled rice) from local farmers.
“They should be moving and not
holding their stocks for a long time. What are they waiting for when they can
actually unload their stocks to the market? That is the directive of the
secretary, to unload as fast as they can, so they (can) roll over the money and
buy more palay from local farmers,” Reyes told The Times.
Dansal admitted during a Senate
hearing by the Committee on Agriculture and Food on Wednesday that 290,000
metric tons (mt) of imported rice, or 4 million bags containing 50 kilograms
each are yet to be sold.
On Thursday, the NFA chief
clarified that the agency’s rice stocks kept in its warehouses nationwide were
maintained in “good condition at all times.”
“We abide by what is dictated by
our mandate. We store and handle our stocks, following good warehouse-keeping
protocols in all our warehouses across the country so that we can immediately
respond to any need for rice supply during calamities and emergencies,” she
explained.
The NFA purchased 1.2 million mt
of rice last year to boost its buffer stock.
Reyes said the “suki trading
system” of the NFA, wherein the agency purchases palay from big traders instead
of farmers also alarmed Dar and he asked Dansal to fix this right away.
“The secretary wanted NFA to go
deeper, meaning they should go to small farmers and not to suki traders,” Reyes
told The Manila Times.
He said the DA would keep an eye
on the NFA, particularly its procurement of local palay and the selling of
low-priced rice in the local market.
Reyes said the NFA’s plan to buy
palay at P17 per kilo would be discussed during a meeting of the NFA Council
next week.
This means the P3-incentive given
by the agency starting October 2018 amid the rice crisis will be discontinued.
The P3-buffer stocking incentive allowed the NFA to buy palay at P20.70 per
kilo from farmer cooperatives and P20.40 per kilo from individual farmers.
“The rationale there is for the
NFA to be able to purchase more palay,” Reyes said. The price of palay has
plunged to as low as P12 per kilo in some provinces.
Dansal said the NFA continues to buy palay from local farmers to provide them a ready market for their produce at reasonable price.
Dansal said the NFA continues to buy palay from local farmers to provide them a ready market for their produce at reasonable price.
“We conduct procurement
operations on a year-round basis. We have more than 300 buying stations across
the country that are open daily where farmers can deliver their produce and
avail of our support price and incentives,” she said.
Under Republic Act 11203, or the
“Rice Tariffication Law” passed in February this year, the NFA is mandated to
maintain a buffer stock good for 15 to 30 days of daily consumption requirement
(DCR) to meet contingencies during calamities and emergencies anywhere in the
country.
The NFA currently holds about 4.5
million bags of rice and 6.4 million bags of palay or a total rice equivalent
of 8.5 million bags of rice good for 13 days based on national DCR of 651,860
bags
Strong demand lifts
Indian rice rates, Thai prices buoyant
Karthika Suresh Namboothiri
AUGUST 29, 2019 / 5:30 PM
BENGALURU (Reuters) - Prices of Indian export rice rose this week
on good export demand and concerns over production of the summer-sown crop
because of erratic rainfall, while fluctuations in Thailand’s currency
supported Thai export rates.
A farmer carries saplings to plant in a rice field on the outskirts
of Ahmedabad, July 5, 2019. REUTERS/Amit Dave
Top exporter India’s 5% broken parboiled variety was quoted at
$374-$378 a tonne this week, up slightly from $372-$375 a week ago.
“Rice production could fall in key states like West Bengal and
Andhra Pradesh due to lower rainfall,” said an exporter based at Kakinada in
the southern state of Andhra Pradesh.
India received 14% less rainfall than the 50-year average in the
week to Aug. 28, data from the India Meteorological Department (IMD) showed.
In neighbouring Bangladesh, Agriculture Minister Abdur Razzaque
said the government is considering providing cash incentives to encourage rice
exports.
Dhaka has been unable to clinch overseas deals since a
long-standing export ban was lifted in May, with its rice more expensive than
supplies from India or Thailand despite a recent fall in local prices.
Thailand’s benchmark 5% broken rice prices were quoted at $410-$430
a tonne, a slightly narrower range from last week’s $415-$430, traders said.
A firmer baht, Asia’s best-performing currency this year, has kept
prices high while supply shortages because of a continuing drought - the worst
in a decade - has also played a major role in supporting prices.
