Thursday, November 03, 2016

3rd November 2016 daily global,regional and local rice e-newsletter by riceplus magazine

Paddy rice futures contracts to be traded on PMEX



ISLAMABAD: The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) has approved super basmati paddy rice
futures contracts for listing on the Pakistan Mercantile Exchange (PMEX).
The move will promote the electronic trading of agricultural commodities through the PMEX platform, a statement said on Wednesday. The SECP expects it will also help protect the interests of farmers in the agriculture value chain.The last item inducted for trading into the PMEX was red chilli, which was introduced as pilot project in August 2015 and was subsequently rolled out on a full scale. In the current season, over 1,000 tonnes of red chilli were traded through the electronic platform of the PMEX.
The super basmati follows Irri rice, red chillis, cotton, palm oil, sugar and wheat that have already been listed for futures trade on the mercantile exchange. Non-agri listed products are copper, gold, silver and crude oil.The SECP said benefits of using the PMEX platform includes quality-tested products, swift payment within 24-48 hours, price transparency and guaranteed delivery and settlement through the exchange’s mechanism.
The PMEX is the first exchange in the country to employ modern risk management techniques based on value-at-risk with a pre-trade risk check in real time.
The exchange acts as a central counterparty to both buyers and sellers and provide clearing and settlement using an online bank transfer mechanism.
The SECP said it is bringing reforms to agricultural commodity trading by encouraging traders to make use of the PMEX platform as a modernised route for buying and selling agricultural commodities in Pakistan.
The SECP has also incorporated the concept of agriculture promotion companies in the Draft Companies Bill 2016.
As a fully electronic exchange with nationwide reach, the PMEX started its operations in May 2007 as a successor of the National Commodity Exchange to broaden its mandate and scope of activity to trade all types of futures contracts.
The PMEX has an institutional shareholding. Its shareholders include National Bank of Pakistan, Pakistan Stock Exchange, LSE Financial Services, ISE Towers REIT Management Company, Pak Kuwait Investment Company and Zarai Taraqiati Bank.
Published in Dawn, November 3rd, 2016

SECP approves paddy rice futures contracts for listing with PMEX


05:52 PM, 2 Nov, 2016
The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) has approved paddy rice futures contracts for listing with Pakistan Mercantile Exchange (PMEX).The SECP's spokesperson in a statement issued in Islamabad on Wednesday said that the commission approved Super Basmati Paddy Rice future contracts for listing on PMEX to promote electronic trading of agricultural commodities and to protect the interests of participants in the agriculture value chain
http://www.radio.gov.pk/02-Nov-2016/secp-approves-paddy-rice-futures-contracts-for-listing-with-pmex



KENYA ACCEPTS ACTUAL PRICE OF PAKISTANI RICE

Wednesday, 02 November 2016 12:16
RIZWAN BHATTI
KARACHI: Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has agreed to the valuation of Pakistani long grained white rice at actual price of $300-350 per metric ton instead of $580 per metric ton previously. Exporters told Business Recorder on Tuesday that the KRA has suddenly revised the valuation of several commodities including Pakistani rice upward side without consultation of stakeholders. The KRA decision resulted in stuck of hundreds of Pakistan's rice containers at Kenyan seaport.They informed that the valuation of Pakistani rice, being calculated by the KRA, was much higher than the actual market price, of which the importers were unable to get their imported rice consignments. The KRA was imposing a valuation of $580 per metric ton on Pakistan long grained white rice as against its actual valuation of $300 to $350 per metric tons. Kenya rice importers are even ready to pay the taxes on the actual price, however the KRA was insisting for higher valuation, they mentioned.

"A trade X messaging system of the KRA is calculating higher valuation on all imports from Pakistan, that created panic among the exporters and imports", said Rafique Suleman, Chairman Rice Export Committee (FPCCI) and Convenor East Africa Committee of Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP).

Hundreds of Pakistani rice containers have been held at Mombasa Port due to valuation issue and importers are worry of increasing the cost of the commodity due to demurrages, he added. He said that now the price valuation issues have almost finalised with the KRA and release of Pakistani rice consignments are likely to start soon. "On request of REAP, Pakistani Commercial Counsellor Zahid Qadeer in Nerobi Keyna held a meeting with the KRA authorities and finally they have been agreed for actual valuation of Pakistani rice," he informed.

Pakistani Commercial Counsellor met the Commissioner Customs of the KRA and discussed the matter of overvaluation by customs authorities on Pakistani rice and Commissioner Customs (Kenya) have been agreed to resolve the matter by valuating Pakistani rice on current market price.

"As per assurance by the Commissioner Customs (KRA) the long grained white Pakistani rice will now be valued at a range of $300-350 per metric ton as against the previous demanded value of $580 per metric ton by the KRA," Suleman said. He said that during the meeting it has also decided that the price will be reviewed quarterly and chances of this problem rising again cannot be ruled out. Customs authorities were also assured that the verified prices of rice (different verities) will be provided to them after devising a mechanism in consultation with Ministry of Commerce (Pakistan) and REAP.

"It was also decided that both Ministry of Commerce and REAP will inform the KRA regarding alleged practices of under invoicing to curb it," he informed. Suleman said that in the light of these meeting, Pakistani Commercial Counsellor, has also requested REAP to co-ordinate with concerned section of ministry of commerce to work out a strategy for addressing the price issue. He said that as per REAP estimates some 600 containers carrying 15,000 metric ton rice cargo have been stuck at Kenyan port from the last one week due to valuation issue. He said that importers are facing huge storage and demurrage bills, which is harmful to Pakistan's potential business to Kenya.
http://www.brecorder.com/pakistan/business-a-economy/326047-kenya-accepts-actual-price-of-pakistani-rice.html

Haryana paddy arrival nearly 52.75 lakh tonnes

20 hours ago | 02-11-2016
IANS

NK Punjab, Chandigarh, Nov 2 : Nearly 52.75 lakh tonnes of paddy has arrived in the grain markets in Haryana this season, food and supplies officials said on Wednesday. This is much higher than the paddy arrival of 44.73 lakh tonnes during the same period last year.Procurement of paddy in Haryana started almost a week ahead of the official procurement commencement date of October 1.

Government procurement agencies have procured about 49.54 lakh tonnes of paddy while nearly 3.2 lakh tonnes has been procured by millers and dealers.

Karnal, Kurukshetra and Ambala districts were leading in paddy arrivalshttp://www.newkerala.com/news/2016/fullnews-137889.html

Scientists discover green rice in Chattisgarh

Chhattisgarh is traditionally known as the Rice Bowl of India as over 20,000 rice varieties have been found here

R Krishna Das  |  Raipur November 2, 2016 Last Updated at 14:23 IST
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Photo: Shutterstock


Chinese agency to inspect basmati rice production facilities for insectsICC to prepare vision document on rice for OdishaFarmers say water allowed will not be sufficient for Samba cropLower rice output to push up pricesCotton, rice and wheat output to go up in India
           
Chhattisgarh has discovered a new variety of rice that is light green in colour.Though the development is at an early stage, scientists in the state have started scientific study of the variety. Only after conducting a detailed research, the scientists will come out with the character of the seed.

“The seed discovered is rare and is light green in colour,” A K Sarawgi, head of department of genetics and breeding in Indira Gandhi Agriculture University, told Business Standard. The university is conduction an in-depth study of the variety, he added.


The seed sample was provided to the university by farmers from Dhamtari and Durg districts. The farmers had stocked the sample as the variety was discovered far back and the farmers had even taken the crop.

