Wednesday, November 02, 2016

2nd November,2016 daily global,regional and local rice e-newsletter by riceplus magazine


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


11/01/2016 Farm Bureau Market Report



            Rice
High
Low
Long Grain Cash Bids
- - -
- - -
Long Grain New Crop
- - -
- - -


Futures:
ROUGH RICE
High
Low
Last
Change
Nov '16
983.0
953.0
960.5
-25.0
Jan '17
1015.5
981.5
988.0
-27.0
Mar '17
1040.0
1009.0
1013.5
-27.0
May '17
1037.5
-27.0
Jul '17
1055.5
-27.5
Sep '17
1064.0
-27.5
Nov '17
1064.0
-27.5
   

Rice Comment

Rice futures continued to plummet today, and November looks headed for a retest of the contract low of $9.40. January has also violated uptrending support over the past week, and could be headed for a retest of the contract low of $9.60. Weekly export sales improved last week, with a total of 79,000 tons sold to foreign buyers. USDA announced yesterday the final marketing year average price of $11.10/cwt for long grain rice, meaning rice farmers will receive a PLC payment of $2.90/cwt on their rice. The southern medium/short grain rice marketing year average price was







           

 
PLC Payment Rates for 2015 Rice Crop Announced  

WASHINGTON, DC -- The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agriculture Statistics Service (NASS) has published the 2015/2016 Market Year Average (MYA) price for long grain and Southern medium/short grain rice varieties. USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA) uses the MYA price to determine whether producers enrolled in the Price Loss Coverage (PLC) program will receive financial assistance for losses tied to the 2015 crop.  The benchmark or reference price is statutorily set at $14.00/cwt for both long grain and Southern medium/short grain rice.  The reference price used for temperate japonica rice by California producers is set at $16.10/cwt. 

California's MYA price is not published by NASS until the end of January.
 Yesterday's Agricultural Prices Report announced that with a MYA price of $11.10/cwt long grain rice will again receive a PLC payment rate of $2.90/cwt.  Also, for the first time since the farm bill was enacted, Southern medium/short grain rice will receive assistance from PLC with a MYA price of $11.20/cwt, resulting in a $2.80/cwt shortfall for eligible medium/short grain acreage. 

Ben Mosely, vice president of government affairs for USA Rice, said, "FSA officials in Washington have confirmed that the process to make payments to eligible growers is underway and that assistance should reach growers over the next few weeks.  We encourage growers to follow-up with their local FSA offices if they're experiencing issues or delays and to let us know if they are unable to get problems resolved."

Mosely said, "PLC is working exactly the way that lawmakers intended it to, it's a simple and straightforward program that growers understand and FSA knows how to deliver.  Price support is the foundation of the farm safety net and hopefully the modest assistance that PLC provides will help keep folks in rice country in business until prices rebound."

Mosely added, "Today is conveniently the first day that producers can visit their local FSA offices to enroll and sign contracts for PLC and the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) programs for the 2017 crop year.  This sign-up window is open until
 August 1of next year but folks should get in there soon while it's fresh on their minds."
USA Rice has developed a
 calculator for producers or financial institutions to incorporate their own data using the MYA price published by NASS to calculate an individual's potential whole-farm payment.  

Wal-Mart Model’ could help advance rice breeding

Oct 31, 2016Forrest Laws  | Delta Farm Press
Dr. Susan McCouch says scientists are discovering a tremendous amount of information about plants, such as rice. But that pales in comparison with what companies like Wal-Mart are discovering about their customers.McCouch says programs such as the “Wal-Mart model,” which collects more data on shopping trends in hours than scientists have collected about the rice plant in decades, could help channel that information into new break-throughs in rice breeding.
Her comments in this last of a three-part series summed up the direction she hopes entities such as the LSU AgCenter’s H. Rouse Caffey Rice Research Station can take rice breeding developments in the coming years. They came at the 100-plus-year-old research facility’s annual field day near Crowley, La.
For more information, visit www.LSUAgCenter.com
http://deltafarmpress.com/rice/wal-mart-model-could-help-advance-rice-breeding





Conventional rice varieties promising in preliminary trials

Oct 31, 2016Ryan McGeeney, University of Arkansas System, Division of Agriculture | Delta Farm Press





Diamond and Titan, conventional long- and medium-grain rice varieties developed by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, should offer strong yields and other advantages to growers, according to preliminary data from this year’s rice performance trials.Jarrod Hardke, Extension rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said each performed well in a difficult growing year.“They both seem to represent further yield improvement over previous releases,” Hardke said.
Diamond showed appreciable yield increases over currently grown long-grain varieties including Roy J and LaKast and CL151, he said, adding that Titan showed particular advantages over other medium-grain varieties such as Jupiter and CL272.
The preliminary data was drawn from two annual small-plot rice trial programs — the Arkansas Rice Performance Trials, or ARPT, in which 75 commercial and experimental rice cultivars were planted and closely monitored by Division of Agriculture researchers at five research locations with varying soil and climate.Of the 75 entries in ARPT, only the lead 23 commercial and experimental entries have been summarized to date. (Find past information on variety testing here: http://www.arkansasvarietytesting.com/home/rice/.)
Rice varieties also go through the Producer Rice Evaluation Program, known as PREP. This year, 20 cultivars were planted by researchers in nine counties. The difference is that in PREP, the cultivars grow in fields managed by a cooperating farmer in the same manner as the rest of the field surrounding the plot.
According to the preliminary ARPT data, the mean yield for Diamond long-grain rice was 197 bushels per acre, and 201 bushels per acre for Titan medium-grain rice. The mean for all cultivars grown at the four research station locations was 186 bushels per acre.
In the PREP trials, Diamond produced a mean yield of 207 bushels per acre, and Titan’s mean yield was 205, bushels per acre. The mean for all cultivars grown at the nine selected private farms was 198 bushels per acre.
 “The PREP trials, are all strictly on-farm, with a more or less ‘plant it and leave it’ approach,” Hardke said. “I don’t dictate anything — we simply plant it, and the growers manage the field as they would manage it anyway.
“We can come back and take notes — we learn as much as we can from it — but the main thing is to come back at harvest and see how all those cultivars perform under those management conditions, in a particular geography,” he said.
Hardke said XL753, a RiceTec hybrid cultivar developed and marketed by RiceTec, continued to set the bar for yield across the board as it has in recent years, yielding 239 bushels per acre in the ARPT and 242 bushels per acre in PREP. Other RiceTec hybrids also performed extremely well.

Varying climate, soils a challenge

Hardke said the variation in soils and growing conditions throughout Arkansas makes developing reliable recommendations for rice growers across the state a challenge, but one he readily accepts.
“Probably what makes Arkansas so unique as a rice-producing area is that we have a very broad range of production conditions,” Hardke said. “We have production areas similar to the Bootheel of Missouri, the Mississippi Delta, northeast Louisiana, in addition to many other production areas that are completely unique to us.
“So when we try to move to these on-farm trials and make sure we’re capturing all these different areas of the state and different production practices — there’s a lot of variability to try to capture, from different environments and production practices.”
Despite the positive data, Hardke cautioned interested growers to exercise prudence in adopting any new cultivar.

