Thursday, September 27, 2018

27th September ,2018 daily global regional local rice e-newsletter



Rising seas threaten Vietnam’s top rice producer
Viet Nam News/Asia News Network / 06:37 PM September 26, 2018
Description: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/files/2018/09/rice_12.jpg
Rice uploading for export at the Southern Food Company in Hồ Chí Minh City. Saltwater intrusion in 2017 destroyed over 30,455 ha of rice fields in Kiên Giang Province, heavily affecting the country’s rice export. VŨ SINH, VIET NAM NEWS/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
KIEN GIANG, Vietnam — After nearly two decades, Kien Giang Province may lose its position as the country’s leading rice producer.
Because of climate change, Kien Giang province is struggling to maintain its place as Vietnam’s biggest rice producer – a distinction it has held for nearly two decades.
The province is well positioned to produce rice. Located on the coast, in an area in Cuu Long (Mekong Delta) with some of the country’s richest soil, Kien Giang is home to more than 357,000 ha of rice paddies. It produces an average of over four million tonnes of rice each year.
But ever-rising seas have deposited saltwater deeper into the province, contaminating the three key production areas of Long Xuyen Quadrangle, West Hau River and U Minh Thuong and killing off hundreds thousands of hectares of rice over the last few years.
“Climate change is affecting the growth of local agriculture,” said deputy director of the province’s agriculture and rural development department Do Minh Nhut.
He cited drought and the intrusion of saltwater as factors that had damaged more than 56,500 ha of fields in 2016 alone, reducing that year’s yield by more than 481,200 tonnes compared to the previous year.
Saltwater intrusion continued in 2017, destroying over 30,455 ha. Heavy rain and flooding damaged an additional 7,150 ha.
Aquaculture
Agriculture in Kien Giang is not only about rice. As a seaside province, it has developed its aquaculture by focusing on farming shrimp, fish, crabs, and clams.
According to the municipal Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, aquaculture areas have grown steadily since 2015, producing more than 217,000 tonnes of seafood last year.
“Aquaculture has helped increase the value of Kien Giang’s agriculture sector, lifting farmers out of poverty and raising their quality of life,” said department director Nguyen Van Tam.
“However, annual productivity has not yet reached its potential, especially in shrimp farming. One important factor is certainly the negative impact of climate change.”
Tam said prolonged drought and the intrusion of saltwater had cost farmers more than 22,188 ha of shrimp farms in the 2015-2016 season. Similar environmental factors caused the loss of 6,000 ha in 2017 and 10,000 ha so far this year.
With its economy threatened by climate change, Kien Giang is pushing ahead with new irrigation facilities to manage the rapid invasion of saltwater.
The province is investing VND950 billion (US$42.2 million) to finance new sluice gates along the An Bien-An Minh coastal dyke that will prevent saltwater intrusion and retain as much fresh water as possible. The funds will also go towards a massive network of irrigation channels in the Long Xuyen Quadrangle and West Hau River agricultural areas.
Although the province had already invested much of its own money, Kien Giang People’s Committee chairman Pham Vu Hong said it would need more financial support from the central Government to protect its agricultural sector from climate change.

Promising future for rice exporters
VNA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2018 - 19:01:00 PRINT
Description: https://cdnimgen.vietnamplus.vn/t660/Uploaded/wbxx/2018_09_26/rice_export.jpgVietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year after a brief lulling period, said Tran Van Cong, Deputy Director of the Agro Processing and Market Development Authority under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Over the first nine months of the year, Vietnam shipped 4.9 million tonnes of rice abroad, earning 2.5 billion USD, up 22 percent from the same period last year.

Cong said that this is an impressive result, attributing the achievement to the effective rice sector restructuring programme which channels focus on developing high-quality and fragrant rice to bolster exports to choosy markets.

Up to 80 percent of exports now are classified as high-quality rice and sold at more than 500 USD per tonne, he said, adding that market diversification has been a catalyst for Vietnamese rice shipments.

China’s sudden imposition of a 50 percent tariff on rice imports from July affected rice consumption in this market, especially sticky rice. At some points, Chinese traders paid only 380 USD per tonne for sticky rice, compared to the 530-540 USD per tonne at the beginning of the year. However, Vietnamese firms have worked to enhance rice exports to Iraq, the Philippines, Malaysia, the Ivory Coast, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

In particular, the Government’s new Decree No.107/2018/ND-CP, which will take effect from October 1, will remove difficulties and legal barriers for rice exporters to expand foreign markets. Accordingly, rice exporters will no longer be required to own rice storage, paddy milling, and grinding facilities with processing capacities of 5,000 tonnes of rice. In addition, customs procedures will be simplified, creating favourable conditions for enterprises to export more to large consuming markets like China, Europe, Africa, Iraq, Cuba, and the UAE.

In the coming time, purchase demand will pick up in some countries, such as the Philippines which will be needing to import an additional 500,000-800,000 tonnes of rice by the end of this year to refill exhausted reserves and stabilise the domestic rice price.

Chinese enterprises have been working with firms from the Mekong Delta region to seek cooperation in rice trading. Meanwhile, Indonesia and several African countries also hold high demands for rice imports in response to output decline due to floods and storms.

Local firms are seeking ways to boost sticky rice shipments to Indonesia to reduce its dependence on the Chinese market. The move has increased the cost of sticky rice from just below 400 USD per tonne in July and August, to 440 USD per tonne now.

Furthermore, as local firms reduce export costs, Vietnamese rice will gain a competitive edge over that grown in India and Thailand, Cong noted.–VNA 


Thailand sells rice to China for first time in six months

SEPTEMBER 26, 2018 / 9:48 AM /
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BANGKOK, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Thailand’s government on Wednesday said it had sold 100,000 tonnes of rice to China, the first such sale since March.Chinese state-owned food trader COFCO had halted purchases over the last few months due to ample rice supply in the country.
Thailand had previously supplied 500,000 tonnes of rice to China as part of a pledged government-to-government deal for 1 million tonnes of the grain struck in 2015.
The latest purchase of the 5-percent grade of white rice will be shipped next month, supporting local prices, Commerce Minister Sontirat Sontijirawong said in a statement.
“This is also a positive sign that the Chinese market’s demand for Thai rice has returned and China might order more rice in 2018,” he said.Thailand has exported 8.22 million tonnes of rice so far in 2018, almost 3 percent higher than a year earlier. That amount is worth around 134 billion baht ($4.13 billion).
Thailand aims to export 11 million tonnes of rice this year. ($1 = 32.4400 baht) (Reporting by Patpicha Tanakasempipat and Panarat Thepgumpanat Editing by Joseph Radford)

https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL4N1WC1WO

 

Food Innovation is Data Driven  

WASHINGTON, DC -- Journalists, experts, and industry leaders gathered last Friday at the International Food Information Council's Food Innovation Summit to discuss innovations in food technology and trends in consumer demand. Topics ranged from marketing buzzwords to advances in gene editing and blockchain, and discussion largely revolved around consumer trust in the agriculture industry.

Panelists tackled difficult questions about how to communicate effectively with the public in a world of rapid scientific advancements and rampant misunderstandings when it comes to labels like "natural" and "GMO."

"The consumer has multiple definitions of freshness, and natural, and healthy, and unprocessed, so there's multiple ways to reach them based on what their perceptions are," said Samantha Cassetty, a nutritionist and food columnist with NBC. "We have to come up with the solutions for letting people know where their food is coming from and create these authentic stories for them."

A central theme of the talks was how increased transparency in supply chains and better management of data can aid the agriculture industry, from farmers to retailers, in providing the trust that consumers are increasingly demanding from their food sources.

"When you gain trust you have a better chance of getting acceptance or getting a message across than when you just go up against it. Consumers don't like to hear that their deeply held beliefs are wrong," continued Cassetty. "There's such a lack of understanding about farming and farming practices among consumers. People think of farms as Big Industry, and they don't realize that most farms are family businesses supporting communities, farms that have been around for 100 years. These farmers care about the sustainability of their land. That's their family business."

Tejas Bhatt, senior director at Walmart and a research scientist with a background in computer science, believes that blockchain could be a boon to greater transparency in food supply chains, and is spearheading Walmart's effort to implement the technology throughout its 28-country operation. "Blockchain is radically transforming the way we enable transparency and traceability across the supply chain. It's foundational to enabling that level of transparency before we get to the customer."

Bhatt also emphasized the shared benefit to stakeholders up and down the supply chain of adopting blockchain. "We approached this from a shared value proposition. We're telling our supply chains that if you give us visibility back to the farm, we will give you visibility to our stores. And you can see how your product is going from the distribution centers, to our stores, to the customers."

There was general agreement among panelists and participants that strong, clear communication with consumers about the food they eat is more important than ever in the ag industry, considering the technological and scientific advances of recent years.

"It's quite incredible when you think about historical farming versus modern farming today, traceability, and all the steps we take to ensure food safety," said dairy farmer Brian Fiscalini with Fiscalini Cheese. "I have the equivalent of a Fit Bit on every single cow."

World Rice Conference to be held in Hanoi


HANOI (Xinhua) – The 10th World Rice Conference will take place here on October 10-12, with the participation of rice millers, exporters, merchants, experts and policy makers from many countries, the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade said yesterday.
During the three-day conference, 500-600 participants from such countries as China, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand and Uruguay will center this discussions on Vietnam’s rice industry and market outlook, key drivers of the world rice trade, and rice technology and value addition.
They are to analyse various kinds of rice, including fragrant rice, broken rice, parboiled rice, basmati rice and glutinous rice to reveal key issues which will shape regional and international markets. The world’s best rice and rice market achievement award 2018 presentation ceremony will be held on October 12.
In the first eight months of this year, Vietnam exported over 4.4 million tons of rice worth more than 2.2 billion US dollars, posting respective year-on-year rises of 8.2 percent and 23.6 percent.
Vietnam is focusing on using better rice growing, harvesting, postharvest, storage and transport practices and types so that rice will have uniform moisture contents, high weight, no foreign material, low percentage of discoloured, broken and damaged kernels, no presence of insects and molds, and high protein and vitamin content, said the ministry.

https://www.khmertimeskh.com/50537076/world-rice-conference-to-be-held-in-hanoi/

LSU AgCenter researchers conduct plant host study on Roseau cane scale

Posted: Sep 26, 2018 11:16 AM CDT
Updated: Sep 26, 2018 11:16 AM CDT
Leslie Avilés, a graduate student in entomology, inspects Roseau cane that is part of plant host experiment she conducted at a greenhouse on the LSU campus. 
BATON ROUGE, LA - LSU AgCenter scientists conducting research on Roseau cane scale said a recent study showed this insect has not attacked commercial crops or marsh grasses important to Louisiana.
The scale could be one of the culprits causing die-off of Roseau cane in marshes within the lower Mississippi River Delta.
AgCenter entomologist Rodrigo Diaz said farmers were concerned that the scale may also find its way to grass crops.
Leslie Avilés, an entomology graduate student working with Diaz, conducted studies in the greenhouse and in the field on 17 types of grasses including agronomic crops sugarcane, corn, rice and sorghum and native marsh plants smooth cordgrass and California bulrush.
Avilés planted stems from each individual grass in containers. She also added a stem of Roseau cane heavily infested with the scale to each container and tied the stems together.
“For the experiment, we collected infested Roseau cane from the Mississippi River Delta,” Avilés said.
She also included scale-free Roseau cane in a container with infested cane as the control.
After a month she checked the stems for infestations.
The first generation of the scale is called crawlers. Avilés said they hatch and attempt to move to a new stem to infest.
Avilés found crawlers on bulrush and cordgrass. They had attempted unsuccessfully to settle on those native grasses but did not mature into adulthood. No crawlers were found on the commercial crops.
“Our studies show that the scale was not a threat to agronomic crops and appears to be restricted to Roseau cane,” Diaz said.
Avilés also went to the mouth of the Mississippi where heavy infestations are found to see if the scale was infesting native grasses in the marsh.
“We found native grasses growing next to heavily infested Roseau cane,” Avilés said. “We peeled back hundreds of samples from several species of marsh grasses and searched for the scale but didn’t find any.”
Diaz said several state agencies, including the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, were interested in this study.
These results are good news to LDAF personnel because Louisiana farmers already have numerous pest issues that significantly effect crop yields and quality. LDAF implemented a quarantine that restricted movement of infested Roseau cane to mitigate movement of the pest across the state.
LDWF uses smooth cordgrass and bulrush in coastal restoration projects, and this information supports the continuation of that work. Also, agents with LDWF have been instrumental in getting Diaz and his researchers into areas in the marsh where scale infestations are prevalent.
“The logistics of getting to these locations is complicated,” Diaz said. “Typically, we are taking a boat ride for an hour to remote places of the Mississippi River Delta.”
Diaz said these marshes are vitally important to the ecology and economy of Louisiana.
LSU AgCenter associate vice president Rodgers Leonard said these research efforts are offering initial information about the biology and ecology of this pest, which can be used to better understand the impacts on Louisiana’s natural resources and provide the basis for future management tactics

https://www.arklatexhomepage.com/community/growing-strong/lsu-agcenter-researchers-conduct-plant-host-study-on-roseau-cane-scale/1476900183

 

China Focus: Researchers expand test of saline soil rice to Loess Plateau

Source: Xinhua| 2018-09-26 14:41:03|Editor: Liangyu
XI'AN, Sept. 26 (Xinhua) -- The saline soil rice R&D team of Yuan Longping, the prestigious pioneer of hybrid rice, is expecting a harvest from a test field in the Loess Plateau, the world's highest soil erosion area.
The test field in Nanniwan, about 50 km away from the city of Yan'an in northwest China's Shaanxi Province, is among six testing bases selected in May to pilot the team's rice growing technique.
Liu Zhaoliang, from the Qingdao Yuance Biological Group Co. Ltd., said the team has grown the rice in 53 hectares in Nanniwan, and the harvest will be made this week.
He said based on the current rice growing momentum, the per-hectare yield is estimated at 6,000 kg, which can meet the target for the pilot project.
"The barren land has been treated using a soil improvement technique. We have also introduced smart farming technology to help control the growing conditions," said Liu.
The team is known for developing saline-alkali tolerant rice in China's coastal city of Qingdao and completing the first batch of drought-resistant rice varieties in Dubai.
Nanniwan is a highland area, where late Chinese leader Mao Zedong mobilized a campaign in the 1940s, urging a revolutionary spirit to reclaim farmland from the dry soil to become self-reliant on the grain supply.
However, rice fields in Nanniwan have declined from 467 hectares to 20 hectares due to low yield, as traditional farming can only reap about 3,000 kg of rice per hectare, which is far lower than the averaged yield in plain areas.
Liu said the team plans to take three to five years to recover the rice fields back to 467 hectares in Nanniwan and achieve a per-hectare yield of 9,000 kg.
About two-thirds of the people in China depend on rice as a staple food. Yuan, who developed the world's first hybrid rice in 1974, has set multiple world records in hybrid rice yields in previous years. The latest record was set in the super hybrid rice field in southwest China's Yunnan Province -- 17 tonnes per hectare.
Yuan's team selected six testing bases this year with different soil conditions in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, as well as Shandong and Zhejiang provinces in east China.
The pilot is aimed at introducing smart farming techniques and drought-resistant rice strains to develop water-saving farms suitable for areas with harsh soil conditions.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-09/26/c_137494015.htm

How to win friends online: It's not which groups you join, but how many

 

Rice scientists crunch social media data to explain how communities affect friendships

Date:September 26, 2018
Source:Rice University
Summary:The chances that people will form new friendships primarily depends on the number rather than the types of organizations, groups and cliques they join, according to an analysis of six online social networks by data scientists.