Based on the sample, the university scientists were conducting the study. According to Sarawgi, the result will provide the additional characters of the variety that include its medical benefits, cropeconomy.

This year, farmers were given sample seed for multiplying. The scientists were waiting for the harvest that would enable them to further study the variety's character. More varieties of paddy seeds were expected to come out in the state.Chhattisgarh is traditionally known as the Rice Bowl of India. Over 20,000 rice varieties have been recorded in the region. These are a result of centuries of rice farming through selection and adaptation to a variety of soil, water and micro-ecosystems conditions including predators.

According to experts, the varieties were extinct following market forces promoting high-yielding varieties and synthetic fertilizer and pesticide-based croppinghttp://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/scientists-discover-green-rice-in-chattisgarh-116110200609_1.html


Seminar on development of food value chain in Africa underway
 Wednesday 2nd November, 2016

By Patience A. Gbeze/Ms Rhema Bansah, GNA

Accra, Nov. 2, GNA – A day’s seminar on development of food value chain in Africa 2016, aimed at offering Ghanaian farmers the opportunity to network and gained knowledge from Japanese companies in Africa, on Food Value Chain and technology know-how is underway in Accra.It is being organized by the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA) in collaboration with Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries MAFF, under the theme, “Creating New Markets by Linking Consumers, Producers, Farmers and Economies”. It is to forge collaboration between the two countries to increase awareness of food value chain in Africa.
It would also enable Japanese companies to offer assistance to participants on how to improve Food Value Chain in Africa, with the aim of creating new market by linking consumers, producers and farmers.

Mr Nicholas Neequaye, Director, Agribusiness Unit of MOFA, said the Ministry was involved in a lot of initiatives to increase yield of farm produce, especially rice production in Ghana.The Ministry, he said, is also providing support in terms of input, fertilizer, research into improved varieties, and land acquisition, among others, which also aimed at increasing farm produce in the country.He said the problem Ghanaian rice farmers face is the preparation of the land and the Ministry is trying to bring in more tractors to address the challenges of land preparation.“We are also finding solutions to harvesting, storage and finding markets for the produce,” he added.

Mr Neequaye said to improve the value chain the Ministry provided milling facilities to rice farmers and currently Ghana has the largest rice miller in the Northern Region.He noted that though people complained about change in taste of local rice as compared to the imported ones, “these millers are state of- the- art machineries with the capacity to provide first quality grade of rice.He said the challenges are that demand for rice consumption in Ghana is always increasing, which means that they have to speed up production to meet the demand.

Currently, he said the country produces between 400,000 tons and 500,000 tons of rice annually and expressed the hope that with the various interventions the Ministry is bringing on board Ghana would be able to increase production in the near future.Answering question on what the Ministry is doing to retrieve its productive lands being encroached upon by real estate developers, Mr Neequaye said, the MOFA is determined to take back all its arable lands for agricultural purposes.He stressed the need to enforce the land use policy to give clear demarcation of farming lands and those that are for real estate development.

Mr Shigeru Umetsu, Charge d’ Affaires of the Japan Embassy, said Value Chain Development is relatively new approach to Agricultural Development in Africa as a whole and in particular.He said the approach is gradually gaining prominence and becoming the center-piece for agricultural development strategies.“Establishment of Food Value Chain is key to success for not only the agricultural sector but the general Ghanaian Economy as well,” he said and expressed the hope that the enriching experiences that would be gained would be put into good use in their various companies.Five Japanese companies in Africa are attending the seminar to showcase their machineries, products and technical know-how.

http://www.ghananewsagency.org/economics/seminar-on-development-of-food-value-chain-in-africa-underway-109680



Thailand's junta seeks to reassure powerful rice farmers amid price plunge

By REUTERS

By Patpicha Tanakasempipat
BANGKOK, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Thailand's military government has rolled out a series of rescue packages in a bid to help rice farmers, most of whom hail from the political heartlands of the government it toppled, amid tumbling prices of the grain.
Farmers in Thailand, the world's second-largest rice exporter, have traditionally been politically powerful and many helped elect former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra in 2011.
Her administration was removed in a 2014 military coup.
The military government has been anxious to head off potential confrontation with farmers but said in its first year in power that it also wanted to wean them off expensive populist schemes such as a rice scheme introduced by Yingluck which bought rice from farmers at above-market rates.
But in recent weeks the military government has announced measures worth at least 59.28 billion baht ($1.70 billion) aimed at curbing market supply and stabilizing rice prices.
The measures come as the ruling junta is trying to ensure a smooth transition following the death of much-loved King Bhumibol Adulyadej and to maintain stability ahead of a 2017 general election.
"There's a possibility for tension, which could be used to incite political gatherings," said Kan Yuenyong, executive director of Siam Intelligence Unit think-tank.
"The government fears the situation would get out of control, so they have to intervene," he said.
FACEBOOK RICE
Global rice prices have plunged over the past months as the world's largest rice producers anticipate an influx of new stocks towards the end of the year.
Some Thai rice farmers have taken matters into their own hands and are turning to social media network Facebook to sell their grain, shunning rice millers, the industry's traditional middlemen, whose prices they say are simply too low.
Nim Inthasorn, 33, who hails from the northeastern province of Kalasin, said she has received orders for over 50 tonnes of rice since she started a Facebook page in October.
"I would hold the rice until prices improve, but that isn't practical so this is what I can do now," she said.
Her family's jasmine rice fetches around 7 baht ($0.20) per kilogram from rice millers, but on Facebook she can sell it for 23 baht ($0.66) to 34 baht (0.97) per kilogram, she added.
But the trend is unlikely to take over traditional methods of selling rice, said Pisanu Sangyoo, an analyst at the Thai Rice Exporters Association.
"Most farmers still have to do business with rice millers and exporters," he said.Government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said this week the government supports farmers selling their grain online. ($1 = 34.92 baht) (Editing by Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Michael Perry)

 

Thailand's junta seeks to reassure powerful rice farmers amid price plunge

By REUTERS

By Patpicha Tanakasempipat
BANGKOK, Nov 3 (Reuters) - Thailand's military government has rolled out a series of rescue packages in a bid to help rice farmers, most of whom hail from the political heartlands of the government it toppled, amid tumbling prices of the grain.Farmers in Thailand, the world's second-largest rice exporter, have traditionally been politically powerful and many helped elect former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra in 2011.Her administration was removed in a 2014 military coup.The military government has been anxious to head off potential confrontation with farmers but said in its first year in power that it also wanted to wean them off expensive populist schemes such as a rice scheme introduced by Yingluck which bought rice from farmers at above-market rates.

But in recent weeks the military government has announced measures worth at least 59.28 billion baht ($1.70 billion) aimed at curbing market supply and stabilizing rice prices.The measures come as the ruling junta is trying to ensure a smooth transition following the death of much-loved King Bhumibol Adulyadej and to maintain stability ahead of a 2017 general election."There's a possibility for tension, which could be used to incite political gatherings," said Kan Yuenyong, executive director of Siam Intelligence Unit think-tank.
"The government fears the situation would get out of control, so they have to intervene," he said.

FACEBOOK RICE

Global rice prices have plunged over the past months as the world's largest rice producers anticipate an influx of new stocks towards the end of the year.Some Thai rice farmers have taken matters into their own hands and are turning to social media network Facebook to sell their grain, shunning rice millers, the industry's traditional middlemen, whose prices they say are simply too low.Nim Inthasorn, 33, who hails from the northeastern province of Kalasin, said she has received orders for over 50 tonnes of rice since she started a Facebook page in October.