No silver bullets

“These trials give us a lot of information — but we’re cautious and conservative about making anything out to be a silver bullet.” Hardke said.
“I always remind everyone — you try a new variety,” he said. “Because whatever information we didn’t know about it, we typically learn in ‘year one,’ once it’s commercially available and planted in large fields, on a wider acreage, in some environments that we may not have had an opportunity to test in. And that first year is when we find these things out, so I always recommend that people don’t get carried away.”
Hardke will continue to release additional preliminary data from the 2016 trials as it becomes available, until December, when the Division of Agriculture will publish its final findings from the trials.
http://deltafarmpress.com/rice/conventional-rice-varieties-promising-preliminary-trials




The drugs and additives in New Zealand food products

RACHEL CLAYTON



Farmed salmon are fed pellets to make their flesh pink.
Salmon is big business in New Zealand - but a popular TV show across the Tasman shocked viewers when it revealed what really gives it an orange colour.The popular Australian show Four Corners revealed farmed salmon in the country is coloured orange from a diet of pellets that contain an additive.And manufacturers are not required to declare to consumers if salmon is farmed or wild, and therefore if it contains additives. Here's some unexpected ingredients involved in the production of New Zealand food products.
Salmon
Just like our friends across the Tasman, salmon farms in New Zealand use pellets containing the additive astaxanthin to colour the fish pink. 
According to Consumer.org, New Zealand has two major salmon farming players: King Salmon and Sanfords. 
Salmon is meant to be a good source of Omega-3 fatty acids, which are essential for human health.
But testing done by Consumer.org found farmed New Zealand salmon overstated the amounts of Omega-3s claimed in the nutritional information. King Salmon rejected claims it was misleading consumers in 2013
Chicken 
Hormones and antibiotics used in chickens is well known around the world.Managing director of Turks Poultry Ron Turk said earlier this year there were no hormones in New Zealand chicken and there hadn't been for more than 40 years. 
But, antibiotics are mixed into the daily feed or water of around 85 million chickens raised in factory farms in New Zealand every year. This creates antibiotic resistant bacteria and superbugs that can spread to humans.


Chinese food, packet soups, processed meats
We've all heard of MSG - the flavour enhancer that makes you over consume Chinese takeaway meals. 
Well, it's still out there. MSG was first added to Western food in 1948, and is commonly found in Chinese food, packet soups, canned vegetables, and processed meats. Ever since its introduction, there have been reports of reactions, known as the "Chinese restaurant syndrome".
The symptoms may include shortness of breath, heart palpitations, chest pain, or swelling of the lips or throat.
Although there is little convincing scientific evidence to link MSG with this type of reaction, many people have an intolerance to MSG that can result in these symptoms. 
Lemon juice 
Sodium benzoate is a food preservative and protects against yeasts, moulds, and types of bacteria. It's why your lemon juice in the fridge never goes off. 
But, sodium benzonate can react with vitamin C - found in most fruit juices - and form benzene. Benzene has been linked to cancer by the World Health Organisation. It used to be found in Diet Coke until a study linking sodium benzoate to Parkinson's disease lead Coca-Cola to phase it out of its product, according to the Daily Mail.


Rice and spices
A recent investigation by Australia's SBS Punjabi Radio found imported Indian rice and spice contained "worrying" levels of chemicals. Including pesticides, arsenic, lead and even the carcinogen DDT.  
The products are available from leading supermarkets in New Zealand. It found the popular Indian spice brand MDH contains pesticides above the limit specified by Food Standards Australia New Zealand. It also revealed Kohinoor basmati rice contains the banned insecticide buprofezin.
"This investigation exposes potentially harmful contaminants that may be present in foods that Australians consume on the mistaken assumption that all foods sold in the country comply with strict quality standards," says SBS Punjabi Radio executive producer Manpreet Kaur Singh


APEDA AgriExchange Newsletter - Volume 1588



Market Watch
Commodity-wise, Market-wise Daily Price on 29-10-2016
Domestic Prices
Unit Price : Rs per Qty
Product
Market Center
Variety
Min Price
Max Price
Maize
1
Derol (Gujarat)
Other
1420
1430
2
Bichhiya (Madhya Pradesh)
Other
1365
1365
3
Hardoi (Uttar Pradesh)
Other
1300
1380
Paddy(Dhan)
1
Jajpur (Orissa)
Other
1410
1470
2
Kaithal (Haryana)
Other
1510
1650
3
Memari (West Bengal)
Fine
1520
1570
Orange
1
Batala (Punjab)
Other
3000
4000
2
Nagpur (Maharashtra)
Other
1000
2500
3
Ratia (Haryana)
Other
2500
2500
Cabbage
1
Palayam (Kerala)
Other
950
1050
2
Satara (Maharashtra)
Other
600
800
3
Barnala (Pun





Thai govt extends new rice scheme to farmers

 
BANGKOK, 31 Oct 2016:

Thailand’s rice management committee today said it will offer loans worth US$1 billion to jasmine rice farmers struggling with falling prices – on a condition that they store the grain for six months to slow down market supply.
The new rice harvest season is currently underway in Thailand, the world’s second-biggest rice exporter, and the Southeast Asian nation expects output of the grain for the 2016/17 production year to come in at 25 million tonnes.
Prices for jasmine rice, Thailand’s highest quality rice, have tumbled to their lowest level in years, leaving the military government scrambling to appease the country’s farmers.

The 35.8 billion baht ($1.02 billion) loan scheme, which will be implemented by Thailand’s state-owned Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives (BAAC), is aimed at curbing an oversupply of jasmine rice in the market and stabilising prices, said commerce minister Apiradee Tantraporn.“If we can push up prices of jasmine rice, prices of other rice varieties will go up too,” Apiradee said at a news conference in Bangkok on Monday.The loans will be provided to two million farm households to hold on to their jasmine rice stocks for six months, said Supat Eawchai, the bank’s assistant manager.

The government will follow up with other measures to help improve rice prices, Apiradee said.Prices for Thai 100% jasmine rice were quoted at US$725 per tonne, FOB Bangkok, on Friday. It was the lowest since hitting US$710 a tonne in January 2008, according to Reuters data.Thai jasmine rice made up 25% of Thailand’s total rice exports from January to August this year, according to data from the Thai Rice Exporters Association.The commerce ministry said this month its rice export push for the last quarter of 2016 will help support Thai rice prices during the annual harvest period.Bernama reported that the Thai government has agreed to buy rice from
farmers affected by the current low market price of the commodity.