Your chances of forming online friendships depend mainly on the number of groups and organizations you join, not their types, according to an analysis of six online social networks by Rice University data scientists.
"If a person is looking for friends, they should basically be active in as many communities as possible," said Anshumali Shrivastava, assistant professor of computer science at Rice and co-author of a peer-reviewed study presented last month at the 2018 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining in Barcelona, Spain. "And if they want to become friends with a specific person, they should try to be a part of all the groups that person is a part of."
The finding is based on an analysis of six online social networks with millions of members, and Shrivastava said its simplicity may come as a surprise to those who study friendship formation and the role communities play in bringing about friendships.
"There's an old saying that 'birds of a feather flock together,'" Shrivastava said. "And that idea -- that people who are more similar are more likely to become friends -- is embodied in a principal called homophily, which is a widely studied concept in friendship formation."
One school of thought holds that because of homophily, the odds that people will become friends increase in some groups. To account for this in computational models of friendship networks, researchers often assign each group an "affinity" score; the more alike group members are, the higher their affinity and the greater their chances of forming friendships.
Prior to social media, there were few detailed records about friendships between individuals in large organizations. That changed with the advent of social networks that have millions of individual members who are often affiliated with many communities and subcommunities within the network.
"A community, for our purposes, is any affiliated group of people within the network," Shrivastava said. "Communities can be very large, like everyone who identifies with a particular country or state, and they can be very small, like a handful of old friends who meet once a year."
Finding meaningful affinity scores for hundreds of thousands of communities in online social networks has been a challenge for analysts and modelers. Calculating the odds of friendship formation is further complicated by the overlap between communities and subcommittees. For instance, if the old friends in the above example live in three different states, their small subcommunity overlaps with the large communities of people from those states. Because many individuals in social networks belong to dozens of communities and subcommunities, overlapping connections can become dense.
In 2016, Shrivastava and study co-author Chen Luo, a graduate student in his research group, realized that some well-known analyses of online friendship formation failed to account for any factors arising out of overlap.
"Let's say Adam, Bob and Charlie are members of the same four communities, but in addition, Adam is a member of 16 other communities," Shrivastava said. "The existing affiliation model says the likelihood of Adam and Charlie being friends only depends on the affinity measures of the four communities they have in common. It doesn't matter that each of them are friends with Bob or that Adam's being pulled in 16 other directions."
That seemed like a glaring oversight to Luo and Shrivastava, but they had an idea of how to account for it based on an analogy they saw between the overlapping subcommunities and the overlapping similarities between webpages that must be taken into account by internet search engines. One of the most popular measures for internet search is the Jaccard overlap, which was pioneered by Google scientists and others in the late 1990s.
"We used this to measure overlap between communities and then checked to see if there was a relationship between overlap and friendship probability, or friendship affiliation, on six well-studied social networks," Shrivastava said. "We found that on all six, the relationship more or less looked like a straight line."
"That implies that friendship formation can be explained merely by looking at overlap between communities," Luo said. "In other words, you don't need to account for affinity measures for specific communities. All that extra work is unnecessary."
Once Luo and Shrivastava saw the linear relationship between Jaccard overlap of communities and friendship formation, they also saw an opportunity to use a data-indexing method called "hashing," which is used to organize web documents for efficient search. Shrivastava and his colleagues have applied hashing to solve computational problems as diverse as indoor location detection, the training of deep learning networks and accurately estimating the number of identified victims killed in the Syrian civil war.
Shrivastava said he and Luo developed a model for friendship formation that "mimicked the way the mathematics behind the hashing work."
The model offers a simple explanation of how friendships form.
"Communities are having events and activities all the time, but some of these are a bigger draw, and the preference for attending these is higher," Shrivastava said. "Based on this preference, individuals become active in the most preferred communities to which they belong. If two people are active in the same community at the same time, they have a constant, usually small, probability of forming a friendship. That's it. This mathematically recovers our observed empirical model."
He said the findings could be useful to anyone who wants to bring communities together and enhance the process of friendship formation.
"It seems that the most effective way is to encourage people to form more subcommunities," Shrivastava said. "The more subcommunities you have, the more they overlap, and the more likely it is that individual members will have more close friendships throughout the organization. People have long thought that this would be one factor, but what we've shown is this is probably the only one you have to pay attention to."
The research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Office of Naval Research.
Rice University. "How to win friends online: It's not which groups you join, but how many: Rice scientists crunch social media data to explain how communities affect friendships." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 26 September 2018. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180926110103.htm>.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180926110103.htm

Description: Kharif-Crop-BCClKharif food-grain output to be record high, show initial government estimates

By Madhvi Sally, ET Bureau|
Sep 26, 2018, 04.07 PM IST
Sugarcane production is estimated at 383.89 million tonnes, higher by 6.99 million tonnes from the last year.
India is likely to post record high food-grain production this kharif season, with monsoon rains being normal in main crop-producing states, the government’s initial estimates show.

Production of rice, sugarcane and oilseed is expected to be higher than last year, show the first advance estimate of the agriculture ministry, released on Wednesday. Coarse cereals, pulses and cotton are expected to see a fall in output.

Production of kharif crops that are cultivated during the rainy season is expected to be 141.59 million tonnes in 2018-19, which is 0.61%, or 0.86 million tonnes, more than last year’s 140.73 million tonnes, which is the highest so far. This will be 11.94 million tonnes more than the average production for the five years through 2016-17.

These are preliminary estimates and will undergo revisions based on further feedback from states, the government said. Cumulative rainfall in the country during the monsoon season till date has been 9% lower than the Long Period Average. However, rains in north-west and central India and southern Peninsula have been normal and hence most of the major crop producing states have witnessed normal rainfall, the government said.

Production of rice, the main kharif crop, is estimated to be 99.24 million tonnes, or 1.78% more than the previous year.

“The bumper production is a good sign for exports,” said BV Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters’ Association. The excess production can be exported to China, Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia, he said.

The next round of paddy planting will now take place in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana and “we expect 13-14 million tonnes of rice more production by February”, Rao said.

The output of kharif pulses such as tur, moong and urad is estimated at 9.22 million tonnes, less than last year’s production of 9.34 million tonnes.

Bimal Kothari, vice chairman of the India Pulses & Grains Association, said prices were ruling below the minimum support price (MSP), discouraging farmers from planting pulses. "Tur MSP is Rs 58.50 a kg while the government is selling at Rs 35-37 a kg. Same is the case for urad and moong. Prices will now remain stable and government has to ensure prices reach the MSP level to help farmers. Ban on imported pulses should continue,” he said.

Production of oilseeds such as groundnut, soyabean and castorseed is estimated to increase 5.66% over the previous year to 22.19 million tonnes, the government said. “Soyabean is definitely high but groundnut is down. The government now needs to ensure that farmers gets the price so as to ensure higher planting this rabi season,” said BV Mehta, executive director at the Solvent Extractors Association.

Sugarcane production is estimated at 383.89 million tonnes, higher by 6.99 million tonnes from the last year.

With area under cotton being 0.89% lower this kharif season, the government estimates production to fall to 32.48 million bales (of 170 kg each) from 34.88 million bales in 2017-18. However, Atul Ganatra, president of the Cotton Association of India, said there could be a revision in production figures as the season progresses. The industry said the crop could be 33-35 million bales, which would still be lower than the previous year when it had estimated production at 36.5 million bales.

Total production of coarse cereals has decreased to 33.13 million tonnes as compared to 33.89 million tonnes in 2017-18. Production of maize is expected to be 21.47 million tonnes, which is higher by 1.23 million tonnes from last year, show the government estimates.

Rice basmati weakens on low demand

New Delhi, Sep 26 () Rice basmati prices drifted lower by Rs 100 per quintal at the wholesale grains market Wednesday owing to slackened demand against ample stocks position. However, wheat strengthened on increased offtake by flour mills.
| Sep 26, 2018, 14:48 IST
New Delhi, Sep 26 () Rice basmati prices drifted lower by Rs 100 per quintal at the wholesale grains market Wednesday owing to slackened demand against ample stocks position.
However, wheat strengthened on increased offtake by flour mills.
Traders said fall in demand from stockists and rice mills against sufficient stocks position on increased arrivals from growing regions mainly weighed on rice basmati prices.
In the national capital, rice basmati common and Pusa-1121 variety were down by Rs 100 each to Rs 7,700-7,800 and Rs 6,650-6,750 per quintal, respectively.
Non-basmati rice permal raw, wand, sela and IR-8 also settled lower at Rs 2,350-2,375, Rs 2,450-2,500, Rs 2,900-3,000 and Rs 1,975-2,000 as compared to previous levels of Rs 2,375-2,400, Rs 2,500-2,550, Rs 3,000-3,100 and Rs 2,000-2,050 per quintal, respectively, in line with basmati trend.
On the other hand, wheat dara (for mills) edged up by Rs 15 to Rs 2,035-2,040 per quintal. Atta chakki delivery followed suit and traded higher by a similar margin to Rs 2,040-2,045 per 90 kg.
Following are today's quotations (in Rs per quintal):
Wheat MP (desi) Rs 2,350-2,450, Wheat dara (for mills) Rs 2,035-2,040, Atta Chakki(delivery) Rs 2,040-2,045, Atta Rajdhani (10 kg) Rs 250-280, Shakti Bhog (10 kg) Rs 275-310, Roller flour mill Rs 1,080-1,100 (50 kg), Maida Rs 1,180-1,190 (50 kg) and Sooji Rs 1,240-1,250 (50 kg).
Basmati rice (Lal Quila) Rs 10,700, Shri Lal Mahal Rs 11,300, Super Basmati rice Rs 9,900, Basmati common new Rs 7,700-7,800, Rice Pusa (1121) Rs 6,650-6,750, Permal raw Rs 2,350-2,375, Permal wand Rs 2,450-2,500, Sela Rs 2,900-3,000 and rice IR-8 Rs 1,975-2,000.
Bajra Rs 1,360-1,365, Jowar yellow Rs 1,600-1,650, white Rs 2,800-2,850, Maize Rs 1,420-1,425, Barley Rs 1,650-1,660. SUN KPS SHW SHW

‘PITC rice imports must use government funds’

Description: https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/agri_secretary_manny_pinol_0-696x463.jpgAgriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol (PNA)
THE National Food Authority Council (NFAC) could approve the Philippine International Trading Corp.’s (PITC) proposal to import rice on the condition that it will use its own funds instead of tapping money from the private sector, the agriculture chief has said.
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol, who is also chairman of the NFAC, told the BusinessMirror that the PITC’s proposed rice importation was tackled by the council on Monday and eventually deferred as it was deemed disadvantageous to other
accredited importers.
Under its proposal, the PITC—a government-owned and -controlled corporation attached to the Department of Trade and Industry—would only serve as a consolidator and that private firms would finance the imports, which would be shipped at zero tariffs, according to Piñol.
“Actually, the NFAC said it will allow the importation if PITC funds are used,” he said via SMS. “Because if it would be the private investors, then the distribution of rice will not be controlled. Plus, they will also not pay tariffs.”
Piñol said the NFAC asked the PITC to revise its proposal and resubmit it to the council.
The NFAC did not give the PITC a deadline but, in case they resubmit their proposal, it would be taken up immediately, he said.
Furthermore, Piñol pointed out that existing laws are clear that the authority to import rice is vested in the National Food Authority (NFA). “The law is very clear that all rice importation could only be done through the NFA,” he said.
The power to import rice and regulate its entry to the local market is vested in the NFA by virtue of Presidential Decree (PD) 4, which created the National Grains Authority, the forerunner of the NFA.
Furthermore, Republic Act 8178, or the Agricultural Tariffication Act, amended PD 4 and gave the NFA the power to delegate the authority to import rice to accredited traders and importers.
However, Presidential Spokesman Harry L. Roque Jr. on Tuesday announced that the PITC had already conducted an open tender for its rice imports that are expected to arrive in two weeks’ time.
Furthermore, Roque said the PITC’s rice importation did not need the NFAC’s approval.
“This importation doesn’t need the [NFA] Council’s approval. This information was given by [Trade Undersecretary] Ruth [Castelo] to the President in Benguet, when we visited Benguet,” Roque said.
“And [Undersecretary] Ruth said that they imported rice of 25-percent brokens, which is sold [by the NFA] at P27 per kilogram,” Roque added.The DTI proposed earlier this month to allow the PITC to import about 150,000 metric tons of rice to beef up the NFA’s current stockpile.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/pitc-rice-imports-must-use-government-funds/

 

Promising future for rice exporters

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Description: https://cdnimgen.vietnamplus.vn/t660/Uploaded/wbxx/2018_09_26/rice_export.jpgVietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year after a brief lulling period, said Tran Van Cong, Deputy Director of the Agro Processing and Market Development Authority under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Over the first nine months of the year, Vietnam shipped 4.9 million tonnes of rice abroad, earning 2.5 billion USD, up 22 percent from the same period last year.

Cong said that this is an impressive result, attributing the achievement to the effective rice sector restructuring programme which channels focus on developing high-quality and fragrant rice to bolster exports to choosy markets.

Up to 80 percent of exports now are classified as high-quality rice and sold at more than 500 USD per tonne, he said, adding that market diversification has been a catalyst for Vietnamese rice shipments.

China’s sudden imposition of a 50 percent tariff on rice imports from July affected rice consumption in this market, especially sticky rice. At some points, Chinese traders paid only 380 USD per tonne for sticky rice, compared to the 530-540 USD per tonne at the beginning of the year. However, Vietnamese firms have worked to enhance rice exports to Iraq, the Philippines, Malaysia, the Ivory Coast, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

In particular, the Government’s new Decree No.107/2018/ND-CP, which will take effect from October 1, will remove difficulties and legal barriers for rice exporters to expand foreign markets. Accordingly, rice exporters will no longer be required to own rice storage, paddy milling, and grinding facilities with processing capacities of 5,000 tonnes of rice. In addition, customs procedures will be simplified, creating favourable conditions for enterprises to export more to large consuming markets like China, Europe, Africa, Iraq, Cuba, and the UAE.

In the coming time, purchase demand will pick up in some countries, such as the Philippines which will be needing to import an additional 500,000-800,000 tonnes of rice by the end of this year to refill exhausted reserves and stabilise the domestic rice price.

Chinese enterprises have been working with firms from the Mekong Delta region to seek cooperation in rice trading. Meanwhile, Indonesia and several African countries also hold high demands for rice imports in response to output decline due to floods and storms.

Local firms are seeking ways to boost sticky rice shipments to Indonesia to reduce its dependence on the Chinese market. The move has increased the cost of sticky rice from just below 400 USD per tonne in July and August, to 440 USD per tonne now.

Furthermore, as local firms reduce export costs, Vietnamese rice will gain a competitive edge over that grown in India and Thailand, Cong noted.–VNA 

https://en.vietnamplus.vn/promising-future-for-rice-exporters/139035.vnp

 

NFA expects debt to swell after rice imports

Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:20 AM September 27, 2018
The National Food Authority’s (NFA) debt is seen to balloon by about P49 billion to P185.9 billion as it plans to increase its rice imports for this year until the next to support the country’s rice requirement.
Based on NFA’s computation, the importation of about 250,000 metric tons (MT) of rice could cost the government P7 billion. With the NFA Council’s approval to import 750,000 MT of rice this year and its standby approval to import an additional million ton in 2019, the grains agency would need to borrow about P49 billion from the Bureau of the Treasury.
This would put the agency’s total debt to the national government at about P185.9 billion.
The agency’s decision came after Typhoon “Ompong” left some 517,175 hectares of rice farms destroyed, leaving in its trail production losses of about 750,000 MT of rice.
After Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol’s first meeting with the agency as the head of the NFA Council on Monday, additional imports were approved to ensure there would be enough rice supply despite the calamity.
As of Wednesday, NFA’s pending loans stood at P136.9 billion—the bulk of which was incurred during the time of the Arroyo administration. During that time, in an effort to satisfy both farmers and consumers, the agency subsidized both the farm-gate and the market price of rice, which proved to be unsustainable.
Asked whether the NFA has the ability to pay off its loans, spokesperson Rex Estoperez said the agency has always been able to pay the Treasury through the proceeds it gets from selling NFA rice variants in the market. These variants are sold at a constant P27 and P32 a kilogram, depending on the quality.
Just a few weeks ago, an agricultural group filed a graft complaint against former NFA Administrator Jason Aquino for allegedly diverting a portion of the agency’s funds to pay off its maturing loans instead of using the money to stabilize the supply and prices of grains.
For the first semester of 2018, NFA received the largest subsidy from the government’s coffers at P5.2 billion, higher than the subsidy received by the National Irrigation Administration at P2.996 billion.
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Duterte removes non-tariff barriers to agri imports
Duterte’s Administrative Order (AO) No. 13 is directed at the Department of Agriculture (DA), National Food Authority (NFA), Sugar Regulatory Authority (SRA) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

Description: http://media.philstar.com/images/articles/7-agri_2018-09-25_23-48-19.jpg
Christina Mendez (The Philippine Star) - September 26, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — As prices of goods continue to soar, President Duterte has issued an order removing non-tariff barriers to importation of rice and other agriculture products and streamlining administrative procedures for accrediting importers.
Duterte’s Administrative Order (AO) No. 13 is directed at the Department of Agriculture (DA), National Food Authority (NFA), Sugar Regulatory Authority (SRA) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).
The Palace issued the order after the country’s economic advisers recommended that steps be immediately taken to arrest inflation, which accelerated to 6.4 percent in August from 5.7 percent the previous month.
AO 13 also sought to minimize the processing time for applications for importation. 
“There is an urgent need to tame the price spikes of basic agricultural commodities by adopting measures that remove non-tariff barriers and streamline administrative procedures to allow importation,” the order stated.
In issuing AO 13, the administration said it seeks to address the shortfall in supply and ensure stable prices of agricultural products in the domestic market.
The Palace also seeks to liberalize the issuance of permits and accreditation to traders as well as temporarily allow importation by sugar-using industries to lower their input cost – but subject to reasonable regulations.
“(This) will facilitate the importation of food beyond what we call as the authorized Minimum Access Volume (MAV). This means that traders can import more and all the fees will be removed,” presidential spokesman Harry Roque Jr. said yesterday, explaining the AO.
“There is a need to liberalize the issuance of permits and the accreditation of traders who import rice to break the monopoly of rice hoarders; and to temporarily allow direct importation of those utilizing sugar to import sugar if needed,” Roque added.
The President is also authorizing the NFA Council to approve additional rice importation beyond the MAV commitment for allocation to the private sector.
The DA is also allowed to issue the appropriate Certificate of Necessity to allow the importation of adequate volumes of fish to augment the 17,000 metric tons of fish already being distributed in the market.
In the order, the President directed the Bureau of Customs “to prioritize the unloading and release of (imported) agriculture products” to minimize or eliminate red tape.
In signing the order, Duterte invoked Republic Act 7581 or the Price Act, which mandates that the state “ensure the availability of basic necessities and prime commodities at reasonable prices at all times without denying legitimate business a fair return on investment.”Based on the order, it’s the duty of the state to “provide effective and sufficient protection to consumers against hoarding, profiteering and cartels with respect to supply, distribution, marketing and pricing of said goods, especially during periods of calamity, emergency, widespread illegal price manipulation and other similar situations.”  
In AO 13, Duterte also ordered the creation of a surveillance team comprising the DTI, NFA, National Bureau of Investigation and Philippine National Police to monitor the importation and distribution of agricultural products.
The group is tasked to ensure the immediate distribution of agriculture products to warehouses and retail outlets, as well as prevent price manipulation.
As this developed, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea also signed Memorandum No. 26 for President Duterte directing the DA and the DTI to adopt measures aimed at reducing the gap between farm gate prices and retail prices of agriculture products.
It also mandated the setting up of public outlets and cold storages where producers of agricultural commodities, as well as poultry producers, can sell directly to consumers.