The Thai government this week announced 21 billion baht ($682
million) of subsidies to help farmers affected by the drought and the strong
baht.
Elsewhere, tepid demand kept rates for Vietnam’s 5% broken rice
unchanged from last week at $335-$340 a tonne amid slow trading activity.
“It’s been quiet this week, with no major export deals, due to weak
demand,” said one trader based in Ho Chi Minh City.
Preliminary data showed only 29,600 tonnes of rice is scheduled to
be loaded at Ho Chi Minh City ports over Sept. 1-10, with 23,000 tonnes bound
for West Africa and the rest for the Philippines, traders said.
Government data released on Thursday showed Vietnam exported 4.53
million tonnes of rice in the first eight months of this year, little changed
from the same period last year.
August rice exports are estimated at 580,000 tonnes, compared with
598,619 tonnes in July.
Reporting by Khanh Vu in Hanoi, Panu Wongcha-um in Bangkok, Ruma
Paul in Dhaka and Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai; Editing by David Goodman
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Rice exporters
propose barter trade treaty with Iran
August 29, 2019
LAHORE: Exporters of local
agricultural products have proposed a barter trade agreement between Islamabad
and Tehran to bypass US-trade sanctions imposed against Iran.
“The government may soon enter into
a barter trade agreement with Iran for importing liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)
against export of Pakistani rice,” claims Shahzad Ali Malik, chief executive of
a local agriculture research and services company.
He tells Dawn here on Wednesday
that Iran is the biggest market of Basmati rice after Saudi Arabia that needs
to be protected for the sake of local farming community and exporters.
He says as Islamabad and Tehran do
not have any currency swap treaty, the rice exporters have proposed barter
trade between the two neighbouring countries for importing LPG against Basmati
rice exports to bypass the US-imposed sanctions on trade with Iran in dollars.
Mr Malik claims the federal
commerce authorities have promised a positive outcome soon in this respect.
Responding to a query, he says
there is a need for more production and supplies to explore new markets for
achieving the target of $5 billion rice exports in the next five years and that
hybrid seed can offer the enhanced yield opportunity in the face of water
shortage and climate change problems.
He claims that his research
company, Guard, has reached close to the target of developing a hybrid Basmati
rice variety with average grain length of 8mm, as per demand of the
international market, which will give on an average 80 maunds (3,200kgs) per
acre yield.
The Basmati variety, he says, will
be heat and drought tolerant to counter the challenge of climatic change,
adding that it will be commercialised within a couple of years.
The company has already developed
hybrid coarse (Irri) varieties for Sindh where these are giving up to 120
maunds per acre yield.
Meanwhile, the Founder Group led by
Shahzad Malik swept the Corporate and Associate class seats of the Rice
Exporters Association of Pakistan managing committee elections for 2019-20.
Shahjahan Malik, Khalid Mahmood,
Ahsan Saeed and Fahad Jahangir were elected unopposed in Corporate Class and
Ishfaq Ali Khan in Associate Class from the north zone.
Incumbent REAP office-bearers
Safder Mehkri, Ali Hussam Asghar and Pir Nazim Shah have congratulated the
newly-elected leaders.
Published in Dawn, August 29th,
2019
Harvest Times in
Arkansas Sync Up with Mother Nature
By Emily Woodall
LITTLE ROCK, AR -- Harvest is on the horizon for many Arkansas
producers if the sun will stick around!
Harvest for some was set to begin last week but was postponed due to
another rainy spell.
In northeast Arkansas, rice farmer
Dean Wall has received more than five inches of rain since last Thursday. "We drained our early fields last week
but with the front that came through, we'll have to drain the fields
again. If the weather cooperates, we're
hoping to start harvesting in the next week or two."
The latest rice Wall planted was in
mid to late May. Weather permitting,
they're hoping it will be ready to harvest in mid to late September. "If we can get a week to 10 days of good
weather, then we should have a lot of combines out in the field," said
Wall.
David Gairhan, another producer from
northeast Arkansas, is also waiting on some sunshine to dry out the fields so he
can start harvesting. "Some folks
may be able to start harvesting on Labor Day but I think the majority will
start in a couple of weeks. This crop is
looking pretty fair except for all of the barnyard grass. This is one of the worst years I can remember
as far as grass goes."