"I would hold the rice until prices improve, but that isn't practical so this is what I can do now," she said.
Her family's jasmine rice fetches around 7 baht ($0.20) per kilogram from rice millers, but on Facebook she can sell it for 23 baht ($0.66) to 34 baht (0.97) per kilogram, she added.But the trend is unlikely to take over traditional methods of selling rice, said Pisanu Sangyoo, an analyst at the Thai Rice Exporters Association.
"Most farmers still have to do business with rice millers and exporters," he said.Government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said this week the government supports farmers selling their grain online. ($1 = 34.92 baht) (Editing by Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Michael Perry)

Commerce ministry to take action on rice price slump but price floor in doubt


By su phyo win and Chan Mya Htwe   |   Thursday, 03 November 2016
The Ministry of Commerce is preparing to take action to combat a severe drop in rice prices threatening the country’s farmers, which includes stepping up efforts to secure new export markets. But some solutions suggested by agricultural industry groups – such as a government-mandated price floor – risk raising a host of other problems, Commerce Minister U Than Myint told The Myanmar Times.
Workers prepare rice for drying next to a road during the harvest in Nay Pyi Taw. Photo - EPA
The commerce minister said the government is considering as many options as possible to address the plunge in prices, and will decide on the best course of action early this month.Myanmar has no well-established market for rice exports other than China, but that country’s crackdown on illegal rice imports has left Myanmar with a growing surplus of unsold paddy. Heavy rain during the harvest has made things worse, soaking finished rice and lowering the price, said U Soe Tun, vice president of the Myanmar Rice Federation.Local farmers are struggling to find willing buyers let alone cover costs, and are worried about falling deeper into debt. Some industry groups are pushing for the government to step in with a minimum price.
“We’ve been demanding that for years,” said U Thein Aung, president of the Myanmar Freedom Farmer League. “We don’t mean that the government has to buy at the highest prices. It would be a fair price that covers the cost of production and fixed in a range where consumers, producers and traders can all benefit.”Following a meeting with the commerce ministry, U Soe Tun said the government was considering a minimum price. But U Than Myint said it was unclear whether that would be possible.“There are many challenges to setting a fixed price,” he said. “Who will buy the rice at the fixed price? Does the government have the budget to buy it? Where can we export to? Those questions are hard to answer.”
In many cases, traders and millers are reluctant to purchase paddy because the Chinese export market has crumbled. A minimum price would not help farmers struggling to find a buyer. In the meantime, issues around storing surplus paddy and drying wet rice are still unsolved.
“We need the government to support rice drying to reduce the moisture,” said U Soe Tun, adding this was reducing already pressured rice prices by over 25 percent.
Myanmar Agribusiness Public Corporation (MAPCO) recently signed an agreement worth around US$3 million with South Korean firm SK networks to import 100 grain dryers for rice and corn. The dryers will go to the agribusiness service centres MAPCO is setting up in Yangon, Mandalay and Ayeyarwady regions, but those are not expected to be operational until January.
U Than Myint said the ministry was focused on two measures that could be implemened in concert. The first is altering a rule so that paddy can be exported directly, rather than finished rice.
Rice traders are also planning to push the government to lower administrative restrictions on where they can sell rice within Myanmar. Yangon rice traders looking to make sales in Tanintharyi Region and Rakhine State, for example, require permission from the Yangon Region government.
The other measure the commerce ministry is focussed on is to find new markets for rice and paddy exports other than China. This is by no means a new initiative. Myanmar has been searching for new export markets for some time, but has had difficulty inking successful agreements.
A potential export agreement with the Philippines last year fell through, mainly because Myanmar rice proved too expensive and so the Philippines bought from Vietnam instead. Attempts to renew a memorandum of understanding with Indonesia are 
under way but yet to come to fruition.
U Khin Maung Lwin, deputy secretary at the commerce ministry, said the government was pursuing exports to the EU and Indonesia, and trying again to form an agreement with the Philippines. He was hopeful that the Indonesia agreement would be finalised soon.
“Indonesia will inform us of the confirmed agreement date,” he said.The Philippines desires Myanmar rice, but at the same price as it pays Vietnam, he added.The government has held meetings with traders and rice industry officials to identify ways to lower production and logistics costs that have made it hard to compete with other regional exporters.In order to make progress on opening up new export markets the government is planning a series of foreign trips, U Khin Maung Lwin added.“At the earliest we’ll conduct visits with rice association representatives [to the EU, Indonesia and the Philippines] before the end of this year,” he told The Myanmar Times.
Although reliance on China for exports has proved risky, the MRF’s U Soe Tun also wants to see an official agreement with China put in place.“We can’t blame the Chinese government for seizing [illegally imported rice] at the Muse border as it’s their right to stop illegal trade,” he said. “But our government needs to agree quotas for Chinese exports. We signed for 100,000 tonnes [of rice exports to China] last fiscal year, and we are asking [the government] for a 200,000- tonne quota for border trade and 200,000-tonne quota for shipments.”
U Khin Maung Lwin said the government was attempting to hold diplomatic discussions with China to secure those official export quotas.
U Ye Min Aung, managing director of MAPCO, said that the MRF and MAPCO have invited Chinese state entities for discussions on rice exports to be held this month. The state entity in charge of export and import quality, the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine of the People’s Republic of China (AQSIQ), is invited. China’s national macroeconomic agency – the National Development and Reform Commission – will also 
attend, said U Ye Min Aung.
The discussion would help “facilitate the [necessary export] certificates from related ministries meet the [level of] quality demanded by China for border trade,” he added
http://www.mmtimes.com/index.php/business/23463-commerce-ministry-to-take-action-on-rice-price-slump-but-price-floor-in-doubt.html

N. Korea imports rice on large scale in Sept.


North Korea imported the largest-ever amount of rice from China on a monthly basis in September since the launch of the Kim Jong-un regime in 2011, in an apparent bid to stabilize prices, a U.S. broadcaster, monitored here, reported Thursday.North Korea imported 18,477 tons of rice and other grains in September, the Voice of America said, citing an analysis of data from China's General Administration of Customs by Kwon Tae-jin, director of East Asia research at GS&J Institute in South Korea.

The September figure was about 2.7 times higher than 6,954 tons imported in October and about six times higher than 3,158 tons imported a year ago in September, the broadcaster said.In particular, the North purchased 16,000 tons of rice from China in September, a monthly high since the start of the Kim Jong-un regime, and higher than the 14,000 tons imported during the first eight months of this year total, the broadcaster said.

Experts opined that the step is designed to stabilize rice prices at a time when the stock as hit its bottom the broadcaster said."This is the time when the harvest is around the corner, and the stock is nearly exhausted," Kwon said. (Yonhap)

https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2016/11/485_217429.html

Cabinet boosts rice subsidy to B13,000

Prayut claims scheme different to Yingluck's

2 Nov 2016 at 04:00

The cabinet has decided to increase its latest rice subsidy to 13,000 baht per tonne for Hom Mali paddy in a bid to stem potential protests from rice farmers who were dissatisfied with a proposed subsidy of 11,525 baht.The decision followed a special meeting by the National Rice Policy Committee which agreed to increase the subsidy a day after initially proposing it.Commerce Minister Apiradi Tantraporn said the measure, which took effect Tuesday and runs to Feb 28 next year, will cost about 20 billion baht, an increase of 8.6 billion baht, with about 2 million rice farmers expected to take part in the scheme.