Hearing deferred

Fearing further economic backlash from the effects of the controversial Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law,  the Senate committee on ways and means is suspending deliberations on the second tranche of the tax reform measure at least until the Department of Finance (DOF) is able to present credible data that the proposed measure would not lead to loss of jobs.
The committee held its first hearing yesterday on the proposed Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High Quality Opportunities (TRABAHO) bill passed by the House of Representatives. Senators said they were not satisfied with the explanation of DOF officials.
“The government should really take this issue on jobs seriously. The bill should stay true to its name – that it would create more jobs rather than kill them,” Sen. Sonny Angara, chairman of the committee, told Finance Undersecretary Karl Kendrick Chua.
The senator also expected the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) to present its cost-benefit analysis of the incentives contained in the measure. But no representative from NEDA was present during the hearing.
Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, chairman of the economic affairs committee, said a cursory examination of the measure left him confused as it showed the allocation of as much as P6 billion to fund safety nets for workers who may be displaced with the enactment of the bill.
“We’re branding the bill as creating work but we’re receiving mixed signals here,” Gatchalian said.
The senators said they welcome the intention of the bill to rationalize fiscal incentives to businesses by making them performance-based, time-bound and transparent to make sure that those benefitting from tax breaks and other incentives really contribute to the economy.
Director Dominique Tutay of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) told the panel the bill might lead to job losses.
Tutay said  DOLE and DOF have yet to complete their joint study on the impact on jobs of the measure.
She revealed that based on their job displacement monitoring, 30,000 jobs in the industry and services sectors were lost in the first quarter of 2018.

Job loss fears

Following the passage of bill in the House, the Semiconductor and Electronics Industries in the Philippines Foundation Inc. (SEIPI) released a statement warning that the bill would force them to lay off 140,000 workers.
They said several multinationals are now locating their expansions outside the country, largely due to the uncertainty over the status of their current tax incentives.
The House version provides for P500 million to be used for cash grants for displaced workers. An additional P500 million would be allocated for targeted training and skills upgrading.
Chua explained the allocations are just “contingency funds for possible job losses.”
Based on data from the DOF, a total of 1.7 million direct and seven million indirect jobs were generated by companies registered with investment promotion agencies (IPAs).
Angara has stressed the primary goal should be to create high-paying jobs, especially in the countryside.
“It seems that the grant of incentives is uneven across regions. We want to spread growth and development in the provinces,” he said.
DOLE official Tutay said the agency would be able to complete its study on the impact on jobs in two weeks.
The leadership of the House of Representatives, meanwhile, will start hearing on Monday the fourth package of TRAIN.
“This is a reform as significant as the recently signed TRAIN law that it aims to complement as it deals with the financial sector which contributes a lot to the economy and plays a crucial role in financing large-scale investments such as the build, build, build program,” committee on ways and means chair Rep. Estrellita Suansing said, referring to House Bill 8252 which seeks to provide neutrality in tax treatment, tax system, tax competitiveness and increase capital mobility and financial inclusion.  
DOF’s Chua, who was present during the committee briefing, said the revenue impact of this measure is around P13 billion on its first year. It is expected to decline as some tax rates become lower.
The finance official also stressed the government should look at the measure from a long-term perspective.
“Sometimes, when we just look at one provision of one package, we do not see the full benefit,” he said, apparently referring to the much-maligned TRAIN 1, widely blamed for rising inflation.
Chua said the government aims to address the deficiencies of the financial sector and institute necessary reforms to at least achieve revenue neutrality so that important government projects get regular and adequate funding.
Suansing, an ally of Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and who took over the post of her predecessor lone Quirino Rep. Dakila Cua, said TRAIN 4 aims to make taxes on capital income and financial intermediaries simpler, fairer and more efficient.
HB 8252 or TRAIN 4 is authored by Suansing and her husband, incumbent Rep. Horacio Suansing Jr. of Sultan Kudarat.
Package 2 or the Trabaho bill seeks to lower corporate income tax while expanding the tax base.
Train Package 3 proposes improvements in the valuation of property so that the government can finance many of its local social services and programs.
The last package, also called “Package 2 Plus,” targets taxes on mining and excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco.  – with Paolo Romero, Delon Porcalla

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2018/09/26/1854856/duterte-removes-non-tariff-barriers-agri-imports

With rice tariffication, what happens to food security?
September 27, 2018
“We’re a blessed Nation because  we can grow our  own food and, therefore, we’re secure.  A Nation that can feed its people is a  nation more secure.”
·        President George Bush, on the occasion of the signing of the US Farms Bill (2002), which is renewed every five years and which allocates massive subsidy to American agriculture.
With the proposed lifting of the quantitative restrictions on rice, the private sector shall be able to import rice – freely so long as it pays for the tariffs set by the government.  No more importation monopoly of the National Food Authority  (NFA).  No more rice inflation?  No more rice pila’s?
Price stability is the main argument of the proponents of rice importation liberalization.  To them, food security is simply the ability of a country to buy agricultural products wherever they are produced, cheaply.  This is the theory of the agricultural trade liberalizers.  This is the reason the country tariffied agriculture in 1995 (with the exception of sugar and rice), after the Senate ratified Philippine membership in the World Trade Organization  (WTO).
The proponents of agricultural trade liberalization embellished the food security argument further by adding that small farmers who cannot compete with cheap producers in other countries need not worry.  They can shift to the production of higher-value agricultural products.  Accordingly, Philippine agriculture would be a runaway winner under agricultural trade liberalization.  They even came up in 1994, at the height of the Senate debates on WTO membership, with the following macro-economic forecasts: agricultural gross value added of P60 billion a year, agricultural net export earnings of P3.2 billion a year, and 500,000 new jobs in the agri sector every year.
And yet, Philippine agricultural performance from 1995 to the present has been dismal, if not catastrophic — widening net agricultural trade deficits, share of the agricultural sector in the GDP shrinking to less than 10 percent, deepening massive poverty in the countryside, and, food inflation, averaging close to five percent a year from 1995 to 2017.  Thus, with rice tariffication, a number of farmer and civil society organizations such as the PATAMABA, Integrated Rural Development Foundation and Freedom from Debt Coalition are raising critical issues which policy makers are still unable to answer.
First, with tariffication, is the government surrendering the entire rice industry business to the private rice traders, who have a leech-like hold on palay trading, rice storage and rice distribution?  Numerous Congressional hearings, from the time of President Corazon Aquino up to the present, have come up with ugly findings on the cartel-like behavior of the traders, including cases of smuggling and collusion with corrupt NFA officials on the hoarding and mislabeling of rice.  With the tariffication and the further downsizing, if not abolition, of the NFA, these traders shall now have the whole business field to themselves  — from palay procurement at home to rice importation, from milling to storage, and from wholesale to retail distribution. They can dictate the farm gate prices that palay farmers would get and the prices for various rice varieties that consumers are willing to buy.  How can the government then level the playing field? Who will prevent the rice importers-traders from re-milling cheap imported rice and mixing this with quality rice produced in the Philippines and sell this as “regular milled rice”?
Second, what happens to the goal of rice self-sufficiency?  With the influx of cheap imported rice, how can the marginal rice farmers compete?  Some of the answers to competitiveness are well known: better seed varieties, cheap and efficient irrigation, land mechanization, grain dryers, good transport facilities from the farms, and quality rice mills.  These have been identified and discussed in past studies.  These have been the object of the Agriculture and Food Modernization Act (AFMA) and the Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Act (ACEF).  And yet, both the billion-peso AFMA and ACEF programs have failed to deliver the promised modernization and prosperity for the farmers.  The culprits: the big C (corruption) and the lack of a strong visionary leadership in the agricultural sector.  Now what is the assurance that the so-called tariff revenues to be set aside for the local rice-farming sector shall be able to transform the sector?
Most likely, the land areas devoted to rice farming will continue to shrink.  The rice industry in Central Luzon and Region IV has been disappearing since the 1980s due to urbanization and industrial development.  In a study by Elvira Manalad of Paragos-Philippines, huge swathes of rice lands all over the country are also disappearing because of the widespread “conversion” of lands supposedly covered by agrarian reform and the unchecked  “land banking” operations of the big realty companies and housing/village/resort developers.  The rainfed rice lands are the most vulnerable to the agents of these companies and developers.  Their job is made easier by the absence of a National Land Use law and the weak monitoring by the Department of Agrarian Reform of the land conversions.
So one of the biggest concerns of farm unions and CSOs is the waning capacity of the government, in a liberalized and deregulated economy, to pursue food security and agricultural sovereignty.  Like in the United States and other countries, these unions and CSOs define food security as the capacity of the nation to grow its own food and feed its own people.  Food security means that whatever the volatility in agricultural commodities in the global market there are, the country will be able to survive because domestic production is stable and sufficient.  Of course, food security does not mean stopping all agricultural imports.  The point is that the Philippines, given its land resources and knowhow, should be able to produce in sufficient quantity its basic food requirements.
In the case of rice, the goal of self-sufficiency remains an important one because rice is one of the thinly traded commodities in the world market.  Thus, if a rice shortage occurs in the two major sources of imported rice, Thailand and Vietnam, the Philippines is likely to have a political and economic problem that is too hot to handle.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/with-rice-tariffication-what-happens-to-food-security/

NFA must continue buying local rice

The Senate is currently stepping up efforts to convert the quantitative restriction (QR) on rice into tariffs, a move that is expected to bring rice prices down and ease inflation. Economic managers have been banking on the scrapping of the rice quota to make rice more affordable, particularly to the poor, who spend at least a fifth of their income on the staple. The poor, who cannot afford to buy more expensive sources of protein, such as pork or chicken, consume more rice to fill their stomachs.
By removing the QR on rice, Manila is effectively signaling to the world that it is ready to allow the entry of cheaper rice. The QR on rice, or import quota, has allowed the Philippines to limit the entry of cheaper staple from neighboring Southeast Asian countries, such as Vietnam and Thailand. With the removal of the nontariff barrier, economic managers expect that the average retail price of rice would go down by as much as P7 per kilogram (kg).
The downside of the removal of rice QR is the competition cheap rice imports would pose to locally produced palay. Based on the BusinessMirror’s computation, 5 percent broken rice from Vietnam can be purchased at P20 per kg. Even at a 40-percent tariff, the landed cost is anywhere from P28 to P30 per kg. The amount is much lower than the current average price of P43.86 per kg, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority.
Assuming that rice imports would not be hoarded by unscrupulous traders (unlike other farm products, rice can be stored longer), the influx of cheap rice would spell doom for farmers who remain uncompetitive compared to their counterparts in Vietnam and Thailand. If importing rice is more cost-efficient, traders who used to scramble for locally produced palay would rethink their plans. Farm-gate price could go down if traders suddenly become uninterested in local rice. While consumers will have their cheap staple, some 2.4 million rice farmers would be hard-pressed to look for alternative crops.
This scenario can be avoided if Congress would still allow the National Food Authority (NFA) to buy palay from farmers. There are proposals from economic managers to stop the NFA from intervening in the market, which means the agency should stop buying and selling rice. But this should not be done right after Congress has removed the QR on the staple. The food agency must be allowed to at least continue buying rice from farmers for buffer-stocking purposes for two years.
This is one of the measures that we believe the government should consider when it crafts a plan that would help farmers adjust to a new rice-trade regime. Congress can consider allocating part of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund for the NFA’s palay-buying program.
The tariffication of rice is expected to be completed this month, and the Department of Agriculture would unveil its road map for the sector once the measure is signed into law. We hope that the DA is conducting the necessary consultations with sectors affected by the removal of the quota. This will ensure that strategies employed by the government will have an impact on those whose lives have long depended on the most important grain in the country.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/nfa-must-continue-buying-local-rice/

 

‘NFA incentives to rice farmers like hiking palay buying price’


Description: https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/agri01-082018-696x457.jpgIn Photo: Photo shows farmers harvesting rice in La Union.
THE National Food Authority Council (NFAC) has effectively increased the government’s support price for palay to P20 per kilogram (kg) when it decided to approve the grant of more incentives to rice farmers.
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol made the pronouncement on Monday, but clarified that the National Food Authority’s (NFA) direct support price for palay remains at P17 per kg.
Piñol is currently the chairman of the NFAC, the highest policy-making body of the NFA.
“The buying price of NFA remains at P17 per kg but we will come up with incentives that when quantified would reach P20 per kg,” Piñol said in a news briefing following the NFAC’s first meeting under his chairmanship.
He said the NFA would give additional transportation incentives to farmers who would sell their crops to the government. They would also be entitled to receive farm equipment, among others.
The grant of additional incentives is effective immediately, according to Piñol.
He said the NFA would also be “flexible” with its 14-percent moisture content requirement for palay and would purchase even wet palay.
“We will be flexible in terms of the moisture content. The government must help the farmers,”  he said. “The farmers would say the NFA’s support is limited. The government is out there to help the people. Our directive is to help the farmers.”
Despite the increase in the NFA’s palay support price, the food agency’s selling price would remain at P27 per kg for regular-milled rice and P32 per kg for well-milled rice, Pinol said.
At present the NFA buys palay from farmers at a support price of P17 per kg and gives additional incentives totaling P0.70 for individual farmers and P1 for cooperatives.
The NFA has been pushing for an increase in its support price as farmers prefer to sell to traders who buy palay at P20 per kg to P25 per kg.
Piñol have repeatedly stated that the NFA will not be able to purchase palay locally if their buying price would remain at P17 per kg.
The agriculture chief said traders could even hike their offer and cause the average farm-gate price to remain above the P20-per-kg mark this main harvest season following the onslaught of Typhoon Ompong in some rice-producing provinces.
Lawmakers belonging to the Makabayan Bloc have recently filed a resolution to provide the NFA a supplemental budget of P10 billion to beef up its palay procurement program. The resolution also mandates the NFA to automatically buy palay at P20 per kg.

NFA stockpile

The NFA buys uNmilled rice from farmers to beef up its stockpile, which is also made up of imports.
The depletion of the NFA’s rice buffer stock, is being tagged as one of the major factors behind the increase in the retail price of commercial rice.
On Tuesday Presidential Spokesman Harry L. Roque Jr. said rice imports were delayed because NFA Administrator Jason Aquino had preferred the government-to-government (G2G) mode of importation.
Because of the delay, Roque said prices of goods went up and forced the government to import more food items, including rice.
Roque claimed that it was Aquino who “purposely delayed” the importation. He said some importers may sue the NFA chief because of this.
“The Council has given the authority to import but he delayed it because he has a preference for G2G,” he said, noting that the G2G importation is the “worst” mode of importation as this is prone to corruption.
“So many [importers] will be filing cases against him because of the losses sustained by them as a result of orchestrations so that they cannot import pursuant to the open tender system,” Roque added.
Roque said he is also thinking of filing graft and corruption and technical malversation cases against Aquino once he leaves the Cabinet.
“Since he did not spend the money to buy rice from local farmers so that the government will have enough buffer stock, we are importing now and we are giving money to foreign farmers,” he added.
President Duterte is set to appoint retiring Army chief Lt. Gen. Rolando Bautista to replace Aquino, whose resignation he already accepted, according to Roque.
During his televised interview with Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador S. Panelo, Duterte said Aquino had asked to be relieved from his post since he is “tired.

 


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Palace to NFA: Release rice stocks to markets

Malacañang on Tuesday issued Memorandum Order No. 28 directing the National Food Authority (NFA) to immediately release existing rice stocks in its warehouses to boost rice supply in the market and protect consumers from profiteers and hoarders.
Description: Workers unload sacks of NFA rice at the NFA Warehouse in Visayas Ave, Quezon City, June 26 2018 as new buffer stock from Vietnam and Thailand arrives. The newly delivered rice will be distributed to selected markets in Metro Manila as the NFA vowed never to allow again the depletion of its buffer stock. They began to to distribute the low-priced, good quality NFA rice priced at P27 per kilo. (Mark Balmores)

Workers unload sacks of NFA rice at the NFA Warehouse in Visayas Ave, Quezon City, June 26 2018.
(Mark Balmores / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)
In the order, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea directed the NFA to “immediately release to markets approximately 230,000 metric tons of rice currently in stock in the warehouses across the country.”Aside from this, the food agency has also been ordered “to release 100,000 metric tons of rice previously contracted to be delivered before the end of September.”“Subject to applicable laws and issuances, the NFA is further directed to adopt measures to ensure access by consumers to regular milled and well-milled rice,” the order read.
It noted that certain administrative constraints and fees unduly add to the costs of importation of basic agricultural commodities and contribute to price increases.
“There is a need to promulgate measures to stabilize the prices of basic agricultural commodities at reasonable levels, to maintain their sufficient supply in the domestic market and to provide effective and sufficient protection to consumers against hoarding, profiteering, and cartels with respect to the supply, distribution, marketing and pricing of said goods,” the memorandum read.
Seamless delivery
Malacañang likewise issued two other directives to ensure efficient delivery of imported agriculture products to the markets.
In Memorandum Order No. 27, the Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), Philippine National Police (PNP) and Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) have been directed to adopt measures to ensure the efficient and seamless delivery of imported agriculture and fishery products from the ports to markets.
The concerned agencies have been authorized to issue “food lane passes for truckers and suppliers carrying agricultural products.”
Memorandum Order No. 26, on the other hand, directed the DAand DTI to adopt measures to reduce the gap between farm gate prices and retail prices of agricultural products.
Among the measures include establishment of public outlets and cold storages where producers of agricultural commodities as well as poultry producers can directly sell to consumers.
The concerned agencies have been directed to submit to the Office of the Executive Secretary a progress report within a month.
The three memorandum orders, signed by Medialdea by the authority of President Duterte last September 21,are effective immediately.
Incentives
Meanwhile, the NFA Council, the highest policy-making body of National Food Authority (NFA), said it is planning to give incentives to farmers who will sell rice at government’s buying price of P17 per kilo.
This was revealed by Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol, who now chairs the NFA Council. The NFA has been using the low buying price of palay as an excuse not to procure palay from local farmers and instead relied on the importation of rice from other countries to boost its stock.
The agency claimed that local farmers prefer selling their produce to private traders at P20 per kilo or more.
Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released this month showed that the average farmgate price of palay has reached P23.66 per kilogram nationwide.
The highest farmgate prices of palay were reported at P29.00/kg in Lanao del Norte and P28.00/kg. in Pangasinan and Laguna. (With a report from Madelaine B. Miraflor)

QC council passes 2 ordinances increasing rice subsidy to employees

Published 
By Chito Chavez
The Quezon City Council passed two ordinances increasing the quarterly rice subsidy for city hall personnel from P1,500 to P2,000 and the longevity pay for career civil servants from P200 to P300 for every five years of service.
Description: Quezon City Vice-Mayor Joy Belmonte. (Mark Balmores/MANILA BULLETIN)
Quezon City Vice-Mayor Joy Belmonte. (Mark Balmores/MANILA BULLETIN)
“We need to make sure that our own city employees have a decent living. In light of the rising prices of goods, we want to start by helping with the most basic commodity – rice,” Quezon City Vice Mayor Belmonte, the presiding officer of the city council said.
Authored by Councilor Victor Ferrer Jr., ordinance No. 2727 states the quarterly rice subsidy for all Quezon City hall regular employees will increase from P1,500 to P2,000.
The assistance is “in consonance with the city government’s desire to alleviate the economic plight of its own workers from the widespread crisis and prolonged high-cost of rice”. The subsidy will be given at the end of every quarter.
Ordinance No. 2728 also authored by Ferrer mandates the increase in longevity pay of career civil service employees of the local government of Quezon City from P200 for every five years of service to P300 for the same period.
The civil servants must have rendered at least five years of continuous service to avail of the loyalty bonus.
According to the ordinance, career civil service employees “deserve to be rewarded financially by the virtue of their loyalty and dedication to public duty”.
For both increases, the vice mayor pointed out that, “Incentives such as this help us reduce corruption by making sure that the public servants in Quezon City are well-compensated.”
Belmonte stressed the need for the city government to provide ample support to the city’s honest and dedicated public servants especially during these rough times.
She said she is currently working on a scheme that will provide more incentives and reward local government employees for their honesty and good behavior.
“We will make sure that bad behavior is punished and penalized, but good behavior is rewarded because values ang gusto natin baguhin dito (we want to change values here),” she said.