South Arkansas producers are in the
same boat. Sidney Robnett from Stuttgart
had plans to start harvesting last Friday but couldn't because of the
weather. However, combines should be out
in the field later this week as long as the sun comes out. Planting was spread out until June this year
so the harvest is expected to be spread out as well.
"More than likely we'll harvest
our early rice, harvest some corn, then harvest our late rice. While it's not ideal, it's how things
are," said Robnett. "There's a
lot of speculation on yields this year and estimates are all over the place but
I'm feeling pretty optimistic."
As always, Mother Nature dictates
this year's harvest schedule, and producers are hoping for a good one.
How humans changed the face of Earth
1. Neil
Roberts1,2
See all authors and affiliations
Science 30 Aug 2019:
Vol. 365, Issue 6456, pp. 865-866
DOI: 10.1126/science.aay4627
hapatis, dal & rice and a lot of TV — how J&K leaders are spending time in detention
Top J&K politicians including Omar Abdullah, Mehbooba Mufti & others, were taken into custody on 5 August, after govt scrapped Article 370. They have been kept at Centaur Hotel.
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Srinagar: Mainstream politicians in the Valley, currently detained at the Sher-i-Kashmir International Convention Center (SKICC) in Srinagar, spend most of their days in their hotel rooms and are only able to interact with each other during meals served in the common dining hall.
The politicians, who include the first and second rung leadership of the National Conference (NC), the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Peoples Conference, and Shah Faesal, have been detained at the Centaur Hotel, which is located in the SKICC compound.
Their families told ThePrint that the leaders are mainly confined to their rooms where they mostly watch the news and movies at times. “They don’t have any technology — no laptops and no iPads,” said the son of a PDP politician. “They watch the news all day and maybe a movie at times on television. They ask us about what is happening outside. That is perhaps the highlight of their day.”
According to the family of a former National Conference MLA, the politicians initially ate their meals in their rooms but are now allowed into the common dining hall. “The timings are fixed for all the meals but it gives them a chance to talk to each other,” said the son of the former MLA. “Otherwise they spend all of their days watching TV.”
The lunch and dinner menu, he said, included vegetables and dal. “Chicken is served once or twice a week but is rationed. They get only one piece,” he said. “They get chapatis during the day and rice for dinner.”
Another family friend accompanying him said, “Kashmiris don’t eat chapatis. I guess they are making them familiar with eating chapatis now that Article 370 is removed”.
Also read: Restrictions ease, but families of detained J&K leaders say it’s tougher to meet them now
Prolonged detention
The politicians were all taken into custody on 5 August, after the Modi government scrapped Article 370 for the state.
They were herded into the luxury Centaur Hotel located on the banks of the Dal Lake. The hotel once hosted national and international events but the entire compound was given the status of a sub-jail by a state government order in the first week of August, a senior government official said.
Though it is widely believed that nearly 40 politicians were lodged in SKICC in the first week of August, the number has grown. Officials refuse to release the exact number of politicians detained there but one government source, however, said 107 politicians are currently lodged in the SKICC.
The politicians have a room of their own and entry into other floors is strictly restricted. Initially, movement in the floor lobby was also restricted, according to one relative, but now the politicians are allowed to take walks in their floor. The hotel park is not out of bounds, and so is the main lobby.
“The frisking at the main SKICC gate is rigorous. Not even our car keys are allowed,” said the daughter of one politician. “The food and clothes that we get are checked but all of it has to be brought in transparent polythene and utensils. Once in, an official sends a message to bring out the family member who is then accompanied by officials to the hotel main lobby where we are allowed to speak.”
She added that the administration has eased restrictions on time spent with family members. “Initially the time allotted to speak was less and officials would remind us that we were running out of time but now it is a little relaxed,” she said. “We can speak as much as we want but between 11 am and 4 pm.”
An advocate, who is also a relative of a detained NC politician, said the rooms were stripped of any objects, especially sharp ones that could be used as weapons to inflict self-harm.
“Nail cutters, hangers, blades and other sharp objects were taken out,” he said. “We were told we can give them trimmers to shave or trim beards. In-house barbers are being arranged from time to time.”
