Tuesday, January 27, 2015

26th January (Monday),2015 Daily Global Rice E_Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine


NE’s rice beer has therapeutic value’


  

GUWAHATI: The humble rice beer, which is brewed in many ethnic households across the northeast, has been found to have many nutritional values including antioxidant properties that may be beneficial in fighting several diseases.Researchers from the Jorhat-based College of Home Science (CHS)'s department of food and nutrition, Assam Agricultural University (AAU) and the Tamil Nadu-based Indian Institute of Crop Processing Technology (IICPT) have found antioxidant activity in rice beer samples in the laboratory.
The research on rice beer samples was carried out by Deep Jyoti Bhuyan and Mridula Saikia Barooah of the CHS's department of food and nutrition, Sudipta Sankar Bora of AAU and K Singaravadivel of IICPT."The antioxidant activity in the rice beer samples was most likely caused by the presence of phenolic acids, polyphenols and flavonoids from various indigenous herbs used in the preparation of the starter culture cake. These compounds are known to inhibit the oxidative mechanism that are responsible for many disorders and diseases in humans such as infections, diabetes, arthritis, cardiovascular diseases, cancer, Alzheimer's diseases, AIDS and so on," their research paper stated.
The researchers have pointed out that besides being consumed as a beverage by different tribes in the region, rice beer is also traditionally used for therapeutic purposes. They highlighted some traditional therapeutic use of rice beer by the Karbi community of Assam, which uses the brew called Hor Acho to cure dysentery and pharyngitis."If Japan's traditional brew sake could become popular internationally, the northeast's particular variety of rice beer has all the potential to become a value-added beverage. That is why we made a scientific intervention on the traditional rice beer of the northeast so that we could find out its nutritional and therapeutic properties. We need to carry out more scientific studies on it for further value-addition," Barooah said.
Different tribes have their own names and tradition of brewing rice beer, which has an important role in their socio-cultural lives. The northeast has over 150 tribes and 200 sub-tribes, each of them having unique traditions of making rice beer. The preparation of the rice beer is an intricate and sophisticated process handed down through the generations. Usually, it is the women of the tribe who are involved in making the rice beer.
Nigeria: Rice Import Duty Debtors Must Pay - Jonathan
President Goodluck Jonathan has approved N16 billion to be deployed for the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development's 2015 dry season farming.Announced this at AgriFest 2015 exhibition of Made-in-Nigeria agricultural produce at the Eagle Square, Abuja, on Friday, the President expressed appreciation to Nigerian farmers for taking up the opportunities provided by his administration's agriculture reforms, which have boosted food production in the country."Great farmers of Nigeria, you can rely on me as the farmers' President. Be assured of my support at all times.

"To further boost your efforts to produce more food for our country, I am pleased to announce here today, the release of N26 billion towards the 2015 Dry Season Farming Programme," he said.The Federal Government launched a National Dry Season Farming Programme in 2012 to facilitate all-year round food cultivation and production.The President directed the ministry to provide annual financial support to further spur the famous traditional fishing competition and festival in Argungu in Kebbi State and promote fishing eco-tourism.He declared that Nigeria "is producing more food than ever before. Our national food production has grown by 21 million metric tons within the past three years. Our food import bill declined from N1.1 trillion in 2009 to N634 billion in 2013 and continues to decline.
"He disclosed that with government's support to private refineries to process crude palm oil in the country, Nigeria hopes to become self-sufficient in palm oil by next year.According to him, "Over N45 billion in private sector investments in new oil palm plantations are ongoing. We expect 70,000 hectares of new plantations to allow Nigeria to become self-sufficient in palm oil production by 2016."He noted that over six million rice farmers have received improved rice seed varieties, thus boosting domestic rice production by an additional seven million metric tons, adding that he would not allow rice importers owing the government to go scot-free."High quality Nigerian rice is now competing favourably with imported rice in the markets.
"Our rice millers have taken advantage of these new opportunities, and the number of integrated rice mills has expanded from one, at the beginning of this administration, to 24 today."I eat Nigerian rice and can tell you that it is better than imported rice. Nigeria, our dear country, will not be held hostage by rice importers. There will be no sacred cows under my watch. All those owing Nigeria on rice import duties must pay."The President pledged that his administration would "continue to support our livestock herders with improvement in grazing facilities, watering points, establishment of ranches, stock routes and provision of veterinary services."We will continue to work hard to end cattle rustling and rebuild trust and cooperation between farmers and herders.
"Jonathan thanked the private sector agribusiness leaders, who are working to boost agro-processing and add value to all the produce in the agricultural sector to the tune of about N900 billion.His words: "I celebrate the efforts of the financial institutions, from banks to micro-finance institutions that have now begun to lend more to farmers and agribusinesses."Our development partners have seen the turnaround in the agriculture sector and are actively supporting the sector. Over N900 billion ($5 billion) of private investments have come into the sector in the last three years."Selected Nigerian farmers, rice producers, seedling dealers and other agro-allied operators on the occasion gave testimonies of their improved production and conditions of services.The President toured exhibition stands at the fair grounds featuring only Nigerian-made agricultural produce.
Hunt for new rice markets a priority
PETCHANET PRATRUANGKRAI
THE NATION January 26, 2015 1:00 am
THE Thai Rice Exporters Association will join forces with the Commerce Ministry for a business mission to potential new rice-import markets such as Iran, Iraq, and other Middle East countries. The move will be a bid to increase rice sales this year in the face of fears that falling oil prices will affect the purchasing power of major importers of Thai rice.TREA president Charoen Laothamatas said the association was scheduled to join many trade missions with the Ministry of Commerce because Thailand needed to aggressively promote its rice plans and activities to "knock on the doors" of potential new importers.
"Due to the lowering oil price, some major import countries such as Nigeria and other countries in Africa, where their incomes have relied mainly on the oil price, could be affected and cause a lower order for rice," he said."The ministry and the association thus have plans to promote more rice sales to other potential markets such as Iran, Iraq, and other countries in the Middle East to encourage them to buy Thai rice."Charoen said that Iran and Iraq used to be major Thai rice importers, but they suspended imports for a few years due to a defaulted contract with a private exporter. Now was a good time to boost the confidence of those countries, he added.
Under the Commerce Ministry plan, Commerce Minister General Chatchai Sarikulya will visit Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Oman, Egypt, Italy, and Indonesia. Charoen said that rice exports this year should be as high as last year - up to 11 million tonnes - due to high demand in the world market and drought problems in some rice-producing countries.He said the price of Thai rice was expected to be steady this year. The price has climbed slightly over the past few months due to the strengthening baht. At the moment, the export price of rice is quoted at US$405-$410 (Bt13,200-Bt13,350) for 5 per cent white rice, while Vietnamese rice is quoted $370 per tonne.
Pakistani businessmen invited to invest in Afghanistan
our correspondent
Sunday, January 25, 2015
From Print Edition
 