Bumper rice harvest in eastern granary county(1/6)

2018-09-26 13:34:49Ecns.cnEditor :Yao Lan
Description: A drone photo shows rice harvesting in a field in Taihe County, East China’s Jiangxi Province, Sept. 25, 2018. The county is one of China’s commodity grain bases. (Photo: China News Service/Sima Tianmin)
A drone photo shows rice harvesting in a field in Taihe County, East China’s Jiangxi Province, Sept. 25, 2018. The county is one of China’s commodity grain bases. (Photo: China News Service/Sima Tianmin)


Xi Jinping inspects rice farms in northeast China's Heilongjiang

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday arrived in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province for an inspection tour.
Xi started his tour Tuesday afternoon at the Jiansanjiang branch of Heilongjiang Farms and Land Reclamation Administration to inspect the conditions of grain production and harvest.
Known as China's "green rice city," Jiansanjiang is one of the most important commodity grain bases in the country.
Description: https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514f304d444e7a457a6333566d54/img/e1698710e2fd4e08bc5d76cf60945d81/e1698710e2fd4e08bc5d76cf60945d81.jpg
Chinese President Xi Jinping (C) conducts an inspection tour in Jiansanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, September 25, 2018. /Xinhua Photo
Description: https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514f304d444e7a457a6333566d54/img/ad169952d99d4347bc632a86e58bdfb3/ad169952d99d4347bc632a86e58bdfb3.jpg
Chinese President Xi Jinping conducts an inspection tour in Jiansanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, September 25, 2018. /Xinhua Photo
It is located in the heartland of the Sanjiang Plain, an alluvial plain created by three rivers. 
There are currently 15 large and medium-sized state-owned farms in Jiansanjiang, covering an area of 12,400 square kilometers. It has 754,667 hectares of arable land and 678,667 hectares are used to grow rice, according to the branch's official website.
A total of 96.35 billion kilograms of grain have been produced in Jiansanjiang over the past 60 years, including 86.75 billion kilograms of commodity grain, the website shows.





 AMERICAN ROLAND FOOD CORP., ESKAL ) AND MORE…






Rice Noodles Consumption Market | Global Research Insight 2018-2023 (Major Players:JFC International, American Roland Food Corp., Eskal ) and more…


Global Rice Noodles Consumption Insight
Get industry insights and important projections for the market in upcoming quarters with the Global Rice Noodles Consumption Research report. Past and present data from the industry brings you the most accurate Rice Noodles Consumption industry status calculations in the report. Check this report out to find some reliable analysis of the Rice Noodles Consumption principals, participants, Rice Noodles Consumption geological areas, product type, and Rice Noodles Consumption end-user’s applications.

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Geographical Scope of this report includes :
Americas, United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, APAC, China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, India, Australia, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia, Spain, Middle East & Africa, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Turkey, GCC Countries
Rice Noodles Consumption pie-charts, tables, systematic overview, and product diagrams are used in the table to represent the state of the GlobalRice Noodles Consumption industry. It compiles all the essential as well as auxiliary data that you may need to understand the markets. In the Rice Noodles Consumption report, you can expect fundamental patois, vital review, understandings, and Rice Noodles Consumption certain aspects made in accordance with commiseration and cognizance of the industry.
Major players in the report included are :
JFC International, American Roland Food Corp., Eskal, Nan Shing Hsinchu, Cali Food, Nature soy, Mandarin Noodle Manufacturing, Ying Yong Food Products, J.D. Food Products, Leong Guan Food Manufacturer, Foodle Noodle, Lieng tong, L&W Food Corp., Thai Preserved Food Factory, Thai Kitchen, Others
Types covered in the Rice Noodles Consumption industry are : 
Thin noodles,Wide noodles
Applications covered in the report are :
Key inclusions in the report:
ManufacturerJFC International, American Roland Food Corp., Eskal, Nan Shing Hsinchu, Cali Food, Nature soy, Mandarin Noodle Manufacturing, Ying Yong Food Products, J.D. Food Products, Leong Guan Food Manufacturer, Foodle Noodle, Lieng tong, L&W Food Corp., Thai Preserved Food Factory, Thai Kitchen, Others
TypesThin noodles,Wide noodles
Applications
RegionsAmericas, United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, APAC, China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, India, Australia, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia, Spain, Middle East & Africa, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Turkey, GCC Countries
The data always remains relevant to the market and consists of market dynamics, prospects, starts, market dynamics and even the Global market volumes into account. It filled with data and deep analysis on market value, environmental analysis, Rice Noodles Consumption advanced techniques, latest developments, Rice Noodles Consumption business strategies and current trends. Hence, it becomes a valuable asset to both manufacturers and investors of the industry.
The report does a SWOT analysis to find the strengths, opportunities, weaknesses and threats to the top companies working in the industry and talks about the economic background as well as financial problems that the industry could face in the next 5 years, up till the year 2023. Apart from this, it contains databases of different industry metrics like supply-demand ratio, Rice Noodles Consumption market frequency, dominant players of Rice Noodles Consumption market, driving factors, restraints, and challenges. Accurate data is also available about market revenue, sales, Rice Noodles Consumption production and manufacturing cost for the readers.
Here are the important points covered in the report:
  • Find out the industry will change till 2023 according to our predictions
  • Understand the historical, current and future prospects of the Rice Noodles Consumptionmarket
  • Understand how sales volumes, Global share and growth of the Rice Noodles Consumptionmarket will occur in the next five years.
  • Read product descriptions of Rice Noodles Consumptionproducts, along with report scopes and upcoming trends in the industry.
  • Learn about key growth factors of the Rice Noodles Consumptionindustry
  • Get a comprehensive analysis of the drivers, risks, opportunities and restrains to growth of the Rice Noodles Consumption
  • Get to know about the leading market players, both current and emerging in the Global Rice Noodles Consumption
To Enquire About This Comprehensive Report, Click Here: 99marketresearch.com/2018-2023-global-rice-noodles-consumption-market-report-2/91278/
The data has been compiled from previous and current years with the help of research analysts and several primary and secondary sources. Profiling of leading players and presentation of the data in an easy to read and understand chapter-wise format with a plethora of charts, stats and graphical representations make this report a must-have for the industry stakeholders.https://orbitninjas.com/2018/09/26/rice-noodles-consumption-market-global-research-insight-2018-2023-major-playersjfc-international-american-roland-food-corp-eskal-and-more/

Rising seas threaten Vietnam’s top rice producer
Viet Nam News/Asia News Network / 06:37 PM September 26, 2018
Description: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/files/2018/09/rice_12.jpg
Rice uploading for export at the Southern Food Company in Hồ Chí Minh City. Saltwater intrusion in 2017 destroyed over 30,455 ha of rice fields in Kiên Giang Province, heavily affecting the country’s rice export. VŨ SINH, VIET NAM NEWS/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
KIEN GIANG, Vietnam — After nearly two decades, Kien Giang Province may lose its position as the country’s leading rice producer.
Because of climate change, Kien Giang province is struggling to maintain its place as Vietnam’s biggest rice producer – a distinction it has held for nearly two decades.
The province is well positioned to produce rice. Located on the coast, in an area in Cuu Long (Mekong Delta) with some of the country’s richest soil, Kien Giang is home to more than 357,000 ha of rice paddies. It produces an average of over four million tonnes of rice each year.
But ever-rising seas have deposited saltwater deeper into the province, contaminating the three key production areas of Long Xuyen Quadrangle, West Hau River and U Minh Thuong and killing off hundreds thousands of hectares of rice over the last few years.
“Climate change is affecting the growth of local agriculture,” said deputy director of the province’s agriculture and rural development department Do Minh Nhut.
He cited drought and the intrusion of saltwater as factors that had damaged more than 56,500 ha of fields in 2016 alone, reducing that year’s yield by more than 481,200 tonnes compared to the previous year.
Saltwater intrusion continued in 2017, destroying over 30,455 ha. Heavy rain and flooding damaged an additional 7,150 ha.
Aquaculture
Agriculture in Kien Giang is not only about rice. As a seaside province, it has developed its aquaculture by focusing on farming shrimp, fish, crabs, and clams.
According to the municipal Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, aquaculture areas have grown steadily since 2015, producing more than 217,000 tonnes of seafood last year.
“Aquaculture has helped increase the value of Kien Giang’s agriculture sector, lifting farmers out of poverty and raising their quality of life,” said department director Nguyen Van Tam.
“However, annual productivity has not yet reached its potential, especially in shrimp farming. One important factor is certainly the negative impact of climate change.”
Tam said prolonged drought and the intrusion of saltwater had cost farmers more than 22,188 ha of shrimp farms in the 2015-2016 season. Similar environmental factors caused the loss of 6,000 ha in 2017 and 10,000 ha so far this year.
With its economy threatened by climate change, Kien Giang is pushing ahead with new irrigation facilities to manage the rapid invasion of saltwater.
The province is investing VND950 billion (US$42.2 million) to finance new sluice gates along the An Bien-An Minh coastal dyke that will prevent saltwater intrusion and retain as much fresh water as possible. The funds will also go towards a massive network of irrigation channels in the Long Xuyen Quadrangle and West Hau River agricultural areas.
Although the province had already invested much of its own money, Kien Giang People’s Committee chairman Pham Vu Hong said it would need more financial support from the central Government to protect its agricultural sector from climate change.

Global Rice Milling Machinery Market 2018-2025 Top Worldwide Players – Satake, Alvan Blanch, Lianyungang Huantai Machinery


The Global “Rice Milling Machinery Market” report offers an all-inclusive study of the Rice Milling Machinery market. It offers a brief overview and explains the key terms of the Global Rice Milling Machinery market. The report highlights various key players in the Global Rice Milling Machinery market together with their contribution in the market to review their growth in the predicted duration. The most important market players are Satake, Alvan Blanch, Lianyungang Huantai Machinery, Kingka Tech Industrial Limited, Lushan Win Tone Machinery Manufacture, Zhengzhou Whirlston Machinery, American Milling Group, Buhler, Beijing Time Progress Technology, Shenzhen Seetop Science and Technology, Shenzhen Wandaan Precision Technology, Zaccaria Brazil. The report also demonstrates the latest improvements in the market that help in predicting the growth of the key market players.
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The report reviews the global Rice Milling Machinery market size for preceding years. The study estimates the global Rice Milling Machinery market in terms of revenue and volume. It also appraises the Rice Milling Machinery market size for the last few years. The report also covers the rising trend combined with the key reasons for the growth of the global Rice Milling Machinery market. Additionally, it highlights segments Capacity <1.5 Tonne/Hour, Capacity 1.5 - 3.0 Tonne/Hour, Capacity 3.0 - 4.5 Tonne/Hour, Capacity >4.5 Tonne/Hour along with the sub-segments Rice Flour, Beans, Wheat, Others of the global Rice Milling Machinery market.
The global Rice Milling Machinery market report involves the entire the chain of the market by highlighting the growth and restraining factors. The report represents the growth of each region of global Rice Milling Machinery market. The data collected in the report is accumulated from different industry organizations to estimate the growth of each region of the market for the predicted period.
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The report reviews the overall global market developments across most important regional sectors United States, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India. It covers the competitive conditions present in the global Rice Milling Machinery market. The report presents data in the form of tables and graph highlighting the current market status.
The most dominating players in the global market are also covered along with their highest income in the global Rice Milling Machinery market research report. It works as a guide for the user by assisting them to make strategic moves to introduce a new product in the market or to expand their businesses.
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http://lakeviewgazette.com/2018/09/27/global-rice-milling-machinery-market-2018-2025-top-worldwide-players-satake-alvan-blanch-lianyungang-huantai-machinery/
Promising future for rice exporters
VNA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2018 - 19:01:00 PRINT
Description: https://cdnimgen.vietnamplus.vn/t660/Uploaded/wbxx/2018_09_26/rice_export.jpgVietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year after a brief lulling period, said Tran Van Cong, Deputy Director of the Agro Processing and Market Development Authority under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Over the first nine months of the year, Vietnam shipped 4.9 million tonnes of rice abroad, earning 2.5 billion USD, up 22 percent from the same period last year.

Cong said that this is an impressive result, attributing the achievement to the effective rice sector restructuring programme which channels focus on developing high-quality and fragrant rice to bolster exports to choosy markets.

Up to 80 percent of exports now are classified as high-quality rice and sold at more than 500 USD per tonne, he said, adding that market diversification has been a catalyst for Vietnamese rice shipments.

China’s sudden imposition of a 50 percent tariff on rice imports from July affected rice consumption in this market, especially sticky rice. At some points, Chinese traders paid only 380 USD per tonne for sticky rice, compared to the 530-540 USD per tonne at the beginning of the year. However, Vietnamese firms have worked to enhance rice exports to Iraq, the Philippines, Malaysia, the Ivory Coast, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

In particular, the Government’s new Decree No.107/2018/ND-CP, which will take effect from October 1, will remove difficulties and legal barriers for rice exporters to expand foreign markets. Accordingly, rice exporters will no longer be required to own rice storage, paddy milling, and grinding facilities with processing capacities of 5,000 tonnes of rice. In addition, customs procedures will be simplified, creating favourable conditions for enterprises to export more to large consuming markets like China, Europe, Africa, Iraq, Cuba, and the UAE.

In the coming time, purchase demand will pick up in some countries, such as the Philippines which will be needing to import an additional 500,000-800,000 tonnes of rice by the end of this year to refill exhausted reserves and stabilise the domestic rice price.

Chinese enterprises have been working with firms from the Mekong Delta region to seek cooperation in rice trading. Meanwhile, Indonesia and several African countries also hold high demands for rice imports in response to output decline due to floods and storms.

Local firms are seeking ways to boost sticky rice shipments to Indonesia to reduce its dependence on the Chinese market. The move has increased the cost of sticky rice from just below 400 USD per tonne in July and August, to 440 USD per tonne now.