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https://theprint.in/india/chapatis-dal-rice-and-a-lot-of-tv-how-jk-leaders-are-spending-time-in-detention/284355/
IMM’s Marketing the Future Conferencespeakers announced
The IMM Graduate School has partnered with Nedbank for its second annual Marketing the Future Conference. IMM has introduced a line-up of world-class speakers and is extending its reach from Johannesburg to Cape Town.
"As Nedbank, we recognise how technology is changing the world and how we do things," says Sandrine Prinsloo, head of marketing for business banking and retail relationship banking at Nedbank.
"The marketing industry is changing rapidly due to technology and making it easier to create products that are best suited for customers. That's why we have partnered with IMM to use our money expertise to do good and create opportunities that make a real difference in South Africa," Prinsloo adds.
This year's conference is themed 'Unlocking the human element in a digital world' and will explore the technological forces that are transforming the role of marketers.
The IMM's Marketing the Future conference will take place in Cape Town on Thursday, 5 September and in Johannesburg on Thursday, 3 October.
The speakers for the conference include:
Sean McCoy
The conference will be MC’d by Sean McCoy in Cape Town. McCoy is a writer, speaker and marketing stalwart of more than 30 years, including being the MD of Enterprise IG Africa Middle East and Specialised Exhibitions.
Andy Rice
Keynote speaker Andy Rice, a well-known brand strategist, public speaker and advertising commentator, will present a talk titled 'Even a Ferrari has a rear-view mirror'. Rice will draw on his experience as a brand manager, strategist and co-founder of Yellowwood Brand Architects.
Anne Thistleton
Consumer marketing veteran and mind science practitioner, Anne Thisleton, will present 'We are of Two Minds (and you are listening and talking to the wrong one)'. The talk aims to present her findings working with some of the world's leading cognitive psychologists, neuroscientists and behavioural economists around how our mental-operating system processes the communications that we are constantly encountering.
Shavani Naidoo
Shavani Naidoo is a machine-learning expert who focuses on client development, with respect to harnessing the benefits of Big data and artificial intelligence. She is passionate about innovation and creative problem solving through the use of technology and talk on 'How the Fourth Industrial Revolution will change the way we work'.
To book a seat for the conference, visit www.imm.ac.za.
For more information, visit www.imm.ac.za. You can also follow IMM Graduate School on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.https://www.mediaupdate.co.za/marketing/147022/imms-marketing-the-future-conference-speakers-announced
"The marketing industry is changing rapidly due to technology and making it easier to create products that are best suited for customers. That's why we have partnered with IMM to use our money expertise to do good and create opportunities that make a real difference in South Africa," Prinsloo adds.
This year's conference is themed 'Unlocking the human element in a digital world' and will explore the technological forces that are transforming the role of marketers.
The IMM's Marketing the Future conference will take place in Cape Town on Thursday, 5 September and in Johannesburg on Thursday, 3 October.
The speakers for the conference include:
Sean McCoy
The conference will be MC’d by Sean McCoy in Cape Town. McCoy is a writer, speaker and marketing stalwart of more than 30 years, including being the MD of Enterprise IG Africa Middle East and Specialised Exhibitions.
Andy Rice
Keynote speaker Andy Rice, a well-known brand strategist, public speaker and advertising commentator, will present a talk titled 'Even a Ferrari has a rear-view mirror'. Rice will draw on his experience as a brand manager, strategist and co-founder of Yellowwood Brand Architects.
Anne Thistleton
Consumer marketing veteran and mind science practitioner, Anne Thisleton, will present 'We are of Two Minds (and you are listening and talking to the wrong one)'. The talk aims to present her findings working with some of the world's leading cognitive psychologists, neuroscientists and behavioural economists around how our mental-operating system processes the communications that we are constantly encountering.
Shavani Naidoo
Shavani Naidoo is a machine-learning expert who focuses on client development, with respect to harnessing the benefits of Big data and artificial intelligence. She is passionate about innovation and creative problem solving through the use of technology and talk on 'How the Fourth Industrial Revolution will change the way we work'.
To book a seat for the conference, visit www.imm.ac.za.
For more information, visit www.imm.ac.za. You can also follow IMM Graduate School on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.https://www.mediaupdate.co.za/marketing/147022/imms-marketing-the-future-conference-speakers-announced