Newly harvested rice is set out for treatment and drying at this northeastern mill. Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha's government now is offering up to 13,000 baht per tonne as a 'subsidy' to farmers. (Post Today photo)
Of the 13,000 baht, 9,500 baht will be paid to farmers to store their paddy in barns for a certain period of time, while the remainder of the subsidy covers other costs, including quality maintenance and storage.For participating farmers without rice barns, they will receive 9,500 baht per tonne plus 2,000 baht for harvesting and improvement costs, and another 1,500 baht for storage costs.However, farmers who have no barns to store the paddy will not receive the 1,500-baht storage cost payment.Ms Apiradi said participating farmers are then expected to redeem their rice within five months of joining the scheme.She said the rice committee decided to revise the figure after officials concerned including those from the Interior Ministry gathered more information about paddy rice prices.She also said that the price is expected to change in the future, along with the subsidy rate to compensate for such price fluctuations.


The subsidy increase came after farmer groups disagreed with the original sum of 11,525 baht per tonne.
Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha said the subsidy programme should alleviate hardship for farmers, and pleaded with them for their understanding.He said the government has a limited budget and needs to strictly adhere to the law. "I hope the measure can more or less help farmers," he said.He insisted that the subsidy measure is not against the law and is different from the rice-pledging scheme implemented by the Yingluck administration.

Gen Prayut said he has ordered the Agricultural Cooperatives Ministry, the Commerce Ministry and the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) to the implement the measure and monitor warehouses for signs of irregularities.He said the NCPO is investigating reports that politicians and rice millers are manipulating paddy rice prices in a bid to provoke rice farmers to protest against the government.

Gen Prayut insisted a subsidy programme is not a sustainable solution and stressed that all stake holders in the rice production industry will need to make changes and adhere to the rules to help each other.Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon said the NCPO, provincial governors and police will monitor the situation for signs of defiance among farmers.He expressed confidence that the rice situation rice will not be politicised.Government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the prime minister has asked security authorities to investigate whether there are people trying to manipulate rice prices.

He said initial findings suggest there are irregular activities in Phichit, with attempts to discredit the government and convince farmers there that the government is mishandling the situation.About 90% of Hom Mali paddy is due to hit the market this month.Army chief Chalermchai Sitthisart, also the NCPO's secretary-general, said troops have been dispatched to investigate any instances of price manipulation before the paddy hits the market
He said the army is considering buying rice from farmer cooperatives to help them with distribution, and is sending troops to help farmers with the harvest to save labour costs."We are trying to do what we can. Ending the price slump is the government's job," he said.
Meanwhile, Democrat member Wirat Kallayasiri said  the rice price is being manipulated by supporters of ex-premier Yingluck Shinawatra to distort information about the rice-pledging scheme."They want to mislead the public into thinking the government is turning a blind eye to their plight. Those who benefited from the rice-pledging scheme are working to discredit the government and provoking farmers," he said.

He called on the government to send local officials to explain the matter to farmers, and to strictly enforce the law against those allegedly trying to distort the market for political gains.Rawee Rungruang, a rice farmer representative, said farmer groups are concerned about reports that the Bank of Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives is refusing to take rice from farmers in the lower part of the North because they grow different grains.

Army wants mills to offer better deal




Visiting troops to 'urge' reasonable rice prices
3 Nov 2016 at 05:00

NEWSPAPER SECTION: NEWS | WRITER: POST REPORTERS

The junta's theory: Farmers grow and harvest the rice, then take it to the mills, where operators pay the farmers a pittance, prepare and bag the rice, and raise prices to get maximum profits. (File photos)

The regime has deployed soldiers to "seek cooperation" from all rice mills nationwide to buy grain from farmers at "reasonable" prices in an effort to shore up rice prices.The move was not aimed at threatening millers but seeking their cooperation not to drive down prices, said Col Sirichan Ngathong, deputy spokesman of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).They will meet all mill operators across the country, Col Sirichan said, adding the officers should have some knowledge about rice affairs and be stationed in areas where they can ask to meet local millers.

Soldiers will gather information about the defects in the rice pricing mechanism which may have led to the recent fall in prices, and listen to concerns raised by millers, she said.Armed forces will buy grain from farmers through growers' cooperatives to feed 100,000 military personnel as well as resell grain, she said.The purchase price is initially set at 13,000 baht per tonne, in line with the government's recently introduced subsidy programme.Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha earlier blamed rice mill operators and some local politicians for manipulating rice prices, causing the price slump.

Thai Rice Millers Association president Manas Kitprasert Wednesday insisted rice millers have not played a role in driving down rice prices or worked with anyone to do so, despite claims to the contrary.Millers bought grain in line with the market mechanism and the prices were based on those quoted by exporters.He said the association and representatives from millers across the country will go before the media today to clarify the matter.The cabinet on Tuesday approved the rice subsidy scheme at 13,000 baht per tonne for Hom Mali paddy to help farmers in the North and the Northeast suffering from tumbling rice prices.

Of the 13,000 baht, 9,500 baht will be paid to farmers to store their paddy for a certain period of time, while the rest of the subsidy covers other costs, including quality maintenance and storage.The programme took effect on Tuesday and it runs until Feb 28 next year.The head of the Thai Agriculturist Association, Wichien Puanglamjeak, thanked the government for rolling out the programme, which he said should make farmers happy.He also called on the government to help Central Plains farmers who grow other kinds of rice besides Hom Mali rice, and who are suffering from the falling prices.Mr Wichien said the recent drop in rice prices was engineered by exporters, rice packaging operators, millers and traders.

They drove down the prices of unmilled rice so as to hoard it, believing the government would have to launch a new rice-pledging programme, which would later buy their rice.Suthikorn Kingkaew, a lecturer at Thammasat University's Department of International Business, Logistics and Transport, said the recent fall in rice prices was in line with an estimate predicting a huge supply around the world this year.This was also coupled with the government's massive rice stockpile, which led rice millers and traders to believe rice prices would fall in the future, he said.

Accordingly, they drove down the prices to ward off possible losses.He said the government should reveal its stock and the rice output likely to enter the market, so millers can gauge suitable prices.Jitti Mongkolnchaiarunya, dean of Thammasat's Puey Ungphakorn School of Development Studies, launched a programme Wednesday to draw buyers to buy rice directly from farmers, after some farmers started selling directly via the internet.It will offer space at the university for direct rice sales, lay out a rice pre-order system and register farmer networks so buyers can contact them directly online.

Agriculture and Cooperatives Minister Chatchai Sarikulya said the ministry will buy paddy from farmers via agricultural cooperatives and mill it for distribution to customers through 24 distribution centres and their 120 sub-centres.Meanwhile, the Office of the Vocational Education Commission has told its agencies to offer farmers assistance, including milling rice free of charge, drawing up designs for rice packaging and sharing knowledge on marketing.
The Department of Labour Protection and Welfare has also vowed to contact provincial commercial offices to sell rice at business operation facilities.
Below: Rice is put on sale at a makeshift tent at Thammasat University's Puey Ungphakorn School of Development Studies, which opened a space for farmers to sell rice directly to customers Wednesday. The activity at the Rangsit campus was intended to help farmers suffering from tumbling rice prices. (Photo by Tanaphon Ongarttrakul).