Furthermore, as local firms reduce export costs, Vietnamese rice will gain a competitive edge over that grown in India and Thailand, Cong noted.–VNA 


Thailand sells rice to China for first time in six months

SEPTEMBER 26, 2018 / 9:48 AM /
·        
·        
BANGKOK, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Thailand’s government on Wednesday said it had sold 100,000 tonnes of rice to China, the first such sale since March.Chinese state-owned food trader COFCO had halted purchases over the last few months due to ample rice supply in the country.
Thailand had previously supplied 500,000 tonnes of rice to China as part of a pledged government-to-government deal for 1 million tonnes of the grain struck in 2015.
The latest purchase of the 5-percent grade of white rice will be shipped next month, supporting local prices, Commerce Minister Sontirat Sontijirawong said in a statement.
“This is also a positive sign that the Chinese market’s demand for Thai rice has returned and China might order more rice in 2018,” he said.Thailand has exported 8.22 million tonnes of rice so far in 2018, almost 3 percent higher than a year earlier. That amount is worth around 134 billion baht ($4.13 billion).
Thailand aims to export 11 million tonnes of rice this year. ($1 = 32.4400 baht) (Reporting by Patpicha Tanakasempipat and Panarat Thepgumpanat Editing by Joseph Radford)

https://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL4N1WC1WO

 

Food Innovation is


Global Refined Rice Bran Oil Market 2018 | industry overview, sales, supply and demand analysis and forecast 2023

Pressmeddelande   •   Sep 19, 2018 21:33 CEST

Global Refined Rice Bran Oil report offers the latest industry trends, technological innovations and forecast market data. A deep-dive view of Refined Rice Bran Oil industry based on market size, Refined Rice Bran Oil growth, development plans, and opportunities is offered by this report. The forecast market information, SWOT analysis, Refined Rice Bran Oil barriers, and feasibility study are the vital aspects analyzed in this report.
Refined Rice Bran Oil market segmentation by Players:
Ricela
BCL
SVROil
Vaighai agro products
A.P. Refinery
3F Industries
Sethia Oils
BIRBHUM OILS INDUSTRIES
Jain Group of Industries
Tsuno Rice Fine Chemicals
Agrotech International
Shivangi Oils
Kamal
Balgopal
Oryza Oil & Fat Chemical
King rice oil group
Habib Industries
Wilmar International
Surin Bran Oil
Suriny
RITO
RiceBran Technologies
Wanyuan Food & Oil
Qaxld
Jinrun
Honghulang Rice Industry
Hubei Tianxing
The up-to-date, comprehensive product knowledge, industry growth curve, end users will drive the revenue and profitability. Refined Rice Bran Oil report studies the present state of the industry to analyze the future growth opportunities and risk factors. Refined Rice Bran Oil report aims at providing a 360-degree market scenario. Initially, the report offers Refined Rice Bran Oil introduction, fundamental overview, objectives, market definition, Refined Rice Bran Oil scope, and market size estimation.
Refined Rice Bran Oil report helps the readers in understanding the growth factors, industry plans, policies and development strategies implemented by leading Refined Rice Bran Oil players. All the terminologies of this market are covered in the report. The report analyses facts and figures to derive the global Refined Rice Bran Oil revenue. A detailed explanation of Refined Rice Bran Oil market values, potential consumers and the future scope are presented in this report.
Refined Rice Bran Oil Market segmentation by Type:
Extraction
Squeezing
Refined Rice Bran Oil Market segmentation by Application:
Food
Cosmetic
Industry
Others
The leading players of Medium-Voltage Inverter industry, their market share, product portfolio, company profiles is covered in this report. The leading market players are analyzed on the basis of production volume, gross margin, market value, and price structure. The competitive market scenario among Refined Rice Bran Oil players will help the industry aspirants in planning their strategies. The statistics offered in this report will be a useful guide to shape the business growth.
Market segmentation
On global level Refined Rice Bran Oil , industry is segmented by product type, diverse applications, and research regions. Regional Refined Rice Bran Oil segmentation analyses the market presence across North America, Europe, Japan, India, China, Middle East & Africa, South America. The regional analysis presented the Refined Rice Bran Oil production volume and growth rate from 2013-2018
In the next section, market dynamics, Refined Rice Bran Oil growth drivers, emerging market segments and the growth curve is presented based on past, present and futuristic market status. The industry plans, policies, and news are presented at a regional level. The Refined Rice Bran Oil industry chain study covers the upstream raw material suppliers analysis, top industry players, manufacturing capacity of each player, cost of raw material and labor cost. The sales channel and downstream buyers analysis is also covered.
Refined Rice Bran Oil market share and market value are analyzed for each product type of this market. The pricing analysis is provided from 2013-2018. Refined Rice Bran Oil consumption statistics, downstream buyers, and the growth trend for each application is analyzed from 2013 to 2018. Refined Rice Bran Oil import, export scenario, SWOT analysis, and utilization ratio is presented on a global and regional scale.
The graphical and tabular view of Refined Rice Bran Oil market will provide ease of understanding to the readers.
Following countries are analyzed in this report at a regional level:
  •  North America (United States and Canada)
  •  Europe (Germany, UK, Italy, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland  and Others)
  • Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India, Australia, Singapore, and Others)
  • Latin America (Mexico, Brazil, and Others)
  • Middle East and Africa                 
Important attributes of the report:
  • The 360-degree Refined Rice Bran Oil overview based on a global and regional level
  • Market share, value, volume, and production capacity is analyzed on global, regional and country level
  • A complete and useful guide for new market aspirants
  • Forecast information will drive strategic, innovative and profitable business plans
  • SWOT analysis of players will pave the way for growth opportunities, risk analysis, investment feasibility and recommendations
  • Lastly, the research methodology and data sources are offered in this report.
Explore Full Report With Detailed TOC Here @ https://www.globalmarketers.biz/report/food-and-beverages/global-refined-rice-bran-oil-market-research-report-2018/12644#table_of_contents Data Driven  

WASHINGTON, DC -- Journalists, experts, and industry leaders gathered last Friday at the International Food Information Council's Food Innovation Summit to discuss innovations in food technology and trends in consumer demand. Topics ranged from marketing buzzwords to advances in gene editing and blockchain, and discussion largely revolved around consumer trust in the agriculture industry.

Panelists tackled difficult questions about how to communicate effectively with the public in a world of rapid scientific advancements and rampant misunderstandings when it comes to labels like "natural" and "GMO."

"The consumer has multiple definitions of freshness, and natural, and healthy, and unprocessed, so there's multiple ways to reach them based on what their perceptions are," said Samantha Cassetty, a nutritionist and food columnist with NBC. "We have to come up with the solutions for letting people know where their food is coming from and create these authentic stories for them."

A central theme of the talks was how increased transparency in supply chains and better management of data can aid the agriculture industry, from farmers to retailers, in providing the trust that consumers are increasingly demanding from their food sources.

"When you gain trust you have a better chance of getting acceptance or getting a message across than when you just go up against it. Consumers don't like to hear that their deeply held beliefs are wrong," continued Cassetty. "There's such a lack of understanding about farming and farming practices among consumers. People think of farms as Big Industry, and they don't realize that most farms are family businesses supporting communities, farms that have been around for 100 years. These farmers care about the sustainability of their land. That's their family business."

Tejas Bhatt, senior director at Walmart and a research scientist with a background in computer science, believes that blockchain could be a boon to greater transparency in food supply chains, and is spearheading Walmart's effort to implement the technology throughout its 28-country operation. "Blockchain is radically transforming the way we enable transparency and traceability across the supply chain. It's foundational to enabling that level of transparency before we get to the customer."

Bhatt also emphasized the shared benefit to stakeholders up and down the supply chain of adopting blockchain. "We approached this from a shared value proposition. We're telling our supply chains that if you give us visibility back to the farm, we will give you visibility to our stores. And you can see how your product is going from the distribution centers, to our stores, to the customers."

There was general agreement among panelists and participants that strong, clear communication with consumers about the food they eat is more important than ever in the ag industry, considering the technological and scientific advances of recent years.

"It's quite incredible when you think about historical farming versus modern farming today, traceability, and all the steps we take to ensure food safety," said dairy farmer Brian Fiscalini with Fiscalini Cheese. "I have the equivalent of a Fit Bit on every single cow."

World Rice Conference to be held in Hanoi


HANOI (Xinhua) – The 10th World Rice Conference will take place here on October 10-12, with the participation of rice millers, exporters, merchants, experts and policy makers from many countries, the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade said yesterday.
During the three-day conference, 500-600 participants from such countries as China, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, Thailand and Uruguay will center this discussions on Vietnam’s rice industry and market outlook, key drivers of the world rice trade, and rice technology and value addition.
They are to analyse various kinds of rice, including fragrant rice, broken rice, parboiled rice, basmati rice and glutinous rice to reveal key issues which will shape regional and international markets. The world’s best rice and rice market achievement award 2018 presentation ceremony will be held on October 12.
In the first eight months of this year, Vietnam exported over 4.4 million tons of rice worth more than 2.2 billion US dollars, posting respective year-on-year rises of 8.2 percent and 23.6 percent.
Vietnam is focusing on using better rice growing, harvesting, postharvest, storage and transport practices and types so that rice will have uniform moisture contents, high weight, no foreign material, low percentage of discoloured, broken and damaged kernels, no presence of insects and molds, and high protein and vitamin content, said the ministry.

https://www.khmertimeskh.com/50537076/world-rice-conference-to-be-held-in-hanoi/

LSU AgCenter researchers conduct plant host study on Roseau cane scale

Posted: Sep 26, 2018 11:16 AM CDT
Updated: Sep 26, 2018 11:16 AM CDT
Leslie Avilés, a graduate student in entomology, inspects Roseau cane that is part of plant host experiment she conducted at a greenhouse on the LSU campus. 
BATON ROUGE, LA - LSU AgCenter scientists conducting research on Roseau cane scale said a recent study showed this insect has not attacked commercial crops or marsh grasses important to Louisiana.
The scale could be one of the culprits causing die-off of Roseau cane in marshes within the lower Mississippi River Delta.
AgCenter entomologist Rodrigo Diaz said farmers were concerned that the scale may also find its way to grass crops.
Leslie Avilés, an entomology graduate student working with Diaz, conducted studies in the greenhouse and in the field on 17 types of grasses including agronomic crops sugarcane, corn, rice and sorghum and native marsh plants smooth cordgrass and California bulrush.
Avilés planted stems from each individual grass in containers. She also added a stem of Roseau cane heavily infested with the scale to each container and tied the stems together.
“For the experiment, we collected infested Roseau cane from the Mississippi River Delta,” Avilés said.
She also included scale-free Roseau cane in a container with infested cane as the control.
After a month she checked the stems for infestations.
The first generation of the scale is called crawlers. Avilés said they hatch and attempt to move to a new stem to infest.
Avilés found crawlers on bulrush and cordgrass. They had attempted unsuccessfully to settle on those native grasses but did not mature into adulthood. No crawlers were found on the commercial crops.
“Our studies show that the scale was not a threat to agronomic crops and appears to be restricted to Roseau cane,” Diaz said.
Avilés also went to the mouth of the Mississippi where heavy infestations are found to see if the scale was infesting native grasses in the marsh.
“We found native grasses growing next to heavily infested Roseau cane,” Avilés said. “We peeled back hundreds of samples from several species of marsh grasses and searched for the scale but didn’t find any.”
Diaz said several state agencies, including the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, were interested in this study.
These results are good news to LDAF personnel because Louisiana farmers already have numerous pest issues that significantly effect crop yields and quality. LDAF implemented a quarantine that restricted movement of infested Roseau cane to mitigate movement of the pest across the state.
LDWF uses smooth cordgrass and bulrush in coastal restoration projects, and this information supports the continuation of that work. Also, agents with LDWF have been instrumental in getting Diaz and his researchers into areas in the marsh where scale infestations are prevalent.
“The logistics of getting to these locations is complicated,” Diaz said. “Typically, we are taking a boat ride for an hour to remote places of the Mississippi River Delta.”
Diaz said these marshes are vitally important to the ecology and economy of Louisiana.
LSU AgCenter associate vice president Rodgers Leonard said these research efforts are offering initial information about the biology and ecology of this pest, which can be used to better understand the impacts on Louisiana’s natural resources and provide the basis for future management tactics

https://www.arklatexhomepage.com/community/growing-strong/lsu-agcenter-researchers-conduct-plant-host-study-on-roseau-cane-scale/1476900183

 Rice Transplanter Market Research 2018 with top 20 Countries data : Region Wise Analysis of Top Players in Market by its Types and Application & Forecast From 2018-2023





Rice Transplanter Market 2018 Research report contains a qualified and in-depth examination of Rice Transplanter Market. At first, the report provides current Rice Transplanter business situation along with a valid assessment of the Rice Transplanter business. Rice Transplanter report is partitioned based on driving Rice Transplanter players, application and regions. The progressing Rice Transplanter economic situations are additionally discovered in the report.
Description:
  • Worldwide and Top 20 Countries Market Size of Rice Transplanter 2013-2017, and development forecast 2018-2023.
  • Main manufacturers/suppliers of Rice Transplanter worldwide and market share by regions, with company and product introduction, position in the market.
  • Market status and development trend of Rice Transplanter by types and applications.
  • Cost and profit status of Rice Transplanter, and marketing status.
  • Market growth drivers and challenges.
The report segments the global Rice Transplanter market as:
The Rice Transplanter market report consist competitive study of the major Rice Transplanter manufacturers which will help to develop a marketing strategy.
Global Rice Transplanter market competition by top manufacturers/players, with Rice Transplanter sales volume, Price (USD/Unit), revenue (Million USD), Players/Suppliers Profiles and Sales Data, Company Basic Information, Manufacturing Base and Competitors and market share for each manufacturer/player; the top players including:
  • Yanmar, Kubota, Branson, Nantong FLW Agricultural Equipment, Iseki, Toyonoki, DongFeng, ChangFa, ShiFeng
Split by Product Types, with sales, revenue, price, market share of each type, can be divided into:
  • All-Automatic, Semi-Automatic
On the basis on the end users/applications, Rice Transplanter market report focuses on the status and outlook for major applications/end users, sales volume, market share and growth rate for each application, including:
  • Residential, Commercial
Global Rice Transplanter Market: Regional Segment Analysis (Regional Production Volume, Consumption Volume, Revenue and Growth Rate 2013-2023):
  • North America (United States, Canada and Mexico)
  • Europe (Germany, UK, France, Italy, Russia, Spain and Benelux)
  • Asia Pacific (China, Japan, India, Southeast Asia and Australia)
  • Latin America (Brazil, Argentina and Colombia)
  • Middle East and Africa
Have any special requirement on above Rice Transplanter market report? Ask to our Industry Expert @https://www.360marketupdates.com/enquiry/pre-order-enquiry/11781631
Target Audience of Rice Transplanter Market:
  • Manufacturer / Potential Investors
  • Traders, Distributors, Wholesalers, Retailers, Importers and Exporters.
  • Association and government bodies.
Rice Transplanter Market along with Report Research Design:
Rice Transplanter Market Historic Data (2013-2017):
  • Industry Trends: Revenue, Status and Outlook.
  • Competitive Landscape: By Manufacturers, Development Trends.
  • Product Revenue for Top Players: Market Share, Growth Rate, Current Market Situation Analysis.
  • Market Segment: By Types, By Applications, By Regions/ Geography.
  • Sales Revenue: Market Share, Growth Rate, Current Market Analysis.
Rice Transplanter Market Influencing Factors:
  • Market Environment: Government Policies, Technological Changes, Market Risks.
  • Market Drivers: Growing Demand, Reduction in Cost, Market Opportunities and Challenges.
Rice Transplanter Market Forecast (2018-2023)
  • Production Forecast by Type.
  • Market Capacity, Production, Revenue
  • Production, Consumption Forecast by Regions.
  • Market Consumption Forecast by Application.
  • Price Forecast.
Along with this, analysis of depreciation cost, manufacturing cost structure, manufacturing process is also carried out. Price, cost, and gross analysis of the Rice Transplanter Market is also included in this section.
Purchase Complete Rice Transplanter Market Report@ https://www.360marketupdates.com/purchase/11781631
Rice Transplanter manufacturing cost analysis, Rice Transplanter capacity, production and revenue of Rice Transplanter industry are also covered in this report. Lastly, the Rice Transplanter market research report present research conclusions, findings which can offer a summarized view of the Rice Transplanter.https://lansingpost.com/2018/09/26/rice-transplanter-market-research-2018-with-top-20-countries-data-region-wise-analysis-of-top-players-in-market-by-its-types-and-application-forecast-from-2018-2023/








Rice Flour Consumption Market | Global Research Insight 2018-2023 (Major Players:Burapa Prosper, Thai Flour Industry, Rose Brand ) and more…








Global Rice Flour Consumption Insight
Get industry insights and important projections for the market in upcoming quarters with the Global Rice Flour Consumption Research report. Past and present data from the industry brings you the most accurate Rice Flour Consumption industry status calculations in the report. Check this report out to find some reliable analysis of the Rice Flour Consumption principals, participants, Rice Flour Consumption geological areas, product type, and Rice Flour Consumption end-user’s applications.

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Geographical Scope of this report includes :
Americas, United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, APAC, China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, India, Australia, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia, Spain, Middle East & Africa, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Turkey, GCC Countries
Rice Flour Consumption pie-charts, tables, systematic overview, and product diagrams are used in the table to represent the state of the GlobalRice Flour Consumption industry. It compiles all the essential as well as auxiliary data that you may need to understand the markets. In the Rice Flour Consumption report, you can expect fundamental patois, vital review, understandings, and Rice Flour Consumption certain aspects made in accordance with commiseration and cognizance of the industry.
Major players in the report included are :
Burapa Prosper, Thai Flour Industry, Rose Brand, CHO HENG, Koda Farms, BIF, Lieng Tong, Bob’s Red Mill Natural Foods, Pornkamon Rice Flour Mills, HUANGGUO
Types covered in the Rice Flour Consumption industry are : 
Rice Flour,Brown Rice Flour,Glutinous Rice Flour,Other
Applications covered in the report are :
Key inclusions in the report:
ManufacturerBurapa Prosper, Thai Flour Industry, Rose Brand, CHO HENG, Koda Farms, BIF, Lieng Tong, Bob’s Red Mill Natural Foods, Pornkamon Rice Flour Mills, HUANGGUO
TypesRice Flour,Brown Rice Flour,Glutinous Rice Flour,Other
Applications
RegionsAmericas, United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, APAC, China, Japan, Korea, Southeast Asia, India, Australia, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia, Spain, Middle East & Africa, Egypt, South Africa, Israel, Turkey, GCC Countries
The data always remains relevant to the market and consists of market dynamics, prospects, starts, market dynamics and even the Global market volumes into account. It filled with data and deep analysis on market value, environmental analysis, Rice Flour Consumption advanced techniques, latest developments, Rice Flour Consumption business strategies and current trends. Hence, it becomes a valuable asset to both manufacturers and investors of the industry.
The report does a SWOT analysis to find the strengths, opportunities, weaknesses and threats to the top companies working in the industry and talks about the economic background as well as financial problems that the industry could face in the next 5 years, up till the year 2023. Apart from this, it contains databases of different industry metrics like supply-demand ratio, Rice Flour Consumption market frequency, dominant players of Rice Flour Consumption market, driving factors, restraints, and challenges. Accurate data is also available about market revenue, sales, Rice Flour Consumption production and manufacturing cost for the readers.
Here are the important points covered in the report:
  • Find out the industry will change till 2023 according to our predictions
  • Understand the historical, current and future prospects of the Rice Flour Consumptionmarket
  • Understand how sales volumes, Global share and growth of the Rice Flour Consumptionmarket will occur in the next five years.
  • Read product descriptions of Rice Flour Consumptionproducts, along with report scopes and upcoming trends in the industry.
  • Learn about key growth factors of the Rice Flour Consumptionindustry
  • Get a comprehensive analysis of the drivers, risks, opportunities and restrains to growth of the Rice Flour Consumption
  • Get to know about the leading market players, both current and emerging in the Global Rice Flour Consumption
To Enquire About This Comprehensive Report, Click Here: 99marketresearch.com/2018-2023-global-rice-flour-consumption-market-report-2/91258/
The data has been compiled from previous and current years with the help of research analysts and several primary and secondary sources. Profiling of leading players and presentation of the data in an easy to read and understand chapter-wise format with a plethora of charts, stats and graphical representations make this report a must-have for the industry stakeholders.