Under a scheme targeted initially at the “Thai Hom Mali” (Thai Jasmine) rice farmers, Apiradee said the government would buy the rice at two different prices – 11,525 baht (1 baht=RM0.12) per tonne and 10,995 baht per tonne.
“The price of 11,525 baht a tonne will be for rice farmers who have silo facilities and 10,995 baht a tonne for those without silo facilities.”Households with 10-rai (hectares) paddy field are eligible for the scheme, with the government targeting to purchase up to two million tonnes of Thai Jasmine rice under the programme, she said.The scheme is effective tomorrow and will be gradually extended to other types of rice.The Thai Rice Exporters Association said the country exported 6.86 million tonnes of rice during the first nine months of the year worth 108 billion baht.President Charoen Laothamatas said the volume for the period was an increase of 3.7% from the same corresponding period last year.He said Thailand shipped 790,000 tonnes of rice in September which was a growth of 9.9% year-on-year, citing African countries’ resumption of imports to refill their diminishing stock as the factor behind the increase


http://www.therakyatpost.com/business/2016/10/31/thai-govt-extends-new-rice-scheme-to-farmers/

Conventional rice varieties promising in preliminary trials

Oct 31, 2016 Ryan McGeeney, University of Arkansas System, Division of Agriculture | Delta Farm Press
Extension Rice Agronomist Jarrod Hardke, right, with microphone, addresses growers at a Greene County Produce Rice Evaluation Program, or PREP, field during a county field day in July. (U of A System Division of Agriculture image by Dave Freeze)
Diamond and Titan, conventional long- and medium-grain rice varieties developed by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, should offer strong yields and other advantages to growers, according to preliminary data from this year’s rice performance trials.
Jarrod Hardke, Extension rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture, said each performed well in a difficult growing year.
“They both seem to represent further yield improvement over previous releases,” Hardke said.
Diamond showed appreciable yield increases over currently grown long-grain varieties including Roy J and LaKast and CL151, he said, adding that Titan showed particular advantages over other medium-grain varieties such as Jupiter and CL272.

The preliminary data was drawn from two annual small-plot rice trial programs — the Arkansas Rice Performance Trials, or ARPT, in which 75 commercial and experimental rice cultivars were planted and closely monitored by Division of Agriculture researchers at five research locations with varying soil and climate.Of the 75 entries in ARPT, only the lead 23 commercial and experimental entries have been summarized to date. (Find past information on variety testing here: http://www.arkansasvarietytesting.com/home/rice/.)
Rice varieties also go through the Producer Rice Evaluation Program, known as PREP. This year, 20 cultivars were planted by researchers in nine counties. The difference is that in PREP, the cultivars grow in fields managed by a cooperating farmer in the same manner as the rest of the field surrounding the plot.
According to the preliminary ARPT data, the mean yield for Diamond long-grain rice was 197 bushels per acre, and 201 bushels per acre for Titan medium-grain rice. The mean for all cultivars grown at the four research station locations was 186 bushels per acre.
In the PREP trials, Diamond produced a mean yield of 207 bushels per acre, and Titan’s mean yield was 205, bushels per acre. The mean for all cultivars grown at the nine selected private farms was 198 bushels per acre.
“The PREP trials, are all strictly on-farm, with a more or less ‘plant it and leave it’ approach,” Hardke said. “I don’t dictate anything — we simply plant it, and the growers manage the field as they would manage it anyway.
“We can come back and take notes — we learn as much as we can from it — but the main thing is to come back at harvest and see how all those cultivars perform under those management conditions, in a particular geography,” he said.
Hardke said XL753, a RiceTec hybrid cultivar developed and marketed by RiceTec, continued to set the bar for yield across the board as it has in recent years, yielding 239 bushels per acre in the ARPT and 242 bushels per acre in PREP. Other RiceTec hybrids also performed extremely well.

Varying climate, soils a challenge

Hardke said the variation in soils and growing conditions throughout Arkansas makes developing reliable recommendations for rice growers across the state a challenge, but one he readily accepts.
“Probably what makes Arkansas so unique as a rice-producing area is that we have a very broad range of production conditions,” Hardke said. “We have production areas similar to the Bootheel of Missouri, the Mississippi Delta, northeast Louisiana, in addition to many other production areas that are completely unique to us.
“So when we try to move to these on-farm trials and make sure we’re capturing all these different areas of the state and different production practices — there’s a lot of variability to try to capture, from different environments and production practices.”
Despite the positive data, Hardke cautioned interested growers to exercise prudence in adopting any new cultivar.

No silver bullets

“These trials give us a lot of information — but we’re cautious and conservative about making anything out to be a silver bullet.” Hardke said.
“I always remind everyone — you try a new variety,” he said. “Because whatever information we didn’t know about it, we typically learn in ‘year one,’ once it’s commercially available and planted in large fields, on a wider acreage, in some environments that we may not have had an opportunity to test in. And that first year is when we find these things out, so I always recommend that people don’t get carried away.”
Hardke will continue to release additional preliminary data from the 2016 trials as it becomes available, until December, when the Division of Agriculture will publish its final findings from the trials
http://deltafarmpress.com/rice/conventional-rice-varieties-promising-preliminary-trials






In Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, floods mean good news for farmers (photos)
TUOI TRE NEWS
Updated : 11/01/2016 16:16 GMT + 7
A fisherman net-fishes in a flooded rice field in An Giang Province, located in southern Vietnam.
Tuoi Tre
PrevNext

Flooding is not necessarily a bad thing. For farmers in the Mekong Delta in southern Vietnam, having their rice fields flooded after a long drought is more than good news.
Thousands of farmers who earn a living by catching seafood in An Giang and Dong Thap Provinces are happy to see the floods back, as they bring along new sources of marine life.Local residents said there was no flooding this time last year, and they had started to worry that the situation would be no better this year.However, to their surprise, the water levels started to rise around a month ago, with floodwaters overflowing into paddy fields.The flooding spells good news for Mekong Delta farmers as it brings fish, crabs, shrimp and other aquatic animals from upstream, which all become lucrative sources of income.
This year’s flooding was the icing on the cake as it comes after the region was hit by a severe drought.In rice fields across An Giang and Dong Thap these days, people are spotted busily catching seafood, and local markets have also experienced more lively trading.
Tran Ngoc Bich, a farmer in An Giang, said local residents had received poor yields from growing rice in the last few years, so they all looked forward to the flood season when they could draw an income from catching fish and shrimp.
“Now that the rice fields are flooded and full of seafood, we are all excited,” she told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper while selling her newly caught fish at a local market.
Below are some photos of the current flood season in the Mekong Delta taken by Tuoi Tre.

Locals bring their newly caught seafood to sell at makeshift markets along the street.

At a makeshift seafood market in Dong Thap

A boy removes newly caught fish from a net.

Fishermen during a net-fishing trip in An Giang.