KARACHI: Pakistani investors can set up their industrial units in Afghan tax-free zones that would help them penetrate in the Afghan market along with gaining access to the Central Asian Republics, said Janan Mosazai, ambassador of Afghanistan.
Speaking at a meeting during his visit to the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) on Saturday, the ambassador said the Afghan government is ready to offer additional facilities to Pakistani investors as compared to investors from other countries with a view to further strengthen economic and trade ties between the two countries.Pakistan and Afghanistan must work jointly to deal with common issues of terrorism, illiteracy, poverty, water shortages, energy crisis and infrastructure development, etc, he said.
The ambassador asked the Karachi Chamber to organise a delegation’s visit to Afghanistan to explore trade and investment opportunities.Identifying various sectors for undertaking joint ventures, he said the business communities of the two countries can undertake joint ventures in agriculture, education, construction, mining, precious stones, natural resources and other important sectors of the economy.“There is also a huge potential in Afghanistan for Pakistani rice exporters who cannot only export rice to Afghanistan, but also to the Central Asian Republics through Afghanistan,” he said.Mosazai stressed the need to develop highways, railways and air links between two countries.“Various memorandums of understanding and agreements had already been signed in this regard, now it is high time to implement all these projects,” he said.
Earlier, KCCI President Iftikhar Ahmed Vohra said the local industry of Pakistan suffers badly due to misuse of Afghan Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement. In order to effectively deal with the situation, he proposed the duties and taxes on imported goods arriving at the Pakistani ports for Afghanistan should be collected on behalf of the government of Afghanistan by Pakistan Customs and transmitted to the Afghan government upon evidence of transit goods reaching their declared destination, which would surely help deal with the smuggling and misuse of APTTA. 
PRICES of crops like onion, cotton, paddy and sugarcane are depressed in Sindh, while farmers continue their outcry against the government, urging it either to regulate prices or subsidise farm inputs.
Crop prices have recorded a decline, starting from last year’s kharif to the current rabi season. To make matters worse, cane-growers are being paid less than the officially notified rate, as millers insist they can’t afford to buy the crop at official rate.Fluctuations in commodity prices cannot be isolated from the subsidy and free-market mechanisms, since multiple factors govern the agriculture sector. Unless the underlying issues in farming are addressed, the price distortion will not go away.Theoretically, a free market idea sounds good. But price distortion is usually linked with the working of the free market.
 The developed world, including countries like the US and Japan and those in the EU provide huge subsidy to their farm sector. This lends credence to the fact that they lack comparative advantage and remain uncompetitive.On the other hand, Pakistani farmers not only have the potential to get higher per acre yields, but also the comparative advantage.Subsidy, say stakeholders, is opposed by the developed world, but it subsidises its own farm sector.Presently, India’s export of agri commodities to Pakistan is the main cause of the low prices here. This is more a case of institutional support and an enabling marketing environment in Pakistan rather than that of subsidy.
 There is a strong need to curb the exploitation of farmers by the market.India is a case in point. It subsidises agriculture despite being part of the WTO. Some reports put the annual amount of subsidy at 100bn Indian rupees.The cotton season has just concluded in Pakistan, with farmers not getting a fair price — a fact admitted by the Economic Coordination Committee. On the other hand, India decided to procure 10m bales this season to keep its minimum support price (MSP) intact in the larger interest of farmers.Out of 10m, about 5m bales have already procured, says Mahesh Kumar, former chairman of the Pakistan Cotton Ginners Association (PCA), while referring to cotton market reports.
The Indian government is ready to buy 15m bales to support farmers, if needed.“Comparatively, the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) lifted only 88,000 bales across Pakistan, despite the ECC’s decision to buy 1m bales at Rs3,000 per 40kg for seed cotton producers. Procurement has closed now after having lasted for just 11 days.”This is one example of the government’s indecisiveness or inaction, and translates into monetary losses for the farmers. So, growers remain reluctant to modernise farms or use vital farm inputs. The cost of inputs continues to rise unchecked, defeating the idea of subsidy or support price, and benefitting input-suppliers.With poor investment, farmers don’t get the desired productivity and find it hard to compete internationally. Access to free market is not unhindered either.
According to Mahmood Nawaz Shah, a progressive farmer, China slapped a quota on cotton imports this year to stabilise prices domestically.India gives huge subsidy and developed countries create inefficient producers by artificially reducing the cost of production. “The European and American markets deny access to Pakistani textile products at the pretext of regulatory duties. With tariff or non-tariff barriers, can we think that the market is free and offers a level playing field to everyone?”
The Sindh government remains indifferent to the farmers’ plight. After the 18th amendment, agriculture became a provincial subject, but the province has yet to build capacity to deliver. For instance, paddy growers get Rs800-900 per 40kg, which they used to get years ago. The Sindh government, this year, proposed the price of Rs1,000 for irri-6, but didn’t officially notify the price. Nabi Bux Sathio, general secretary of the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture (SCA), argues that the government doesn’t ensure administrative protection for the growers. And it doesn’t even exercise its authority to ban the cultivation of rice in cotton-growing area.Resultantly, the surplus rice production depresses prices. “The cultivation of rice in the cotton zone not only results in a surplus, but causes water-logging and affects cotton production. Same is the case with sugarcane, as the government looks the other way. We lack institutional support so we suffer financially.
” Urea prices, he says, remain beyond the reach of an average small grower. It was Rs560 per bag in 2008 and now stands at Rs1,855. Urea was imported for Rs35bn in 2013-14, but never reached small farmers, he says. “Urea factories increase their prices, saying they are not getting gas and the government claims that 75pc of their gas needs are met. This shows that the regulatory environment is non-existent.”Besides, the government lacks the required storage capacity for the surplus output. Sindh can’t procure wheat beyond 1.3m tonnes for want of storage. And it hires private facilities to hold this 1.3m tonnes. Ad-hocism mars policymaking, which affects producers.
Published in Dawn, Economic & Business, January 26th , 2015

Japan proposes boosting imports of US rice

Nikkei Asian ReviewSunday, Jan 25, 2015

20150125_NikkeiAR_RiceJapUS.jpg


The minimum access quota for tax-free rice imports is 770,000 tons, Japan currently imports just over 10 thousand tones of US rice.
TOKYO - Japan has proposed a plan to add US rice imports to the Japan-US trade negotiations. This is a key to making progress on the overall Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade talks, government sources said.The Japanese government will likely increase the tariff-free quota for imported rice and import more than 10 thousand tons of additional rice from the US, according to sources.The US has also ceased its request that Japan ease its strict standards imposed on car imports, according to sources.
These moves will likely help the two countries to reach an agreement in spring, adding momentum to the conclusion of all TPP negotiations among the 12 member countries.Japanese delegates, including the Ambassador in charge of Economic Diplomacy Takeo Mori, will meet with the US Trade Representative's acting deputy Wendy Cutler and others in Washington to work out details, starting Wednesday.
Read the full article here.

Palay prices still declining, says statistics agency

Ronnel W. Domingo


10:00 PM | Monday, January 26th, 2015

THE SLIDE in the farmgate prices of palay persists, with a kilo fetching P18.63 as of the third week of January, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA).PSA monitoring showed  that the average price of paddy rice had fallen by P3.24 a kilo since peaking at P21.87 in June for the non-fancy varieties.The price for rice in the husk is still above the National Food Authority’s (NFA) procurement budget per kilo. NFA now relies almost exclusively on importation of milled rice to maintain its inventory at required level.Mandated to ensure stable supply and price of the staple grain, NFA buys palay at a basic rate of only P17.

 Including fees for delivery and drying, the NFA’s effective buying rate is P17.70 a kilo.According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, the Philippines is expected to again import 1.8 million tons of milled rice this year amid projections that growth in domestic production will be insignificant if not nil.This would mean the Philippines—in particular the NFA—will have to depend again on large volumes of imports in order to meet consumer demand as well as maintain stockpiles, the FAO added.As of Dec. 1, the nation’s stock of milled rice swelled for the third consecutive month, gaining two days to be enough for 87 days of consumption.

The supply grew to 3.03 million tons from 2.95 million tons in the previous month amid the harvest season for the year’s main crop.Latest data from the PSA show that the NFA’s inventory climbed to 490,000 tons, 96 percent of which is imported.The NFA’s stock was good for 14 days of consumption, one day short of the agency’s mandate of keeping at least 15-days’ supply.

Thai Junta Unloading Mountain of Rice Amid World Surplus

By Supunnabul Suwannakij  Jan 26, 2015 10:55 PM PT  
Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg
In a government building outside Bangkok, along the murky Chao Phraya River,Thailand’s ruling junta is preparing to unload a mountain of rice on an already oversupplied world. And there’s more on the way.The biggest exporter stockpiled 17.8 million metric tons after former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra spent $27 billion since 2011 buying at above-market prices to aid farmers. The move threatened the nation’s credit rating and helped fan months of protests. She was ousted in May by military leaders, who now plan to auction the grain over two years, with 1 million tons set for sale at the Department of Foreign Trade on Jan. 29.
With global output poised to be near last year’s record, Thailand will ship more this year than any country ever, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show. The staple for half the world plunged to a four-year low in Chicago, helping cut food costs that the United Nations says are the lowest since 2010.
“We have plenty of rice,” said Mamadou Ciss, who’s traded the grain since 1984 and is president of Alliance Commodities (Suisse) SA in Geneva. “Thailand still has huge stocks available, compared with world trade. Anything more than 10 million tons will take time to clear. Prices will stay weak.”
Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg
 
Global reserves are 30 percent above a 10-year average, UN Food & Agriculture Organization data show. Production for 2014-2015 in the U.S., the fifth-largest exporter, is seen rising by the most in a decade, expanding global grain inventories already at all-time highs following record global harvests of wheat, corn and soy.

Buying Spree

The Thai buying spree from November 2011 to February 2014 filled more than 1,000 warehouses and left inventories equal to about 42 percent of what the world’s importers bought in 2014. Exports from the country will surge 9.7 percent to a record 11.3 million tons this year, USDA data show.Protest groups that opposed Yingluck’s government say the rice-buying program was part of a pattern of corruption by politicians allied with her brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed as prime minister in a 2006 coup. Since Thaksin’s ouster, the country has been divided between supporters of the Shinawatra family, mostly farmers in the north and northeast, and opponents who are mostly urban and middle-class.Yingluck was impeached on Jan. 23 for failing to heed warnings about the spiraling cost of rice subsidies, which the FAO said were unsustainable. She also faces criminal prosecution. Yingluck denies the corruption charges and defends the subsidies, saying they raised wages for the millions of farmers who voted for her party in the 2011 elections and boosted economic growth.
Photographer: Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg

Every Election

Junta leader Prayuth Chan-Ocha is seeking to clear the warehouses without torpedoing the market, saying on Jan. 26 the government wants to accelerate sales to reduce inventory costs while ensuring prices are acceptable. Since government buying began, Thai 5 percent broken rice, an Asia benchmark, tumbled 35 percent from a three-year high of $647 a ton in 2011 to $420 on Jan. 21.
On theChicago Board of Trade, futures reached $10.81 per 100 pounds on Jan. 26, the lowest since 2010, and traded at $11.035 on Tuesday.The government may get unexpected help from a dry spell that’s reducing output. In the central basin north of Bangkok, irrigation officials shut the taps after reservoir levels fell to a 15-year low. Farmers are growing the smaller of two annual harvests that normally accounts for a quarter of production. The lack of water may cut output 31 percent to 6.7 million tons, the lowest in a decade, government data show.