https://orbitninjas.com/2018/09/26/rice-flour-consumption-market-global-research-insight-2018-2023-major-playersburapa-prosper-thai-flour-industry-rose-brand-and-more/


China Focus: Researchers expand test of saline soil rice to Loess Plateau

Source: Xinhua| 2018-09-26 14:41:03|Editor: Liangyu
XI'AN, Sept. 26 (Xinhua) -- The saline soil rice R&D team of Yuan Longping, the prestigious pioneer of hybrid rice, is expecting a harvest from a test field in the Loess Plateau, the world's highest soil erosion area.
The test field in Nanniwan, about 50 km away from the city of Yan'an in northwest China's Shaanxi Province, is among six testing bases selected in May to pilot the team's rice growing technique.
Liu Zhaoliang, from the Qingdao Yuance Biological Group Co. Ltd., said the team has grown the rice in 53 hectares in Nanniwan, and the harvest will be made this week.
He said based on the current rice growing momentum, the per-hectare yield is estimated at 6,000 kg, which can meet the target for the pilot project.
"The barren land has been treated using a soil improvement technique. We have also introduced smart farming technology to help control the growing conditions," said Liu.
The team is known for developing saline-alkali tolerant rice in China's coastal city of Qingdao and completing the first batch of drought-resistant rice varieties in Dubai.
Nanniwan is a highland area, where late Chinese leader Mao Zedong mobilized a campaign in the 1940s, urging a revolutionary spirit to reclaim farmland from the dry soil to become self-reliant on the grain supply.
However, rice fields in Nanniwan have declined from 467 hectares to 20 hectares due to low yield, as traditional farming can only reap about 3,000 kg of rice per hectare, which is far lower than the averaged yield in plain areas.
Liu said the team plans to take three to five years to recover the rice fields back to 467 hectares in Nanniwan and achieve a per-hectare yield of 9,000 kg.
About two-thirds of the people in China depend on rice as a staple food. Yuan, who developed the world's first hybrid rice in 1974, has set multiple world records in hybrid rice yields in previous years. The latest record was set in the super hybrid rice field in southwest China's Yunnan Province -- 17 tonnes per hectare.
Yuan's team selected six testing bases this year with different soil conditions in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, as well as Shandong and Zhejiang provinces in east China.
The pilot is aimed at introducing smart farming techniques and drought-resistant rice strains to develop water-saving farms suitable for areas with harsh soil conditions.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-09/26/c_137494015.htm

How to win friends online: It's not which groups you join, but how many

 

Rice scientists crunch social media data to explain how communities affect friendships

Date:September 26, 2018
Source:Rice University
Summary:The chances that people will form new friendships primarily depends on the number rather than the types of organizations, groups and cliques they join, according to an analysis of six online social networks by data scientists.

Your chances of forming online friendships depend mainly on the number of groups and organizations you join, not their types, according to an analysis of six online social networks by Rice University data scientists.
"If a person is looking for friends, they should basically be active in as many communities as possible," said Anshumali Shrivastava, assistant professor of computer science at Rice and co-author of a peer-reviewed study presented last month at the 2018 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining in Barcelona, Spain. "And if they want to become friends with a specific person, they should try to be a part of all the groups that person is a part of."
The finding is based on an analysis of six online social networks with millions of members, and Shrivastava said its simplicity may come as a surprise to those who study friendship formation and the role communities play in bringing about friendships.
"There's an old saying that 'birds of a feather flock together,'" Shrivastava said. "And that idea -- that people who are more similar are more likely to become friends -- is embodied in a principal called homophily, which is a widely studied concept in friendship formation."
One school of thought holds that because of homophily, the odds that people will become friends increase in some groups. To account for this in computational models of friendship networks, researchers often assign each group an "affinity" score; the more alike group members are, the higher their affinity and the greater their chances of forming friendships.
Prior to social media, there were few detailed records about friendships between individuals in large organizations. That changed with the advent of social networks that have millions of individual members who are often affiliated with many communities and subcommunities within the network.
"A community, for our purposes, is any affiliated group of people within the network," Shrivastava said. "Communities can be very large, like everyone who identifies with a particular country or state, and they can be very small, like a handful of old friends who meet once a year."
Finding meaningful affinity scores for hundreds of thousands of communities in online social networks has been a challenge for analysts and modelers. Calculating the odds of friendship formation is further complicated by the overlap between communities and subcommittees. For instance, if the old friends in the above example live in three different states, their small subcommunity overlaps with the large communities of people from those states. Because many individuals in social networks belong to dozens of communities and subcommunities, overlapping connections can become dense.
In 2016, Shrivastava and study co-author Chen Luo, a graduate student in his research group, realized that some well-known analyses of online friendship formation failed to account for any factors arising out of overlap.
"Let's say Adam, Bob and Charlie are members of the same four communities, but in addition, Adam is a member of 16 other communities," Shrivastava said. "The existing affiliation model says the likelihood of Adam and Charlie being friends only depends on the affinity measures of the four communities they have in common. It doesn't matter that each of them are friends with Bob or that Adam's being pulled in 16 other directions."
That seemed like a glaring oversight to Luo and Shrivastava, but they had an idea of how to account for it based on an analogy they saw between the overlapping subcommunities and the overlapping similarities between webpages that must be taken into account by internet search engines. One of the most popular measures for internet search is the Jaccard overlap, which was pioneered by Google scientists and others in the late 1990s.
"We used this to measure overlap between communities and then checked to see if there was a relationship between overlap and friendship probability, or friendship affiliation, on six well-studied social networks," Shrivastava said. "We found that on all six, the relationship more or less looked like a straight line."
"That implies that friendship formation can be explained merely by looking at overlap between communities," Luo said. "In other words, you don't need to account for affinity measures for specific communities. All that extra work is unnecessary."
Once Luo and Shrivastava saw the linear relationship between Jaccard overlap of communities and friendship formation, they also saw an opportunity to use a data-indexing method called "hashing," which is used to organize web documents for efficient search. Shrivastava and his colleagues have applied hashing to solve computational problems as diverse as indoor location detection, the training of deep learning networks and accurately estimating the number of identified victims killed in the Syrian civil war.
Shrivastava said he and Luo developed a model for friendship formation that "mimicked the way the mathematics behind the hashing work."
The model offers a simple explanation of how friendships form.
"Communities are having events and activities all the time, but some of these are a bigger draw, and the preference for attending these is higher," Shrivastava said. "Based on this preference, individuals become active in the most preferred communities to which they belong. If two people are active in the same community at the same time, they have a constant, usually small, probability of forming a friendship. That's it. This mathematically recovers our observed empirical model."
He said the findings could be useful to anyone who wants to bring communities together and enhance the process of friendship formation.
"It seems that the most effective way is to encourage people to form more subcommunities," Shrivastava said. "The more subcommunities you have, the more they overlap, and the more likely it is that individual members will have more close friendships throughout the organization. People have long thought that this would be one factor, but what we've shown is this is probably the only one you have to pay attention to."
The research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Office of Naval Research.
Rice University. "How to win friends online: It's not which groups you join, but how many: Rice scientists crunch social media data to explain how communities affect friendships." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 26 September 2018. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180926110103.htm>.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180926110103.htm

Description: Kharif-Crop-BCClKharif food-grain output to be record high, show initial government estimates

By Madhvi Sally, ET Bureau|
Sep 26, 2018, 04.07 PM IST
Sugarcane production is estimated at 383.89 million tonnes, higher by 6.99 million tonnes from the last year.
India is likely to post record high food-grain production this kharif season, with monsoon rains being normal in main crop-producing states, the government’s initial estimates show.

Production of rice, sugarcane and oilseed is expected to be higher than last year, show the first advance estimate of the agriculture ministry, released on Wednesday. Coarse cereals, pulses and cotton are expected to see a fall in output.

Production of kharif crops that are cultivated during the rainy season is expected to be 141.59 million tonnes in 2018-19, which is 0.61%, or 0.86 million tonnes, more than last year’s 140.73 million tonnes, which is the highest so far. This will be 11.94 million tonnes more than the average production for the five years through 2016-17.

These are preliminary estimates and will undergo revisions based on further feedback from states, the government said. Cumulative rainfall in the country during the monsoon season till date has been 9% lower than the Long Period Average. However, rains in north-west and central India and southern Peninsula have been normal and hence most of the major crop producing states have witnessed normal rainfall, the government said.

Production of rice, the main kharif crop, is estimated to be 99.24 million tonnes, or 1.78% more than the previous year.

“The bumper production is a good sign for exports,” said BV Krishna Rao, president of the Rice Exporters’ Association. The excess production can be exported to China, Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia, he said.

The next round of paddy planting will now take place in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana and “we expect 13-14 million tonnes of rice more production by February”, Rao said.

The output of kharif pulses such as tur, moong and urad is estimated at 9.22 million tonnes, less than last year’s production of 9.34 million tonnes.

Bimal Kothari, vice chairman of the India Pulses & Grains Association, said prices were ruling below the minimum support price (MSP), discouraging farmers from planting pulses. "Tur MSP is Rs 58.50 a kg while the government is selling at Rs 35-37 a kg. Same is the case for urad and moong. Prices will now remain stable and government has to ensure prices reach the MSP level to help farmers. Ban on imported pulses should continue,” he said.

Production of oilseeds such as groundnut, soyabean and castorseed is estimated to increase 5.66% over the previous year to 22.19 million tonnes, the government said. “Soyabean is definitely high but groundnut is down. The government now needs to ensure that farmers gets the price so as to ensure higher planting this rabi season,” said BV Mehta, executive director at the Solvent Extractors Association.

Sugarcane production is estimated at 383.89 million tonnes, higher by 6.99 million tonnes from the last year.

With area under cotton being 0.89% lower this kharif season, the government estimates production to fall to 32.48 million bales (of 170 kg each) from 34.88 million bales in 2017-18. However, Atul Ganatra, president of the Cotton Association of India, said there could be a revision in production figures as the season progresses. The industry said the crop could be 33-35 million bales, which would still be lower than the previous year when it had estimated production at 36.5 million bales.

Total production of coarse cereals has decreased to 33.13 million tonnes as compared to 33.89 million tonnes in 2017-18. Production of maize is expected to be 21.47 million tonnes, which is higher by 1.23 million tonnes from last year, show the government estimates.

Rice basmati weakens on low demand

New Delhi, Sep 26 () Rice basmati prices drifted lower by Rs 100 per quintal at the wholesale grains market Wednesday owing to slackened demand against ample stocks position. However, wheat strengthened on increased offtake by flour mills.
| Sep 26, 2018, 14:48 IST
New Delhi, Sep 26 () Rice basmati prices drifted lower by Rs 100 per quintal at the wholesale grains market Wednesday owing to slackened demand against ample stocks position.
However, wheat strengthened on increased offtake by flour mills.
Traders said fall in demand from stockists and rice mills against sufficient stocks position on increased arrivals from growing regions mainly weighed on rice basmati prices.
In the national capital, rice basmati common and Pusa-1121 variety were down by Rs 100 each to Rs 7,700-7,800 and Rs 6,650-6,750 per quintal, respectively.
Non-basmati rice permal raw, wand, sela and IR-8 also settled lower at Rs 2,350-2,375, Rs 2,450-2,500, Rs 2,900-3,000 and Rs 1,975-2,000 as compared to previous levels of Rs 2,375-2,400, Rs 2,500-2,550, Rs 3,000-3,100 and Rs 2,000-2,050 per quintal, respectively, in line with basmati trend.
On the other hand, wheat dara (for mills) edged up by Rs 15 to Rs 2,035-2,040 per quintal. Atta chakki delivery followed suit and traded higher by a similar margin to Rs 2,040-2,045 per 90 kg.
Following are today's quotations (in Rs per quintal):
Wheat MP (desi) Rs 2,350-2,450, Wheat dara (for mills) Rs 2,035-2,040, Atta Chakki(delivery) Rs 2,040-2,045, Atta Rajdhani (10 kg) Rs 250-280, Shakti Bhog (10 kg) Rs 275-310, Roller flour mill Rs 1,080-1,100 (50 kg), Maida Rs 1,180-1,190 (50 kg) and Sooji Rs 1,240-1,250 (50 kg).
Basmati rice (Lal Quila) Rs 10,700, Shri Lal Mahal Rs 11,300, Super Basmati rice Rs 9,900, Basmati common new Rs 7,700-7,800, Rice Pusa (1121) Rs 6,650-6,750, Permal raw Rs 2,350-2,375, Permal wand Rs 2,450-2,500, Sela Rs 2,900-3,000 and rice IR-8 Rs 1,975-2,000.
Bajra Rs 1,360-1,365, Jowar yellow Rs 1,600-1,650, white Rs 2,800-2,850, Maize Rs 1,420-1,425, Barley Rs 1,650-1,660. SUN KPS SHW SHW

‘PITC rice imports must use government funds’




Description: https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/agri_secretary_manny_pinol_0-696x463.jpgAgriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol (PNA)

THE National Food Authority Council (NFAC) could approve the Philippine International Trading Corp.’s (PITC) proposal to import rice on the condition that it will use its own funds instead of tapping money from the private sector, the agriculture chief has said.
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol, who is also chairman of the NFAC, told the BusinessMirror that the PITC’s proposed rice importation was tackled by the council on Monday and eventually deferred as it was deemed disadvantageous to other
accredited importers.
Under its proposal, the PITC—a government-owned and -controlled corporation attached to the Department of Trade and Industry—would only serve as a consolidator and that private firms would finance the imports, which would be shipped at zero tariffs, according to Piñol.
“Actually, the NFAC said it will allow the importation if PITC funds are used,” he said via SMS. “Because if it would be the private investors, then the distribution of rice will not be controlled. Plus, they will also not pay tariffs.”
Piñol said the NFAC asked the PITC to revise its proposal and resubmit it to the council.
The NFAC did not give the PITC a deadline but, in case they resubmit their proposal, it would be taken up immediately, he said.
Furthermore, Piñol pointed out that existing laws are clear that the authority to import rice is vested in the National Food Authority (NFA). “The law is very clear that all rice importation could only be done through the NFA,” he said.
The power to import rice and regulate its entry to the local market is vested in the NFA by virtue of Presidential Decree (PD) 4, which created the National Grains Authority, the forerunner of the NFA.
Furthermore, Republic Act 8178, or the Agricultural Tariffication Act, amended PD 4 and gave the NFA the power to delegate the authority to import rice to accredited traders and importers.
However, Presidential Spokesman Harry L. Roque Jr. on Tuesday announced that the PITC had already conducted an open tender for its rice imports that are expected to arrive in two weeks’ time.
Furthermore, Roque said the PITC’s rice importation did not need the NFAC’s approval.
“This importation doesn’t need the [NFA] Council’s approval. This information was given by [Trade Undersecretary] Ruth [Castelo] to the President in Benguet, when we visited Benguet,” Roque said.
“And [Undersecretary] Ruth said that they imported rice of 25-percent brokens, which is sold [by the NFA] at P27 per kilogram,” Roque added.The DTI proposed earlier this month to allow the PITC to import about 150,000 metric tons of rice to beef up the NFA’s current stockpile.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/pitc-rice-imports-must-use-government-funds/

 

Promising future for rice exporters

VNA PRINT
Description: https://cdnimgen.vietnamplus.vn/t660/Uploaded/wbxx/2018_09_26/rice_export.jpgVietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnamese rice exports are expected to grow stronger by the end of the year after a brief lulling period, said Tran Van Cong, Deputy Director of the Agro Processing and Market Development Authority under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Over the first nine months of the year, Vietnam shipped 4.9 million tonnes of rice abroad, earning 2.5 billion USD, up 22 percent from the same period last year.

Cong said that this is an impressive result, attributing the achievement to the effective rice sector restructuring programme which channels focus on developing high-quality and fragrant rice to bolster exports to choosy markets.

Up to 80 percent of exports now are classified as high-quality rice and sold at more than 500 USD per tonne, he said, adding that market diversification has been a catalyst for Vietnamese rice shipments.

China’s sudden imposition of a 50 percent tariff on rice imports from July affected rice consumption in this market, especially sticky rice. At some points, Chinese traders paid only 380 USD per tonne for sticky rice, compared to the 530-540 USD per tonne at the beginning of the year. However, Vietnamese firms have worked to enhance rice exports to Iraq, the Philippines, Malaysia, the Ivory Coast, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

In particular, the Government’s new Decree No.107/2018/ND-CP, which will take effect from October 1, will remove difficulties and legal barriers for rice exporters to expand foreign markets. Accordingly, rice exporters will no longer be required to own rice storage, paddy milling, and grinding facilities with processing capacities of 5,000 tonnes of rice. In addition, customs procedures will be simplified, creating favourable conditions for enterprises to export more to large consuming markets like China, Europe, Africa, Iraq, Cuba, and the UAE.

In the coming time, purchase demand will pick up in some countries, such as the Philippines which will be needing to import an additional 500,000-800,000 tonnes of rice by the end of this year to refill exhausted reserves and stabilise the domestic rice price.

Chinese enterprises have been working with firms from the Mekong Delta region to seek cooperation in rice trading. Meanwhile, Indonesia and several African countries also hold high demands for rice imports in response to output decline due to floods and storms.

Local firms are seeking ways to boost sticky rice shipments to Indonesia to reduce its dependence on the Chinese market. The move has increased the cost of sticky rice from just below 400 USD per tonne in July and August, to 440 USD per tonne now.