Two boys help their parents classify newly caught crabs in An Giang.

A man wears a big smile after a big haul of fish in An Giang.

The flooding also provides an abundant source of food for the this man’s flock of ducks in An Giang.
http://tuoitrenews.vn/society/37804/in-vietnams-mekong-delta-floods-mean-good-news-for-farmers-photos


Indonesia's 2016 rice output may rise to 79.14 mln-agriculture min


10/31/2016
JAKARTA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Indonesia's agriculture ministryofficial said on Tuesday, unmilled rice production in 2016 mayrise to 79.14 million tonnes, up from 75.40 million tonnes last
year.
Corn production this year may rise to 23.16 million tonnes,up from 19.61 million tonnes, while soybean output is expectedto fall to 885,580 tonnes in 2016, down from 963,180 tonnes theyear before.
(Reporting by Bernadette Christina Munthe; Writing by Fransiska
Nangoy; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
http://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/indonesias-2016-rice-output-may-rise-to-7914-mln-agriculture-min




BD, Thailand to sign MoU on rice trade

Dhaka agreed in principle to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Bangkok in order to import up to one million metric tons of standard rice from Thailand per year on government to government basis, reports BSS. The import of Thai rice would, however, depend on production level each year in both countries and at the level of international price, said a handout of the ministry of food here today.Food Minister Advocate Mohammad Quamrul Islam, now on a four-day visit to Thailand, reached the understanding when he held a bilateral meeting with Thai Minister for Commerce Apiradi Tantraporn at her Bangkok office.
"Thailand considers Bangladesh as an important trade partner in South Asia," said Apiradi at the meeting, where Advocate Quamrul called for more trade concessions from Thailand as a reflection of warm relations between the two countries. Bangladesh Ambassador to Thailand Saida Muna Tasneem was present. Advocate Quamrul appreciated Thailand's announcement of 'Duty-Free Quota-Free (DFQF)' access of 6998 products from the least developed countries (LDCs) that include Bangladesh and proposed that Thailand would continue to review more favourable tariff structure for Bangladesh in near future.
The two ministers also agreed to hold the 4th meeting of the Joint Trade Committee (JTC) in Dhaka at a mutually convenient time this year. During the meeting the entire gamut of bilateral trade relations is expected to be reviewed and the proposed MoU on rice trade be signed. Thai commerce minister indicated that a large private delegation would accompany her during her visit to Dhaka for the JTC. Both sides also agreed that it was important to hold the JTC meeting regularly in each year to promote trade and businesses between the two countries.
Advocate Quamrul Islam held a separate meeting with Thai Minister of Agriculture and Cooperatives on Monday. They agreed to enhance bilateral cooperation in agriculture, particularly in food sector
http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2016/11/01/51515/BD,-Thailand-to-sign-MoU-on-rice-trade


Dry season: RIFAN targets production of 700,000 tonnes of rice in Kano

Posted by Popoola Babalola on October 31, 2016 in Business, Economy | Leave a response
The association said the target will be achieved on the platform of Central Bank of Nigeria’s Anchor Borrowers Programme, in collaboration with the Kano State Government


The Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria, Kano Chapter says it is targeting the production of 700,000 tonnes of rice during this the 2016 dry season farming.The association said the target will be achieved on the platform of Central Bank of Nigeria’s Anchor Borrowers Programme, in collaboration with the Kano State Government.
The Chairman of the association in Kano, Alhaji Abubakar Haruna, said this on Monday during the inauguration of 2016 rice harvest in Kadawa village in Kura Local Government Area.Haruna said more than 9,960 farmers in the state participated in the programme to achieve the targeted quantity.The chairman said that the association would monitor and also work closely with officials of CBN, Bank of Agriculture and state officials to ensure the success of the programme.

Earlier, Governor Abdullahi Ganduje, who said the state government was committed to boosting agricultural production, also commended the Federal Government for its efforts in developing agriculture in the country.
The governor also visited rice and wheat farms in Garum Mallam and Kura Local Government Areas respectively.He added that the number of combine harvesters would also be increased to boost rice and wheat farming in the state.A cross section of the farmers expressed determination to ensure the success of the initiative and solicited for full support from the government and banks


.http://theeagleonline.com.ng/dry-season-rifan-targets-production-of-700000-tonnes-of-rice-in-kano/

Army to buy rice directly from farmers

Army commander-in-chief Gen Chalermchai Sitthisat said today that the Army will cooperate with local administration officials to probe into the problems farmers are currently facing and may buy rice directly from farmers' cooperatives. He said the Army will look into all facts related to the farmers’ problems and will  seek cooperation from millers who remain selfish or have hidden motives.He would ask them if they could sacrifice a bit to help farmers, while the Army may also help to buy rice directly from mills owned by farmers’ cooperatives.
This would be discussed in details, he said.He said soldiers might also help farmers to harvest their crops in areas where there are problems of harvesting.The government is now trying its best to help farmers, saying he believed national politicians might not be behind the price drop, but it might be those local politicians who have conflict of interest.The army chief  appealed for all sides to cooperate, adding that now the country has only one colour or black and hoped all could cooperate to struggle through the current crisis.

Rice crisis back to haunt govt


BY EDITORON 2016-11-02THAILAND
Rice crisis back to haunt junta
By The Nation

The current govt has failed to learn lessons from disastrous short-term, politically motivated policies of its predecessors
 BANGKOK: — The government has launched a plan to help out rice farmers with Bt35.9 billion in “soft” loans at a lowly 3 per cent interest.The market price for Hom Mali (Jasmine) paddy has now dropped to Bt9,700 per tonne, from Bt12,000 previously.Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has sought to alleviate pressure on his government by accusing local politicians and rice millers of collaborating to suppress the price.
 He went as far as to suggest that collaboration was motivated by a political desire to damage ties between the government and farmers, and proposed that a law be enacted to punish the “evil” middlemen.http://news.thaivisa.com/thailand/thai-editorial-rice-crisis-back-to-haunt-govt/158171/



PTT Plc to open petrol stations for farmers to sell rice directly to consumers

By Thai PBS
November 2, 2016
 
PTT Public Company will open all its petrol stations throughout the country to allow rice farmers to sell their crops directly to the consumers free of charge, said CEO and president Mr Thewin Wongwanich on Tuesday.He said that PTT Plc was ready to support the government’s effort to help rice farmers to tackle the problem of rice price slump.
Farmers, farmer groups, farmer’s cooperatives or community rice millers who are interested to sell rice at PTT’s petrol stations can contact petrol stations in their respective provinces.Mr Thewin further said that PTT would coordinate with its business networks and farmer’s groups to bring rice to PTT’s head office to be sold to staff members, officials and members of the public.Also, PTT will buy rice from farmers to be given as New Year’s gifts.

http://www.pattayamail.com/thailandnews/ptt-plc-open-petrol-stations-farmers-sell-rice-directly-consumers-153794