‘Welcome Development’

“The reduction in production this season would be a welcome development for the Thai government, whose priority is now to get rid of the surpluses,” said Concepcion Calpe, a senior economist at the Rome-based FAO.Kwanchai Mahachuenjai, a 54-year-old farmer in Ayutthaya, said he cut planting almost in half to 120 rai (47.4 acres) because he’s getting less water. Yields will drop to 300 to 400 kilograms per rai from 700 to 800 kilograms, he said.

A decline in the quality of the stockpiles also may limit the impact of sales on prices, which reflect food-grade grain. An audit in 2014 found about 80 percent was substandard and almost 4 percent was poor quality, destined for non-food uses.Most is still food-grade quality and can be sold as long as it’s kept dry and fumigated, said Somkiat Makcayathorn, secretary-general of the Thai Rice Exporters Association.

While the government doesn’t want to buy rice, it plans other support. About 40 billion baht ($1.2 billion) has been earmarked for payments to the poorest farmers, and officials are encouraging the growing of other crops, including sugar.For now, the government is focused on unloading 10 million tons this year and 7.8 million tons in 2016. This week’s auction will be the biggest amount since 2004, said Duangporn Rodphaya, director-general at Department of Foreign Trade.“It’s good timing to sell because of low supply ahead of second-crop harvests,” Somkiat said. “Prices will stay under pressure until the government clears the huge inventories.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Supunnabul Suwannakij in Bangkok atssuwannakij@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net Jake Lloyd-Smith, Steve Stroth

Yingluck will be arrested if she tries to flee: NACC

 The Nation

January 26, 2015 1:00 am
Former PM faces IndIctment from attorney general over rIce scheme, while EC probes her spending on trip prior to election last year
Former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who now faces criminal charges over the rice-pledging scheme, could be arrested if she shows any intention of leaving the country to avoid the court trial, the anti-graft body said yesterday.Impeachment by the junta-installed National Legislative Assembly (NLA) on Friday was not the end of her troubles because the Office of the Attorney General has decided to indict her in the Supreme Court's Criminal Division for Political Office Holders in connection with the rice-pledging scheme.
The Election Commission is also looking at evidence to decide whether or not she used state funds and resources for a political campaign ahead of the February 2 election last year, which was the subject of major street protests.National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) secretary-general Sansern Polajiak said the public prosecutor has one month to write and submit a criminal writ to the Supreme Court.After drafting of the writ is completed, prosecutors have to coordinate with the NACC to inform Yingluck that she has to report to the Attorney General on the day the suit is filed at the court.
If Yingluck fails to turn up, the Attorney General will ask the NACC to fetch her. If it looks like she intends to flee the country, the NACC would ask the police to issue a warrant for her arrest. However, Sansern said he believed the former PM was ready to stand trial to fight the charges.Former Pheu Thai Party MP Amnuay Khlangpha said the party would not protest over the prosecution of Yingluck on criminal charges or her impeachment because the party wanted peace and stability. He believed Yingluck would not flee the country because she has already announced her intention to fight the charges in accordance with justice procedures.
While some have said they see Yingluck's impeachment as a chance to open the door for an amnesty and reconciliation, Amnuay believes it would be "extremely appropriate" to issue an amnesty law."Reconciliation is just 'lip service' without amnesty. These two must go hand in hand," Amnuay said.National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) spokesman Winthai Suvari said Yingluck's prosecution was a separate matter that had nothing to do with reconciliation. The NLA voted freely without any influence from the NCPO.He said Yingluck must still observe the NCPO's rules and seek permission if she wants to travel abroad, which she has not made done since she was impeached and indicted on criminal charges over the rice-pledging scheme.
Winthai said there were no political "undercurrents" that might spark a new round of political conflict after Yingluck's impeachment. There had been only comments from people with different political attitudes.Former education minister Chaturon Chaisang posted on his Facebook page that Yingluck's impeachment was not carried out democratically and the intent was to get the Shinawatra family out of politics.He foresaw more "ill intentions" of the May 22 coup, such as hitting the strength of Pheu Thai Party, reducing the role and power of elected parties, allowing an unelected prime minister, senators and independent agencies, and increasing the authority of the Constitutional Court.

"I am not instigating protests but the voice of the people is always meaningful and once the collective voice gets louder, it would be strong enough to suspend disaster to democracy,'' he said.Pheu Thai's acting deputy spokesman Anusorn Iam-saard denied reports that Yingluck would hold a press conference at different places over her impeachment. He said Yingluck would prove her innocence through the justice system.He said the party hopes that once democracy returns to the country, justice will prevail. "What happened [with her impeachment] is the torment that must be kept in our heart.
We will wait till the day the election comes," he said.Inquiries into Yingluck's activities are not over yet. Election Commission chairman Supachai Somcharoen said the EC sub-panel had not completed its probe into the allegation that Yingluck used state funds and resources while campaigning in the North and Northeast prior to the February 2 election. He said five panel committees would tentatively finish their probe before the end of January but he had no idea if they could wrap up the probe as expected, as he could not interfere.

Hunt for new rice markets a priority

 ECONOMIC 2015/01/26 11:31:23HePingSiJie.comPETCHANET PRATRUANGKRAITHE NATION January 26, 2015 1:00 am
THE Thai Rice Exporters Association will join forces with the Commerce Ministry for a business mission to potential new rice-import markets such as Iran, Iraq, and other Middle East countries. The move will be a bid to increase rice sales this year in the face of fears that falling oil prices will affect the purchasing power of major importers of Thai rice.

TREA president Charoen Laothamatas said the association was scheduled to join many trade missions with the Ministry of Commerce because Thailand needed to aggressively promote its rice plans and activities to “knock on the doors” of potential new importers.“Due to the lowering oil price, some major import countries such as Nigeria and other countries in Africa, where their incomes have relied mainly on the oil price, could be affected and cause a lower order for rice,” he said.“The ministry and the association thus have plans to promote more rice sales to other potential markets such as Iran, Iraq, and other countries in the Middle East to encourage them to buy Thai rice.”Charoen said that Iran and Iraq used to be major Thai rice importers, but they suspended imports for a few years due to a defaulted contract with a private exporter. Now was a good time to boost the confidence of those countries, he added.

Under the Commerce Ministry plan, Commerce Minister General Chatchai Sarikulya will visit Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Oman, Egypt, Italy, and Indonesia. Charoen said that rice exports this year should be as high as last year – up to 11 million tonnes – due to high demand in the world market and drought problems in some rice-producing countries.e said the price of Thai rice was expected to be steady this year. The price has climbed slightly over the past few months due to the strengthening baht.At the moment, the export price of rice is quoted at US$405-$410 (Bt13,200-Bt13,350) for 5 per cent white rice, while Vietnamese rice is quoted $370 per tonne.

Thailand: Financial losses from rice pledging scheme likely to exceed estimated 682 billion baht, says Finance Ministry

26.01.2015
Financial losses incurred from rice subsidy schemes dating back to 2004 are likely to exceed the estimated 682 billion baht, says the Finance Ministry, the Bangkok Post reports.If rising depreciation and missing milled rice from warehouses are taken into account, the combined losses will be higher than the recent estimate, finance permanent secretary Rungson Sriworasat said on January 21.

The subcommittee overseeing accounting affairs of all rice subsidy schemes earlier estimated losses from buying 84 million tonnes of milled rice in the 15 schemes from 2004-14 amounted to 682 billion baht, with the Yingluck Shinawatra government's programme alone accounting for 518 billion.But that estimate did not take into account depreciation or missing rice from warehouses inspected by a team working for PM's Office Minister ML Panadda Diskul.According to the inspection of 17 million tonnes of milled rice bought under the previous government's scheme, only 2.19 million tonnes were deemed of standard quality and classified as Grade A rice.