Furthermore, as local firms reduce export costs, Vietnamese rice will gain a competitive edge over that grown in India and Thailand, Cong noted.–VNA 

https://en.vietnamplus.vn/promising-future-for-rice-exporters/139035.vnp

 

NFA expects debt to swell after rice imports

Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:20 AM September 27, 2018
The National Food Authority’s (NFA) debt is seen to balloon by about P49 billion to P185.9 billion as it plans to increase its rice imports for this year until the next to support the country’s rice requirement.
Based on NFA’s computation, the importation of about 250,000 metric tons (MT) of rice could cost the government P7 billion. With the NFA Council’s approval to import 750,000 MT of rice this year and its standby approval to import an additional million ton in 2019, the grains agency would need to borrow about P49 billion from the Bureau of the Treasury.
This would put the agency’s total debt to the national government at about P185.9 billion.
The agency’s decision came after Typhoon “Ompong” left some 517,175 hectares of rice farms destroyed, leaving in its trail production losses of about 750,000 MT of rice.
After Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol’s first meeting with the agency as the head of the NFA Council on Monday, additional imports were approved to ensure there would be enough rice supply despite the calamity.
As of Wednesday, NFA’s pending loans stood at P136.9 billion—the bulk of which was incurred during the time of the Arroyo administration. During that time, in an effort to satisfy both farmers and consumers, the agency subsidized both the farm-gate and the market price of rice, which proved to be unsustainable.
Asked whether the NFA has the ability to pay off its loans, spokesperson Rex Estoperez said the agency has always been able to pay the Treasury through the proceeds it gets from selling NFA rice variants in the market. These variants are sold at a constant P27 and P32 a kilogram, depending on the quality.
Just a few weeks ago, an agricultural group filed a graft complaint against former NFA Administrator Jason Aquino for allegedly diverting a portion of the agency’s funds to pay off its maturing loans instead of using the money to stabilize the supply and prices of grains.
For the first semester of 2018, NFA received the largest subsidy from the government’s coffers at P5.2 billion, higher than the subsidy received by the National Irrigation Administration at P2.996 billion.
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 Brown Rice Syrup Market 2018- Global Industry Analysis, By Key Players, Trends, Segmentation And Forecast By 2025

"Brown Rice Syrup Market 2018 rnrn"
Brown Rice Syrup – Global Market Growth, Opportunities, Analysis of Top Key Players and Forecast to 2025
Brown Rice Syrup Market 2018 
Wiseguyreports.Com Adds “Brown Rice Syrup – Global Market Growth, Opportunities, Analysis of Top Key Players and Forecast to 2025” To Its Research Database.
Description: 

This report researches the worldwide Brown Rice Syrup market size (value, capacity, production and consumption) in key regions like North America, Europe, Asia Pacific (China, Japan) and other regions.
This study categorizes the global Brown Rice Syrup breakdown data by manufacturers, region, type and application, also analyzes the market status, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porter's Five Forces Analysis.
Global Brown Rice Syrup market size will increase to Million US$ by 2025, from Million US$ in 2017, at a CAGR of during the forecast period. In this study, 2017 has been considered as the base year and 2018 to 2025 as the forecast period to estimate the market size for Brown Rice Syrup.
This report focuses on the top manufacturers' Brown Rice Syrup capacity, production, value, price and market share of Brown Rice Syrup in global market. The following manufacturers are covered in this report:
CNP
Habib-ADM
Suzanne
Ag Commodities
The Taj Urban Grains
Northern Food Complex
Khatoon Industries

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Brown Rice Syrup Breakdown Data by Type Regular Type
Organic Type
Brown Rice Syrup Breakdown Data by Application
Food & Beverage
Other
Brown Rice Syrup Production Breakdown Data by Region United States
Europe
China
Japan
Other Regions
Brown Rice Syrup Consumption Breakdown Data by Region North America
United States
Canada
Mexico
Asia-Pacific
China
India
Japan
South Korea
Australia
Indonesia
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Europe
Germany
France
UK
Italy
Russia
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Central & South America
Brazil
Rest of South America
Middle East & Africa
GCC Countries
Turkey
Egypt
South Africa
Rest of Middle East & Africa
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Table of Content:
Global Brown Rice Syrup Market Research Report 2018-2025, by Manufacturers, Regions, Types and Applications 1 Study Coverage
1.1 Brown Rice Syrup Product
1.2 Key Market Segments in This Study
1.3 Key Manufacturers Covered
1.4 Market by Type
1.4.1 Global Brown Rice Syrup Market Size Growth Rate by Type
1.4.2 Regular Type
1.4.3 Organic Type
1.5 Market by Application
1.5.1 Global Brown Rice Syrup Market Size Growth Rate by Application
1.5.2 Food & Beverage
1.5.3 Other
1.6 Study Objectives
1.7 Years Considered
2 Executive Summary 2.1 Global Brown Rice Syrup Production
2.1.1 Global Brown Rice Syrup Revenue 2013-2025
2.1.2 Global Brown Rice Syrup Production 2013-2025
2.1.3 Global Brown Rice Syrup Capacity 2013-2025
2.1.4 Global Brown Rice Syrup Marketing Pricing and Trends
2.2 Brown Rice Syrup Growth Rate (CAGR) 2018-2025
2.3 Analysis of Competitive Landscape
2.3.1 Manufacturers Market Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)
2.3.2 Key Brown Rice Syrup Manufacturers
2.4 Market Drivers, Trends and Issues
2.5 Macroscopic Indicator
2.5.1 GDP for Major Regions
2.5.2 Price of Raw Materials in Dollars: Evolution
……..
8 Manufacturers Profiles
8.1 CNP 
8.1.1 CNP Company Details
8.1.2 Company Description
8.1.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.1.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.1.5 SWOT Analysis
8.2 Habib-ADM 8.2.1 Habib-ADM Company Details
8.2.2 Company Description
8.2.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.2.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.2.5 SWOT Analysis
8.3 Suzanne 8.3.1 Suzanne Company Details
8.3.2 Company Description
8.3.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.3.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.3.5 SWOT Analysis
8.4 Ag Commodities 8.4.1 Ag Commodities Company Details
8.4.2 Company Description
8.4.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.4.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.4.5 SWOT Analysis
8.5 The Taj Urban Grains 8.5.1 The Taj Urban Grains Company Details
8.5.2 Company Description
8.5.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.5.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.5.5 SWOT Analysis
8.6 Northern Food Complex 8.6.1 Northern Food Complex Company Details
8.6.2 Company Description
8.6.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.6.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.6.5 SWOT Analysis
8.7 Khatoon Industries 8.7.1 Khatoon Industries Company Details
8.7.2 Company Description
8.7.3 Capacity, Production and Value of Brown Rice Syrup
8.7.4 Brown Rice Syrup Product Description
8.7.5 SWOT Analysis
Continued…..
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Duterte removes non-tariff barriers to agri imports
Duterte’s Administrative Order (AO) No. 13 is directed at the Department of Agriculture (DA), National Food Authority (NFA), Sugar Regulatory Authority (SRA) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

Description: http://media.philstar.com/images/articles/7-agri_2018-09-25_23-48-19.jpg
Christina Mendez (The Philippine Star) - September 26, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — As prices of goods continue to soar, President Duterte has issued an order removing non-tariff barriers to importation of rice and other agriculture products and streamlining administrative procedures for accrediting importers.
Duterte’s Administrative Order (AO) No. 13 is directed at the Department of Agriculture (DA), National Food Authority (NFA), Sugar Regulatory Authority (SRA) and Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).
The Palace issued the order after the country’s economic advisers recommended that steps be immediately taken to arrest inflation, which accelerated to 6.4 percent in August from 5.7 percent the previous month.
AO 13 also sought to minimize the processing time for applications for importation. 
“There is an urgent need to tame the price spikes of basic agricultural commodities by adopting measures that remove non-tariff barriers and streamline administrative procedures to allow importation,” the order stated.
In issuing AO 13, the administration said it seeks to address the shortfall in supply and ensure stable prices of agricultural products in the domestic market.
The Palace also seeks to liberalize the issuance of permits and accreditation to traders as well as temporarily allow importation by sugar-using industries to lower their input cost – but subject to reasonable regulations.
“(This) will facilitate the importation of food beyond what we call as the authorized Minimum Access Volume (MAV). This means that traders can import more and all the fees will be removed,” presidential spokesman Harry Roque Jr. said yesterday, explaining the AO.
“There is a need to liberalize the issuance of permits and the accreditation of traders who import rice to break the monopoly of rice hoarders; and to temporarily allow direct importation of those utilizing sugar to import sugar if needed,” Roque added.
The President is also authorizing the NFA Council to approve additional rice importation beyond the MAV commitment for allocation to the private sector.
The DA is also allowed to issue the appropriate Certificate of Necessity to allow the importation of adequate volumes of fish to augment the 17,000 metric tons of fish already being distributed in the market.
In the order, the President directed the Bureau of Customs “to prioritize the unloading and release of (imported) agriculture products” to minimize or eliminate red tape.
In signing the order, Duterte invoked Republic Act 7581 or the Price Act, which mandates that the state “ensure the availability of basic necessities and prime commodities at reasonable prices at all times without denying legitimate business a fair return on investment.”Based on the order, it’s the duty of the state to “provide effective and sufficient protection to consumers against hoarding, profiteering and cartels with respect to supply, distribution, marketing and pricing of said goods, especially during periods of calamity, emergency, widespread illegal price manipulation and other similar situations.”  
In AO 13, Duterte also ordered the creation of a surveillance team comprising the DTI, NFA, National Bureau of Investigation and Philippine National Police to monitor the importation and distribution of agricultural products.
The group is tasked to ensure the immediate distribution of agriculture products to warehouses and retail outlets, as well as prevent price manipulation.
As this developed, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea also signed Memorandum No. 26 for President Duterte directing the DA and the DTI to adopt measures aimed at reducing the gap between farm gate prices and retail prices of agriculture products.
It also mandated the setting up of public outlets and cold storages where producers of agricultural commodities, as well as poultry producers, can sell directly to consumers.

Hearing deferred

Fearing further economic backlash from the effects of the controversial Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law,  the Senate committee on ways and means is suspending deliberations on the second tranche of the tax reform measure at least until the Department of Finance (DOF) is able to present credible data that the proposed measure would not lead to loss of jobs.
The committee held its first hearing yesterday on the proposed Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High Quality Opportunities (TRABAHO) bill passed by the House of Representatives. Senators said they were not satisfied with the explanation of DOF officials.
“The government should really take this issue on jobs seriously. The bill should stay true to its name – that it would create more jobs rather than kill them,” Sen. Sonny Angara, chairman of the committee, told Finance Undersecretary Karl Kendrick Chua.
The senator also expected the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) to present its cost-benefit analysis of the incentives contained in the measure. But no representative from NEDA was present during the hearing.
Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, chairman of the economic affairs committee, said a cursory examination of the measure left him confused as it showed the allocation of as much as P6 billion to fund safety nets for workers who may be displaced with the enactment of the bill.
“We’re branding the bill as creating work but we’re receiving mixed signals here,” Gatchalian said.
The senators said they welcome the intention of the bill to rationalize fiscal incentives to businesses by making them performance-based, time-bound and transparent to make sure that those benefitting from tax breaks and other incentives really contribute to the economy.
Director Dominique Tutay of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) told the panel the bill might lead to job losses.
Tutay said  DOLE and DOF have yet to complete their joint study on the impact on jobs of the measure.
She revealed that based on their job displacement monitoring, 30,000 jobs in the industry and services sectors were lost in the first quarter of 2018.

Job loss fears

Following the passage of bill in the House, the Semiconductor and Electronics Industries in the Philippines Foundation Inc. (SEIPI) released a statement warning that the bill would force them to lay off 140,000 workers.
They said several multinationals are now locating their expansions outside the country, largely due to the uncertainty over the status of their current tax incentives.
The House version provides for P500 million to be used for cash grants for displaced workers. An additional P500 million would be allocated for targeted training and skills upgrading.
Chua explained the allocations are just “contingency funds for possible job losses.”
Based on data from the DOF, a total of 1.7 million direct and seven million indirect jobs were generated by companies registered with investment promotion agencies (IPAs).
Angara has stressed the primary goal should be to create high-paying jobs, especially in the countryside.
“It seems that the grant of incentives is uneven across regions. We want to spread growth and development in the provinces,” he said.
DOLE official Tutay said the agency would be able to complete its study on the impact on jobs in two weeks.
The leadership of the House of Representatives, meanwhile, will start hearing on Monday the fourth package of TRAIN.
“This is a reform as significant as the recently signed TRAIN law that it aims to complement as it deals with the financial sector which contributes a lot to the economy and plays a crucial role in financing large-scale investments such as the build, build, build program,” committee on ways and means chair Rep. Estrellita Suansing said, referring to House Bill 8252 which seeks to provide neutrality in tax treatment, tax system, tax competitiveness and increase capital mobility and financial inclusion.  
DOF’s Chua, who was present during the committee briefing, said the revenue impact of this measure is around P13 billion on its first year. It is expected to decline as some tax rates become lower.
The finance official also stressed the government should look at the measure from a long-term perspective.
“Sometimes, when we just look at one provision of one package, we do not see the full benefit,” he said, apparently referring to the much-maligned TRAIN 1, widely blamed for rising inflation.
Chua said the government aims to address the deficiencies of the financial sector and institute necessary reforms to at least achieve revenue neutrality so that important government projects get regular and adequate funding.
Suansing, an ally of Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and who took over the post of her predecessor lone Quirino Rep. Dakila Cua, said TRAIN 4 aims to make taxes on capital income and financial intermediaries simpler, fairer and more efficient.
HB 8252 or TRAIN 4 is authored by Suansing and her husband, incumbent Rep. Horacio Suansing Jr. of Sultan Kudarat.
Package 2 or the Trabaho bill seeks to lower corporate income tax while expanding the tax base.
Train Package 3 proposes improvements in the valuation of property so that the government can finance many of its local social services and programs.
The last package, also called “Package 2 Plus,” targets taxes on mining and excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco.  – with Paolo Romero, Delon Porcalla

https://www.philstar.com/headlines/2018/09/26/1854856/duterte-removes-non-tariff-barriers-agri-imports

With rice tariffication, what happens to food security?
September 27, 2018
“We’re a blessed Nation because  we can grow our  own food and, therefore, we’re secure.  A Nation that can feed its people is a  nation more secure.”
·        President George Bush, on the occasion of the signing of the US Farms Bill (2002), which is renewed every five years and which allocates massive subsidy to American agriculture.
With the proposed lifting of the quantitative restrictions on rice, the private sector shall be able to import rice – freely so long as it pays for the tariffs set by the government.  No more importation monopoly of the National Food Authority  (NFA).  No more rice inflation?  No more rice pila’s?
Price stability is the main argument of the proponents of rice importation liberalization.  To them, food security is simply the ability of a country to buy agricultural products wherever they are produced, cheaply.  This is the theory of the agricultural trade liberalizers.  This is the reason the country tariffied agriculture in 1995 (with the exception of sugar and rice), after the Senate ratified Philippine membership in the World Trade Organization  (WTO).
The proponents of agricultural trade liberalization embellished the food security argument further by adding that small farmers who cannot compete with cheap producers in other countries need not worry.  They can shift to the production of higher-value agricultural products.  Accordingly, Philippine agriculture would be a runaway winner under agricultural trade liberalization.  They even came up in 1994, at the height of the Senate debates on WTO membership, with the following macro-economic forecasts: agricultural gross value added of P60 billion a year, agricultural net export earnings of P3.2 billion a year, and 500,000 new jobs in the agri sector every year.
And yet, Philippine agricultural performance from 1995 to the present has been dismal, if not catastrophic — widening net agricultural trade deficits, share of the agricultural sector in the GDP shrinking to less than 10 percent, deepening massive poverty in the countryside, and, food inflation, averaging close to five percent a year from 1995 to 2017.  Thus, with rice tariffication, a number of farmer and civil society organizations such as the PATAMABA, Integrated Rural Development Foundation and Freedom from Debt Coalition are raising critical issues which policy makers are still unable to answer.
First, with tariffication, is the government surrendering the entire rice industry business to the private rice traders, who have a leech-like hold on palay trading, rice storage and rice distribution?  Numerous Congressional hearings, from the time of President Corazon Aquino up to the present, have come up with ugly findings on the cartel-like behavior of the traders, including cases of smuggling and collusion with corrupt NFA officials on the hoarding and mislabeling of rice.  With the tariffication and the further downsizing, if not abolition, of the NFA, these traders shall now have the whole business field to themselves  — from palay procurement at home to rice importation, from milling to storage, and from wholesale to retail distribution. They can dictate the farm gate prices that palay farmers would get and the prices for various rice varieties that consumers are willing to buy.  How can the government then level the playing field? Who will prevent the rice importers-traders from re-milling cheap imported rice and mixing this with quality rice produced in the Philippines and sell this as “regular milled rice”?
Second, what happens to the goal of rice self-sufficiency?  With the influx of cheap imported rice, how can the marginal rice farmers compete?  Some of the answers to competitiveness are well known: better seed varieties, cheap and efficient irrigation, land mechanization, grain dryers, good transport facilities from the farms, and quality rice mills.  These have been identified and discussed in past studies.  These have been the object of the Agriculture and Food Modernization Act (AFMA) and the Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Act (ACEF).  And yet, both the billion-peso AFMA and ACEF programs have failed to deliver the promised modernization and prosperity for the farmers.  The culprits: the big C (corruption) and the lack of a strong visionary leadership in the agricultural sector.  Now what is the assurance that the so-called tariff revenues to be set aside for the local rice-farming sector shall be able to transform the sector?
Most likely, the land areas devoted to rice farming will continue to shrink.  The rice industry in Central Luzon and Region IV has been disappearing since the 1980s due to urbanization and industrial development.  In a study by Elvira Manalad of Paragos-Philippines, huge swathes of rice lands all over the country are also disappearing because of the widespread “conversion” of lands supposedly covered by agrarian reform and the unchecked  “land banking” operations of the big realty companies and housing/village/resort developers.  The rainfed rice lands are the most vulnerable to the agents of these companies and developers.  Their job is made easier by the absence of a National Land Use law and the weak monitoring by the Department of Agrarian Reform of the land conversions.
So one of the biggest concerns of farm unions and CSOs is the waning capacity of the government, in a liberalized and deregulated economy, to pursue food security and agricultural sovereignty.  Like in the United States and other countries, these unions and CSOs define food security as the capacity of the nation to grow its own food and feed its own people.  Food security means that whatever the volatility in agricultural commodities in the global market there are, the country will be able to survive because domestic production is stable and sufficient.  Of course, food security does not mean stopping all agricultural imports.  The point is that the Philippines, given its land resources and knowhow, should be able to produce in sufficient quantity its basic food requirements.
In the case of rice, the goal of self-sufficiency remains an important one because rice is one of the thinly traded commodities in the world market.  Thus, if a rice shortage occurs in the two major sources of imported rice, Thailand and Vietnam, the Philippines is likely to have a political and economic problem that is too hot to handle.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/with-rice-tariffication-what-happens-to-food-security/