Government tries to stem declining rice prices

 Eleven 
Writer: Nilar
Workers unloading rice bags at Wardan in Yangon.
 In a bid to solve declining rice prices, the government plans to buy rice from farmers at an inflated price, according to the Myanmar Rice Federation.The committee which was formed under the Law of Protection and Promotion of Farmers Interests will implement the plan in cooperation with the commerce ministry and state and regional governments, said Dr Soe Tun, vice president of the MRF.The price of monsoon rice per 100 baskets has declined from Ks 500,000 to Ks 350,000 after the 2015-2016 fiscal year.
Rice exports have also declined this year. The falling prices are linked to surplus and lower demand. The commerce ministry is making efforts to obtain rice export contracts with other nations.Myanmar Agribusiness Public Corporation, formed by the MRF, plans to import dryers in order to provide dryer services at rice mills. Under this plan, members of the MRF, exporters, and rice millers will buy rice from farmers, and the government will increase its rice export volume.  In the 2016-2017 fiscal year, the country earned over US$145 million from rice exports to 33 countries, of which, 85 percent went to China, according to customs department figures. Myanmar generated over $123 million in rice exports to China, $7.164 million via a sea routes and over $115 million over land.
http://www.elevenmyanmar.com/business/6398

Grain processing facilities launched in Jinja, Masindi


If Uganda continues at this pace, there is no doubt that we shall become a middle income country."

Agriculture state minister Christopher Kibazanga (right) took a tour of Upland Rice Millers. (Credit: Prossy Nandudu)

The Ministry of Agriculture Animal Industry and Fisheries (MAAIF) with support from the South Korean government has launched two pilot model grain processing facilities in the districts of Masindi and Jinja.
These will work with farmer groups to increase production, add value to it and earn an income hence reduce poverty and food insecurity at household level.While launching the facilities, minister of at state for agriculture Christopher Kibanzanga said the projects are part of government's efforts to add value to agriculture commodities to increase incomes and achieve a middle-income status.

"If Uganda continues at this pace, there is no doubt that we shall become a middle-income country. This will be possible if people make use of such projects in their localities," he said.According to the minister, farmers still face challenges of post-harvest losses due to lack of equipment, capacity and storage facilities and markets."These are being addressed through the pilot models where farmers are linked to processors, to add value, and also help in finding market in addition to trainings on how to make their products better.”

Farmers look at the finished product at Upland. (Credit: Prossy Nandudu)

Jun Young-Suk is the resident representative of Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA), through which the money was channeled. He said Jinja should serve as a success story to other rice growing regions for the model to spread and benefit all farmers."The future of rice production in Uganda will be determined by the success of this establishment. I urge the farmers to work together to produce enough for the establishments," he said.

The maizemill in Masindi is located at AgroVet, a local maize processor, while in Jinja the machinery is at Upland Rice Millers, to take care of surrounding districts into rice production.The project will see farmers working with centers get equipment such as maize shellers, tarpaulins, threshers and moisture meters to boost quality. AgroVet processes four tons of maize per hour. 65% of the grain comes from the three farmer groups.
At Upland the machine processes 120 tons of rice in a day, coming from 30,000 farmers














Vietnam: Rice exports hit 4.2 million tonnes


11/1/2016 
Thai News Service

Vietnam's rice exports in the first ten months of 2016 reached 4.2 million tonnes, earning 1.9 billion USD in revenue, a year-on-year decrease of 21.2 percent in volume and 16.9 percent in value.In October alone, the country earned 164 million USD from shipping 368,000 tonnes of rice abroad.China remained the leading importer of Vietnamese rice in the first three quarters of 2016, accounting for 35.4 percent of market share. Vietnam exported 1.35 million tonnes of rice worth 613.8 million USD to China during the period, down 23 percent in volume and 13.9 percent in value from a year earlier.
A decline has seen in rice exports to other markets like Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, the United States, Ivory Coast and Hong Kong.
However, Vietnam's rice export to Ghana and Indonesia increased strongly. Ghana became Vietnam's second largest rice importer in the first nine months with 387,000 tonnes worth 189.6 million USD, up 41.8 percent in volume and 36.2 percent in value compared to the same period last year.
By the end of September, Indonesia spent 142.5 million USD buying 359,000 tonnes of rice from Vietnam, a 21.5-fold rise in volume and a 22.5-fold increase in value.
Vietnam's rice export to Angola increased 4.4-fold and 3.5-fold in volume and value, respectively.
According to the Vietnam Food Association, domestic businesses have a chance to boost rice exports as the Philippines plans to import 293,100 tonnes of rice from Vietnam to meet food demand during the 2017 between-crop period.-VNA
http://www.world-grain.com/news/news%20home/LexisNexisArticle.aspx?articleid=2671572251


China: Rice market anomaly

Tuesday

Posted Nov 1, 2016 at 12:13 PM
  
That is the global situation, now let's focus on the anomaly that is China's rice market. Production is forecasted to rise one percent to 146.5 million tons while consumption remains flat at 144 million tons. Add imports to the equation and ending stocks are set to rise by 7.2 million tons to 71 million tons or the equivalent of 60 percent of global ending stocks. In other words supplies in the market, not counting carry-in stocks, will exceed consumption by 7.2 million tons, or nearly the size of the 2016 U.S rice crop.
By Jim Guinn / USA Rice Federation
According to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), global rice production declined by 6.65 million tons in 2015/2016, which USDA reports led to reduced consumption of rice in animal feeds and to some extent in food — particularly in India and Thailand. That situation was reversed in the latest USDA forecast with production forecasted to rebound by 11.17 million tons in 2016/2017 to a new record of 482.26 million tons. Ending stocks are forecasted to rise 5.1 million tons to 120.7 million tons or a little more than 25 percent of consumption.
That is the global situation, now let's focus on the anomaly that is China's rice market. Production is forecasted to rise one percent to 146.5 million tons while consumption remains flat at 144 million tons. Add imports to the equation and ending stocks are set to rise by 7.2 million tons to 71 million tons or the equivalent of 60 percent of global ending stocks. In other words supplies in the market, not counting carry-in stocks, will exceed consumption by 7.2 million tons, or nearly the size of the 2016 U.S rice crop.
You need look no further than the recently announced U.S. challenge to rice production subsidy policy in China to understand how this anomaly has arisen. The domestic price guaranteed to the farmer set by the government is significantly higher than the price of rice in nearby countries with exportable supplies of rice. As a result, China has become by a wide margin the largest importer of rice in the world, even though self-sufficient in rice production. In fact, in previous years the "official" import numbers have understated imports by probably a million tons or more that crossed the border from Vietnam unaccounted for and paying no import duty.
Can this trend continue? Simply put, it cannot. China has essentially capped imports at 5.3 million tons, the level agreed to when China joined the World Trade Organization. This Tariff Rate Quota allows this level of imports at a tariff of 1 percent and a 13 percent value added tax (VAT). Continually growing stocks is not sustainable. Either of three things must happen to alleviate the oversupply situation: No. 1 The production subsidies will be reduced to lower the incentive for local production; No. 2 Imports will decline; or No. 3 Rice will be used for industrial processes such as animal feed — a policy adopted by Japan — ethanol or other industrial use.
USA Rice continues to monitor progress toward market access, but at the same time is preparing ground for entering the market by identifying and building relationships with major rice importers through trade servicing activities. USA Rice is also building interest in U.S. rice in China by participating in food shows demonstrating the variety of rice types available from the U.S.
USA Rice is planning trade seminars in China to coincide with when market access is gained, and is also planning to bring major importers to the U.S. for them to get a better understanding of the U.S. rice industry to build confidence in the U.S. as a reliable trading partner with high quality rice to sell.
http://www.stuttgartdailyleader.com/news/20161101/china-rice-market-anomaly