Some 14.4 million tonnes were judged to be substandard Grade B, while the rest was classified as Grade C because it was either rotten or had been registered incorrectly.The rice-pledging scheme was a major policy that helped to sweep Ms Yingluck to power in the 2011 general election.However, its guaranteed purchase of every single grain at a pledging price of 40-50% above marketprices incurred a substantial cost to taxpayers.Thailand also lost its crown as the world's biggest rice exporter, as the scheme, which ran for five crops, encouraged farmers to grow low-quality rice that normally took less time to cultivate.

The joint committee of the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) and the Office of the Attorney-General on Tuesday agreed to press criminal charges against Ms Yingluck for alleged dereliction of duty in overseeing the rice scheme and causing massive damage to the state.The NACC also recommended that former commerce minister Boonsong Teriyapirom, his ex-deputy Poom Sarapol and 19 others be indicted for graft for their roles in government-to-government rice sales.
Manas Jamveha, director-general of the Comptroller-General's Department, said his department, which is responsible for seeking compensation from those alleged to have caused damage to the state, was awaiting the Commerce Ministry's report."Damaged state agencies must submit a summary report of the charge to verify all information," he said."They must set up a committee to launch the probe again before arranging the report."


Unending Controversy About Nigeria’s Rice Policy

Saturday, 24 January 2015 17:28
Written by Joke Falaju, Abuja

Stakeholders Seek Investigation Of Quota Regime 
THE backward integration policy of the Federal Government in the rice value chain for some time have been generating heated debate in the media, with some investors accusing government of granting import waiver to stakeholders who do not have investment in the rice sector.    Of concern to them is the granting of arbitrary waiver and import quota to investors still planning to invest locally, at the expense of some others already having rice farms and mill factories in Nigeria. For instance, whereas Elephant Group, which has a planned investment, got an investor allocation of 61,770, Ebony Agro with two functional rice mill got an Existing Miller Allocation of 15,000mt without getting allocation as an investor.
Also, MIKAP rice got an allocation of 82,897mt as an investor and existing miller, while Stine Rice, an investor with existing rice mill, got allocation of 30,000mt.   Although a group of rice millers told The Guardian that the policy is the best any government can venture into to encourage local investors at the expense of stiff competition from foreign products, many of them have faulted the manner by which the policy is being implemented.    But President Goodluck Jonathan, during the AgriFest  2015 Celebration of Nigeria’s Agriculture, held at Eagles Square, Abuja on Friday, read the riot act, insisting that “all those owing Nigeria on rice import duties must pay.
” “Nigeria, our dear country, will not be held hostage by rice importers. There will be no sacred cows under my watch. All those owing Nigeria on rice import duties must pay,” said Mr. President. According to him, “high quality Nigerian rice is now competing favourably with imported rice in the markets. Our rice millers have taken advantage of these new opportunities, and the number of integrated rice mills has expanded from 1 (one) at the beginning of this administration, to 24 today. And they are all here today. I celebrate you all. I eat Nigerian rice and can tell you it is better than imported rice.
”  In his opening speech, Minister of Agriculture,  Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, said: “We have here today over 20,000 farmers and agribusinesses from the 36 states of Nigeria and the FCT. Today, they are here to celebrate the achievements of your Agricultural Transformation Agenda.  The agricultural transformation agenda has turned around the lives and destinies of millions of farmers.
‘Farmers from across the country daily besiege my office asking to have an opportunity to thank the President who has done so much for them. If I were to request for appointments for the delegations that daily want to meet you, your calendar for two years cannot accommodate them,” Adesina said.    Co-chairman of the rice investor Group, Mr. Tunji Owoeye, took sides with government, stating that the view being expressed by some stakeholders are unfair to government officials, who have worked hard to midwife the policy.Indeed, the government had come up with the new rice policy as part of its efforts to ensure self-sufficiency in production, and to protect local investors, to the point they can reasonably stand on their feet.
The policy was developed based on what is produced presently against the obvious shortfalls. Supposedly, the policy should encourage local investors against those whose core interest was importing and selling locally without the mind of contributing to the national dream of self-sufficiency; but some stakeholders allege that ‘portfolio investors” without clear investments on ground are truncating the policy by reselling their quotas. 
 The Nigeria Rice Investor Group had explained that the quota allocation given to both existing rice miller and investors in equity was based on the supply gap of import grade rice of 1.5million metric tonnes, “existing millers and others with expressed interest submitted Domestic Rice Production Plan (DPP) and based on the submissions, a total of 1.3million metric tones of rice import quota was issued to 25 qualifying millers at the preferential levy of 20 percent and duty of 10 percent. The remaining 0.2 million metric tonnes of rice imports was given at a higher levy and duty of 10 percent.    To the group, government should be commended for its transparency, “This is the first time that the government is so transparent in allocation of quota in this industry, because they ensure that nobody is shut out, farmers, millers, traders and outgrowers (smallholder farmers) have all being considered”.
Owoeye said that the government had contacted them as an association to provide a list of their investments in the rice value chain. “We contacted all our members to send details of their investment to the government, which they all complied with; and, based on this list, allocations were given. If government had wanted to sweep the allocation of quota under the carpet they wouldn’t have contacted the association.”   He, however, agreed that some quota beneficiaries are trading their slots to interested buyers at 60 to 80 percent levy having got the same at 20 percent.
He said it implied that 60 percent levy is lower than what is charged as penalty, otherwise why would anyone pay above that to buy from those who got the waiver.  “It may not be the best policy, but we moved from a static position to a position where investors were encouraged, and government came up with the criteria for assessing and qualification to be part of the investment concession. Government had looked at four areas in assessing investment in local rice value chain. They looked at Domestic Rice Production Plan, Paddy Purchase Outlook –from paddy Application Center, Paddy Purchase from out-grower scheme and farmers purchase and ownership of milling facility. 
Owoeye submitted that it was not possible for any investor without veritable production plan to benefit from quota allocation, as the ministry has a team that goes to verify this fact, in terms of production, rice farming, milling capacity and outgrowers scheme.   Chairman Mikap Rice and former Attorney General of the Federation, Michael Andoaka, said before the administration of President Jonathan came on board, the issue of quota was not made public, as nobody knew how it was being distributed.
“But this government changed; and now, local rice millers are getting the quota. So people who monopolised it feel that something is wrong.” He alleged that it was the cabal (the big-time rice importers) that are faulting government’s action.  He said he was not going to speak as if he is taking sides with the government on the new rice policy, but maintained that no government in recent times have given attention to agriculture like the current administration is doing, “because I am a direct beneficiary of the transformation in that sector, I started a small mill and in less than five years I have expanded to 8.5 tonnes because of the support have received from the government. 
On the Rice Quota, he said he never knew what it was all about. “I was surprised when I got a call from the Ministry of Agriculture that, based on what the Minister saw in my factory and Ashi Rice owned by the Governor of Benue State, we should come over and get the rice quota. I never lobbied for it, even when I was in government, it never happened. I am the Secretary of the Rice Millers Association, many of our members have confirmed to have gotten the quota. We simply went to the registry and were given the quota. Anybody who doubts this level of transparency has other things in mind,” he noted.   Meanwhile, another rice investor commended the backward integration policy, but faulted the manner in which the policy was being implemented.
He noted that government applied the backward integration policy in an effort to stop cement importation and today, Nigeria has not only attained self-sufficiency in cement production but will soon become a net exporter.”    He said: “During the period, government did not allow investors to import finished goods; it had to be the unfinished ones, so that it is brought to their factory and processed, and gradually importation of cement was reduced. That was the same advice we gave to the minister to discourage importation of finished rice and then encourage importation of brown rice so that it is milled and packaged in the country. However, the reverse is the case.” 
He expressed the fear that, with the way government is going about the implementation of the policy, local rice millers may be forced out of business, because they may not be able to compete favourably with the foreign rice, thereby discouraging many of the farmers from growing paddy, which would in turn affect plans to attain self sufficiency in rice production.   It would be noted that presently there is glut in the rice market, as it is flooded with foreign rice. Distributors would rather buy cheaper foreign rice at N6500, as against the local rice which gets to the market at the price of N8,700.
The rice investor disclosed that due to late release of the quota allocation, and the removal of the embargo placed on rice importation, many of the investors went ahead to import rice at 30 percent duty, having seen that they qualify for quota allocation, thereby flooding the market with over 1.2million mt of rice. He lamented that because of the present glut in the rice market, many local millers have stopped production, because there is no market for their produce.  On the way out of the crisis,  the investor said the Federal Government should do all it can to end smuggling, as foreign rice still makes its way into the Nigerian market through the Cotonou/Seme borders. He also called for proper management of the import regime and the quota allocation. 
The source urged government to provide mechanisation and irrigation facilities, as well as planting materials for rice farmers across the country. He said with the glut in paddy rice in the north, there is still less production in the Southeast, as rice farming is still being done with hoe and cutlass; and, since there are no irrigation facilities, rice farming is done once a year.     Chairman of Stine rice, Akai Egwuomwu, noted that the policy was a good one that could ensure self  sufficiency in rice production.
 However, government need to look into the manner in which it was being implemented, especially in the area of granting waivers. He said waivers should not be given randomly, rather government should anchor it on the milling capacity of  the so-called investors.  He lamented that government was giving preferential treatment to investor, who had planned investment against some others that have been in the business for the past four years. He said:  “A miller spend not less that N2billion in establishing a mill, and after spending so much money, it would be unfair if government do not give them consideration.”  
 He also advised that waiver should be given for brown rice as this would further strengthen the capacity of the local millers.  A representative of one of the rice farms, told The Guardian that there is no truth in the claim that they are owing the Federal Government, as the minister cannot retroactively impose a quota in December 2014 and request payment of excess duties for importations made when quota was not in place and then want to impose penalty on them.He said: “There are about 10-11 of them who imported beyond the allotted quota and their names were not mentioned.
The importation we did was based on our level of investment in the rice value chain. We have an existing investment of $100million.”    He said though the government mean very well, the way quotas are being given to people without established mills, as against those with established mills, needs to be checked.    He further observed that there is an existing production gap of 3million metric tonnes, with government only giving concession of 1.3million mt. He wondered what would happen to the remaining gap of 1.7million metric tonnes.  
 On the way out of the crisis, he said there is the need for the Ministry of Agriculture, Finance, Trade and Investment, National Planning to do a thorough investigation of the quota regime and also streamline the method in which it is being granted, and ensure that it is not done randomly.     He, however, frowned at the granting of waiver to import brown rice, saying it would affect paddy production.