NFA must continue buying local rice

The Senate is currently stepping up efforts to convert the quantitative restriction (QR) on rice into tariffs, a move that is expected to bring rice prices down and ease inflation. Economic managers have been banking on the scrapping of the rice quota to make rice more affordable, particularly to the poor, who spend at least a fifth of their income on the staple. The poor, who cannot afford to buy more expensive sources of protein, such as pork or chicken, consume more rice to fill their stomachs.
By removing the QR on rice, Manila is effectively signaling to the world that it is ready to allow the entry of cheaper rice. The QR on rice, or import quota, has allowed the Philippines to limit the entry of cheaper staple from neighboring Southeast Asian countries, such as Vietnam and Thailand. With the removal of the nontariff barrier, economic managers expect that the average retail price of rice would go down by as much as P7 per kilogram (kg).
The downside of the removal of rice QR is the competition cheap rice imports would pose to locally produced palay. Based on the BusinessMirror’s computation, 5 percent broken rice from Vietnam can be purchased at P20 per kg. Even at a 40-percent tariff, the landed cost is anywhere from P28 to P30 per kg. The amount is much lower than the current average price of P43.86 per kg, according to data from the Philippine Statistics Authority.
Assuming that rice imports would not be hoarded by unscrupulous traders (unlike other farm products, rice can be stored longer), the influx of cheap rice would spell doom for farmers who remain uncompetitive compared to their counterparts in Vietnam and Thailand. If importing rice is more cost-efficient, traders who used to scramble for locally produced palay would rethink their plans. Farm-gate price could go down if traders suddenly become uninterested in local rice. While consumers will have their cheap staple, some 2.4 million rice farmers would be hard-pressed to look for alternative crops.
This scenario can be avoided if Congress would still allow the National Food Authority (NFA) to buy palay from farmers. There are proposals from economic managers to stop the NFA from intervening in the market, which means the agency should stop buying and selling rice. But this should not be done right after Congress has removed the QR on the staple. The food agency must be allowed to at least continue buying rice from farmers for buffer-stocking purposes for two years.
This is one of the measures that we believe the government should consider when it crafts a plan that would help farmers adjust to a new rice-trade regime. Congress can consider allocating part of the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund for the NFA’s palay-buying program.
The tariffication of rice is expected to be completed this month, and the Department of Agriculture would unveil its road map for the sector once the measure is signed into law. We hope that the DA is conducting the necessary consultations with sectors affected by the removal of the quota. This will ensure that strategies employed by the government will have an impact on those whose lives have long depended on the most important grain in the country.

https://businessmirror.com.ph/nfa-must-continue-buying-local-rice/

 

‘NFA incentives to rice farmers like hiking palay buying price’





Description: https://businessmirror.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/agri01-082018-696x457.jpgIn Photo: Photo shows farmers harvesting rice in La Union.

THE National Food Authority Council (NFAC) has effectively increased the government’s support price for palay to P20 per kilogram (kg) when it decided to approve the grant of more incentives to rice farmers.
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol made the pronouncement on Monday, but clarified that the National Food Authority’s (NFA) direct support price for palay remains at P17 per kg.
Piñol is currently the chairman of the NFAC, the highest policy-making body of the NFA.
“The buying price of NFA remains at P17 per kg but we will come up with incentives that when quantified would reach P20 per kg,” Piñol said in a news briefing following the NFAC’s first meeting under his chairmanship.
He said the NFA would give additional transportation incentives to farmers who would sell their crops to the government. They would also be entitled to receive farm equipment, among others.
The grant of additional incentives is effective immediately, according to Piñol.
He said the NFA would also be “flexible” with its 14-percent moisture content requirement for palay and would purchase even wet palay.
“We will be flexible in terms of the moisture content. The government must help the farmers,”  he said. “The farmers would say the NFA’s support is limited. The government is out there to help the people. Our directive is to help the farmers.”
Despite the increase in the NFA’s palay support price, the food agency’s selling price would remain at P27 per kg for regular-milled rice and P32 per kg for well-milled rice, Pinol said.
At present the NFA buys palay from farmers at a support price of P17 per kg and gives additional incentives totaling P0.70 for individual farmers and P1 for cooperatives.
The NFA has been pushing for an increase in its support price as farmers prefer to sell to traders who buy palay at P20 per kg to P25 per kg.
Piñol have repeatedly stated that the NFA will not be able to purchase palay locally if their buying price would remain at P17 per kg.
The agriculture chief said traders could even hike their offer and cause the average farm-gate price to remain above the P20-per-kg mark this main harvest season following the onslaught of Typhoon Ompong in some rice-producing provinces.
Lawmakers belonging to the Makabayan Bloc have recently filed a resolution to provide the NFA a supplemental budget of P10 billion to beef up its palay procurement program. The resolution also mandates the NFA to automatically buy palay at P20 per kg.

NFA stockpile

The NFA buys uNmilled rice from farmers to beef up its stockpile, which is also made up of imports.
The depletion of the NFA’s rice buffer stock, is being tagged as one of the major factors behind the increase in the retail price of commercial rice.
On Tuesday Presidential Spokesman Harry L. Roque Jr. said rice imports were delayed because NFA Administrator Jason Aquino had preferred the government-to-government (G2G) mode of importation.
Because of the delay, Roque said prices of goods went up and forced the government to import more food items, including rice.
Roque claimed that it was Aquino who “purposely delayed” the importation. He said some importers may sue the NFA chief because of this.
“The Council has given the authority to import but he delayed it because he has a preference for G2G,” he said, noting that the G2G importation is the “worst” mode of importation as this is prone to corruption.
“So many [importers] will be filing cases against him because of the losses sustained by them as a result of orchestrations so that they cannot import pursuant to the open tender system,” Roque added.
Roque said he is also thinking of filing graft and corruption and technical malversation cases against Aquino once he leaves the Cabinet.
“Since he did not spend the money to buy rice from local farmers so that the government will have enough buffer stock, we are importing now and we are giving money to foreign farmers,” he added.
President Duterte is set to appoint retiring Army chief Lt. Gen. Rolando Bautista to replace Aquino, whose resignation he already accepted, according to Roque.
During his televised interview with Chief Presidential Legal Counsel Salvador S. Panelo, Duterte said Aquino had asked to be relieved from his post since he is “tired.

 


Read more at:

Palace to NFA: Release rice stocks to markets

Malacañang on Tuesday issued Memorandum Order No. 28 directing the National Food Authority (NFA) to immediately release existing rice stocks in its warehouses to boost rice supply in the market and protect consumers from profiteers and hoarders.
Description: Workers unload sacks of NFA rice at the NFA Warehouse in Visayas Ave, Quezon City, June 26 2018 as new buffer stock from Vietnam and Thailand arrives. The newly delivered rice will be distributed to selected markets in Metro Manila as the NFA vowed never to allow again the depletion of its buffer stock. They began to to distribute the low-priced, good quality NFA rice priced at P27 per kilo. (Mark Balmores)

Workers unload sacks of NFA rice at the NFA Warehouse in Visayas Ave, Quezon City, June 26 2018.
(Mark Balmores / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)
In the order, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea directed the NFA to “immediately release to markets approximately 230,000 metric tons of rice currently in stock in the warehouses across the country.”Aside from this, the food agency has also been ordered “to release 100,000 metric tons of rice previously contracted to be delivered before the end of September.”“Subject to applicable laws and issuances, the NFA is further directed to adopt measures to ensure access by consumers to regular milled and well-milled rice,” the order read.
It noted that certain administrative constraints and fees unduly add to the costs of importation of basic agricultural commodities and contribute to price increases.
“There is a need to promulgate measures to stabilize the prices of basic agricultural commodities at reasonable levels, to maintain their sufficient supply in the domestic market and to provide effective and sufficient protection to consumers against hoarding, profiteering, and cartels with respect to the supply, distribution, marketing and pricing of said goods,” the memorandum read.
Seamless delivery
Malacañang likewise issued two other directives to ensure efficient delivery of imported agriculture products to the markets.
In Memorandum Order No. 27, the Department of Agriculture (DA), Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), Philippine National Police (PNP) and Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) have been directed to adopt measures to ensure the efficient and seamless delivery of imported agriculture and fishery products from the ports to markets.
The concerned agencies have been authorized to issue “food lane passes for truckers and suppliers carrying agricultural products.”
Memorandum Order No. 26, on the other hand, directed the DAand DTI to adopt measures to reduce the gap between farm gate prices and retail prices of agricultural products.
Among the measures include establishment of public outlets and cold storages where producers of agricultural commodities as well as poultry producers can directly sell to consumers.
The concerned agencies have been directed to submit to the Office of the Executive Secretary a progress report within a month.
The three memorandum orders, signed by Medialdea by the authority of President Duterte last September 21,are effective immediately.
Incentives
Meanwhile, the NFA Council, the highest policy-making body of National Food Authority (NFA), said it is planning to give incentives to farmers who will sell rice at government’s buying price of P17 per kilo.
This was revealed by Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel Piñol, who now chairs the NFA Council. The NFA has been using the low buying price of palay as an excuse not to procure palay from local farmers and instead relied on the importation of rice from other countries to boost its stock.
The agency claimed that local farmers prefer selling their produce to private traders at P20 per kilo or more.
Data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) released this month showed that the average farmgate price of palay has reached P23.66 per kilogram nationwide.
The highest farmgate prices of palay were reported at P29.00/kg in Lanao del Norte and P28.00/kg. in Pangasinan and Laguna. (With a report from Madelaine B. Miraflor)

QC council passes 2 ordinances increasing rice subsidy to employees

Published 
By Chito Chavez
The Quezon City Council passed two ordinances increasing the quarterly rice subsidy for city hall personnel from P1,500 to P2,000 and the longevity pay for career civil servants from P200 to P300 for every five years of service.
Description: Quezon City Vice-Mayor Joy Belmonte. (Mark Balmores/MANILA BULLETIN)
Quezon City Vice-Mayor Joy Belmonte. (Mark Balmores/MANILA BULLETIN)
“We need to make sure that our own city employees have a decent living. In light of the rising prices of goods, we want to start by helping with the most basic commodity – rice,” Quezon City Vice Mayor Belmonte, the presiding officer of the city council said.
Authored by Councilor Victor Ferrer Jr., ordinance No. 2727 states the quarterly rice subsidy for all Quezon City hall regular employees will increase from P1,500 to P2,000.
The assistance is “in consonance with the city government’s desire to alleviate the economic plight of its own workers from the widespread crisis and prolonged high-cost of rice”. The subsidy will be given at the end of every quarter.
Ordinance No. 2728 also authored by Ferrer mandates the increase in longevity pay of career civil service employees of the local government of Quezon City from P200 for every five years of service to P300 for the same period.
The civil servants must have rendered at least five years of continuous service to avail of the loyalty bonus.
According to the ordinance, career civil service employees “deserve to be rewarded financially by the virtue of their loyalty and dedication to public duty”.
For both increases, the vice mayor pointed out that, “Incentives such as this help us reduce corruption by making sure that the public servants in Quezon City are well-compensated.”
Belmonte stressed the need for the city government to provide ample support to the city’s honest and dedicated public servants especially during these rough times.
She said she is currently working on a scheme that will provide more incentives and reward local government employees for their honesty and good behavior.
“We will make sure that bad behavior is punished and penalized, but good behavior is rewarded because values ang gusto natin baguhin dito (we want to change values here),” she said.

Bumper rice harvest in eastern granary county(1/6)

2018-09-26 13:34:49Ecns.cnEditor :Yao Lan
Description: A drone photo shows rice harvesting in a field in Taihe County, East China’s Jiangxi Province, Sept. 25, 2018. The county is one of China’s commodity grain bases. (Photo: China News Service/Sima Tianmin)
A drone photo shows rice harvesting in a field in Taihe County, East China’s Jiangxi Province, Sept. 25, 2018. The county is one of China’s commodity grain bases. (Photo: China News Service/Sima Tianmin)


Xi Jinping inspects rice farms in northeast China's Heilongjiang

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday arrived in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province for an inspection tour.
Xi started his tour Tuesday afternoon at the Jiansanjiang branch of Heilongjiang Farms and Land Reclamation Administration to inspect the conditions of grain production and harvest.
Known as China's "green rice city," Jiansanjiang is one of the most important commodity grain bases in the country.
Description: https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514f304d444e7a457a6333566d54/img/e1698710e2fd4e08bc5d76cf60945d81/e1698710e2fd4e08bc5d76cf60945d81.jpg
Chinese President Xi Jinping (C) conducts an inspection tour in Jiansanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, September 25, 2018. /Xinhua Photo
Description: https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514f304d444e7a457a6333566d54/img/ad169952d99d4347bc632a86e58bdfb3/ad169952d99d4347bc632a86e58bdfb3.jpg
Chinese President Xi Jinping conducts an inspection tour in Jiansanjiang, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, September 25, 2018. /Xinhua Photo
It is located in the heartland of the Sanjiang Plain, an alluvial plain created by three rivers. 
There are currently 15 large and medium-sized state-owned farms in Jiansanjiang, covering an area of 12,400 square kilometers. It has 754,667 hectares of arable land and 678,667 hectares are used to grow rice, according to the branch's official website.
A total of 96.35 billion kilograms of grain have been produced in Jiansanjiang over the past 60 years, including 86.75 billion kilograms of commodity grain, the website shows.






ORGANIC RICE MARKET 2018: MANUFACTURERS PROFICIENCY AND IN-DEPTH INTERNATIONAL GROWTH RESEARCH REPORT DURING 2023


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Tubers float over Texas Wild Rice. Daily Record file photo

Grant Will Fund Expansion Of Wild Rice Study

Endangered Species
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
The Meadows Center for Water and the Environment at Texas State University has received a $168,000 grant from the city of San Marcos to support removal of non-native aquatic species and expand the distribution of native aquatic species including the endangered Texas Wild Rice in the San Marcos River.
Efforts led by The Meadows Center’s Biology Field Crew, in partnership with the Edwards Aquifer Habitat Conservation Plan (EAHCP), have contributed to a 15 percent (or 1,300 m2) increase of the endangered Texas wild rice distribution in the San Marcos River this past year. Since the plan’s implementation in 2013, Texas wild rice has expanded an estimated 4,500 m2.
“Texas Wild Rice is only found in the San Marcos River, which is why it’s important to have a greater aerial coverage to protect the species from what may come in the future,” Chief Science Officer Thom Hardy said. “This past year we’ve been successful at expanding the species’ distribution laterally and longitudinally, which will hopefully help make it more resilient against unanticipated events and human influenced changes.”
The field crew, led by Hardy, is contracted through the EAHCP to rehabilitate aquatic habitats and conduct research to strengthen conservation efforts in the San Marcos River. Services provided by the field crew and other organizations involved in the EAHCP ensure the river meets federal standards.
“Texas Wild Rice will always remain significant ecologically because of its limited location and distribution on a global and regional level,” Hardy said. “We hope to preserve Texas Wild Rice for its own uniqueness as well as the other native species that utilize it for habitat.”
To maintain a healthy habitat for the river, the field crew continuously monitors non-native plants and native plants. Non-native species are removed by hand and sent to composting at Bobcat Blend, while native aquatic plants are grown in the Freeman Aquatic Building at Texas State. Once the native plants mature, they are replanted in the river.
“The community can help Texas Wild Rice thrive by being mindful to not walk through the rice, which could cause harm to the plants,” Hardy said. “I would also encourage our community to help teach others about the uniqueness of this system and why that is important.”
The field crew also provides opportunities for Texas State students to get hands-on experience in biology-related research, which allows them to apply materials learned in the classroom to real-world projects. 
“I decided to attend Texas State University because of the unique aquatic ecosystem that originates right on campus, but not knowing exactly where I would go after achieving a degree,” said Chris Mullins, biology field lab student worker. “Being able to participate in the work that the field crew does has transformed my interest into a passion. I now know that I want to continue my education and find a career in conservation biology that will allow me to continue my efforts to preserve other amazing ecosystems and the wildlife within them.”
Habitat restoration is a tough job that needs constant attention. Individuals that are interested in volunteering with the field crew should contact meadowscenter@txstate.edu
For more information about the EAHCP, view the 2017 Annual Report at www.eahcp.org/files/admin-records/NEPA-and-HCP/EAHCPAnnualReport2017v2_C... The EAHCP is done in partnership with the Edwards Aquifer Authority, the city of New Braunfels, the city of San Marcos, the city of San Antonio, the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority, Texas State University, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ensure the protection of the federally listed species in the Comal and San Marcos Springs, while helping to ensure stability of the Edwards Aquifer as a water supply for the region.