Farmers' leader accuses traders, thanks govt




 

2 Nov 2016 at 16:17 2,187 viewed3 comments
WRITER: SUNTHON PONGPAO, WASSANA NANUAM, WICHIT CHANTANUSORNSIRI

Farmers lay out harvested rice to dry in Surin province. (Photo by Nopparat Kingkaew)
A farmers' leader has welcomed the government's move to foil rice traders he says conspired to keep paddy prices low in expectation of making a big profit later.Wichien Phuanglamjiak, former president of the Thai Agriculturalists Association, said in Ayutthaya province rice traders had conspired to buy as much paddy as possible from farmers at low prices. They expected to make a big profit from the government's price guarantee scheme.Traders had also planned to use farmers as their proxies to cash in on any rice price scheme, he said.


Wichien Phuanglamjiak,  former president of the Thai Agriculturalists Association

"Rice brokers from the Central Plain bought paddy cheaply in the Northeast. Now why would they do that, with the ongoing complaints about the low price for rice exports?" Mr Wichien said.He expressed appreciation for the government's move to deal with such traders through a rice-pledging scheme that lets farmers store paddy in their own barns. That surprised the speculators, he said.Mr Wichien said officials from the Prime Minister's Office visited his home in Phak Hai district, Ayutthaya, to discuss farmers' problems and the pros and cons of past assistance schemes for rice growers, including rice-pledging schemes. He told them all he knew.

Deputy army spokeswoman Col Sirichan Ngathong said on Wednesday soldiers were meeting with rice millers nationwide, asking them to show sympathy for farmers and their problems and needs, and to pay fair prices for their paddy. They were also asking about the criteria the millers use in deciding how much to pay.Farmers could also seek assistance from any military unit in their area if they had problems, she said. "We are ready to help farmers sell rice directly to consumers, without having to rely on the millers. We believe that people nationwide are ready to help farmers," Col Sirichan said.Representatives of rice millers have announced a media conference on Thursday to reply to allegations.
Finance Minister Apisak Tantivorawong said on Wednesday the market price of Hom Mali paddy stood at 11,000 baht per tonne for top grade dry grain, which was about the same as the growers' production costs, and it was unlikely to go lower.


86-year-old scientist aims to revolutionize rice planting

2016-11-03 13:13chinadaily.com.cnEditor: Xu Shanshan
Developing a new strain of crop is time-consuming. But that doesn't worry 86-year-old Yuan Longping, China's renowned rice scientist.Yuan has set his sight on next trophy, a seawater rice for full commercial production in five years.
According to Yuan, it takes time for this kind of revolutionary development of new agricultural species to become full-fledged. It will take three years to develop a breed that has commercial value, and would take five years for it to be mass marketed. And to make it popular in China's tidal-flat areas and saline-alkali lands, it would take about 10 years.
He told China Daily in a written reply that by that time, a rice strain grown by his research team will yield up to 4.5 metric ton per hectare, around 60 percent of the yield from the regular paddy fields. And the increment of rise output will be enough to feed 200 million people.
Now and then, here and there across Asia, small news items appear about discovery of some wild rice grown in briny swamps, potentially resistant to diseases and with no need for fertilizer.
But successful development of the discovery into a commercial crop has never hit the headline. So, for Yuan, it's never too late to start his own quest for the glory.
China has plenty of saline-alkaline wasteland and can be put into use when the country's arable land is sparse, Yuan said, adding that more than 13 million hectares of such wasteland could potentially be used for sea-rice farming.
If fully utilized, Yuan said, China can reap an additional 50 million tons of grain.
Under Yuan's directorship, a sea-rice research center will be built in Licang district of Qingdao, Shandong province, where his team will use molecular breeding technologies to develop a sea-rice strain with high photosynthetic efficiency and yield.
With a seed fund of 100 million yuan ($14.77 million), scientists will begin experiments on two hectares of saline-alkaline marshland just north of Jiaozhou Bay in next April, and expect to reap their first harvest in the autumn.
Once the two-billion-yuan R&D center is fully built, Yuan's team will start planting a sea-rice species in 1.33 million hectares of saline-alkaline soil along the coast.
Seawater rice seeds and planting techniques could also be exported to countries in Southeast Asia, which has a total of 20 million hectares of saline-alkaline soil, Yuan said. "Our Qingdao center is likely to help Southeast Asia raise its yearly rice production by 20 million tons," he said.
According to Zhang Guodong, general manager of Yuance Biotech, a partner in Yuan's project, a rice strain that can both thrive on seawater and yield a high output has not yet been reported.
There are overseas institutions reportedly trying to develop seawater rice using genetic technology. But all seem to remain lab attempts thus far, Zhang said
http://www.ecns.cn/2016/11-03/232675.shtml


APEDA AgriExchange Newsletter - Volume 1589


Market Watch
Commodity-wise, Market-wise Daily Price on 01-11-2016
Domestic Prices
Unit Price : Rs per Qty
Product
Market Center
Variety
Min Price
Max Price
Rice
1
Dibrugarh (Assam)
Common
2200
2300
2
Manjeri (Kerala)
Other
3000
3900
3
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
2200
2500
Wheat
1
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
1525
1800
2
Umarkhed (Maharashtra)
Other
1500
1600
3
Dibrugarh (Assam)
Other
2350
2450
Guava
1
Bariwala (Punjab)
Other
1700
1700
2
Shillong (Meghalaya)
Other
2800
3200
3
Pune (Maharashtra)
Other
2000
3000
Cauliflower
1
Koraput (Orissa)
Other
1600
1800
2
Chittorgarh (Rajasthan)
Other
2500
3000
3
Barnala (Punjab)
Other
2000
2500





Senate Appropriations Staff Prioritize Rice Abroad 

WASHINGTON, DC -- While Members of Congress have spent much of the last three months in their home states in advance of the fall elections, their staff have held down the fort on the agricultural front in Washington and, in some cases, abroad.Several Senate Appropriations Committee staff members recently took rice-centric trips to Africa and Cuba representing the Committee and its chairman, Senator Thad Cochran (R-MS). In August, Rachel Santos, Carlisle Clarke, and Patrick Carroll, traveled to Tanzania to visit with the Project Concern International (PCI), which oversees the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) McGovern-Dole International Food for Education Program. 

The group toured the Guta Primary School, where they had the opportunity to visit with children and families who benefit from McGovern-Dole and other USDA food aid programs.  Thanks to the great work USDA and PCI are doing, a large amount of U.S.-grown rice is made available to schools to provide needed nutrition and give incentives for children to attend school. 

The same staff, along with colleagues Jessica Schulken, Dianne Nellor, and Laura Friedel, traveled to Cuba on a fact-finding mission earlier this month.  The bipartisan group of Hill staff were joined by several USDA officials, including Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) Administrator Phil Karsting.

Following the 2014 decision to begin reestablishing U.S. bilateral diplomatic relations with Cuba, USDA has worked to ensure that it is prepared when the 56-year-old U.S. embargo is lifted.  Currently, USDA has temporary staff posted in Cuba until it is able to have a full-time post in the U.S. embassy.

The Senate group had the rare opportunity to visit a co-op in the Pinar del Rio region where rice and tobacco are grown.  Cuba is not self-sufficient when it comes to rice production, and the island nation must import the majority of the food needed by the Cuban people.  Cuban officials stressed the importance of lifting the embargo, and emphasized their preference for U.S.-grown rice over the Vietnamese rice currently imported by Cuba.

In addition to rice and tobacco farm tours, the delegation met with representatives from several Cuban ministries, including agriculture and trade.
 Ben Mosely, vice president of government affairs for USA Rice, said, "The on-ground experience gained by staff on these fact finding trips is extremely valuable to members of Congress and the constituents they represent.  These delegations provide an opportunity for staff to interact with USDA officials abroad and to see firsthand the great work that FAS does in efficiently carrying out programs that benefit U.S. growers back home.  We're glad to see that rice is playing a significant role during informational trips taken by congressional staff."