Small scale rice dealers slam Trade Ministry
The Small Scale Rice Dealers Association of Ghana (SSRIDA-GH) has said the assertion by Ministry of Trade and Industry that the total ban of rice importation is detrimental to the state is not nationalistic.The media report attributed to Mr Ibrahim Murtala, Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry said Ghana’s rice self sufficiency is about 30 per cent and government consider as a high priority to see the country productivity high.He, however, said a total ban on rice importation is not the ideal thing to do and would also be in violation of World Trade Organisation regulations.
Mr Murtala said the country must also improve the quality and quantity of rice production.The Minister was reacting to a call by SSRIDA-GH to Ministry of Trade and Industry to ensure an outright ban of rice importation.It said the ban on inland rice importation is not only having negative impact on the traders but also discriminatory and in favour of the major players in the industry.A statement issued by Yaw Korang, National Coordinator of SSRIDA-GH said given monopoly of large scale importation of the commodity to foreigners is unfair, and so if government finds it untenable for small-scale rice dealers to be in business then an outright ban would be necessary .

“The ban as it stands now is pushing poor Ghanaians out of business and helping foreign traders to thrive,” the statement.The statement said the ministry on October 14, 2013 served a notice of ban on inland importation of rice stating that with effect from November 1, 2013, all imports of rice shall be done through only the Kotoka International Airport, Tema and Takoradi Ports.“This directive gave SSRIDA-GH only two weeks ultimatum to fold up our trading business through the border. As petty traders, our capital base would not allow us to do our business through the air or by the sea. The directive also came at a time when we had made orders with loans for goods for the Christmas festivity.
“We humbly wish to state that our business is only a threat to the monopoly being practiced by foreign rice importers, whose activities are a threat to the nation`s economy because they do the importation under the cover of warehousing and sell their products for high prices in dollar equivalence before paying their revenue and sometimes run-off without paying.We do our business in the CFA-FRANC and pay our duty into the consolidated fund at the borders before we are allowed to bring our goods into the country to sell.The statement asked Dr Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, the sector Minister to review the ban on inland importation of rice or prohibit the trade in Ghana.
However another statement by the SSRIDA-Ghana says the 500 million dollars spent annually to import rice is a drain to the national economy and could be used to step up the productivity of the crop.It said great rice producing nations like Thailand dreamt big and were nationalistic enough to go great length to achieve the feat.The statement said: “Nigeria was able to do it and now local rice is in high demand in the West African nation.”It said for the Ministry to say that total ban of rice importation is not feasible is “too simplistic, unpatriotic and uninspiring. It can be done if we embrace the challenge”, the statement said.
Source with thanks:http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/business/artikel.php?ID=343839
Nigeria: Agriculture Will Soon Overtake Oil - Adesina
By Christiana Nwaogu

The minister of agriculture and rural development, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, has boasted that the agricultural sector would topple the nation's oil sector in no distant time.According to him, this is feasible because the Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA) which is a brainchild of President Goodluck Jonathan's Transformation Agenda, is geared towards ushering in agricultural sector-led economic growth.Speaking on the AGRIFEST 2015, an international Agriculture Exhibition organised by his ministry to aid the sector in achieving green revolution, Adesina said that as the price of crude oil plummets, he is convinced that agriculture will be the new mainstay of the nation's economy.

The minister reeled out the achievements of his ministry to include the recent disbursement of N122million grant to 27 Nagropreneurs across the six geo-political zones as a measure of boosting agricultural production and also promoting its newly established project, the Youth Employment in Agriculture Programme (YEAP).Noting that Nigeria's greater future for inclusive growth lies in agriculture, he said food production had risen massively and as a nation, Nigeria has produced additional 21 metric tons of food within the last three years.Adesina listed other milestones of the ministry under him to include the establishment of Marketing Corporation, nationwide census of farmers and supply of subsidised fertilisers to 14million farmers.

Explaining that the elaborate event is aimed at creating a distinct platform that will further boost the country's agriculture, he added that it will also keep Nigerians abreast of the latest evolution in technologies and food production.Meanwhile, President Goodluck Jonathan commended the minister at the event, saying agriculture is now the lifeline for Nigeria.He said, "As crude oil prices decline, we must create new wealth from the richness of our soils, the vastness of our rivers and the abundance of our cheap labour. We will produce more, and we will industrialise the agricultural sector."When I appointed Dr Akinwumi Adesina as the minister of agriculture, I charged him to turn agriculture around. My vision was clear - turn agriculture away from being a sector for managing poverty to one for creating wealth. We now see agriculture as a business, not as a development programme".

Noting that the rice revolution is taking place across the country, the president said while high quality Nigerian rice is now competing favourably with imported rice in the markets, rice importers cannot hold the country hostage.He said, "Nigeria, our dear country will not be held hostage by rice importers. There will be no sacred cows under my watch. All those owing Nigeria on rice import duties must pay.""Rice farmers across the country have a new lease of life, due to the transformation taking place in the sector.

Over 6 million rice farmers have received improved rice seed varieties, boosting domestic rice production by an additional 7 million metric tons.""Our rice millers have taken advantage of these new opportunities, and the number of integrated rice mills has expanded from 1 (one) at the beginning of this administration, to 24 today. And they are all here today. I celebrate you all. I eat Nigerian rice and can tell you it is better than imported rice".
California Rice Commission, Rice Farmers Hold Annual Grower Meetings       
 West coast info session
YUBA CITY & WILLIAMS, C

A -- More than 200 growers attended the California Rice Commission's (CRC) annual grower meetings last week.  USA Rice Federation Vice President of Government Affairs Ben Mosely attended the meetings and met with growers and industry representatives from around the region to discuss California specific initiatives and issues. George Soares, with the law firm Kahn, Soares and Conway, gave a presentation on the state's political outlook, including a discussion of the ongoing water availability issues, the California water bond, and the statewide political climate. 

Randy Russell, long time consultant for CRC, discussed farm policy and the political atmosphere in Washington as it relates to agriculture.  Russell highlighted issues for rice farmers to be aware of in the new Congress, including budget and debt ceiling issues, trade, and tax reform.  Finally, Jeff Yasui, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture Risk Management Agency in Davis, California, talked about new and existing crop insurance policies."With the political landscape shifting beneath our feet, these face-to-face meetings are invaluable," said Mosely.  "Excellent information was provided and I think everyone came away more prepared to tackle challenges ahead."
 Contact:  Evan Spencer (703) 236-1476
Source with thanks:USA Rice Federation