         

BSP backs removal of QR on rice

Philippine Daily Inquirer / 12:34 AM November 02, 2016
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas is backing up moves to remove the import quota on rice.
“It will benefit consumers if you do that. Remove the QR (quantitative restriction) so everyone could import, but we should slap tariff,” BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo told reporters recently.Guinigundo said proceeds from the tariff protection could be spent on improving agricultural infrastructure such as irrigation and drying facilities, and providing better seeding varieties.
 “It could also help improve farm-to-market roads, instead of [the government] just subsidizing farm-gate prices,” Guinigundo added.State-run think tank Philippine Institute of Development Studies was urging a shift from the current import quota regime to tariff protection, pushing a 35-percent tariff on rice when the QR lapses in July next year.The Department of Finance also expressed support for the removal of import restrictions on rice and transferring rice importation to the private sector.
The Department of Agriculture, however, is seeking a grace period of two more years before the QR on rice is removed to give farmers more time to adjust to an expected influx of imports under an open market setup.State planning agency National Economic and Development Authority earlier disclosed the decision of the majority of the country’s economic managers to remove the quota on rice importation, as the government moves to lower the prices of the staple food.
Economic managers were proposing amendments to the decade-old Republic Act No. 8178 or the Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996, which had put the rice import quota in place.In 2014, the World Trade Organization (WTO) allowed the Philippines to extend its QR on rice until June 30, 2017, in a bid to buy more time for local farmers to prepare for free trade in light of the government’s goal of achieving rice self-sufficiency.Since the government imposes a quota on rice imports, domestic prices are vulnerable to shocks arising from meager supply.The QR puts the burden of rice supply and demand to the government, whereas the market forces are being limited by the quota system.
Pundits say importation should be done by the private sector in order to allow market forces to determine prices.The extended QR slaps a 35-percent duty on imported rice under a minimum access volume (MAV) of 805,200 metric tons. Importation outside of the MAV limit are slapped 50 percent.The Philippines’ most favored nation rate—the additional tariff imposed when imported outside of Asean—on the commodity remains at about 40 percent.


http://business.inquirer.net/218113/bsp-backs-removal-of-qr-on-rice



·        

Developing, promoting ‘adlai’ as alternative staple food

Philippine Daily Inquirer / 12:30 AM November 02, 2016
Looking like grass, the adlai plant is easily overlooked in the wild. PhilRice is promoting rice-adlai blend (left photo) as an alternative staple food.
PHOTOS BY DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Filipinos may go crazy if rice suddenly becomes unavailable, but they might not go hungry as the country is blessed with many alternatives for staple food.
Of course, there is corn and root crops like the many varieties of camote (sweet potato). But there is also adlai, a grain-producing perennial plant that is native to Southeast Asia.
The plant is known as Job’s tears in the United States, and also called coixseed, tear grass. Some Catholics may recognize the grain as these are used in making rosaries or prayer beads.
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Herbal supplement
Grown and consumed mainly in provinces like Zamboanga del Sur, Isabela, Batangas, Romblon and the Bicol region, adlai is also known to Filipinos as an herbal supplement used to address inflammation, allergies and even diabetes.
But the Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR), which has a research and development program for adlai which is now on its fifth year, is pushing the commercialization of the grain as food.
BAR director Nicomedes P. Eleazar says the agency is pushing for the strengthening of adlai product development initiatives, value-adding activities and other promotional undertakings.
“(We continue the work) to further intensify the development and promotion of adlai projects, activities, and technologies to help ignite the passion of our farmers in planting adlai, not only for economic reasons but health causes as well,” Eleazar says.
BAR has been coordinating 49 adlay projects implemented through the Department of Agriculture’s  regional field offices, state universities and colleges, and Philippine Center for Postharvest Development and Mechanization, and with the Magsasaka at Siyentipiko para sa Pag-unlad ng Agrikultura.
Across the regions, various adlay products have been developed and are now available to be tapped by the private sector for the mainstream market.
Among these products are the adsoy, gourmix, champorado, 3-in-1 coffee, nutrimeal, herbal coffee mix, breakfast cereal, wine, adlai pop, cracker, cereal bar, and polvoron.
Versatile grain
Since 2010, the DA has been promoting adlay as a staple food under its food security blueprint called the Food Staples Sufficiency Program.
Based on adaptability trials in strategic locations nationwide, the following adlay varieties were identified: the commonly grown gulian, kinampay (ginampay) and pulot (or tapol), as well as the linay, mataslai, agle gestakyan, NOMIARC dwarf, jalayhay, and ag-gey.
Mature adlai grains can be processed, cooked and served steamed just like rice—and as versatile as well. It has a pleasant mild flavor making it a good ingredient in soups and broths.
Also, the adlai grain can be ground into flour and used to make breads, pastas and porridge.
Ground grains can also be roasted and turned into coffee or tea and further processed and fermented into wine.
Feasibility, acceptability
In the meantime, at the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), researchers are exploring the feasibility and consumer acceptability of adlai mixed with rice or rice-adlai blend.“We chose adlai owing to its very similar characteristics with rice,” PhilRice researcher Henry Mamucod said. “True enough, our sensory evaluation showed that rice eaters find rice-adlai blend acceptable.”
Results showed ginampay as the most acceptable variety. Blending it with rice at 50:50 ratio increased the protein composition and the healthy fat content of the blend.While adlai naturally contains lower amount of carbohydrates, the 50:50 ratio of rice-ginampay provided the same amount of energy with that of pure rice. For better aroma, gloss, tenderness, smoothness, and taste without off-odor, PhilRice recommends the rice variety NSIC Rc160 for blending with ginampay.“Combined with NSIC Rc160, ginampay provided the consumer the same eating satisfaction as pure white rice, Mamucod says. “Aside from being an excellent source of carbohydrates, the blend also provides higher nutritional value.

http://business.inquirer.net/218105/developing-promoting-adlai-as-alternative-staple-food



How Blue Moon Acres Farm became a field-grown rice pioneer


Jim and Kathy Lyons first met at a Massachusetts center for macrobiotics. Now their Pennington farm is a model
for growing rice in an environmentally friendly way. (Photo by Ashley Lyons Putman.)