Korea to dispose of 240,000 tons of rice in gov't stockpiles


Published : 2016-11-02 12:02
Updated : 2016-11-02 14:44
The South Korean government said Wednesday that it will dispose of up to 240,000 tons of rice in government stockpiles, a move partly aimed at keeping prices up.The amount compares with 100,000 tons disposed at the start of this year. The rice to be disposed was produced in 2013, and will be used as animal feed, according to the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs.Currently, the government has 1.71 million tons of rice in its stockpile, more than twice the amount the government storages are designed to hold, the ministry said.

With a steady decline in consumption and years of better-than-expected harvests, the average price of rice has dipped to a 21-year low of 129,628 won ($113) for a 80-kilogram sack, it added."The government may consider expanding the amount to be disposed as animal feed after carefully monitoring the country's supply," a ministry official said. (Yonhap)

http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20161102000577



Fall rains conclude California rice harvest

Growers back up to 545,000 acres after two years of water cutbacks
Nov 1, 2016Todd Fitchette | Western Farm Press






California’s rice harvest can be precariously timed to coincide with early-season rains, as was the case with this year’s crop. About 10 percent of the state’s rice crop still needed to be harvested after Halloween because of early-season record rainfall.
After a couple dismal years of water availability, California’s rice harvest is on track for “normal.”Last year, California rice growers harvested rice from about 75 percent of the land typically used for growing rice. In raw numbers that was about 421,000 out of a more normal 550,000 acres of the crop. This year’s figure, pegged at 545,000 acres by the California Rice Commission (CRC), is down slightly from the estimated 564,000 acres the U.S. Department of Agriculture says growers planted this year.
As of the end of October, about 90 percent of the state’s total rice acreage had been harvested and moved to storage, says Jim Morris, CRC spokesman.Unlike last year which had near-perfect weather conditions during the early-fall harvest window, the weather was a challenge for this year’s harvest. Growers were either running hard to beat early-season rains or had to battle the wet consequences of it.
Tom Butler, a grower in the southern Sacramento Valley, said he finished his rice harvest in late October, just ahead of the major rain storms that hit the area with several inches of rain.
For Butler, this was the first year in several that he was able to plant 100 percent of his fields with rice because of restricted water conditions in the state. This year Butler grew 4,100 acres of M206, a medium-grain rice popular among growers in the Northstate.
During the two most previous seasons, Butler was able to plant 2,900-3,000 acres because of water restrictions.
Josh Sheppard, who grows rice in partnership with family members in the northern growing region of Butte County, likewise was able to plant all of his acreage – about 3,000 acres to rice - because of better water conditions. He finished harvest just ahead of the late-October storm that dumped several inches of rain on Northern California.
Sheppard grows three varieties of medium-grain rice – M105M205 and M206. He also produces rice for certified seed production. He was fortunate, he admits, as he harvested before the big rains hit.
According to the National Weather Service, Sacramento, Calif. reported 420 percent of normal rainfall for the month of October. California’s rice-growing region recorded rainfall amounts in excess of 200 percent of normal during the same month.
Aside from the water restrictions of recent years, rice growers also dealt with what Cass Mutters, rice specialist with the University of California Cooperative Extension in Butte County ,called “a biblical infestation” of armyworm last year that, for some growers, was still around this year, albeit in reduced numbers.
Sheppard says he did not have the worm pressure this year that he saw last year.
Mutters suspects that along with reduced armyworm numbers, growers likely used the lessons learned from last year to start early with well-timed insecticide applications to help control armyworm populations.
Growers also had to contend with issues surrounding blast and stem rot, according to Mutters.
Mutter says growers who harvested early tended to have higher quality rice, compared to those who harvested later. The weather had much to do with quality of the later harvest. He suspects this year’s overall rice harvest could be somewhat lower quality than last year’s crop because of the near-perfect weather growers experienced during last year’s harvest.
For Sheppard, his rice quality this year ranged from what he terms “normal” to high.
The price paid for rice has been another challenge for California farmers. Sheppard says rice prices to the grower remain at or below the cost of production.
On the flip side, the availability of water for the crop and for rice straw decomposition was a bright spot for growers. The added benefit of flooding fields shortly after harvest is the return of migratory birds which blanket rice fields with millions of waterfowl and raptors throughout the winter months.
For Sheppard, the use of “decomp” water, as it’s called, allows him to participate in Natural Resource Conservation Service and Nature Conservancy programs that tend to be a win-win for rice growers and nature.
Most of California’s rice crop – over 500,000 acres of it – is medium grain varieties. Short grain varieties (or Sushi rice, as some call it) command about 45,000 acres of farmland with the remainder in long-grain varieties.

Wild rice changes the game for stuffing

By Melissa D'Arabian, Associated Press
UPDATED:   11/02/2016 06:53:43 AM EDT


We all have our favorite winter dishes and mine is stuffing -- or dressing, technically, since I don't stuff it in a turkey.
The classic flavors lull me into feeling like I'm in white-capped mountains, even though I live in sunny San Diego. Rosemary, sage, thyme, dried cranberries and a little sausage work winter-wonderland magic for me.
My oldest daughter is also a fan. She is also gluten intolerant. For several years, I simply made my holiday dressing with dried gluten-free bread cubes, but we wanted other options that didn't involve fussing with gluten-free breads whose texture can be unpredictable in a dressing recipe. This Wild Rice Holiday Stovetop Dressing fits the bill.
It has all the classic taste of my grandma's holiday stuffing and it's pulled together in under 30 minutes in one pan on the stove. One link of turkey sausage is enough to add flavor and richness, so this dish is comforting without being overly heavy. Typical holiday herbs -- rosemary, thyme and sage -- can be dried or fresh, so use whatever you are buying for the rest of your meal.
Cubed butternut squash adds a touch of color, sweetness and vitamins -- feel free to change up the squash/rice ratio and add more if you want a more veg-leaning side. A small sprinkling of dried cranberries and pecans completes the holiday touch. But, feel free to serve this dish anytime -- it's a perfect complement to any grilled or roasted meat or fish.
Advertisement
Wild Rice Stovetop Dressing
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 link sweet Italian turkey sausage, casing removed
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped yellow onion
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup butternut squash cubes
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme, or 1 teaspoon fresh thyme, chopped
1/2 teaspoon dried rubbed sage, or 1 teaspoon fresh sage, chopped
1 teaspoon dried rosemary, or 2 teaspoons fresh chopped rosemary
1 1/4 cup wild rice blend (usually wild rice and basmati mixed)
3/4 cup chicken or turkey broth
3/4 cup water
1/4 cup dried cranberries
1/4 cup chopped toasted pecans
salt and pepper
Cook the sausage in the olive oil in a large saucepan over medium high heat, until meat is golden, about 4 minutes. Add in the celery and onion and cook until softened, about 3 more minutes. Add the garlic, squash cubes, herbs and rice blend and saute for 1 minute. Add the broth and water, and raise temperature to high and bring to a boil.
Once boiling, stir the rice once, and then cover and reduce the temperature to low and allow to simmer gently, covered tightly, for 15 minutes. Turn off the heat, toss in the dried cranberries (quickly covering again) and let sit covered tightly for 5 minutes. Remove the lid, stir, taste for seasoning, add toasted pecans and serve.
Nutrition information (per serving): 314 calories; 80 calories from fat; 9 g fat (1 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 4 mg cholesterol; 554 mg sodium; 58 g carbohydrate; 6 g fiber; 8 g sugar; 7 g protein

Nagpur Foodgrain Prices Open- Nov 02

 
Nagpur Foodgrain Prices - APMC/Open Market-November 3
 
Nagpur, Nov 3 Gram prices moved down in Nagpur Agriculture Producing and Marketing
Committee (APMC) auctions on poor demand from local millers amid high moisture content arrival.
Easy condition in Madhya Pradesh gram prices also affected sentiment. Non-availability of
labourers also affected trading activity, according to sources.
 