Japanese rice: the new, safe luxury food in China

By By Alexandra Harney and Yuka Obayashi | Reuters – Sun, 25 Jan, 2015
By Alexandra Harney and Yuka Obayashi
SHANGHAI/TOKYO (Reuters) - First it was European infant formula, then New Zealand milk. Now Chinese consumers are adding Japanese rice to the list of everyday foods they will bring in from abroad at luxury-good prices because they fear the local alternatives aren't safe.The volume of rice imported from Japan remains small - 160 tonnes last year, according to Japan's National Federation of Agricultural Cooperative Associations.
But that is more than triple the total in 2013, a trend that illustrates Chinese consumers' dwindling confidence in the safety of the country's own agricultural produce."Chinese rice farmers use pesticides," said a seller identified as Ying Ying, who started offering Japanese rice on the Taobao online marketplace last August. "Japanese rice isn't polluted by heavy metals."Pollution from industrialization has exacted a heavy toll on China's soil and water. In May 2013, officials in Guangdong province in southern China said 44 percent of rice samples contained excessive levels of the metal cadmium.
A study by the Ministry of Environmental Protection last April estimated that 16.1 percent of China's soil was contaminated. In parts of the country, soil pollution is so bad that some rice farmers refuse to eat what they grow.After the cadmium revelations, some Chinese consumers began to see rice from Thailand as an affordable and safe substitute.In contrast, Japanese rice is neither cheap nor easy to find in China. Japanese rice imported by Chinese grain trader COFCO sells for 74 Chinese yuan ($12) a kg on PinStore, an online supermarket run by Japanese trading house Sumitomo Corp.
 Domestic rice sells there for as little as 7.5 yuan per kg.As demand grows, Chinese consumers are increasingly turning to online platforms such as Taobao, run by Alibaba, to buy rice directly from individuals in Japan.One person seems to have paid as much as 1,499 yuan ($241) for five kg, according to Taobao.
Steep prices, though, are no deterrent for some."Much tastier than Chinese rice. Worth every cent - great texture and taste," one delighted buyer wrote on Taobao.To meet demand, some Chinese producers now say they use Japanese seeds and promote their rice as a safer alternative to purely domestic strains.Zhejiang Xinxie Yueguang Agricultural Science and Technology says its Echizen brand rice is safe and grown with "water from pure sources and strict quality control". The packaging says the rice is a Japanese variety.
But Echizen rice is grown in Changxing county, a hub of lead-acid battery production in eastern Zhejiang province. Battery production can be highly polluting.Li Jun, general manager at Zhejiang Xinxie Yueguang, insisted the company's rice had passed tests for lead, cadmium, mercury, pesticides and other chemicals by state inspectors.The company had also found other areas to grow rice where there was less concern about pollution, Li said.The Chinese eat around 120 million tonnes of rice a year and the country imported more than 2.2 million in the first 11 months of 2014, including 1.2 million tonnes from Vietnam and 626,000 tonnes from Thailand, customs data shows.
Japan is a small rice exporter - just 3,777 tonnes in January to November 2014, according to agriculture ministry data - but it is looking to boost shipments to Asian countries as part of a wider push to export more agricultural products.However, if the trend to China looks encouraging, any further increase through normal export channels may be slow: the Chinese authorities have given just one Japanese rice mill clearance to send polished rice.Others have begun an application process but that has stalled. Some would-be suppliers have been waiting for three years, a Japanese government official said.
($1 = 6.2275 Chinese yuan)
(This version of the story corrects paragraph 2 to make clear the reference is to imports from Japan)
(Additional reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Alan Raybould)

Efficient rice farming to curb emissions
New water- and cost-efficient farming techniques will allow Vietnam to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in wet rice production by 15 to 20 percent by 2020, said Mai Van Trinh, Director of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development's Institute for Agricultural Environment.Trinh was speaking at a recent conference on the first phase of the Project on Reduced CH4 Emissions in Wet Rice Cultivation in Vietnam , jointly held by his institute and the Manila-based International Rice Research Institute in Hanoi .
To achieve the target, the ministry will use the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), a plan in which farmers will increase productivity, quality and economic effectiveness, while reducing pesticides and nitrogenous fertilisers, he said.In addition to these measures, the ministry will also encourage farmers to use green production methods. The sector will also apply Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) in cultivation, which means using techniques that consume less fertilisers and water, employing better land preparation techniques and reducing methane emissions.
Another technology mentioned at the conference was Alternative Wetting Drying (AWD)."Actually, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in rice growing, the institute has tried AWD while implementing a project on reducing CH4 emissions in wet rice cultivation," Trinh said, adding that AWD is no longer strange to rice growers in Vietnam, as it has already been incorporated in several other programmes, including SRI.Vu Duong Quynh, the project coordinator, said a major challenge with SRI is water management. Most problems are caused by the unfavourable terrain in many areas, fragmented rice fields and a lack of cooperation between irrigation staff and farmers.

This is especially troublesome considering the fact that efficient irrigation is the best way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.To overcome these difficulties, Quynh said that in its first phase, from October 2014 to June 2016, the project intends to collect lessons learnt from efficient irrigation models and to gather data on land and infrastructure in each province, to make a water-efficient irrigation map."When looking at this map, one can read out which province can apply AWD, as not all types of land are suitable for this technology," Quynh said. In the second phase, the project will incorporate other technologies.
VNA
Tags:rice farming to curb emissions

CME Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures   
CME Group (Preliminary):  Closing Rough Rice Futures for January 26

Month
Price
Net Change

March 2015
$10.885
- $0.125
May 2015
$11.145
- $0.125
July 2015
$11.390
- $0.120
September 2015
$11.070
- $0.120
November 2015
$11.170
- $0.120
January 2016
$11.260
- $0.120
March 2016
$11.260
- $0.120

 


source with thanks:USA Rice Federation


Download/Print/View On-Line the above News in pdf format,just click the following link:



Monday, January 26, 2015

26th January (Monday),2015 Daily ExclusiveORYZA Rice E-Newsletter by Riceplus Magazine

Asia Rice Quotes Unchanged Today

Jan 23, 2015
Asia rice sellers kept their quotes mostly unchanged today.
5% Broken Rice
Thailand 5% rice is quoted at around $405 - $415 per ton, about $40 per ton premium on Vietnam 5% rice shown at around $365 - $375 per ton. India 5% rice is quoted at around $395 - $405 per ton, about $35 per ton premium on Pakistan 5% rice quoted at around $360 - $370 per ton.
25% Broken Rice 
Thailand 25% rice is quoted at around $365 - $375 per ton, about $25 per ton premium on Vietnam 25% rice shown at around $340 - $350 per ton. India 25% rice is quoted at around $360 - $370, about $40 per ton premium on Pakistan 25% rice quoted at around $320 - $330 per ton.
Parboiled Rice
Thailand parboiled rice is quoted at around $405 - $415 per ton. India parboiled rice is quoted at around $390 - $400 per ton, about $10 per ton discount to Pakistan parboiled rice quoted at around $400 - $410 per ton.
100% Broken Rice
Thailand broken rice, A1 Super, is quoted at around $320 - $330 per ton, about $5 per ton premium on Vietnam 100% broken rice shown at around $315 - $325 per ton. India's 100% broken rice is shown at around $300 - $310 per ton,  about $10 per ton premium on Pakistan broken sortexed rice quoted at around $290 - $300 per ton.

Oryza Afternoon Recap - Chicago Rough Rice Futures Break $11.000/cwt as Falling Crude and Global Competition Continue to Weigh on Prices

Jan 23, 2015
Chicago rough rice futures for Mar delivery settled 15 cents per cwt (about $3 per ton) lower at $11.010 per cwt (about $243 per ton). Rough rice futures continued lower today, adding to losses sustained yesterday and on the week. These losses bring the total on the week to 33.5 cents per cwt (about $7 per ton) and saw the market dip below psychological support at $11.000 per cwt (about $243 per ton) in late session trading. Today’s dip to $10.960 per cwt (about $242 per ton) marks a fresh contract low and has returned price to levels not seen since 2010. Although the market did manage to close just above the previously mentioned level of support, the outlook for trading early next week remains negative and traders expect a continuation lower. Negativity in outside markets such as crude and the euro continue to weigh on US grain prices and will likely continue to do so in coming sessions. The other grains finished the day with mixed results today; Soybeans closed about 0.4% lower at $9.7375 per bushel; wheat finished about 0.7% lower at $5.3000 per bushel, and corn finished the day about 0.8% higher at $3.8775 per bushel.U.S. stocks mainly fell on Friday, with the S&P 500 halting a four-session winning run, as investors considered economic data, energy costs and a reduced 2014 earnings estimate from United Parcel Service. Friday's economic reports had had existing-homes sales rising 2.4 percent to an annual rate of 5.04 million in December. After a 91-point slide, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was lately off 39.66 points, or 0.2%, to 17,774.32. The S&P 500 shed 3.45 points, or 0.2%, to 2,059.70, with materials and telecom hardest hit and utilities and technology faring best of its 10 major sectors. The Nasdaq gained 13.83 points, or 0.3%, to 4,764.21. Gold is trading about 0.7% lower, crude oil is seen trading about 1.5% lower, and the U.S. dollar is seen trading about 0.8% higher at about  1:00pm Chicago time.Thursday, there were 800 contracts traded, up from 240 contracts traded on Wednesday. Open interest – the number of contracts outstanding – on Thursday decreased by 10 contracts to 8,746.