Growing rice in New Jersey sounds, on the face of it, impossible. Even more so when the rice is certified organic and comes in five varieties that pretty much cover the entire spectrum that we cook with, including white, brown, and black; short, medium, and long grain; and specialized for risotto and sushi. But that is exactly what Jim and Kathy Lyons have accomplished at Blue Moon Acres Farm in Pennington.
The first rice crop was harvested in 2014; this fall, Jim Lyons says he just finished harvesting 12,000 pounds from the three acres he planted. One-pound bags of Blue Moon Acres rice are sold at the farm’s own markets in Pennington and Buckingham, Bucks County, and online. But customers can also find them at the Stockton Market, all three McCaffrey’s markets, the Whole Earth Center, and Lucy’s Kitchen & Market. In fact, the rice and other Blue Moon Acres products are also stocked at New York City’s Dean and Deluca and Philadelphia’s Di Bruno Brothers.
Blue Moon Acres first gained notice as a pioneer in the production of microgreens starting back in 1993, soon after the Lyonses had purchased their first farm, in Buckingham. The tiny gourmet greens quickly became the darling of top-tier chefs in New York City and elsewhere. Even decades later, when the rice was introduced, the first customer was the renowned Gramercy Tavern.
Blue Moon Acres rice is field-grown, not in paddies flooded with water. When asked what possessed him to think he could grow premium rice in central New Jersey, Jim Lyons starts at the very beginning of his personal and professional path. “There are a couple of different ways of looking at this. I had an interest in agriculture after I graduated from college,” he says.
After graduating from Lafayette College in Easton, PA, where he had majored in psychology, he went up to Boston. “I was studying Oriental healing and was very close to the point of studying acupuncture, but decided instead to go in the direction of agriculture,” despite, he says a complete lack of background in that area. “I was working in the natural foods industry for a time and I realized, looking at Oriental healing, how important food is.”
That led him ultimately to care about how food is produced. “And a big part of healthy diets seemed to me to include good-quality whole grains. Rice, in particular, is kind of fascinating in that it doesn’t require any additional processes other than cooking. You have to grind wheat into a flour, so in that sense there’s more processing required. With rice, you just husk it and cook it.” Lyons also notes that people who have issues with gluten do not seems to have similar digestive issues with rice.
THE HANDFUL OF RICE GROWERS IN THE NORTHEAST, INCLUDING JIM AND KATHY LYONS, ARE EACH DEVISING THEIR OWN FIELD-GROWN METHOD — ALMOST NEVER PADDY STYLE.
Jim Lyons began experimenting with growing rice 30 years ago, when he and Kathy founded the Buckingham farm. “I got a variety from a friend, Chris Elwell, who’s up in South River Miso Company in Massachusetts. I thought, well if he can grow it up there I should be able to grow it here. It did well, but of course 30 years ago I had no way of husking it or doing anything other than growing it. Kathy was trying to figure out why I was wasting my time messing around growing rice.”
Fast forward to 2007 and the couple added the Pennington farm to their holdings: 63 acres on Willow Creek Road that received its organic certification three years later. Jim was in the process of deciding what crops to grow there when one day he was browsing at Essene, the natural foods market and cafe in Philadelphia. “A magazine cover caught my eye. The story was about Chris Elwell! I was intrigued, contacted him, and asked him if I could get some seed from him. He said, sure, so we started seeding it and each year kept refining our process.” Through Elwell, Lyons connected with rice researchers at Cornell University and other New England rice growers. “I got a sense of, maybe this isn’t such a crazy idea, maybe it can work. So that’s one angle.”
The other angle, Lyons says, has everything to do with Michael Pollan’s 2001 book, “The Botany of Desire.” “What intrigues me is he talks about corn using us to take over the planet and I wondered if rice is interested in taking over the planet, too,” he says. The handful of rice growers in the Northeast, including Lyons, are each devising their own method — almost never paddy style. “While paddy growing has some advantages in rice yield,” he says, “it seems to create conditions for greater absorption of arsenic.”
Alarming levels of arsenic in rice grown both in the U.S. and around the world came to public attention in part when the FDA proposed action to limit the harmful amounts routinely found in infant rice cereal. “Because here we grow dry-land style, we don’t have that issue,” Lyons says. “Our levels have been tested and are very, very low — in some cases undetectable. On the down side, it’s a lot more work.”
Rice, it turns out, is not an aquatic plant. “It merely tolerates the paddy; it doesn’t necessarily thrive in it,” Lyon explains. “The thing with the flooding — aside from issues like what it does to the pH and how nitrogen behaves in soil, etc. — mainly it’s for convenience. But I’m not interested in growing paddy style, I’m trying to figure out how we can do this more efficiently.”
He and his crew have ideas in that regard and are developing equipment for growing and harvesting more efficiently. “If our ideas work, then we might have something of more significance here,” he says.
Despite its price tag of $10 per pound, sales of all Blue Moon Acres rice varieties are brisk. “I was curious to see how the rice would sell when we started at the Stockton Market last year,” Lyons confesses. Turns out, he worried needlessly. Customers — especially, he notes, female customers — immediately began noticing the difference. “Our rice is so fresh! No one really thinks in terms of fresh grain, but I started noticing early on that our brown rice didn’t have a smell attached to it, and I was used to a smell. So I bought a bag of California rice and, sure enough, there’s that smell — and it’s not really a good smell.
People, mainly women, Lyons says, with finely tuned noses noticed that rice often smells bad, like rancid oil. “Come to learn,” says Lyons, “those lipids in the grain are very volatile. Given one humid day, rice can grow rancid — that’s all it takes. Rice is like wheat: you have to remove its protective husk, the rice potentially starts oxidizing, and those oils can start to turn.”
‘PEOPLE ASK WHAT’S IN THE MIX BESIDES THE RICE AND I SAY, WELL, IT’S JUST THE RICE. THEY ARE JUST THAT PLEASANTLY SURPRISED AT THE FLAVOR.’
“We mill our rice every week, sometimes twice a week so it’s always fresh. Every bag has a date on it,” he says. As for storage, “Keep it cool and dry. If you’re going to be hanging onto your rice for a while, put it in a glass jar in your fridge. If you have a warm pantry, sure, basmati moths or grain moths can be flying around and land on it and start laying eggs. So put it in your refrigerator. But really our thinking is, hey, we’re here milling our rice every week, just come and get it as you need it.”
Blue Moon Acres’ certified black-and-tan rice is one of his big sellers. A blend of aromatic brown and black rice, it turns purple when cooked. “It has exceptional texture and flavor,” Lyons says. “People ask what’s in the mix besides the rice and I say, well, it’s just the rice. They are just that pleasantly surprised at the flavor.”
His personal go-to rice is the medium grain brown rice. (Blue Moon Acres also offers long-grain brown rice). “When I sit down for a meal where there’s just rice, beans, and vegetables, or maybe rice with a tofu stir-fry if it’s vegetarian night, it holds its own as the centerpiece of the meal,” he says.
Lyons sampled many rice suitable for risotto and settled on Martelli, a medium-size risotto rice that he says holds onto its firm texture while cooking up to creamy consistency. Lyons, who cooks often, swears it also maintains the perfect texture longer out of the pan than the more widely known arborio, carnaroli, or vialone nano. This past season he also grew and harvested not only sushi rice, but also sweet (glutinous) rice, which is most commonly used to make mochi. He is contemplating growing bomba rice, used for paella, next season.
Jim and Kathy, who have three grown children (the eldest, Ashley Lyons Putman, heads up Blue Moon Acre’s sales and marketing department) met when they were both studying at the Kushi Institute, the educational center for macrobiotics based in Becket, Massachusetts. “Kathy was living down here; I was kind of free floating, wanting to really sink my teeth into something. At the time, I was just trying to figure out what I was doing on the planet and how I can help.”
Asked what led him to his philosophy of farming this way, Lyons, 61, cringes, saying he has worked with so many talented people. (His enterprise currently employs about 60.) But he does credit one of his early teachers with planting the seed. “He said ‘Are you choosing the food you eat or is the food choosing you?’”
Among the other inspirations this widely read farmer cites are: a TED talk titled “Stroke of Insight,” by Jill Bolte Taylor, a neuro-anatomist at Harvard who had a brain hemorrhage and was forced to rely on one side of her brain; the spiritual teacher and author Eckhardt Tolle (“The Power of Now and A New Earth”); David Brooks, the New York Times columnist, for his book “The Road to Character”; and Paul Hawken, the environmentalist.
Lyons points out that his farm equipment uses bio-diesel, that all the farm buildings, including the market, are geothermally heated and cooled, and he is most proud of the new array of solar panels, which went online in October. His dream is that agriculture can wean itself off fossil fuels. “The guys at John Deere are working on electric tractors and Elon Musk is working on electric pickup trucks,” he says by way of example.
“There are people out there who define conventional agriculture as use of land to convert fossil fuels into food. When you stop and think about it, that’s a fairly accurate statement.” He speaks extensively about how chemical fertilizers that feed nitrogen into the soil are destroying the soil’s microbiology. “Unless,” he points out, “you have an organic farm like ours, where you’re relying on soil microbiology to work your nitrogen.” He is hoping to preserve that natural microbiology by “working toward lessening the amount of tillage that we do.”
All the rice is harvested using a small, simple combine. “We either dry it or clean it for use as seed,” he says. “We then clean it further to remove dust, chaff, and sometimes stems and stalks. Then the rice gets dried down to between 12 and 14 percent moisture so that it stores well. Anything more than that you have mold issues.” The rice is then hermetically sealed in bags, where it stays until it’s ready for milling and packaging.
“We’re fortunate in that we have this simple technology,” Lyons says. “We’ve visited rice paddies in Italy and this past summer we visited a farm in the Camargue region of southern France,” he says. “Down the street were massive rice silos The whole area is having salt problems, with brackish water. The water is falling out of the paddies back into the roads. We’re looking to see if we can create something here that environmentally is much less problematic. I’m hopeful!”
http://mercerspace.com/2016/11/01/how-blue-moon-acres-farm-became-a-field-grown-rice-pioneer/


Research delivers insight into the global organic rice industry forecast to 2021 with key companies profile, supply, demand, cost structure, and SWOT analysis

WhaTech Channel: Industrial Market Research
Published: 02 November 2016
Submitted by The Market Reports 
Global Organic Rice Industry 2016 Market Research Report provide the details about Industry Overview and analysis about Manufacturing Cost Structure, Revenue, Gross Margin, Consumption Value and Sale Price, Major Manufacturers, Distributors, Industry Chain Structure, New Project SWOT Analysis with Development Trends and Forecasts 2021.
The Global Organic Rice Industry 2016 Market Research Report is a professional and in-depth study on the current state of the Organic Rice industry. With around 150 tables and figures this report provides key statistics on the state of the industry and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the market.
Development policies and plans are discussed as well as manufacturing processes and Bill of Materials cost structures are also analyzed. This report also states import/export consumption, supply and demand Figures, cost, price, revenue and gross margins.
Companies like Doguet’s Rice, Randallorganic, Sanjeevani Organics, Kahang Organic Rice, Riceselect, Texas Best Organics, Capital Rice, Yinchuan, Urmatt, Vien Phu, Sunrise Foodstuff Jsc, Khaokho Talaypu, Beidahuang, Yanbiangaoli, Jinjian, Huichun Filed Rice, Dingxiang, Heilongjiang Taifeng, Heilongjiang Julong and more are profiled in the terms of product picture, specification, capacity, production, price, cost, gross, revenue, and contact information.

Global Organic Rice Market report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. Upstream raw materials and equipment and downstream demand analysis is also carried out.
The Organic Rice industry development trends and marketing channels are analyzed. Finally the feasibility of new investment projects are assessed and overall research conclusions offered.
Table of Contents:
1 Industry Overview of Organic Rice
2 Manufacturing Cost Structure Analysis of Organic Rice
3 Technical Data and Manufacturing Plants Analysis of Organic Rice
4 Capacity, Production and Revenue Analysis of Organic Rice by Regions, Types and Manufacturers
5 Price, Cost, Gross and Gross Margin Analysis of Organic Rice by Regions, Types and Manufacturers
6 Consumption Volume, Consumption Value and Sale Price Analysis of Organic Rice by Regions, Types and Applications
7 Supply, Import, Export and Consumption Analysis of Organic Rice
8 Major Manufacturers Analysis of Organic Rice
9 Marketing Trader or Distributor Analysis of Organic Rice
10 Industry Chain Analysis of Organic Rice
11 Development Trend of Analysis of Organic Rice
12 New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis of Organic Rice
13 Conclusion of the Global Organic Rice Industry 2016 Market Research Report
The Market Reports 
Category: Market Research ReportsCompany profile: The Market Reports aims to provide the best industry and market reports to a seeker. We are looking forward to a place where we are the one stop destination for all the report seekers irrespective of any country, category, domain, etc. We are always open on call and email (24*7) to your queries and very clean with the business methodology. Since we are dealing with so many Publishers, we can actually give you what suits best in accordance to your requirements.
For more information:
·         www.themarketreports.com/
https://www.whatech.com/market-research/industrial/222741-global-organic-rice-industry-forecast-to-2021-with-key-companies-profile-supply-demand-cost-structure-and-swot-analysis