    FOODGRAINS & PULSES
 
    GRAM
    * Gram varieties ruled steady in open market here on poor demand from local traders 
      amid ample stock in ready position.    
 
     TUAR
   * Tuar gavarani reported higher in open market on good seasonal demand from local 
     traders amid tight supply from producing region.
 
   * Batri dal showed weak tendency in open market here on poor demand from local traders 
     amid good supply from producing belt.
                                         
   * In Akola, Tuar New - 6,300-6,400, Tuar dal (clean) - 10,800-11,700, Udid - 
     9,700-10,000, Udid Mogar (clean) - 11,400-11,700, Moong - 
     6,100-6,300, Moong Mogar (clean) 6,800-7,200, Gram - 9,000-9,500, 
     Gram Super best bold - 12,400-12,700 for 100 kg.
 
   * Wheat, rice and other commodities moved in a narrow range in scattered deals, 
     settled at last levels.  
 
       
 Nagpur foodgrains APMC auction/open-market prices in rupees for 100 kg
    
     FOODGRAINS                 Available prices     Previous close   
     Gram Auction                6,000-8,600         6,000-9,000
     Gram Pink Auction            n.a.           2,100-2,600
     Tuar Auction                n.a.                5,400-6,000
     Moong Auction                n.a.                6,400-6,600
     Udid Auction                n.a.           4,300-4,500
     Masoor Auction                n.a.              2,600-2,800
     Gram Super Best Bold            12,600-13,100        12,600-13,100
     Gram Super Best            n.a.            n.a.
     Gram Medium Best            11,900-12,200        11,900-12,200
     Gram Dal Medium            n.a.            n.a
     Gram Mill Quality            10,300-10,600        10,300-10,600
     Desi gram Raw                10,000-10,200       10,000-10,200
     Gram Yellow                 13,400-13,800        13,400-13,800
     Gram Kabuli                13,800-15,100        13,800-15,100
     Gram Pink                        13,100-13,600        13,100-13,600    
     Tuar Fataka Best-New             11,500-12,000        11,500-12,000
     Tuar Fataka Medium-New        10,900-11,200        10,900-11,200
     Tuar Dal Best Phod-New        9,500-10,200        9,500-10,200
     Tuar Dal Medium phod-New        8,500-9,000        8,500-9,000
     Tuar Gavarani New             6,700-6,800        6,600-6,700
     Tuar Karnataka             6,800-6,950        6,800-6,950
     Tuar Black                 11,900-12,400        11,900-12,400 
     Masoor dal best            6,400-6,500        6,400-6,500
     Masoor dal medium            6,000-6,200        6,000-6,200
     Masoor                    n.a.            n.a.
     Moong Mogar bold (New)        6,700-7,100         6,700-7,100
     Moong Mogar Medium            6,200-6,500        6,200-6,500
     Moong dal Chilka            6,100-6,400        6,100-6,400
     Moong Mill quality            n.a.            n.a.
     Moong Chamki best            6,400-7,000        6,400-7,000
     Udid Mogar best (100 INR/KG) (New) 11,000-12,100       11,000-12,100 
     Udid Mogar Medium (100 INR/KG)    9,500-10,500        9,500-10,500    
     Udid Dal Black (100 INR/KG)        7,300-7,600        7,300-7,600     
     Batri dal (100 INR/KG)        6,300-6,700        6,400-6,800
     Lakhodi dal (100 INR/kg)          4,700-4,900         4,600-4,800
     Watana Dal (100 INR/KG)            2,800-2,900        2,800-2,900
     Watana White (100 INR/KG)           3,400-3,600           3,400-3,600
     Watana Green Best (100 INR/KG)    4,000-4,500        4,000-4,500   
     Wheat 308 (100 INR/KG)        1,900-2,000        1,900-2,000
     Wheat Mill quality (100 INR/KG)    1,950-2,050        1,950-2,050   
     Wheat Filter (100 INR/KG)         1,750-1,950        1,750-1,950
     Wheat Lokwan best (100 INR/KG)    2,250-2,450        2,250-2,450    
     Wheat Lokwan medium (100 INR/KG)   1,950-2,250        1,950-2,250
     Lokwan Hath Binar (100 INR/KG)    n.a.            n.a.
     MP Sharbati Best (100 INR/KG)    3,300-4,000        3,300-4,000    
     MP Sharbati Medium (100 INR/KG)    2,400-3,000        2,400-3,000           
     Rice BPT best New(100 INR/KG)    2,800-3,250        2,800-3,250    
     Rice BPT medium (100 INR/KG)        2,300-2,650        2,300-2,650    
     Rice Luchai (100 INR/KG)         2,200-2,500        2,200-2,500
     Rice Swarna best (100 INR/KG)      2,100-2,450        2,100-2,450   
     Rice Swarna medium (100 INR/KG)      1,800-2,000        1,800-2,000   
     Rice HMT best New (100 INR/KG)    3,450-3,800        3,450-3,800    
     Rice HMT medium (100 INR/KG)        2,600-3,000        2,600-3,000    
     Rice Shriram best New(100 INR/KG)    4,200-4,500        4,200-4,500 
     Rice Shriram med New(100 INR/KG)    3,800-4,100        3,800-4,100   
     Rice Basmati best (100 INR/KG)    8,700-13,300        9,000-13,500     
     Rice Basmati Medium (100 INR/KG)    6,300-7,800        6,500-8,000    
     Rice Chinnor best New(100 INR/KG)    5,300-5,600        5,300-5,600    
     Rice Chinnor med. New (100 INR/KG)    4,900-5,100        4,900-5,100    
     Jowar Gavarani (100 INR/KG)        1,900-2,200        1,900-2,200    
     Jowar CH-5 (100 INR/KG)         1,700-1,850        1,700-1,850
 
WEATHER (NAGPUR)  
Maximum temp. 31.7 degree Celsius (89.1 degree Fahrenheit), minimum temp.
17.90 degree Celsius (62.6 degree Fahrenheit)
Humidity: Highest - n.a., lowest - n.a.
Rainfall : Nil
FORECAST: Partly cloudy sky. Maximum and minimum temperature would be around and 32 and 16
degree Celsius respectively.
 