FAO Estimates Liberia to Import 350,000 Tons of Rice in 2015; Up 24% from Last Year

Jan 23, 2015

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has estimated Liberia to import around 350,000 tons of rice in 2015, up about 24% from an estimated 282,250 tons in 2014 due to a reduction in paddy rice production following the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).  Liberia's total cereal imports are estimated at around 445,000 tons in 2015.   
Liberia's 2014 paddy rice output is estimated to decline to around 237,000 tons (around 174,000 tons, basis milled), down about 12% from around 270,000 tons in 2013, according to the FAO.The outbreak of EVD during the planting and harvest time of the rice crop has disrupted various farming activities including crop maintenance (such as weeding, fencing and application of chemicals) and harvesting due to labor shortages.
Harvesting of the 2014 paddy crop was completed in December. According to the FAO GIEWS Disease Impact on Agriculture – Simulation (DIAS) Model, paddy crop has been hard hit in Lofa and Margibi counties, where losses are estimated at about 25%.Since Liberia relies heavily on food imports, including rice, border closures, quarantine measures and other restrictions to contain EVD outbreak led to severe food shortages. According to the World Bank data, as of November 2014, nearly 630,000 people are estimated to be food insecure (of which 170,000 are attributed to EVD), and the number is projected to increase to 750,000 (250,000 attributed to EVD) by March 2015. Most of the people affected by EVD are farmers, fishermen, hunters and unskilled laborers.
Prices of imported rice in the country have increased significantly during the past five months partly due to EVD and partly due to local currency depreciation against the dollar, but stabilized in November 2014, according to the FAO.USDA estimates Liberia to produce around 189,000 tons of milled rice and import around 300,000 tons in 2014-15 (October-September) to meet an annual consumption demand of around 480,000 tons.

IGC Estimates 2015 World Rice Trade at 41.6 Million Tons; Slightly Down from Last year

Jan 23, 2015

The International Grains Council (IGC) has estimated 2015 world rice trade at around 41.6 million tons, slightly down from around 42 million tons in 2014 as a reduction in imports to Far Eastern countries such as China, Indonesia and the Philippines is expected to be offset by increased imports to other regions such as Africa.
The IGC expects total rice imports by Far East Asian countries including Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, China and the Philippines, at around 13.1 million tons in 2015, down about 5% from around 13.8 million tons last year. It expects China to remain largest importer in 2015 with about 3.8 million tons. The IGC expects Bangladesh and Sri Lanka to import around 600,000 tons and around 200,000 tons in 2015. It expects rice imports by the Philippines and Indonesia to be lower than last year but to be significant due to their efforts to maintain reserves. The IGC estimates shipments to sub-Saharan Africa at an above-average level of about 14 million tons. Shipments to Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Ghana and Nigeria are expected to increase. 
On the exports side, the IGC estimates Thailand to export around 11 million tons of rice in 2015, up about 8% from around 10.2 million tons in 2014. Most of its sales are expected to sub-Saharan Africa and Far East Asia, especially China. The IGC expects India to export around 8.8 million tons of rice in 2015, about 17% lower than around 10.3 million tons exported last year due to increasing concerns of the impact of a weak monsoon on the country's production.  
The IGC estimates 2014-15 global rice production at around 474 million tons, slightly down from around 475 million tons in 2013-14. It expects decline in production in many parts of the world to offset a 1.5% increase in production in China to around 144.5 million tons. It expects India's rice production to decline 3% y/y to around 102.5 million tons. The IGC is expecting higher output in the Philippines and Vietnam but a lower output in Thailand. It is also expecting higher outputs in the U.S. and South America.
It expects global rice consumption in 2014-15 to increase to around 482 million tons, up about 1.2% from around 476 million tons in 2013-14 due to expected increased consumption in Asian countries including India (98.3 million tons) and China (147 million tons) as well as in sub-Saharan Africa (26 million tons) and in the Americas (4.2 million tons). 
The Council expects world rice ending stocks in 2014-15 to decline to around 101.6 million tons from around 109 million tons in the previous year. It expects inventories of major rice exporters to decline to around 31.7 million tons, down 20% from around 39.4 million tons last year mainly due to higher stock depletion in India and Thailand.

Oryza U.S. Rough Rice Recap - Prices Weaken Further despite Record Export Shipments

Jan 23, 2015
The U.S. cash market was softer yet again today falling with a futures market that can’t seem to find a bottom. Analysts continue to believe that prices will remain in free fall without a substantial increase in export demand.In the meantime, the USDA reported that cumulative net export sales for the week ending on January 15th, totaled 97,800 tons, which was 27% higher than last week and considerably higher than the prior 4-week average.
Increases were reported for the following destinations: 79,100 tons to Mexico, 4,000 tons to El Salvador, 3,000 tons to the United Kingdom, 2,500 tons to Turkey, and 2,400 tons to unknown destinations.U.S. rice exporters shipped 148,900 tons, a marketing year high, which was considerably higher than last week and the prior 4-week average. The primary destinations included 62,500 tons to Turkey, 31,400 tons to Iraq, 25,100 tons to Japan, 12,500 tons to Mexico, and 9,400 tons to Haiti.

Spain's Rice Sector to Receive $13.9 Million Support in 2015

Jan 23, 2015

The Spanish government will support the country’s rice sector with around around 12.2 million euros (around $13.9 million), according to official sources. The amount also includes funds allocated to the sector under the European Union (EU) Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) as well as some contributions from local communities. 
The allocated amount can support about 122,060 hectares of rice fields concentrated around the regions of Andalucia, Catalunia and Valencia. Spain is the second largest producer of rice in the EU after Italy.According to the Royal Decree number 1075/014 approved on December 19, 2014, rice farmers intending to receive direct help from the government need to declare their rice fields October 15, 2015, confirm the actual planted area by November 15, 2015. As per the available funds, each farmer can get maximum help of around 400 euros (around $455) per hectare.Also rice farmers need to grow rice in irrigated area and use seeds of varieties included both in the EU common Catalogue of agricultural plants as well as in the Spanish Register of commercial varieties; or take a special permission from the Agriculture Ministry. The decision is to safeguard rice production in traditional areas where there is no alternative to rice growing as well as for protecting ecological balance.The total amount available for the sector is said to be published every year, from 2015 to 2020, on the web site of FEGA, Fondo Español de Garantìa Agraria (Spanish Fund of Agricultural Guarantee).

Armyworms: Farmers' Foes in Australia

Jan 23, 2015
Armyworm, a type of caterpillar of a native moth, is known to be attacking rice crops in Australia, especially in New South Wales region, according to local sources.The worms usually appear enclosed in a shell type covering and attack the rice crop just when the rice heads begin to emerge. When they attack, there are chances that nearly 50% of the rice output is affected. They mostly affect rice varieties that are drained mid-season. Local agronomists say this pest was not so attacking a few years ago but of late they have become very powerful. They say the pest has to be eradicated in the beginning and before they multiply to prevent significant damage. They say the armyworms can be killed with chemicals at budding stage. But they have to be properly identified, say agronomists. They also noted that once killed in the initial stage, there is a very little possibility that they re-emerge.

Oryza Overnight Recap - Chicago Rough Rice Futures Look to Open Higher on Strong Export Sales -- but Will They Be Enough to Erase Steep Losses Sustained Yesterday?

Jan 23, 2015
Chicago rough rice futures for Mar delivery are currently listed 7.5 cents per cwt (about $2 per ton) higher at $11.235 per cwt (about $248 per ton) ahead of floor trading in Chicago. The other grains are seen mostly lower: soybeans are currently seen 0.6% lower, wheat is listed about 1.1% lower and corn is currently noted about 0.1% higher.U.S. stock-index futures wavered on Friday, a day after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi detailed plans of a larger-than-expected bond-buying program. In an effort to bolster the euro-zone economy, Draghi said the central bank would make monthly bond purchases of as much as $70 billion, starting in March and running to September 2016. The stimulus package was well-received by global markets, with European stocks rallying on Friday.
The euro also weakened to an 11-year low against the dollar, and euro-area sovereign bond prices ticked up. The day also brings several key data releases. Existing home sales at 10:00 a.m. ET are expected to push back just above 5 million, having dipped below this level for the first time in six months in November. The Conference Board's Leading Index for December is also due at 10:00 a.m. ET. In other news, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah died early on Friday and his brother Salman has been named king. Investors will be keeping a close eye on the oil-exporting nation and what the succession means for crest-fallen commodity. Gold is currently trading about 0.3% lower, crude oil is seen trading about 1.1% lower,  and the U.S. dollar is currently trading about 0.7% higher at 8:30am Chicago time.