Note: n.a.--not available
(For oils, transport costs are excluded from plant delivery prices, but included in market prices)

http://in.reuters.com/article/nagpur-foodgrain-idINL4N1D42IW


APEDA AgriExchange Newsletter - Volume 1590

Market Watch
Commodity-wise, Market-wise Daily Price on 01-11-2016
Domestic Prices
Unit Price : Rs per Qty
Product
Market Center
Variety
Min Price
Max Price
Rice
1
Dibrugarh (Assam)
Common
2200
2300
2
Manjeri (Kerala)
Other
3000
3900
3
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
2200
2500
Wheat
1
Bonai (Orissa)
Other
1525
1800
2
Umarkhed (Maharashtra)
Other
1500
1600
3
Dibrugarh (Assam)
Other
2350
2450
Guava
1
Bariwala (Punjab)
Other
1700
1700
2
Shillong (Meghalaya)
Other
2800
3200
3
Pune (Maharashtra)
Other
2000
3000
Cauliflower
1
Koraput (Orissa)
Other
1600
1800
2
Chittorgarh (Rajasthan)
Other
2500
3000
3
Barnala (Punjab)
Other
2000
2500

 

 

Rice Prices

as on : 03-11-2016 12:02:02 PM
Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
Price
Current
%
change
Season
cumulative
Modal
Prev.
Modal
Prev.Yr
%change
Rice
Azamgarh(UP)
155.00
-8.28
7950.00
2190
2175
5.54
Kalipur(WB)
92.00
-13.21
8161.00
2300
2350
17.95
Cachar(ASM)
80.00
100
3630.00
2200
2200
-18.52
Srirampur(ASM)
50.00
-37.5
2600.00
3000
3000
0.67
Beldanga(WB)
50.00
4.17
3976.00
2500
2500
11.11
Khatra(WB)
39.00
8.33
1161.00
2500
2500
8.70
Gazipur(UP)
35.00
40
3362.00
2190
2190
8.68
Lakhimpur(UP)
30.00
-25
597.00
2260
2200
2.73
North Lakhimpur(ASM)
13.40
55.81
2102.90
1900
1900
NC
Champadanga(WB)
10.00
-37.5
1255.00
2700
2700
8.87
Dibrugarh(ASM)
9.00
11.11
52.40
2250
2250
-
Mirzapur(UP)
7.50
50
1755.10
2165
2175
9.62
Chandoli(UP)
6.00
50
216.50
2140
2150
13.83
Jeypore(Kotpad)(Ori)
5.00
257.14
273.30
4200
4200
-1.18
Jeypore(Ori)
3.50
2.94
281.10
4100
4100
NC
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/article9299538.ece


Hybrid rice expert plans to promote yield of sea rice

Source:People.cn Published: 2016/11/3 8:18:12

On Nov. 1, Yuan Longping, China's "father of hybrid rice" and academician with the Chinese Academy of Engineering, introduced the prospect of sea rice at the 2016 World Life Science Conference in Beijing. Yuan's target is to increase the yield of sea rice per mu (0.0667 hectares) to 300 kilograms.Yuan explained that the key element of popularizing sea rice is to increase its salt tolerance. There are two main methods of achieving this change: either by grafting the characteristic of salt tolerance or by transplanting the cloned gene of salt tolerance to an existing high-yield breed.

Yuan said that the current yield of semi-wild sea rice per mu is around 100 kilograms. Farmers are less enthusiastic about this variety of rice, as they are unlikely to get back their energy and capital input in terms of irrigation, fertilization and disease prevention. If the yield per mu can reach 300 kilograms, however, farmers would enjoy far greater economic benefits.Previously, Yuan's plan was to expand the yield of sea rice to 200 kilograms per mu within three years at the Sea Rice Research and Development Center, headed by Yuan in Qingdao, Shandong province, according to Xinhua.

As for the prejudice some consumers maintain toward hybrid rice, Yuan explained that yield used to be the top priority, as China had to focus on maintaining an adequate food supply. However, with living standards on the rise, rice cultivation needs to prioritize both quality and quantity

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1015625.shtml


Rice board adjusts rice pledging price to 13,000 baht from 11,525 baht/tonne


BANGKOK: — The Rice Policy and Management Committee or the rice board has agreed to adjust up the pledging price of 2016-17 main crop Hom Mali paddy from 11,525 baht/tonne to 13,000 baht/tonne under the programme to delay the sale of paddy through credit extension to be implemented immediately until February 28.
The five-month programme which will help about two million Hom Mali rice farmers covering an area of 26 million rai will cost the government 20 billion baht in expenditure budget. Under the programme, the Bank of Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives will accept paddy pledged by farmers at a fixed price of 9,500 baht/tonne or 90 percent of market price estimated at 11,000 baht/tonne. On top of that, farmers will receive 2,000 baht/tonne for quality improvement fee plus 1,500 baht/tonne for storage fees for farmers who have their own barns to store the pledged paddy with the first 1,000 baht to be paid immediately to farmers and the rest to be paid when the paddy is redeemed.   For farmers who do not have their own facility to store paddy, they will receive 9,500 baht/tonne for the paddy plus 2,000 baht/tonne for rice quality improvement fee.
news.thaivisa.com/thailand/rice-board-adjusts-rice-pledging-price-to-13000-baht-from-11525-bahttonne/158169

KANO to harvest 1.2 million tons of rice this year- Ganduje




By Yusha’u A. Ibrahim, Kano | Publish Date: Nov 2 2016 3:33PM


Kano state is expected to produce an estimated 1. 2 million tons of rice this year, the state Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje has said.Ganduje in a statement signed by his Director General on Media and Communication, Alhaji Salihu Tanko Yakasai, said the quantity was equivalent to one sixth of the country’s rice demand.

The governor said this was part of the state’s effort to enhance food sufficiency in the country, saying researchers had estimated that Nigerians eat around 6 million tons rice annually, half of which is being imported.
Dr. Ganduje, who spoke during the launch of this year’s rice harvest programme at Samawa and Kadawa in Garun Mallam local government, added that “with the administrations’ political will and commitment of the farmers, it is envisioned that the state would produce 2 million tons of rice next year”.“Kano has the potential to feed itself and contribute significantly to meeting the nation’s rice requirement. That is why our farmers must take advantage of the ban on importation of rice to boost production locally”, the governor stated.The ban, he maintained, has motivated and opened a new opportunities for local farmers to diversify from subsistence farming to commercial agriculture, emphasizing that the diversification is yielding positive result across the country as many Nigerians have now abandoned imported rice for the local varieties

Hybrid rice expert plans to promote yield of sea rice


2016/11/3 8:18:12
On Nov. 1, Yuan Longping, China's "father of hybrid rice" and academician with the Chinese Academy of Engineering, introduced the prospect of sea rice at the 2016 World Life Science Conference in Beijing. Yuan's target is to increase the yield of sea rice per mu (0.0667 hectares) to 300 kilograms.Yuan explained that the key element of popularizing sea rice is to increase its salt tolerance. There are two main methods of achieving this change: either by grafting the characteristic of salt tolerance or by transplanting the cloned gene of salt tolerance to an existing high-yield breed.

Yuan said that the current yield of semi-wild sea rice per mu is around 100 kilograms. Farmers are less enthusiastic about this variety of rice, as they are unlikely to get back their energy and capital input in terms of irrigation, fertilization and disease prevention. If the yield per mu can reach 300 kilograms, however, farmers would enjoy far greater economic benefits.Previously, Yuan's plan was to expand the yield of sea rice to 200 kilograms per mu within three years at the Sea Rice Research and Development Center, headed by Yuan in Qingdao, Shandong province, according to Xinhua.

As for the prejudice some consumers maintain toward hybrid rice, Yuan explained that yield used to be the top priority, as China had to focus on maintaining an adequate food supply. However, with living standards on the rise, rice cultivation needs to prioritize both quality and quantity

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1015625.shtml


Global Rice Seed Market 2016 Revenue, Manufacturing Cost Structure Analysis, Growth Rate, Specifications

 November 2, 2016  No Comments  Erik jason  Global Rice Seed Market

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