Pakistan to Develop Rice Husk Based Power Plants

Jan 23, 2015
Pakistan Rice Millers Association (PRMA) has collaborated with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) to develop rice husk-based gasification power plants in the rice producing areas of the country, according to local sources.The project funded by the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) aims to generate cheap and uninterrupted power supply from rice husk. To start with, the PRMA has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the UNIDO, under which the UNIDO will support the PRMA to support the development of a feasibility study for 1 Mega Watt (MW) rice husk based gasification power plant at Bawalnagar, according to local sources.
Of late, Pakistan has been facing serious energy issues, including frequent power cuts and breakdown downs due to which the small and medium scale (SMEs) have been facing several problems such as low productivity and incomes.The project is expected to lay a foundation for the development of biomass gasification technologies in the future in Pakistan, according to the industrial development officer at the UN.“Pakistan being an agricultural country possesses a fuel for future which is cheap, clean and abundant. Such projects will enable SMEs to have uninterrupted electricity to run their operations, which will increase their productivity and also help in providing low cost electricity,” the The UNIDO’s country representative for Pakistan was quoted as s

Thai Government Fixes Rice Floor Prices for Upcoming Auction at Below Market Levels

Jan 23, 2015
The Thai government has reportedly fixed floor prices for rice to auctioned on January 29, 2014 at below market levels. According to local sources, the government has fixed floor price for white rice at around 8-10 baht per kilogram (around $245-$307 per ton), while the market price is quoted at around 13 baht per kilogram (around $399 per ton). On the other hand, the government has fixed the floor price for Hom Mali rice at around 20-21 baht per kilogram (around $613-$644 per ton) compared to market price of around 31-33 baht per kilogram (around $950-$1,012 per ton).
The government is planning to auction around 850,000 tons of 5% broken rice and around 150,000 tons of jasmine rice on January 29. The Director General of the Foreign Trade Department was quoted as saying that the government would auction rice on a whole-warehouse basis and a wide variety of grades and varieties would be offered for sale. The government is understood to auction rice from 168 warehouses in 36 provinces.The government has told that it will allow prospective bidders to inspect samples of rice stocks being put up for sale before the scheduled auction to ensure transparency in rice sales in the wake of concerns over the deteriorating quality of rice stocks.
Two or three auctions are expected before the end of March, according to official sources. The military government is keen on selling around ten million tons of rice stocks this year. About 60% of this year's sales will comprise of premium-grade rice and 40% will comprise of substandard grains, according to the Commerce Ministry Permanent Secretary.It sold around 681,740 tons of rice in last four auctions raising around 6.36 billion baht (around $195 million) after it took charge on May 22, 2014.

Weekly Recap: Former Thailand PM Yingluck Impeached; Ebola Rages On; Asian Rice Quotes Continue Lower

Jan 23, 2015

The Oryza White Rice Index (WRI), a weighted average of global white rice export quotes, ended the week at about $425 per ton, down about $6 per ton from a week and a month ago and down about $38 per ton from a year ago.
Thailand
Thailand 5% broken rice is today shown at about $405 per ton, down about $5 per ton from a week and a month ago, and down about $35 per ton from a year ago.
Today, Thailand’s military-appointed legislature voted to impeach former Prime Minister Yingluck.  In response, Yingluck said the move was part of a “political agenda” and adding on Facebook, “Democracy has died in Thailand today, along with the rule of law.” Her political party, the Pheu Thai, is considered the most popular political party in Thailand and won the 2011 on promises of higher rice prices under the government’s now-failed rice pledging scheme. 
The joint panel consisting of members of the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) and the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) will recommend criminal charges against former PM Yingluck under the criminal code’s Section 157. Losses from the rice subsidy/pledging scheme between 2004 and 2014 are estimated to exceed earlier estimations of about $682 billion baht (about $21 billion USD) if depreciation and missing rice stocks are included, according to the Finance Permanent Secretary.  The government of Thailand has said it will maintain transparency in all future G2G contracts, following misdealings that occurred during Yingluck’s tenure as Prime Minister.
Meanwhile, the government plans to sell about one million tons of rice in a tender on January 29, and it will allow prospective bidders to inspect samples of rice stocks being auctioned, according to the Wall Street Journal.
It seems that long after the end of the rice mortgage scheme and the now impeachment of Yingluck, Thailand rice export quotes are depressed, Thailand rice stocks remain high, and farmers are arguably facing worse market conditions than before the scheme started.
India
India 5% broken rice is today shown at about $400 per ton, unchanged from a week ago, up about $10 a month and down about $10 per ton from a year ago.
The High Level Committee, tasked with looking into the present structure and operational aspects of the Food Corporation of India (FCI), submitted its recommendations to the Prime Minister today.  The Committee recommends that the FCI hand over all procurement operations of paddy, rice and wheat to states that have requisite infrastructure and instead focus on procurement in states where farmers suffer from distressed sales.
The Indian government plans to increase exports of rice (and other products) to China in continuing efforts to contain increasing trade deficit with the neighboring country, according to the Economic Times.
The Prime Minister of Bangladesh reiterated their government’s willingness to export rice to India, after India showed interest in buying around 20,000-30,000 tons of rice from them. Separately, many private business firms and multi-national corporations are planning huge investments in Bangladesh’s $6.4 billion rice milling sector following a consistent and rising demand for rice in the country.  Recently, blockades of highways, railways, and waterways have been disrupting the supply chain there since the Opposition Leader called for blockades on January 5.
Vietnam
Vietnam 5% broken rice is today shown at about $370 per ton, down about $10 per ton from a week ago, down about $20 per ton from a month ago and down about $35 per ton from a year ago. The forward outlook remains dim for quotes. The Vietnam Food Association (VFA) has scaled down expectations for rice exports in the first three months of 2015 to around 900,000 tons.  Meanwhile, the VFA plans to procure the entire paddy rice output in 2015 in efforts to protect farmers from anticipated price decreases.
Pakistan
Pakistan 5% broken rice is today shown at about $365 per ton, down about $10 per ton from a week and a month ago and down about $30 per ton from a year ago.
In December 2014, Pakistan exported about 490,371 tons of rice, an increase of about 7% from November, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.  In terms of value, export earnings increased to about $238.2 million in December, up about 8% from November.
Central & South America
Brazil 5% broken rice is today shown at about $540 per ton, unchanged from a week ago, down about $10 per ton from  a month ago and down about $125 per ton from a year ago.
The USDA Post estimates Mexico’s MY 2014-15 rice imports at around 775,000 tons, up about 10.7% from MY 2013-14.
U.S.
U.S. 4% broken rice is today shown at about $500 per ton, down about $15 per ton from a week and a month ago and down about $90 per ton from a year ago.
The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control announced new trade norms with Cuba following President Obama’s announcement to relax the 50-year embargo with the country. The U.S. rice industry is hopeful about exports to Cuba.
The U.S. share in South Korea’s total rice imports in 2014 declined to about 15% from about 30% in 2013 due to high prices driven by drought conditions, according to the USDA Post.
U.S. cash prices for rough rice has been quiet this week as with bids and offers both hard to find.  Buyers remain hand-to-mouth, and later in the week the cash market fell in tandem with the futures market.
After a holiday on Monday, Chicago rough rice futures for March delivery were around $11.350 per cwt (about $250 per ton) and climbed slightly during the short week before dropping Thursday and Friday.  Futures for March delivery closed the week at $11.050 per cwt (about $244 per ton).
Other Markets
Cambodia 5% broken rice is today shown at about $440 per ton, down about $5 per ton from a week ago, down about $25 per ton from a month ago and down about $15 per ton from year ago. Separately, Cambodia’s MY 2014-15 rice exports are expected to increase about 15% from MY 2013-14 to 1.15 million tons (official and unofficial tonnage), according to the UN’s FAO.
Starting in April 2015, Myanmar will begin exporting rice to China legally, following the finalization of a trade agreement between the two countries.
The Food and Agricultural Organization data show that prices of food, including rice, have increased on average from 30% to 75% in African regions affected by the Ebola virus, and the UN’s International Fund for Agriculture Development warns that if the situation continues for long, those regions may face acute food shortages.
Nepal is considering allowing rice exports to China in the fiscal year 2014-15 (August-July), based on the huge demand for Nepali rice in China.
Paddy rice production in Indonesia is expected to increase about 4% to 73.4 million tons in 2015.
Paddy rice output in the Philippines in 2014 has increased about 2.87% from 2013 to reach about 18.97 million tons (about 11.95 million tons, basis milled).
Japan has purchased about 61,000 tons of non-glutinous milled rice from Thailand and the U.S.
In the first eleven months of 2014, China imported about 2.244 million tons of rice, down about 1% from the same period last year, according to the China Customs General Administration.
The Sri Lanka government will release the stored rice in its warehouses into the open market before the harvest season of the 2014-15 Maha rice crop (September-April) begins next month.
The FAO estimates Liberia will import 350,000 tons of rice in 2015, up 24% from last year.
The government of Spain has said it will support the country’s rice sector with around 12.2 million euros (about $13.9 million).

Download/Print/View On-Line above News in pdf foramat;Just Click the link: