Monday, February 18, 2019

18th February,2019 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter


Biryani Stories: In search of the origin of Biryani

15:54 GMT 
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Chicken Biryani from the streets of Hyderabad, India. Image via Wikimedia Commons by FoodPlate. CC: BY -SA 4..0
This is the second article of our series, “Biryani Stories”, which looks at the common culinary culture in South Asian countries. In this installment, we explore the various types of Biryani that exist in India.
While a debate rages over whether Biryani, the king of South Asian cuisine, originated in Persia (present-day Iran), history suggests that this mixed rice dish has its origins among the Muslims of the Indian subcontinent — part of the Mughlai cuisine for which India is famous.
This does not discount the strong logic behind the claim that Biryani originated in Persia. The word comes from the Persian word “birian”, which means “fried before cooking” — but Iranian Biryani street food no longer contains rice; rather, it has evolved into chunks of meat cooked in an envelope of paper-thin bread. Of course, it is also possible that the food may have traveled with pilgrims from central Asia to the Deccan region in south India.
The current Indian subcontinent versions of Biryani were developed from the 15th century to about the 19th century, during the reign of the Mughal Empire.
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The origin & Journey Of Biryani http://redd.it/2cvcyo 
India is a diverse country in terms of culture and culinary flavors. Northern Indian food varieties, for example, have been influenced by the Mughlai cooking techniques like Dum Pukht (slow cooking in a sealed pot) and butter-based curries, while Southern Indian people are fonder of using more vegetables, rice, and seafood.

North and Central Indian Biryanis

One of the most famous Biryanis in India is Lucknowi Biryani, named after Lucknow, the capital of the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. In both flavor and aroma, it is considered one of the best Biryanis: the textures are softer and the spices milder.
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Hyderabadi Dum Biryani originated as a blend of Mughal and Iranian cuisine during the reign of the Mughal viceroy Asif Jah, who was known as the Nizam of Hyderabad back in the 18th century. His royal cooks would marinate meat with spices overnight and soak it in yogurt before layering it with long-grain, aromatic Basmati rice and placing it in a sealed handi (cooking pot), where it was cooked to perfection in Dum Pukht style.
Hyderabad also has some offbeat flavors of Biryiani, especially Doodh Ki Biryani, which is the polar opposite of the spicy Hyderabadi Dum Biryani: because it is flavored with creamy milk, roasted nuts, and minimal spices, it tastes rather mild.

Biryiani in South India

Towards the south of India, the Biryani recipes start to vary wildly, incorporating ingredients like vegetables and seafood. Take the example of Bhatkali Biryani from Bhatkal, a tiny coastal town in Karnataka state. For this dish, the meat, the spices, and the rice are all cooked separately without using oil and ghee, and mixed only seconds before serving.
Further south in Mangalore, a coastal town in Karnataka, there are seafood varieties of Biriyani. In this Pukki Biryani, where half-cooked fish is layered with rice in a sealed handi and slow-cooked, spices like fennel and coriander are common, as is the use of rice varieties other than the traditional long-grained Basmati.
The Ambur Biryani from the Arcot region of Tamil Nadu is basically Pukki Biriyani (rice cooked separately) with a distinctive feature: it uses a short-grained Seeraga Samba rice.
Further southeast, in Kerala, the Thalassery Biryani uses Jeerakasala rice — a short-grained local variant, which is cooked separately from the meat, then combined with the famous spices of Kerala and garnishes like fried onions, cashews, and raisin to blend the flavors. The Kozhikode Biryani (Calicut Biryani) uses Khyma Rice and is tempered with several Kerala spices that give it its signature spicy taste.

Biryani in other parts of India

The Memoni trading community of Sindh-Gujarat in northeastern India has Memoni Biryiani, made with lamb, yogurt, fried onions and potatoes, and fewer tomatoes compared to the famous Pakistani Sindhi Biryani. The distinguishing factor in the western Indian Bohri Biryani cooked in Dum style is the moist, smoked meat.
The Kolkata (Calcutta) Biryani from West Bengal is similar to the Lucknowi Biryani, but more subtle in taste, with fewer spices and the addition of potato and egg.
In India's northeast, the Kampuri Biryani is a simple, colorful dish prevalent in the Muslim town of Kampur in Assam. First, the chicken is cooked separately with peas, carrots, beans, potatoes, and bell peppers, and spiced with mild cardamom and nutmeg. It is then mixed with Basmati rice and cooked over a slow fire.

Biryani as street food and temple offerings

The traditional Mughal Biryani was a meat dish, which strictly vegetarian Hindu officers of the court could not have. For them, there was Tehari or Tehri dish, in which the meat was substituted with potatoes. This vegetarian version of the cult dish remains a popular street food in Kashmir and Uttar Pradesh.
Mutanjan Biryani, which uses almost equal amounts of mutton, rice, and sugar, is very popular in Kashmir and Lucknow. It is blended with cream, spices, saffron, screwpine water, and rose water.
There are also instances of Biryani being used in temple offerings:
Biryani is part of the holy offering in this temple https://bit.ly/2FAHf3z  #India #food
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Though social media users quibble about its origins, there is little doubt that Biryani is considered a trademark dish from the Indian subcontinent:
There are at least 20 + varieties of biryani like Bombay biryani, Afghan biryani, Hyderabadi biryani, Sindhi biryani, Kacchi Biryani etc & karachiites should realize that they did not invent it or own its rights. Its origin is Mughlai & Awadhi cuisine from Delhi & Lucknow.
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Although Biryani may be a Persian import, the origin may go back to 2 A.D to a dish called 'Oon Soru', recorded in Sangam literature.
A meat and rice preparation cooked with Black Pepper and Coriander and more. Could India's almost national dish have been invented in Tamilakam?
8
The debate may go on, but no one will ever turn down a Biryiani treat.
https://globalvoices.org/2019/02/16/biryani-stories-in-search-of-the-origin-of-biryani/

Drop in rice prices due to market speculation
By Lilybeth Ison  February 18, 2019, 5:01 pm
MANILA -- Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel "Manny" Piñol clarified that the fall in the buying price of rice by commercial traders is the result of speculation, which was fueled by the anticipated "flooding" of the market with cheap imported rice under a liberalized market.
This is in view of the disinformation surrounding the newly-enacted Rice Tariffication Law's effect on the local rice industry, to the point that the buying price of palay has dropped from a high of PHP22 per kilo last year to PHP14 and PHP15 in some parts of the country now.
Piñol said the Rice Tariffication Law has just been signed by President Rodrigo Duterte and is not effective yet.
"There is a period within which the public will be notified and the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) still have to be finalized," he explained.
And even if the importers would want to bring in huge volumes of imported rice, the DA chief said there is not much rice supply available in the world market.
"As it is now, the volume of rice traded in the world market every year is only about 40-million metric tons (MT) of which about 38-million (MT) is already committed to specific non-rice producing countries," he said.
"The world population is growing exponentially while the land area is constant and this is true with rice exporting countries like Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Pakistan and Myanmar," he added.
The DA chief said a few years from now, Thailand and Vietnam will not be able to export the same volume of rice as they do today because they also have growing populations.
"The Philippines cannot let go of its own Rice Production Program because the moment it becomes dependent on imported rice, even on a short term, it will end up at the mercy of the rice exporters who could sell their produce at an even higher price than our domestic cost of production," he noted.
Piñol said that the view that some economists are peddling that the Philippines would be better off just importing rice rather than producing it locally is "a short-sighted perspective".
"If this view prevails, the Philippines will face a real rice crisis a few years from now with sky-high prices which the poor cannot afford," he said.
Piñol, however, admitted that initially, there would be a drop in the buying price of palay "but the farmers are expected to adjust by increasing productivity with funds coming from tariffication."
Under the Rice Tariffication Law, a provision states that the tariffs and duties collected from the rice importation -- 35 percent for ASEAN members and 50 percent for other sources -- shall be turned over to the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF), estimated at no less than PHP10-billion annually.
For 2019, Piñol said about PHP5 billion of the PHP10-billion RCEF will be allocated for farm mechanization; PHP3-billion for high-yielding seeds; PHP1-billion for credit; and PHP1-billion for technical skills training.
"Properly used, the RCEF could actually increase the productivity of Filipino rice farmers because farm mechanization alone will increase production efficiency and reduce post-harvest losses estimated at 16 percent of total production," he said.
The DA chief explained that the PHP3-billion intended for high-yielding seeds developed by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) is also expected to increase average farm yield by at least two MT in one-million hectares for the first year of implementation.
On the other hand, the PHP1-billion credit facility will also allow farmers to buy fertilizers and other farm inputs, thus increasing their productivity, while the P1-B for technical skills training is expected to improve their farming technology, he said.
Piñol also stressed that he is supporting the lifting of the Quantitative Restrictions (QR) on rice importation.
He reiterated that the Rice Tariffication Law was the commitment of the Philippines to the World Trade Organization WTO) negotiations many years ago "and these are commitments that we must honor or else we will face trade disputes from other WTO member countries."
"Of course, I have to admit that I had my reservations on the provisions of the law, which takes out the regulatory powers of the National Food Authority (NFA), but these are now settled with the signing of the bill into law. I am a government worker and I will abide by the policy set by the administration and work to ensure its successful implementation," he added. (PNA)

Bangladesh wants to import guava, rice

Parvez JabriFebruary 17, 2019

LARKANA: Noor-e-Helal Saifur Rahman, Deputy High Commissioner of Bangladesh at Karachi has said that his country desires to increase trade with brethren Islamic countries for which he invited delegation of Larkana Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI) to visit Bangladesh for market research without any middleman.
He was addressing meeting of LCCI in their office here on Saturday.
He said Bangladesh is importing several things from Brazil and Australia which cost them more. He said we want to increase import & export with Pakistan which include mangoes, guava, rice and vegetables. He said production of coconut, pineapple, mineral water bottles is made in Bangladesh which we want to export to Pakistan.
Nisar Ahmed Khuhro, PPP provincial chief, Asad Ali Tunio, Kashif Ali Mumtaz Ali, Mayor Muhammad Aslam Shaikh, LCCI president Abdul Ghafar Shaikh and other members participated in the meeting.
In his welcome address Asad Tunio said that Pakistan is importing jute bags and its raw material costing $38 million annually whereas rice is largely used in Bangladesh and Larkana is the largest producer of Irri-6 rice
He said in 2016 Bangladesh imported rice worth $10 million which was reduced to $3 million in 2017. Bashir M Paryal said that Bangladesh is our brethren Islamic country and it can import rice, guava, mangoes and vegetables which will further improve our relations. He also suggested meeting of Bangladesh and Pakistani businessmen to further strengthen trade relationship.
Traditional Sindhi Ajrak was presented to the distinguished guest.

Support India’s right to self-defence
Written by Shubhajit Roy |New Delhi |Updated: February 17, 2019 7:43:12 am
US NSA dials Ajit Doval:

US National Security Advisor John Bolton’s underlying message in the conversation is being read by New Delhi as a nod to a possible retaliatory strategic response by India, including military options.
In a significant signal to New Delhi as well as the international community, US National Security Advisor John Bolton has supported India’s “right to self-defence” against cross-border terrorism, in his phone conversation Friday night with National Security Advisor Ajit Doval.
Bolton’s underlying message in the conversation is being read by New Delhi as a nod to a possible retaliatory strategic response by India , including military options.

This is different from NSA in the Obama administration, Susan Rice’s conversation with Doval in September 2016, after the Uri attack. Then, the message was to exercise restraint, and that Pakistan should take action against Jaish-e-Mohammad, Lashkar-e-Taiba and other terror outfits.
The tone and tenor of Bolton’s phone call are different from Rice’s, and that has emboldened the Indian establishment’s strategic thinking in the last 24 hours since the phone conversation, sources said.
Incidentally, Rice’s phone call took place just hours before India conducted surgical strikes along the Line of Control in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
According to a statement by the Ministry of External Affairs Saturday, Bolton expressed condolences and “outrage” over the Pulwama attack Thursday in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed when a suicide bomber struck a convoy in J&K. Jaish has claimed responsibility for the attack.
 “Ambassador Bolton supported India’s right to self-defence against cross-border terrorism. He offered all assistance to India to bring the perpetrators and backers of the attack promptly to justice. NSA Doval appreciated U.S. support,” said the MEA statement.
“The two NSAs vowed to work together to ensure that Pakistan cease to be a safe haven for JeM and terrorist groups that target India, the U.S. and others in the region. They resolved to hold Pakistan to account for its obligations under UN resolutions and to remove all obstacles to designating JeM leader Masood Azhar as a global terrorist under the UN Security Council Resolution 1267 Committee process,” said the statement said. The US had co-sponsored the resolution, along with France and UK, to list Azhar in 2017, which was blocked by China.

 
“I told Ajit Doval today that we support India’s right to self-defence. I have spoken to him twice, including this morning… and expressed the US’ condolences over the terrorist attack,” Bolton told PTI in Washington.
He also said the US has been very clear to Pakistan on ending support to terrorist safe havens. “We have been very clear on that score… And, we are continuing to be in discussions we are going to have with the Pakistanis,” he said.
On Twitter, Bolton said: “I expressed condolences to NSA Doval yesterday for the reprehensible terrorist attack on India. Pakistan must crack down on JeM and all terrorists operating from its territory. Countries should uphold UNSC responsibilities to deny safe haven and support for terrorists”, and then tagged a handle managed by Doval’s “followers and fans” @nsaajit.
In September 2016, the US National Security Council Spokesperson, Ned Price had said in a statement that Rice spoke to Doval and strongly condemned the September 18 cross-border attack on the Indian Army Brigade headquarters in Uri and offered condolences to the victims and their families.
“Ambassador Rice affirmed President Obama’s commitment to redouble our efforts to bring to justice the perpetrators of terrorism throughout the world. Highlighting the danger that cross-border terrorism poses to the region, Ambassador Rice reiterated our expectation that Pakistan take effective action to combat and delegitimize United Nations-designated terrorist individuals and entities, including Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, Jaish-e-Muhammad, and their affiliates. In the context of the robust U.S.-India partnership, Ambassador Rice discussed our shared commitment with India to pursuing peace and regional stability and pledged to deepen collaboration on counterterrorism matters including on UN terrorist designations.”
However, this time, the signal from Washington, both from the US administration and the US Congress, was swift, stronger and much larger in scale. This is significant since the White House and the US Congress are at odds with each other.
And, that has been visible with statements from the US. While US Ambassador to India, Kenneth Juster was the first ambassador in New Delhi to tweet support to India on Thursday evening, the White House and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have also asked Pakistan to end its support to terrorist safe havens inside the country.
“We stand with India as it confronts terrorism. Pakistan must not provide safe haven for terrorists to threaten international security,” Pompeo said on Twitter.
In a stern message to Pakistan, the White House asked Islamabad to “immediately end” its “support” to all terror groups and not to provide “safe haven” to them, as the US condemned the brutal Pulwama terror attack.
“The United States calls on Pakistan to end immediately the support and safe haven provided to all terrorist groups operating on its soil, whose only goal is to sow chaos, violence, and terror in the region,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said in a late night statement on Thursday.
Top US lawmakers have rallied behind India’s effort to fight terrorism and said that such heinous crimes will not weaken the resolve of its people.
So far, more than 70 American lawmakers including 15 Senators have condemned the attack.





Northern Australia CRC launches project aimed at taking wild rice from the swamp to supermarket shelves

On QLD Country Hour with Amy Phillips
Professor Robert Henry from the Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation has been mapping wild rice plots in far north Queensland - including at the Mareeba Wetlands - for about the past decade. But now the commercial potential of these ancient varieties will be tested in a new project launched by the Co-operative Research Centre (CRC) for Developing Northern Australia. It's a quantum leap forward that will bring together researchers, government, rice growers, processors and marketers to analyse the entire supply chain, but not everyone is convinced rice production is the right fit for the north.


Philippines liberates rice market
ASEAN+ February 18, 2019 01:00
By PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER
ASIA NEWS NETWORK
MANILA
THE PHILIPPINES' Rice Tariffication Bill has been signed into law by President Duterte amid opposition from farmer groups and consistent prodding from economic managers and business organisations.

The measure, considered a priority bill of the Duterte administration, will effectively open the country’s doors to unimpeded importation of rice and provide an annual subsidy of 10 billion peso (Bt6 billion) for the development of the rice industry.
Economic managers and 13 business organisations had thrown their support for the law, noting that its enactment would help temper the country’s inflation, bring down retail prices of rice in the market and harness the country’s ability to ensure food security.
However, industry groups, including the Federation of Free Farmers, Alyansa ng Magbubukid and Bantay Bigas, had urged Duterte to veto the bill, citing issues of smuggling and corruption in the rice trade as well as the limited role of the National Food Authority (NFA) under the law.
Under the tariff regime, the NFA would be limited to maintaining the country’s emergency stocks in time of calamities and would not be allowed to license importers and regulate the entry of imported rice in the market.
It was not clear if it would still be allowed to sell subsidised rice in the market.
Acting NFA Administrator Tomas Escarez said details of the agency’s function would be tackled in the implementing rules and regulations of the law, which has yet to be released.
The Rice Tariffication Law allows the market to be flooded with rice imports so long as these are slapped a tariff at 35 per cent if coming from Asean members and 50 per cent for non-Asean states.
Around 28 billion peso in revenues are expected to be collected by the government from these imports, which would be used to subsidise rice farmers to ensure their competitiveness.
Senator Cynthia Villar, chair of the Senate committee on food and agriculture and the proponent of the bill, said that the money should be used to mechanise and modernise the sector, which has been lagging behind other rice-producing countries.
Unlike in Vietnam and Thailand where farmers can produce a kilo of rice at 6 peso, Filipino farmers incur a production cost of 12 peso a kilo, making local rice costlier than imported rice.
Whether or not relying on rice imports would benefit both local producers and consumers of the staple remains to be seen.
Right now, the challenge is to make sure that rice farmers can compete at a price 35-per cent higher than imported rice, and give consumers the option to avail themselves of the staple at a more affordable price.

Corn growers call new rice policy unrealistic

THE Philippine Maize Federation (PhilMaize) said the abandonment of the policy goal of rice-self-sufficiency does not reflect reality, with Filipinos still favoring rice over other staple carbohydrates.
“This does not reflect what is on the ground. We are a nation that mostly eats rice and a little bit of corn,” PhilMaize President Roger V. Navarro said in a statement over the weekend, suggesting that advocates of more liberal rice imports are conducting theoretical exercises in mapping out agricultural policy.
“(Budget) Secretary (Benjamin E.) Diokno should calibrate his pronouncements (when he sits at his) table planning for us in the field. They don’t even know if their words inspire or hurt farmers’ feelings,” Mr. Navarro added.
The rice tariffication bill was signed into law by President Rodrigo R. Duterte last week. This will allow more liberal rice imports by the private sector, with the shipments to be charged tariffs which will help finance a rice industry competitiveness fund while bringing rice prices down for consumers.
Mr. Navarro said if rice exporting countries decide not to sell their produce, it could ultimately lead higher prices.
“We cannot abandon growing in favor of importing it. [In] 2007 to 2008, our country had money to buy rice but exporting countries refused to sell, then prices went to the ceiling. We don’t want a repeat,” Mr. Navarro said.
On Thursday, a day prior to Mr. Duterte signing the bill, Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said that relying heavily on imports will kill the rice industry.
“Ten years from now, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Myanmar, Pakistan and India will no longer be able to export the same volume of rice that they ship out today. They have to feed their growing population as well,” Mr. Piñol said.
“This is a shortsighted view which will kill the rice industry and drive away farmers from the rice fields. The next generation of Filipinos will surely curse us for this misjudgment prompted by a myopic view which focuses on fleeting and changing economic numbers,” according to Mr. Piñol.
The rice tariffication bill also removed the importation role of the National Food Authority. The NFA approved last year rice imports of 750,000 MT, auctioned off to private companies and to the governments of Thailand and Vietnam. This volume turned out to be the last of the NFA-supervised rice imports.
The last tranche of the imports — equivalent to 500,000 MT — is now 88.79% complete with 443,943.60 MT having arrived in the country as of Feb. 15. — Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio

Full impact of rice tariffs not felt till early Q2–Neda

By Cai U. Ordinario & Jovee Marie N. dela Cruz
FILIPINOS cannot enjoy the supposed benefits of rice tariffication until early next quarter, according to the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) and local economists.
Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia told the BusinessMirror the P2- to P7-per-kilogram reduction in rice prices could be felt around March or April or even later, depending on the supply and demand for rice.
Neda Undersecretary for Planning and Policy Rosemarie G. Edillon said the lag time could even stretch to the last part of the second quarter or in the third quarter. The impact on agriculture productivity, she added, could take even longer at around one to two years.
“[Reduction in rice prices will be felt] when supply from tariffied imports, as opposed to NFA’s [National Food Authority]MAV [Minimum Access Volume] imports, matches or exceeds demand for rice,” Pernia said via SMS on Sunday.
Edillon said others factors that could affect the impact of the new law on rice prices include global supply and demand. She said the estimate of a P2- to P7-per-kilogram reduction of rice prices is based on global prices, a tariff of 35 percent, and logistics costs.
However, under the newly signed law, tariff rates can be adjusted by the President. Edillon said this can happen when there are extreme weather events, such as a bad case of El Niño.
Alyansa ng Industriyang Bigas (Anib) Founding Chairman Robert Hernandez said he supports the Neda’s pronouncement that the effect of the rice tariffication law on the prices of the staple could be seen by March or April.
Port congestion, logistics woes
However, Hernandez cautioned that the present port congestion, particularly at the Manila International Container Terminal (MICT), could increase importers’ total costs, which would effectively add on to the retail value of the staple.
Hernandez said Anib applied to import 10,000 metric tons (MT) of rice under the NFA’s out-quota program but they have already faced problems in unloading 10,000 MT of the volume in the MICT due to port congestion.
The 10,000 MT imported by Anib arrived on February 9 but has yet to be unloaded at the MICT and the group will soon incur additional costs due to demurrage, according to Hernandez.
Due to the problem, Anib was forced to divert the remaining 380 containers or about 9,500 MT of rice, which are yet to be imported, to Subic port for unloading there in order to avoid additional costs in MICT, he added. However, Hernandez said the change in port of discharge would still entail them additional costs, which would be added on to the price of the bag imported, due to more expensive trucking costs.
“The trucking costs of transporting the rice from Subic port to our Bocaue warehouse would be double or even triple the trucking cost if it would be unloaded from MICT,” he said.
“[Because of the higher trucking costs] we would be incurring additional costs of P10 per bag. But [the additional cost] would be even higher if our containers stay in MICT, so it is better to divert the remaining containers now to Subic [to cut additional costs],” he added.
Hernandez urged the government to address the port congestion concerns in MICT, especially with the anticipated influx of imported rice abroad. Any delays in unloading would mean higher price of rice as importers would just pass on the additional costs they incurred, plus prolonged unloading time could cause quality of the staple to deteriorate, he added.
“In the rice business, timing is of the essence. We might lose clients if we missed to supply them on the right time. When there is demand then you should have the stock. If you could not supply them right away then they might find another supplier,” Hernandez said.
However, Edillon said the government expects the port congestion problem to be “easily resolved.”
She said rice importation is an easy fix since importers can get their shipments from other ports nationwide. Edillon said the inspection required for rice shipments is not as complicated as other goods.

Special Customs window

House Committee on Agriculture and Food Chairman Jose Panganiban Jr. added that there was a provision in the newly signed law that will allow the Bureau of Customs (BOC) to open a special window for rice importation.
Rice imports will be part of the BOC’s National Single Window program, which seeks to facilitate trade transactions 180 days from the effectivity of the law in accordance with  Executive Order (EO) 482.
The Philippines National Single Window  will facilitate trade through efficiencies in the Customs and authorization processes. Strongly supported by the Office of the President and mandated to be implemented via EO 482, the NSW will allow single submission and accelerated processing of applications for licenses, permits and other authorizations required prior to undertaking a trade transaction.
“We can use other ports, especially if its rice which only requires one kind of inspection, so it can be processed easily. I think it [port congestion] can be resolved immediately, there are alternatives, [there are] solutions that we can suggest, recommend,” Edillon said.

Depends on IRR

Economists such as University of Asia and the Pacific School of Economics Dean Cid Terosa and Philippine Institute for Development Studies Senior Research Fellow Roehlano Briones said the impact of the tariffication will also depend on the government’s efforts in crafting the implementing rules and regulations (IRR).
Terosa hopes the IRR will be completed before the dry season. “There will definitely be a lag. Given the urgency of the bill, I hope the IRR to be processed before the start of the dry season.”
Briones, for his part said, said the content of the IRR will be crucial. He said that if the National Food Authority (NFA) will still control the importation at least during the transition period, this will reduce the impact of the tariffication law on rice prices.
Meanwhile, Action for Economic Reform (AER) Coordinator Filomeno Sta. Ana III said that, while there will be transition problems, the impact of the rice tariffication is already being felt with commodity prices declining.
Many economists chimed in on the issue and even extended their congratulations to the President’s economic team for passing a law that has languished in Congress for 30 years.“[The rice tariffication law] will man
Philippine farmers attack law lifting rice import limits
Say cheap imports will flood local market putting their livelihoods under threat
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Farmers end another day of harvesting on a farm north of Manila. Philippine farmers are complaining over a lack of government support for rice production in the country. (Photo by Mark Saludes)

Farmers in the Philippines have voiced anger over a new law liberalizing the importation of rice, saying it directly threatens local rice production.
The Peasant Movement of the Philippines described the law as "a death sentence for the local rice industry and farmers." 
Danilo Ramos, chairman of the farmers' organization, claimed the lives of about 13.5 million Filipino rice farmers, 17.5 million farm workers, 20,000 rice retailers, and 55,000 rice mill workers would be seriously effected.
"It's the beginning of the end of the local rice industry," said Ramos, adding the local rice industry will not stand a chance against rice imports, despite financial support from the government.
Bishop Arturo Bastes of Sorsogon supported the farmers, saying that with cheaper imported rice flooding the market, young Filipinos will never become farmers.
"They have already lost the desire because of extreme poverty. Now, because of unregulated rice importation, no one would want to plant rice in our own land," the prelate said.
Bishop Bastes said the new law would only force the Philippines to become dependent on neighboring countries for a staple food.
"That law will make us a weaker and poorer country because our farmers are being neglected," he said.
The new law will impose taxes instead of limiting the amount of imported rice entering the country. 
It will enforce a 35-percent tariff on rice importations from Southeast Asian states and 50 percent on imports from countries that are not members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. 
Food security advocates have also opposed the law, warning against its effects on local rice production.
Renmin Crisanta Vizconde, executive director of the Philippine Network of Food SecurityProgrammes, said the law would not reduce the high price of rice and other agricultural commodities.
She said the law "favors rice cartels, traders and capitalists" even as farmers suffer "due to extreme and unprecedented economic instability."
Independent think-tank, the Ibon Foundation, noted that Filipino farmers are unproductive and local rice is expensive "because of long-standing government neglect."
In recent years, the government has allocated no more than five percent of the national budget to agriculture


NFA Council to meet Monday to discuss IRR of rice tariffication law

Published February 17, 2019 4:17pm 
The National Food Authority Council is set to meet on Monday, February 18, to start fine-tuning the implementing rules and regulations (IRR) of the rice tariffication law.
In an interview on GMA Super Radyo dzBB on Sunday, NFA OIC Administrator Tomas Escarez said the NFA Council will meet tomorrow to start discussions on the IRR of the law which removed the quantitative restrictions on rice imports.
"Bukas ng umaga, magco-convene ang NFA Council para i-finalize... para dito sa implementing rules and regulations," he said.
"Kasama kami sa technical working group pero 'yung final decision dito ay magsisimula sa NFA Council," added Escarez.
Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo last week confirmed that Duterte approved the measure that would effectively impose a 25-percent tariff on imports from neighbors in Southeast Asia.
Among those to be discussed, according to Escarez, are the "gray areas" regarding the future of the NFA and what the agency's mandate would be moving forward.
According to Escarez, it is still unclear if the regulatory powers of the NFA would be removed, and if it would instead be confined to ensuring that the country has a sufficient buffer stock to cater to the Philippines' demands.
"Kung iko-confine kami sa buffer-stocking, titignan natin 'yung optimal level na kailangang i-maintain," said Escarez.
The measure allows unlimited importation of rice as long as private sector traders secure a phyto-sanitary permit from the Bureau of Plant Industry and pay the 35-percent tariff for shipments from neighbors in Southeast Asia.
The law earmarks P10 billion for the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund, of which P5 billion will be allotted to farm mechanization and P3 billion to seedlings. The fund intends to ensure that rice imports won’t drown out the agriculture sector and rob farmers of their livelihood. —Jon Viktor Cabuenas/LBG, GMA News

Duterte signs rice law

Last updated Feb 18, 2019
By Prince Golez
Malacanang on Monday released a signed copy of the law, lifting quantitative restrictions (QR) on rice importation.Republic Act (RA) 11203 seeks to remove the QR on rice imports to allow private merchants to bring in rice from other countries.
“Any and all laws, rules, regulations, guidelines, and other issuances imposing quantitative export restrictions on rice are hereby repealed,” the new law said.
Under RA 11203, the exportation of rice will be allowed in accordance with the established rules, regulations, and guidelines.
Signed by President Rodrigo Duterte on February 14, 2019, the measure also created the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund, which will have an annual appropriation of P10 billion for the next six years.
The Rice Fund will be allocated and disbursed to rice producing areas such as rice farm machinery and equipment, rice seed development, propagation, and promotion, expanded rice credit assistance, and rice extension services.

‘Tariffication law should not kill rice farmers’
posted February 17, 2019 at 10:30 pm by Rio N. Araja and Macon Ramos-Araneta
House Speaker Gloria Arroyo on Sunday called for the proper implementation of the Rice Tariffication Act that would lift import restrictions on rice to ensure that it would not be disadvantage farmers and the domestic industry.
Description: http://manilastandard.net/panel/_files/image/Personalities/Arroyo_Gloria_Macapagal/arroyo_final.jpg“We can now focus on its proper implementation so that everyone can and should benefit from the law,” she said.
House Speaker Gloria Arroyo
The measure, which amends the Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996, removes the quantitative restriction on rice importation and impose a 35-percent tariff on imports from Southeast Asian countries.
She said the new law would help further cushion inflation.
“I am happy that President Duterte has signed into law the Rice Tariffication Act. It would further help in easing the inflation that has hit the poor the most,” Arroyo said.
Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Ray Villafuerte, a co-author of the law, said the rice competitiveness enhancement fund under the measure shall allocate 10 percent of its P10-billion allocation or P1 billion for credit to farmers and cooperatives.
The new law would liberalize imports of rice and expand the availability of cheaper rice, he said.
“This will, in turn, prevent a repeat of the 2018 inflation surge brought in large part by the supply shortfall and the subsequent retail price increase of rice...Rice tariffication will benefit poor households the most, given that rice accounts for 20 percent of their consumption,” he added.
Former Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile, however, warned an “oversupply” of rice could adversely affect local farmers.
“The people will be hurt in the domestic market when you bring too much commodity from the outside and you deprive them of the source of livelihood, so we use ta tariff to protect them,” Enrile said in an interview.
“If you would neglect that, and anybody can bring and supply that commodity in our country, our farmers would suffer losses and prices would go down because you plant more than what is needed to cover the demand and that should be the standard of the tariff you need to enforce,” he added.
According to the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, a decline in rice farmers’ income of 29 percent is projected when the rice tariffication law is implemented.

Philippine farmers attack law lifting rice import limits
Say cheap imports will flood local market putting their livelihoods under threat
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Farmers end another day of harvesting on a farm north of Manila. Philippine farmers are complaining over a lack of government support for rice production in the country. (Photo by Mark Saludes)

Farmers in the Philippines have voiced anger over a new law liberalizing the importation of rice, saying it directly threatens local rice production.
The Peasant Movement of the Philippines described the law as "a death sentence for the local rice industry and farmers." 
Danilo Ramos, chairman of the farmers' organization, claimed the lives of about 13.5 million Filipino rice farmers, 17.5 million farm workers, 20,000 rice retailers, and 55,000 rice mill workers would be seriously effected.
"It's the beginning of the end of the local rice industry," said Ramos, adding the local rice industry will not stand a chance against rice imports, despite financial support from the government.
Bishop Arturo Bastes of Sorsogon supported the farmers, saying that with cheaper imported rice flooding the market, young Filipinos will never become farmers.
"They have already lost the desire because of extreme poverty. Now, because of unregulated rice importation, no one would want to plant rice in our own land," the prelate said.
Bishop Bastes said the new law would only force the Philippines to become dependent on neighboring countries for a staple food.
"That law will make us a weaker and poorer country because our farmers are being neglected," he said.
The new law will impose taxes instead of limiting the amount of imported rice entering the country. 
It will enforce a 35-percent tariff on rice importations from Southeast Asian states and 50 percent on imports from countries that are not members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. 
Food security advocates have also opposed the law, warning against its effects on local rice production.
Renmin Crisanta Vizconde, executive director of the Philippine Network of Food SecurityProgrammes, said the law would not reduce the high price of rice and other agricultural commodities.
She said the law "favors rice cartels, traders and capitalists" even as farmers suffer "due to extreme and unprecedented economic instability."
Independent think-tank, the Ibon Foundation, noted that Filipino farmers are unproductive and local rice is expensive "because of long-standing government neglect."
In recent years, the government has allocated no more than five percent of the national budget to agriculture.
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President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration allotted about US$951 million for the Agriculture Department or 1.3 percent of the national budget for 2019.

Paddy fields can’t do without mechanised farming

Mohammad Hussain KhanFebruary 18, 2019
Sindh’s paddy sector has lately seen some interventions aimed at mechanising cultivation, increasing per-acre yields and improving the milling process. The provincial government’s Sindh Enterprise Development Fund (SEDF) has supported several rice mills by absorbing most of the mark-up component of the loan subsidy.
In the forthcoming Kharif season starting in April-May, the SEDF plans to establish companies for the provision of laser land levellers, crop transplanters and harvesters on a rental basis. SEDF Managing Director Mahboob Kazi said the Sindh government was being approached in this regard keeping in view the encouraging trend among millers who availed the subsidy in the last two years.
A rice miller could avail a loan of Rs10m for an upgrade of their mill. The SEDF has tried to prevail upon the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to make sure that commercial bank liberalise their loan regimes for rice millers as well as farmers.
‘The hybrid seed variety has increased paddy production, but the related infrastructure is still missing’
The SEDF absorbs six per cent of the mark-up while 2pc is borne by the borrower. Eight rice mill owners availed this facility between 2012 and 2016. However, 22 mills underwent the much-needed upgrade in the last two years, according to Mr Kazi. “New machinery has reduced the level of electricity consumption by the miller. It has also decreased the ratio of broken rice during milling,” he said.
This trend is encouraging from the SEDF’s point of view. Therefore, it aims to ensure the provision of laser land levellers, transplanters and harvesters for paddy growers through rental service-providers. Laser land levellers ensure uniformity in water distribution at the cultivation and post-cultivation stages as paddy remains a high-delta crop.
It helps save 30-40pc of water that is otherwise lost in any piece of uneven farmland. Similarly, transplanters and harvesters contribute to the overall increased farm productivity.
Manual transplantation of seedlings is labour-intensive, tedious and time-consuming. In contrast, mechanised transplantation substantially increases the plant population up to 100,000 per acre which, according to paddy grower Nabi Bux Sathio, varies around 50,000-70,000 plants per acre in the manual process. Mechanised transplantation increases productivity by 20 maunds an acre which is usually assessed at 50-60 maunds.
Harvesters substantially save grain losses at the harvesting stage. Keeping such losses within 15pc translates into revenue of half a billion dollars, according to Rice Exporters Association Pakistan (Reap) Chairman Safdar Mehkri. He said paddy growers in Pakistan produce 2.7 million tonnes of rice per hectare against 9.2m tonnes in the United States.
“We have a net potential of $5bn rice exports. But we are currently fetching $2bn because of gaps at the cultivation, harvesting, storage and milling stages,” he remarked. He said Pakistan can increase its rice production to 12.5m tonnes from 7.4m tonnes by adopting mechanisation.
In 2018-19, paddy production in Sindh dropped to 2.5m tonnes against the target of 2.7m tonnes (the 2017-18 production estimate is 2.85m tonnes). The cropped area declined to 690,000 acres against the target of 770,000 acres.
The drop in the area and production was attributed to a water shortage at the peak of sowing in Kharif 2018 (April-June). Water flows, as per figures by the irrigation department, stood at 6.453MAF in April-June in 2018 against 11.22MAF in the corresponding period of 2017, showing an overall shortfall of 42.5pc in the last crop season.
Paddy is grown mainly in the right-bank areas of upper Sindh. In lower Sindh, it was cultivated in Badin, Thatta, Tando Mohammad Khan and Sujawal districts.
The quality of seeds also hampered overall growth in the paddy sector. Farmers prefer the imported hybrid variety that paddy growers like Nadeem Shah believe was hit by germination and fruit-setting issues. “It is basically weather conditions that vary between Sindh and countries like Australia, United States and China that produce these seeds,” he observed.
The higher yield potential of hybrid seeds attracts growers. At the same time, this variety also demands vital inputs like zinc, magnesium, pesticides and fertiliser besides timely water flows for better productivity. This increases the overall cost of production.
According to Mr Shah, local varieties like DR-82, Shandar, Irri-6 and Irri-9 also give higher yields with better inputs. He levelled his land in the Sujawal district by laser levellers to overcome water losses and have uniform irrigation water distribution.
Post-harvest losses during milling reduce the overall production of refined rice. With outdated machinery, rice millers have to make do with losses in production. As a result, the ratio of broken rice increases. The SEDF’s assessment showed upgraded machinery in a rice mill improves the production capacity, making a difference of four to five tonnes on average.
Mr Mehkri noted that the hybrid variety has indeed increased paddy production, but the related infrastructure is still missing. The crop was not dried, although driers are available. The tendency to use these driers is too little.
He added that equipment rental companies exist in Punjab, but the idea has not gained popularity here. “Commercial banks avoid offering loans to millers and farmers,” he said.
He referred to rice production in Vietnam which attracted a price over and above the going rate of $110-$150 per tonne in the international market. “With upgraded mills and increased rice production, we can capture markets in the Middle East and other regions. Mechanised farming can offset the impact of the water shortage at the field level,” he asserted.
Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, February 18th, 2019

Rice tariff law a ‘death sentence’ to the local rice industry – Migrante Int’l

Published February 17, 2019, 4:41 PM
By Chito Chavez
An overseas Filipino workers group labelled as a “death sentence to the local rice industry’’ President Duterte’s signing of the rice tarrif bill.“From opening the country to the deluge of imported weevil-infested rice to bringing in more importations, this bill is the final nail in the coffin that will spell a tragic ending to the livelihood of millions of rice farmers,” Migrante International said in a statement.
Description: Migrante International (Migrante International / FACEBOOK)
Migrante International (Migrante International / FACEBOOK / MANILA BULLETIN)
Migrante International rejected the government’s claim that agricultural trade liberalization would ensure food security for Filipinos.
The group insisted that “in reality, we can attest at how this country has deteriorated from being among Asia’s largest rice producers to being one of the world’s top rice importing countries.”
Migrante International also noted that Department of Agriculture (DA) Secretary Emmanuel Piñol admitted the imposition of the rice tariffication is the country’s fulfillment of its commitment to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
“Many of our dear OFWs hail from peasant backgrounds in the countryside and they fully understand the repercussions that this bill would entail to their families’ livelihood back home. As more farmers find rice cultivation unbearable due to the regime’s inclination towards importations, many will be forced to sell their lands to greedy developers and rice millers will find their storehouses empty,’’ the group’s statement added.
 


Odisha should abide by its promise to farmers

The hype and brouhaha over Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik’s KALIA scheme has drowned a burning issue affecting the farmers of the state.
Published: 18th February 2019 04:00 AM  |   Last Updated: 18th February 2019 03:30 AM  |  
The hype and brouhaha over Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik’s KALIA scheme has drowned a burning issue affecting the farmers of the state. Unable to offload their paddy yield through the government’s procurement system, they now stand as vulnerable to exploitative market conditions and non-realisation of minimum support price (MSP) as before. Across the state, stacks of non-procured paddy are lying in mandis as lapses, delays and irregularities have shrouded the procurement process this season. Farmers are resorting to agitations at various places to protest the gross mismanagement in the procurement process and irregularities in the mandis. They suspect the activities of millers, who are alleged to have delayed the lifting of stocks due to ulterior motives. 
If this was not enough, the government has suddenly gone ahead and announced the closure of paddy procurement operations from February-end, two months before the stipulated date of April 30. It has taken into consideration the plea of achieving marketable surplus paddy, surpassing last year’s achievement by over 45 per cent, and to prevent recycling by millers. But it seems to have forgotten its own proclamation in the food policy for the 2018-19 Kharif marketing season that there would be no bar on procurement if more paddy comes to the mandis. Though a target of procuring 55 lakh tonnes of paddy was announced, it was not binding.
Putting an end to procurement at a time when a substantial quantity of paddy is still to be lifted at the mandis is questionable. The farmers will now be at the mercy of private traders and rice millers and forced to sell their paddy at prices much below the MSP. While the procurement mess will no doubt give a fresh impetus to the political blame game over farmers, the government should abide by its own commitments by ensuring that the produce is procured. Besides, the lack of storage facilities at procurement centres as well as at mills is what is hurting farmers the most. If the issue is addressed sincerely, it will resolve a whole lot of problems—both for farmers and the government.
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Paddy Procurement: Opposition slams state govt for Feb 28 deadline


Description: , Paddy Procurement: Opposition slams state govt for Feb 28 deadlineBhubaneswar: Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Saturday slammed the state government for its decision to close paddy procurement after February 28. It comes two months before the usual deadline.Congress leader Bibhu Prasad Tarai said, “The government’s decision seems to help rice millers to make money. The farmers will be forced to sell their harvest at a price of Rs 1200 to Rs1300 per quintal, which is far below the minimum support price (MSP).”The government has taken this decision to mint money to meet its election expenditure, the Congress leader alleged.
Alleging an unholy nexus between millers and the state government, BJP General Secretary Prithviraj Harichandan said the government even failed to procure surplus paddy from farmers, which is unfortunate.
However, Food Supply and Consumer Welfare minister Surya Narayan Patro has a different story to tell. According to Patro, the government has procured 45 per cent more paddy than the previous year. If the process of paddy procurement continues, the brokers will try and loot government money by furnishing false documents. This restriction is necessary to check those brokers.”
This statement by the minister raised questions on the transparency of the paddy procurement process adopted by the state government.
The state Food Supply and Consumer Welfare department has recently asked collectors of 19 districts to complete the paddy procurement process by February 28.
The 19 districts are Angul, Balasore, Bhadrak, Cuttack, Dhenkanal, Gajapati, Ganjam, Jagatsinghpur, Jajpur, Kalahandi, Kendrapara, Keonjhar, Khurda, Malakangiri, Mayurbhanj, Nayagarh, Puri, Rayagada and Sundergarh.
Earlier, the government had ordered for completion of paddy procurement in other districts by February 20.
Kuttanad set for a bumper paddy crop
KOTTAYAM, FEBRUARY 17, 2019 07:50 IST
UPDATED: FEBRUARY 17, 2019 07:50 IST
Description: Paddy harvesting on at Kumarakom. The region, which lies next to Kuttanad, witnessed a sharp rise in yield this season.
Paddy harvesting on at Kumarakom. The region, which lies next to Kuttanad, witnessed a sharp rise in yield this season.  
Region suffered a complete washout of crops in back-to-back floods last year
Incredible it may sound but the devastating floods that hit Kuttanad last year has brought in some good news to the paddy farmers.
After suffering a complete washout of crops in the back-to-back floods, the farmers in the rice bowl of Kerala are preparing for a bumper crop in the first harvest post-floods.
If the initial reports pouring in from the Kumarakom- Aymanam polders adjacent to Kuttanad are any indication, the yield per acre across the region has shot up to 30 to 35 quintals this time as against the average yield of 20-25 quintals.
Silt deposits
Scientific experts attribute the prospective rise in yield to a combination of factors ranging from sedimentation due to the floods to washout of the early crop.
As per estimates, the back-to-back floods during the last monsoon resulted in depositing of silt varying from three centimetres (cm) to 20 cm across the wetland system.
“The most crucial of these could be that after these fields remained submerged for several weeks, the farmers this time could follow the crop calendar for ‘puncha’ cultivation. Given the smooth progress of the calendar, the harvest could be completed much before the arrival of saline water,” explained Dr. Geetha K., Agronomist, Regional Agriculture Research Station, Kumarakom.
Nature of soil
She, however, added that the yield per hectare would vary based on the nature of the soil. “The yield from the kari lands tend to be a bit lower than those classified as Karappadam while the yield from the ‘kayal land’ will always be on the higher side,” said Ms. Geetha.
Confirming the trend, scientists with the Rice Research Station, Mankombu, said the quality of the seed that was distributed for this year’s ‘puncha’ season was significantly higher.
Soil acidity down
“The gush of floodwater brought down soil acidity, which was a major issue experienced by the farmers across Kuttanad, and though the value may differ from pocket to pocket, testing of soil samples in the post-flood season also pointed to a general rise in calcium levels,” said a senior scientist with the centre.
According to them, the strict adherence to the crop calendar coupled with a favourable climate also resulted in low instance of pest and diseases. This in turn raised the prospective yield.
A flip side
Meanwhile, the rise in yield is also accompanied by a relatively new challenge in the form of invasive birds. As per reports, the region has witnessed a sharp rise in bird activity over the past couple of days, leading to wide-spread destruction of the crop.
https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/kuttanad-set-for-a-bumper-paddy-crop/article26295313.ece

ARMM farmers gain P35m DAF machines
posted February 17, 2019 at 08:50 pm by Nash B. Maulana
Sultan Kudarat, Maguindanao—The province’s farmers queued here for the distribution of P35 million worth of mechanized farming equipment by the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao through its Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (DAF-ARMM).
This was the last time the region’s agriculture agency extended aid to farmers in a forum at the DAF-ARMM Information and Area Resource Center (IARC).
Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel “Manny” Piñol said aiding the farmers through upgrading the country’s agriculture was the government’s way of rewarding the tillers for literally feeding the country.
Regional Agriculture Secretary Alexander Alonto Jr. and Assistant Regional Secretary Eugene Strong met the farmers and led the distribution together with Sittie Anida Tomawis Limbona, DAF director for administration.
Limbona said Piñol had earlier approved the release of rice farming machinery units worth P22 million and mechanized equipment for corn crop agriculture worth P13 million.
The agriculture assistance package consisted of 80 units of rice and corn farm machinery units given to 18 farmer and fishers cooperatives in different parts of the province.
Reina Regente Producers Cooperative, Nanungen Mauyag Agriculture Cooperative, Sitio Tumagantang Farmers’ Marketing Cooperative, Sitio Makaw Farmers and Fisher Folks’ Association, and Sitio Pidtulusan Agri-Farmers’ Marketing Cooperative received hand tractors with floating tiller.
Apo Luminog Farmers’ Association and Sunggilingan Marketing Cooperative gained Portable Rice Mills, and Montod Farmers’ Marketing Cooperative received an Electrical Corn Mill.
Reina Regente and Nanungen Mauyag also received mechanical corn shellers; Majadiah Farmers’ Association, Salindab Farmers’ Association, and Satan Taliawid Farmers’ Marketing Cooperative all received Potable Irrigator Open Source machines.
Edna Bajao, alternate focal person for regional rice program, said the machineries for rice farming also included threshers, transplanters, reapers, combine harvester, and MPDP.
Dr. Albert Usman said farmer cooperatives also received cassava graters, 1,600 liters of Insecticides; 1,600 kilograms of fungicide, and 550 sachets of rodenticides.
The assistance is designed to minimize manpower intervention in farming and mechanize the country’s agriculture.
Dr. Tong Pinguiaman, chief of operations of the DAF-ARMM’s Livestock program, said 116 heads of goats and 994 heads of free range chickens also formed part of the aid intervention to Maguindanao farmers in support of the Bangon Marawi Program.
Regional officials also had onsite visit of a model irrigation system inside the ARMMIRC complex to assess and evaluate the area.

New rice price formula to bust large rice miller oligopoly

The ages-old rice pricing mechanism is set to be transformed into a new pricing formula to re-invigorate the market competition with the aim of enhancing farmers’ income while curtailing local market manipulations by the country’s large rice miller oligopoly, Agriculture Ministry sources said. The new formula will stabilise the price of rice, fixing a stipulated price, removing price controls and preventing an artificial price hike in the market.
The government will be providing concessions to small and medium paddy millers by releasing Rs.1 billion from the Treasury to resume their paddy purchasing and processing process affected by the monopolistic practices of bigger rice millers, a senior official of the Ministry said.President Maithripala Sirisena submitted a cabinet memorandum this week seeking approval to provide subsidies to small and medium scale rice mill owners affected by oligopoly.
With the aim of streamlining the paddy marketing system to meet the needs of consumers, the rice pricing formula is to be devised considering paddy production as a function of land size, cost of fertiliser, cost of seed, cost of farm power and labour use in order to sell rice at a reasonable price to consumers without imposing price controls, he divulged.
He added that this decision was announced at a recent meeting between Agriculture Minister P. Harrison, and a few representatives of the Mill Owners and Farmers Associations. According to a simple calculation made as an example using the proposed pricing formula, when the purchasing price of a kg of paddy is Rs. 10, the wholesale price of a kg of rice is Rs. 24 and the retail price is Rs. 28. The current selling price of a kg of rice exceeds Rs. 100 while the purchasing price of paddy was fixed at Rs. 36 per kg.
When taking the paddy purchasing price as a variable explained in the example to calculate the retail price, the wholesale price would be around Rs. 86.40 and retail price Rs.90.80 which then is Rs.9.20 lower than the current retail price.This formula is to be introduced in the backdrop of a 5-year work plan being implanted by the government in collaboration with the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) to advance Sri Lanka’s rice self-sufficiency goals through joint research for development projects in the country.
The work plan will also address current issues on agricultural productivity and sustainability targeting to increase the country’s rice production by 20 percent over the present level by 2030 to remain self-sufficient.However farmers’ organisations claimed that, successive governments have always fallen into the trap of paddy millers’ oligopoly.
Paddy farmers get loans for their cultivation due to their poor economic situation and have no alternative other than selling their produce at any price to the millers who step in to buy their paddy stock as the poor framers had to pay back the loans on time. Private millers not only fix paddy prices ignoring the government guaranteed price but also create an artificial shortage in the market, to release the rice stocks only when the prices go up, a leader of a farmer organisation said.
Large scale private millers who purchase over 40 percent of Sri Lanka’s annual rice produce are controlling the market at present. Under the normal paddy purchasing process, the government directs the Paddy Marketing Board, and local co-operatives to buy paddy at a designated floor price or guaranteed price
Accordingly the government only purchases around 10 per cent of the national paddy production.
National Organizer for the All Ceylon Peasants Federation, Namal Karunaratne disclosed that that the rice industry is presently controlled by four leading rice millers with storage facilities. He revealed that some of the small and medium rice millers are now bankrupt and they are compelled to close down their businesses due to oligopoly of these leading millers who purchase the whole harvest at very low price from farmers and store it at their stores – to sell later when there is shortage. (BS)

Rice tariff law has education component, roles for SUCs
By HORPublished on February 16, 2019
Cong. Bong Belaro (file photo)
QUEZON CITY, Feb. 16 -- Little-known and often overlooked aspects of rice tariffication are the roles of higher and vocational education, 1-Ang Edukasyon Party-list Rep. Bong Belaro pointed out.
"Rice scholarships, vocational education, research, extension services, and technology development and transfer are all provided for in the rice tariff measure," said Rep. Belaro, a farmer's son.
"To make sure those provisions are implemented, the chairperson of the Commission on Higher Education is tasked to serve on the executive committee of the Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Fund," he noted.
Belaro said the CHED chairperson's participation in the ACEF cannot be delegated.
"There is no provision for an alternate or designated representative because Congress made it a matter of policy to place the CHED chairperson there and make his ACEF role a priority," the Bicolano congressman said.
"The CHED chairperson also happens to be the chairman of all the governing boards of state universities and colleges. That role enables the CHED chair to mobilize state universities and colleges," he added.
Belaro said the CHED chairperson can exercise leadership by steering the SUCs so that they maximize their contribution to agriculture growth.
"This is a window of opportunity for the CHED to convince the Filipino youth to have careers in agribusiness, farm technologies, and farming itself," the congressman said. (HOR)
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Solon urges gov't to ensure safety net for rice farmers
By Villamor Visaya, Jr.  February 17, 2019, 2:46 pm
ANGADANAN, Isabela -- Following the signing of President Rodrigo Duterte of the rice tariffication law on Feb. 15, the chairman of the House agriculture committee encouraged the government’s executive branch to ensure provision of a “safety net for local farmers” in the form of a fund that would be used to improve the country's rice sector.    
"The 10-billion-peso Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) was included in the law as a safety net to protect our own farmers and enable them to become more competitive. We should ensure that this will be set aside and spent for rice farmers’ welfare,” ANAC-IP party-list Rep. Jose Panganiban Jr., who chairs the House agriculture committee, told the Philippine News Agency on Sunday.
The newly-enacted law mandates a PHP10-billion RCEF for the provision of machinery and equipment, seed production, and training on rice farming. A portion of the fund would also be made available to farmers and cooperatives in the form of a credit facility with minimal interest and minimum collateral requirements.
“Due care should be applied in writing the law’s implementing rules and regulations so that the measure's primary goals are met,” he added as the executive department is tasked to craft the IRR of the new law.
The lawmaker soothed fears that local farmers would be on the losing end with the passage of the legislation.
“We would be closely monitoring the law’s implementation so that its true purpose will be achieved—that of having a steady supply of low-priced rice and to enhance farmers’ lives,” Panganiban said.
The rice tariffication law seeks to liberalize rice importation by replacing quantitative import restrictions with tariffs.
Under the new law, private companies will be allowed to import rice once they secure the necessary permit from the Bureau of Plant Industry and pay 35 percent tariff for imports from Southeast Asian countries. Higher rates will be imposed for imports from non-ASEAN countries.
The National Food Authority’s (NFA) importation role has also been removed, with the agency being restricted to maintaining a minimum rice inventory that will be sourced from local farmers. 
Even if the President did not sign the erstwhile bill, it would have lapsed into law, a month after it was officially received by Malacañang on January 15. The bill was ratified by both the House of Representatives and Senate.
“This measure has been long-needed, and we hope that this law will kickstart the implementation of far-reaching reforms in our rice industry,” said Panganiban, adding that President Duterte should be lauded for acknowledging the need to act on this measure, and for marking it a priority legislation," Panganiban said. (PNA)







EDITORIAL - ‘Unli’ rice imports
Description: https://media.philstar.com/photos/2019/02/16/startoon021719_2019-02-16_21-25-22.jpg (The Philippine Star) - February 17, 2019 - 12:00am
Brushing aside a last-minute appeal from local rice producers, President Duterte has signed a law lifting quantitative import restrictions on rice. 
The rice tariffication law was crafted amid the surge in rice prices last year, which was attributed to official infighting that led to the near-depletion of subsidized rice from the National Food Authority. To bring down rice prices, the government decided to flood the market with imports.
Consumers welcomed the promise of cheaper rice prices, but unlimited rice importation was bad news for local rice farmers. In response to concerns that the “unli” rice importation would kill local rice production, the tariffication law provides for the creation of a Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund, to be drawn from the import fees and used to provide various forms of assistance to local rice farmers. 
Obviously, the success of the assistance scheme hinges on the efficient and honest management of the common fund, which will have an initial annual funding of P10 billion. Unfortunately, the country has a disappointing record in handling such funds. There are valid concerns that the common fund will go the way of the fertilizer funds and Road User’s Tax – in the pockets of thieves in government rather than used for the purpose specified in the law. 
Local rice production is suffering enough from the lack of interest among youths to make farming their life’s calling. The flood of rice imports could add to the disincentives and make the Philippines heavily dependent on other countries for its staple. 
The rice tariffication law has two principal goals: to bring down rice prices and tame food inflation, and to boost local rice production. Every effort must be made to ensure that the achievement of one goal will not be at the expense of the other. With rice tariffication in place, authorities must see to it that the worst fears of local rice farmers will not materialize.

Not so much policy reform and enabling legislation but better program planning and execution in agriculture

Published February 16, 2019, 10:00 PM

Description: Dr. Emil Q. JavierDr. Emil Q. Javier
The pushback of rice farmers to the lifting of quantitative restrictions on rice imports is expected and understandable. The entry of more inexpensive rice from Vietnam and Thailand will depress the farm gate price of palay thereby reducing their income.
The local palay buyers, the rice millers and the big rice traders in Binondo oppose the liberalization of rice imports as well. The palay buyers will have less palay to buy, and the millers, less palay to mill. The big traders in Binondo are threatened too because their dominance and control over the rice industry will be challenged by rice importers.
However, maintaining the status quo will mean that Filipino consumers will have to continue paying 20%–30% more for their staple. And since rice constitutes a significant part of their food budget, to that extent poor households will be that much more food insecure.
This debate over the need to protect local food producers from inexpensive imports versus the imperative to make food available and affordable to make poor Filipinos more food secure had been festering on for at least three decades.
Unfortunately, this problem is not unique to rice but applies as well to sugar, corn, and other crops and increasingly to poultry, livestock, and fisheries. We are simply not producing enough to meet the needs of our growing population.
Among the five major ASEAN economies (i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines) we are the only net food importer. Singapore the prosperous city state is a net food importer too but it has no choice because it has little farmland.
What ails Philippine agriculture had been the subject of numerous studies both by own scholars from the UP System and the Philippine Institute of Development Studies (NEDA), as well as by analysts of the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the institutes of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) led by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington D.C. The conclusions invariably lead to the lack of and/or inappropriate or faulty policies.
Indeed, there are systemic issues which remain unresolved. Among them are: 1) the continuing break-up of farm lands and limits to land ownership under agrarian reform, 2) lack of small farmers’ access to credit, 3) weakening of rural extension with devolution, 4) undue emphases on rice, corn, sugar and coconut to the neglect of more profitable tree crops, poultry and livestock, and prominently, fisheries, and 5) underinvestment in rural infrastructure and research and development. Also very contentious, the continuing monopolies of the National Food Authority (NFA) and Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) over the rice and sugar sectors, respectively.
However as a technical agriculture graduate and a practicing farmer myself, I have a slightly differently nuanced perspective. Even if the above-enumerated policy issues were resolved, it does not necessarily follow that our woes in agriculture will be over.
Our problem with agriculture is not so much for lack of proper policies and enabling legislation but more of inadequacy in the nitty-gritty of program planning, implementation and monitoring and feedback and embarrassingly, graft and corruption.
I have come around this conclusion based on the following observations:
We have a surfeit of overarching policies, strategies and enabling legislation to move agriculture forward. The Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (AFMA), the Fisheries Code, the Forestry Code, the Local Government Code, the Agriculture Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (ACEF), among others, are Olympian in their purposes and comprehensive in their coverage. For sure they can be improved further but all the essential principles, purposes and directions are there. All that remain to be done is to translate the intents of these laws into well-thought out programs and implement them.
For specific subsectors we have laws creating the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), the SRA, the NFA, the National Irrigation Administration (NIA), the Land Bank of the Philippines, the Agri-Agra Law requiring all banks to set aside at least 25% of their loan portfolios for agriculture, and further support for inclusive financing through rural banks and microfinance institutions (MFIs), crop insurance, and the agricultural loan guarantee fund.
Had these implementing agencies been performing their mandates well, agriculture should not be floundering. Up to the last two years of the administration of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ten years ago, most of these agencies can claim lack of funds to rationalize their underperformance. But not anymore. Since the presidency of Benigno Aquino, and to date under President Rodrigo Duterte, lack of funds for Department of Agriculture (DA) and its agencies has ceased to be an excuse.
Let me illustrate with some examples:
The liberalization of rice imports by itself will bring down the price of rice to consumers but does not address the plight of farmers.
The problem all along with our domestic rice industry is two-fold: 1) our low yields and relative high cost of production, and 2) low income of farmers from rice alone, both of which can be ameliorated by further intensification of rice culture with high yielding hybrids and inbreds, and partial diversification to other high value crops. In both cases, farmers’ control over the timeliness and volume of irrigation water are crucial.
Unfortunately, the large irrigation systems are designed for rice and are ill-suited for the intermittent needs of water of the other crops. The obvious solution is to embed the small irrigation units (shallow tube wells, water pumps and farm ponds) being promoted and financed by the Bureau of Soils and Water Management (BSWM) into the large irrigation systems administered by NIA. Since both BSWM and NIA are under the DA, a single department order should suffice. Clearly no need for further legislation.
Just like rice, coconut suffers in 1) its low productivity versus its dominant competitor, the oil palm, and 2) low income of farmers from coconut alone. The four strategic technological directions are clear: 1) massive replanting with very productive indigenously-developed hybrids, 2) intercropping with other more profitable tree crops, 3) integrated, wet coconut processing at the village level to create more livelihoods in the country side and derive greater value added through processing of all parts of the fruit, and 4) market and product development support to the domestic oleo-chemical industry.
Again no further legislation or policy reform is needed for PCA to adopt this four-track modernization strategy. What are needed are 1) setting of targets, 2) intelligent program planning, 3) resolute execution, and 4) monitoring and feedback. All of these powers reside with the PCA board and its administrator (The utilization of the coconut levy funds is another story).
For access of small farmers to affordable credit, we have the Land Bank of the Philippines. With its annual net income of ₱15 billion which is ten times the annual General Appropriations Act funding for subsidized credit under AFMA, Land Bank can do much much more than what it is doing now. In the first place, Land Bank should reconstitute its original cadre of farm credit officers when it first started 50 years ago. These dedicated farm credit supervisors unfortunately were phased out when Land Bank became a universal bank to enhance its bottom line.
Instead of being required to remit half of its ₱15 billion annual income to the National Treasury, Land Bank may be exempted and allowed to utilize all its margins for subsidized rural credit as originally intended.
The commercial banks which are unable and/or unwilling to extend credit to small farmers, and hence unable to comply with the 25% Agri-Agra credit requirement may course their investments through Land Bank.
Again these courses of action are well within the existing powers of the executive and the authority of the Land Bank board and its president.
To be continued . . . Part 2
*****
Dr. Emil Q. Javier is a Member of the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) and also Chair of the Coalition for Agriculture Modernization in the Philippines (CAMP).
For any feedback, email eqjavier@yahoo.com

There’s no evidence Buhari created 12 million jobs in rice sector

 On Feb 16, 2019
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THE Muhammadu Buhari Administration has continued to claim that 12 million jobs were created in the Rice production sector in Nigeria as a result of the administration’s agricultural policies, but there is no evidence anywhere to support this claim.
On Tuesday, February 12, 2019, Lauretta Onochie, a presidential aide posted a tweet citing the much-talked-about 12 million jobs created in the rice production sector as one of the reasons Buhari deserves to be re-elected on Saturday.
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Onochie had been found guilty of spreading fake news through her Tweeter handle in the past.
The claim of millions of jobs in the rice sector was first made by President Buhari in November 2018, when he presented his administration’s scorecard at the time. He was represented at the event by the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh.
He said: “The impact of our intervention in the rice sector has resulted in job creation, increase in wealth, while reducing migration from rural to urban areas. As of July this year, the number of farmers has increased by 12 million.
“The Rice Farmers Association (RIFAN) has five million members. The number of people working in rice mills, small or big is over 1.7 million. These include harvesters, loaders, off-loaders, transporters, distributors and markers.
“Unemployment is one of our biggest challenges in the country. We want to make Nigeria self-sufficient in rice production and the fact that we are currently the largest producer of rice in Africa, followed by Mali is good news.”
However, there are no available statistics anywhere to back up this bogus claim. In fact, the Statistician-General of the Federation, Yemi Kale, categorically denied the claim, saying via a Tweeter post that “neither the statistician-general nor NBS ever made any such admission at any time to anybody”.
But the presidency insisted on the figure, saying that the unemployment rate as calculated by the NBS was concentrated on white-collar jobs and does not take into consideration the millions of jobs created in the Agric sector.
Garba Shehu, Buhari’s spokesman based his claims on a statement purportedly issued by the rice farmers association of Nigeria.
Nigeria’s unemployment rate was at 10.4 per cent in the last quarter of 2015 just after Buhari just took office, it has continued to rise and as at Q3 of 2018, it had risen to 23.1 per cent. Many say that since the majority of Nigeria’s workforce is in the Agric sector, according to the NBS, a 12 million addition in the sector would have reflected positively on the unemployment rate.
Tope Fasua, an Economist and the presidential candidate of the Abundant Nigeria Renewal Party (ANRP) in an article titled ‘Stop the deception – there are no 12 million rice farm-holders in Nigeria’, agave reasons why he believes the claim of 12 million jobs in the rice sector was false.
The article read in part: “The last record shows we cultivate about 40 per cent of our arable land (Abdullahi, 2017). That is 40 per cent of 923,000 square kilometres or 92 million hectares net of at least 20 per cent built up. This is close to 300,000 square kilometres or 30 million hectares cultivated in Nigeria… By every means, 12 million rice paddies will be visible from space. Nigeria will have become the biggest rice producer for the universe. We will even supply some to the kingdom of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs).  We must note however that not all of our 923,000 square kilometre landmass is arable. We have some desert and increasing desertification. We have swamps. We have rivers, lakes and so on. We also have mindless environmental degradation.”
The Buhari administration has also consistently said that Nigeria’s rice import has been reduced by over 90 per cent and that the country has almost attained self-sufficiency in rice. But evidence abounds that a significant quantity of the rice being consumed in Nigeria are not produced in the country.
What has happened is that rice imports into neighbouring countries like the Benin Republic have increased astronomically within the same period Nigeria’s official rice importation purportedly fell. The excess of these imports end up in Nigeria’s markets, no thanks to the country’s porous borders and largely corrupt customs officials, and because they are most times cheaper than the locally produced rice, consumers tend to go for them more.
Therefore, the claim that the Buhari administration created 12 million plus jobs in the rice production sector is at best unsubstantiated and at worst false.

How this retired lieutenant led the revival of Wasan, Brunei’s biggest rice farm

With Wasan abandoned and rice planting fading away in Brunei-Muara, Hj Sahlan marshaled 200 ex-military members to revive Wasan in 2006
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Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/150218AW-koseka-7-696x463.png
It’s the middle of February and Wasan – currently Brunei’s largest actively farmed rice field – is buzzing. It’s the main harvest season, where paddy grains emerge at the end of rice shoots, infusing some 286 hectares of verdant, green farmland with a golden-yellow sheen.
Overlooking his lots of five hectares, Hj Mohd Sahlan Hj Hidup, chairperson of Koperasi Setia Kawan (KOSEKA) – Wasan’s largest tenant and Brunei’s biggest rice producer – is quietly confident that they will yield their largest harvest yet.
“This is our first harvest of Sembada(188),” says the 60-year-old of the new hybrid rice strain. Jointly developed by Indonesia’s Biogene Plantation and Brunei’s Department of Agriculture and Agrifood (DAA), Sembada is being commercially piloted over 38 hectares and along with another hybrid titith, are being touted to usher in new levels of productivity to Brunei’s rice fields that will hopefully drive the nation’s self-sufficiency.
“Some are reporting yields (from Sembada) high as five to six (tonnes). That’s nearly double Laila and MRQ76.”
Today, Wasan is known as the heart of the Sultanate’s rice production, but few know that the project dates back to 1978 when it debuted as Brunei’s first large scale, mechanized rice planting experiment.
Fewer know that it failed to take off initially, reverting to a bush-like state after being abandoned, and that it was Hj Mohd Sahlan – a retired Lieutenant Colonel – who marshaled a bastion of retired military members to answer His Majesty the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam’s call for food security by reviving it in 2006.
Declining rice self-sufficiency: agrarian to industrial  
Four years before the Wasan Rice Project (WRP) began, Brunei’s self-sufficiency in rice was entering a state of free fall. According to DAA statistics, local supply met 37.5% of the rice consumed in 1974, dropping to 13.7% by 1978.
Imports filled the gap, and rose in tandem as the population increased. Today, Brunei imports around 30,000 tonnes of rice annually, triple the amount it imported in 1974, but produced just 1,527 tonnes of rice in 2017, compared to 6,348 tonnes in 1974.
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/130219info-hmagri-2.pngThe importance of food security came to the forefront in 2007 during a global food price crisis, and was then accelerated in 2008 – where after a shortage in global rice exports – the price of rice increased 300% across four months before returning to previous levels.
In an ehtnographic study of Wasan’s rice fields, Khairunnisa Yakub argues that while Brunei had become The Commonwealth’s second-largest oil producer by the 1950s, it wasn’t until the industry’s boom twenty years later that proved to be the turning point, where Bruneians began relinquishing agricultural pursuits – particularly rice farming – in favour lucrative, stable careers in oil and gas and the civil service.
“Although (the) government spent millions of dollars on agriculture, this industry had lost its appeal,” writes Khairunnisa on the prevailing sentiment of the 1970s. “Gradually, the number of farmers working on the rice fields decreased and plots of land were abandoned.”
Around the same time, neighbouring Indonesia and the Philiipines were revolutionizing rice cultivation with high yielding hybrid varieties and mechanization. Looking to ride the wave, the Brunei government began experimenting on smaller projects, culminating with the proposal for 300 hectares for wetland paddy farming in Wasan that would be jointly run by the Public Works Department and DAA.
Issues over management and the surrounding environment, coupled with gaps in technical know-how and infrastructure, plagued the project from the outset. Annual output peaked at 282 tonnes in the eighth year, but the project was far from meeting expectations. The government then decided to privatize WRP with foreign joint ventures, none which succeeded.
No official records are readily available online on what happened to Wasan after this period. Not until a lieutenant colonel in his 40s – who had taken up rice farming in his retirement – submitted a proposal to revive it.
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/150218AW-koseka-9.pngHj Sahlan with founding KOSEKA members Hj Mohd Zain and Hj Mohd Saifulizan. Staunchly loyal to His Majesty, many of the founders took on agriculture without prior experience, with DAA providing business and agricultural courses.
Hj Sahlan comes full circle
Hj Sahlan’s earliest memories of his father were of him farming. Not commercially, with tractors over hundreds of acres, but in small lots amongst the community, the harvest which they brought home to cook.
Any surplus was sold or traded in the market for fish, maybe some meat if they were lucky. Looking to provide a better life for his family, Hj Sahlan enlisted as a soldier with the Royal Brunei Land Forces in 1968, and by 1994, had earned the rank of major and was bestowed an epistle from His Majesty to serve as the third battalion’s first commanding officer.
When Hj Sahlan retired in 2000, he needed a new cause; whittling away his pension unproductively was not of interest. Staying abreast on national issues – particularly the nation’s lagging agricultural industry – he decided to join the village consultative council (MPK) of Bebluloh’s rice project near his home, farming traditional varieties like bario and pusu. 
Here, he would learn first hand, what some scholars have gone on to argue; that rice farming is more laborious, and arguably more complex than growing any other staple crop.
On average, wetland rice cultivation takes at least double the steps wheat requires. Writing about the work ethic needed to cultivate rice successfully, Malcolm Gladwell describes that each field must be irrigated, with series of dikes constructed and channels dug near the water source, which must then have inbuilt controls to allow precise inflow of water.
The soil has to be repeatedly fertilized and have a hard clay floor to prevent water from seeping into the ground, yet have a softer layer atop so seedlings can stay submerged at the right moisture level.
Farmers must then select carefully their paddy variety to plant, each which carries their own trade-off; between yield and maturity time or moisture and soil composition. The seedlings are also grown separately before being transplanted onto the farm. Daily inspection for weeds, pests and diseases are considered standard practice, and in Brunei, strings with empty tin cans are raised over the fields and rung every morning and afternoon during harvest season to prevent pipit birds who will otherwise ravage more than half of all potential produce.
Soil in Brunei is generally acidic, so long-term treatment is required, and extensive water supply – enough to periodically flood the farm – is needed.
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/150218AW-koseka-11.pngTo mitigate the impact of birds feeding, farmers harvest in unison. Hj Sahlan says machines emitting sound frequencies have not been an effective detterent so far.
“The truth is rice is cheap (in Southeast Asia) but it’s challenging to farm,” said Hj Sahlan. His blanket assertion has basis; Brunei has managed near self-sufficiency in poultry, and his halfway there for vegetables. But perhaps most telling is that out of all of Brunei’s biggest agriculture businesses, none of them farm rice substantially.
“When I first approached them (the authorities) I think they didn’t think I was serious,” jokes Hj Sahlan. “But I told them that we had 200 (ex-military) on standby, willing to get into this full-time. His Majesty in his titah had been stressing that we need to be less reliant (on welfare and imports). Now it was time to act.”
The revival of Wasan
With the government’s green light, Hj Sahlan formed a cooperative to unify their efforts, and they began clearing Wasan once more.
Structurally, KOSEKA was very different from a traditional cooperative, or a private company for that matter. Operationally, it acted more as an association that would centralize the sale of farmers’ paddy harvest to the government, and return all the sales to the farmers based off their contribution.
By the same token, KOSEKA as a collective would not invest individually in any one lot – it was up to the members themselves to manage their own parcel of land, decide how much they wanted to farm, and what capital they would front to kickstart their operations.
Essentially, KOSEKA’s members were their own self-contained micro-businesses, responsible for their own profits and losses. At first glance, the approach seems harsh, but Hj Sahlan insists the opposite was true.
“It created a sense of belonging (between member and the farm),” he said. “It is not a cooperative or company where you have investors (shareholders) who put in money and entrust an administration who then hire and operate the business and then give you dividends (or profits) at the end of the year. You don’t have a sense of ownership or relatability this way to the struggle of the farm. You have to be the one operating it.”
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/150218AW-koseka-2-2.pngA Koseka lot being farmed at Wasan with a combine harvester. The majority of combine harvesters used in Wasan are rented from Pertanian Tropikal Utama.
The founding members quickly established the costs and profit margins. Roughly $2,500 was required to farm one hectare for one season. There would be two seasons annually.
The government laid out an extensive subsidy framework which remains in place today; seeds, basic equipment, fertilizers and pesticides were discounted by at least 50%, and famers‘ paddy would be bought back at $1.60 per kilogramme. Agriculture authorities also built the Imang Dam nearby with a reservoir of 10 million cubic metres of water and opened a rice milling facility that would also package the farmers’ rice and supply to retail stores nationwide.
By KOSEKA’s estimations, each hectare would need to yield at least 1.6 tonnes a season to break even. At two tonnes, they would make just a $700 profit, a poor return for six months of operations.
“At the start, it was very difficult,” said Hj Sahlan. “Many members left because they realized that the costs were too big up front. Others left after a few seasons realizing that the margins were too small to sustain.”
The remaining 80 plus farmers toiled 186 hectares, each employing one to four Indonesians. MPK Pengkalan Batu also entered the fray, taking up the remaining third. Results came slow, but those that persisted had their first big win in 2009 when DAA unveiled Brunei’s first hybrid variety Laila, capable of three tonnes per hectare.
His Majesty arrived in Wasan to officiate both the planting and harvest, underscoring rice planting as a national priority. The then Ministry of Industry and Primary Resources set an ambitious target of 60% self-sufficiency by 2015, farmed over 10,000 hectares as new agricultural areas were earmarked across Brunei.
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/AMP_14.jpgHj Sahlan (R) looks on as His Majesty harvests Laila. Photo: Information Department
KOSEKA followed through with their first annual revenue over a $1 million in 2011, surpassing it the following year with $1.87 million as they became Brunei’s largest rice producer.
It appeared to be a watershed period for Brunei’s rice industry, signaling a new era for Brunei agriculture. But the target was never met. In 2015, rice self-sufficiency stood at just 4%.
An unfufilled promise
Taking a more measured approach, new Minister of Primary Resources and Tourism (MPRT) YB Dato Seri Setia Hj Ali Apong said at last year’s Legislative Council session that the government would be targeting a 20% self-sufficiency in rice by 2020, and had set aside $45 million for rice and vegetable cultivation.
Last November, His Majesty said that there could be “no more excuses” for the nation to not progress in agriculture, announcing a new 500-hectare rice field in Kandol, Belait that once operational, would take the mantle as Brunei’s biggest rice farm.
DAA says Kandol is less likely to face the same soil acidity issue, with the land made up of a finer-grained fertile soil which carries alluvial sediment deposited from water flooding over.
Back at Wasan, founding members of KOSEKA Hj Mohd Zain Abd Ghani and Hj Mohd Saifulizan Hj Mohd Alishah drop by Hj Sahlan’s farm. With His Majesty visiting just a few days ago to harvest Sembada, they’re in good spirits, welcoming DAA’s plans to increase the Imang Dam’s capacity by 10%.
Hj Sahlan points out that His Majesty is not just calling for food security, but for agriculture to contribute to the economy. He then initiates a controversial topic amongst the farming community – weaning off government subsidies.
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Some feel that the government hasn’t done enough over the years, especially in following through on plans promptly and in the upkeep of infrastructure, most critically over the supply of water.
In Belait, the unirrigated 300-hectare Sengkuang – at one point Brunei’s largest rice farm and the district’s rice bowl – is now a shadow of its former self after losing its ability to flood from naturally from a nearby river. According to DAA, groundwater wells will be trialed soon.
Over in Wasan, it’s common for farmers to take turns using the water from Imang Dam, because they claim the pressure isn’t enough for simultaneous use. A senior DAA official mentioned this week that the dam hasn’t been maintainedsince it was completed in the late 1990s.
Hj Sahlan cuts through the arguments, claiming that if it weren’t for the subsidy framework, farming rice wouldn’t have taken off in the first place.
“Yes, the authorities must maintain the infrastructure, follow through on plans and keep us updated. Otherwise  it is very hard to manage and plan (our own farming operations),” said Hj Sahlan. “But the reality is that if it weren’t for the subsidies, how many of us could plant rice (profitably)?”
Whatever paddy farmers can produce, the government will buy at $1.60/kg. After milling, 1,000kg of dried paddy yields approximately 650kg of rice. The government then packages it and sells the rice at $1.15/kg to retail stores, to stay competitive against imported rice, which is also subsidized.
“This means the government is buying rice from us at $1.60 for 650 grammes($2.46/kg),” says Hj Sahlan, and that’s not a true reflection of the operating cost to the government, because it hasn’t factored the cost of operating the milling facility, or the money shelled out for other subsidies like seeds, fertilizers andpesticides.
“The truth is that while we are contributing to food security, we are not contributing back to the economy; we are costing the government money. KOSEKA’s long-term future must be being profitable (without subsidies) for us to truly answer His Majesty’s call.”
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/koseka_BizBrunei_130219-03.pngKOSEKA’s output in paddy yield. The introduction of hybrid varities in 2009, and good weather in 2012 lead to their biggest spikes in productivity says Hj Sahlan.
As a start, Hj Sahlan estimates that farmers must yield at least six tonnes per hectare, as a minimum, every season, to be profitable without the buy back scheme. A DAA official says they have no plans to amend the scheme, and see it as a critical component of their wider mission to encourage farmers to increase yield and entice the younger generation to take up rice farming.
“The new hybrids (we’re told) have the potential (to yield a minimum of six tonnes),” says Hj Sahlan. Titih, another hybrid being jointly developed by DAA with a Myanmar firm is reportedly able to yield eight tonnes, will be trialed soon. At Wasan, Hj Sahlan says the soil acidity is now manageable after repeated fertilization. If the Imang Dam upgrade delivers – and birds and diseases are controlled effectively – he’s confident KOSEKA’s productivity can be taken to the next level.
In 2017, the cooperative accounted for over 40% of all rice produced in Brunei, and on paper, their produce of 1,069 tonnes from 186 hectares equates to a yield of over five tonnes per hectare, several times higher than the national average of 1.75 tonnes per hectare.
Hj Sahlan and his founding members are proud of all their milestones, and will certainly feature in any study or historical account of Brunei’s journey in rice farming. But there’s also a sense of urgency to do more. For all the mechanization and modernization, Brunei still produces four times less rice than it did in 1974.
Description: https://www.bizbrunei.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/150218AW-koseka-1.pngFreshly harvested Sembada 188.


Congress pushes full implementation of Rice Tariffication Act

Updated February 17, 2019, 7:24 PM
By Charissa Luci-Atienza, Hannah Torregoza, and Lee Chipongian
Speaker Gloria Macapagal- Arroyo sought Sunday the proper and full implementation of the Rice Tariffication Act to benefit everyone, citing that it would further help tame inflation.
Description: Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo during the opening of the Third Regular Session of Congress on Monday. (Jansen Romero / MANILA BULLETIN)
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (Jansen Romero / MANILA BULLETIN)
The former President cheered at President Duterte’s signing of the Rice Tariffication Act on Friday.
“I am happy that President Duterte has signed into law the Rice Tariffica­tion Act. It will further help in easing the inflation which has hit the poor the most,” she said.
“Now we can focus on its proper implementation so that everyone can and should benefit from the law,” Ar­royo said.
But former Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile urged the government to brace for the negative impact of the rice tariffication law on local farmers, warning that the “over supply” of rice could adversely affect them following its implementation.
Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuerte, co-author of the rice tarif­fication measure, agreed with Arroyo, saying that the law would help expand the access of Filipinos to cheap rice.
“This will, in turn, prevent a repeat of the 2018 inflation surge brought in large part by the supply shortfall and the subsequent retail price increase of rice,” he said.
“Rice tariffication will benefit poor households the most, given that rice accounts for 20 percent of their con­sumption,” Villafuerte said, noting that inflation began to ease in the latter part of 2018 and is expected to drop even further this year following the decisive steps taken by President Duterte to remove administrative constraints on food imports and narrow the gap between farmgate and retail prices of rice and other foodstuff.
Death warrant
Bayan Muna party-list Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate expressed serious con­cern that the newly signed law would serve as a death warrant to the coun­try’s agriculture.
“With the rice tariffication, the rice cartels can tighten their hold on the price of rice as well as the supply. Ang mangyayari sa presyo ng bigas ay matutulad sa presyuhan ng langis na parating tumataas depende sa interna­tional market dahil mas dun nakasala­lay ang supply,” he said.
He said the rice cartel and the foreign rice suppliers will only benefit from the law.
“Mapanlinlang ang tariffication scheme na ito dahil hindi ito pabor sa mahihirap na Pilipino; ang cartel at dayuhang mga rice suppliers lang ang magiging masaya dito,” Zarate said.
“Ang dapat sanang gawin ay palaka­sin pa ang NFA para mas marami siyang mabiling palay sa mga lokal na magsasaka sa mas mataas na halaga.Sa ganitong paraan ay hindi mapipili­tang magbenta ang mga magsasaka sa kartel ng bigas,” he said.
Congress ratified the measure on November 28, and transmitted it to Malacanang on January 15 for the President’s signature.
Anakpawis Party-list Rep. Ariel “Ka Ayik” Casilao earlier said he would file a bill that would repeal the law after 15 days upon its publication or the date it shall legally effect.
“I would like to save the government the effort of crafting its implementing rules and regulations, and will promptly file for the repeal,” he said.
Casilao branded the law as a “tomb­stone for the Philippine rice industry” as it would impact the livelihood and welfare of 2.4 million rice farmers and more farm workers.
“This will undermine the P350 billion – 19 million metric ton – palay sector. This is clearly betrayal of the people’s and national interest,” he said.
Farmers at risk
Under the law, restrictions are lifted and the National Food Authority (NFA) can no longer monopolize rice importa­tion because private sectors would now be allowed to import rice.
The tariff is mandated at 35 percent for rice from members of the Associa­tion of Southeast Asian Nations (ASE­AN) and 50 percent for non-ASEAN countries.
As a safeguard, revenues from the tariffs will go to a Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund or RCEF with an annual funding of P10-billion to protect the rice industry from sudden or ex­treme price fluctuations.
Enrile warned that when the gov­ernment allows too much commodity to enter the country from the outside, local farmers are at risk of losing their source of livelihood.
“If you bring in too much commod­ity from the outside, you deprive local farmers of their source of livelihood, so we should be using tariffs to protect them,” Enrile said.
“Farmers will not incur losses if (the government) only adheres to the rice tariffication law and relates (the tariffs) to the reasonable price of the commodity in the country,” said Enrile.
“Now, if you would neglect that, and anybody can bring and supply that commodity in our country, our farmers would suffer losses and prices would go down because you plant more than what is needed to cover the demand and that should be the standard of the tariff you need to enforce,” stressed Enrile.
He said the government should make sure that rice importers will strictly follow the requirements for agricultural and food safety to ensure the protection of the local farmers and the agriculture sector.
He also suggested enacting a “mini­mum access volume” above which higher tariffs would be implemented.
“We agree that we will allow a so-called minimum access volume for a product like rice to be exported from other countries at a very low level of tariffs,” said Enrile, who was also a former finance secretary.
“Now, anything above that minimum access volume should not be allowed to come in if we have sufficient supply. Without sufficient supply, we can allow it to come in but we can subject it to tariffs,” he pointed out.
Inflation
Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said the rice tariffication law will re­duce inflation rate by 0.6 percentage point (ppt) this year and 0.3-0.4 ppt in 2020.
“The important point here is that the government is about to complete the IRR (implementing rules and regu­lation) to ensure quick implementation of the law. Truly a very graphic sign of the government’s serious effort to protect price stability for the people,” said Guiniundo.
He said the impact to inflation rate for 2019 and 2020 is enough to ensure the level will stay within the two-four percent target.
“It’s split because the implementa­tion is already close to the end of the first quarter. With the tariff collection, a fund would be established to help the farmers achieve greater efficiency and productivity in agriculture,” said Guinigundo.
“They are therefore expected to be more competitive,” he added. “This is a landmark legislation that would help greatly in rationalizing rice farming in the Philippines. After all, the farmers are also consumers, and, together with the other 100 million Filipinos, will ben­efit from lower rice prices.”

Two booked for Rs 50 lakh fraud

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Description: Two booked for Rs 50 lakh fraud
TARN TARAN: Two rice millers (siblings) have been accused of defrauding a man of Rs 50 lakh. ASI Harbans Singh, investigating officer, said the accused had been identified as Surjit Singh of Amritsar and his brother Tarlok Singh of Dode Chhapa. Complainant Mohinder Lal of Khalra grain market said the accused purchased basmati (1121 variety) from him worth Rs 50 lakh two years ago and later refuted to make the payment. The accused have been booked under Sections 420 and 120-B of the IPC. OC
3 inmates held with mobiles
AMRITSAR: Central jail authorities have confiscated two mobile phones and intoxicants from three jail inmates. They have been identified as Rahul Gill, alias Raghu, of Rambagh, Akashdeep Singh of Mallan village in Tarn Taran and Shammy Kumar, alias Raman, of Ram Nagar Colony. Rahul and Akashdeep were found possessing cell phones while two-gm intoxicating powder was seized from Shammy. Separate cases have been registered against them at Islamabad police station. TNS

Not so much policy reform and enabling legislation but better program planning and execution in agriculture

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Published February 16, 2019, 10:00 PM
Description: Dr. Emil Q. Javier
Dr. Emil Q. Javier
The pushback of rice farmers to the lifting of quantitative restrictions on rice imports is expected and understandable. The entry of more inexpensive rice from Vietnam and Thailand will depress the farm gate price of palay thereby reducing their income.
The local palay buyers, the rice millers and the big rice traders in Binondo oppose the liberalization of rice imports as well. The palay buyers will have less palay to buy, and the millers, less palay to mill. The big traders in Binondo are threatened too because their dominance and control over the rice industry will be challenged by rice importers.
However, maintaining the status quo will mean that Filipino consumers will have to continue paying 20%–30% more for their staple. And since rice constitutes a significant part of their food budget, to that extent poor households will be that much more food insecure.
This debate over the need to protect local food producers from inexpensive imports versus the imperative to make food available and affordable to make poor Filipinos more food secure had been festering on for at least three decades.
Unfortunately, this problem is not unique to rice but applies as well to sugar, corn, and other crops and increasingly to poultry, livestock, and fisheries. We are simply not producing enough to meet the needs of our growing population.
Among the five major ASEAN economies (i.e. Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines) we are the only net food importer. Singapore the prosperous city state is a net food importer too but it has no choice because it has little farmland.
What ails Philippine agriculture had been the subject of numerous studies both by own scholars from the UP System and the Philippine Institute of Development Studies (NEDA), as well as by analysts of the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the institutes of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) led by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington D.C. The conclusions invariably lead to the lack of and/or inappropriate or faulty policies.
Indeed, there are systemic issues which remain unresolved. Among them are: 1) the continuing break-up of farm lands and limits to land ownership under agrarian reform, 2) lack of small farmers’ access to credit, 3) weakening of rural extension with devolution, 4) undue emphases on rice, corn, sugar and coconut to the neglect of more profitable tree crops, poultry and livestock, and prominently, fisheries, and 5) underinvestment in rural infrastructure and research and development. Also very contentious, the continuing monopolies of the National Food Authority (NFA) and Sugar Regulatory Administration (SRA) over the rice and sugar sectors, respectively.
However as a technical agriculture graduate and a practicing farmer myself, I have a slightly differently nuanced perspective. Even if the above-enumerated policy issues were resolved, it does not necessarily follow that our woes in agriculture will be over.
Our problem with agriculture is not so much for lack of proper policies and enabling legislation but more of inadequacy in the nitty-gritty of program planning, implementation and monitoring and feedback and embarrassingly, graft and corruption.
I have come around this conclusion based on the following observations:
We have a surfeit of overarching policies, strategies and enabling legislation to move agriculture forward. The Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (AFMA), the Fisheries Code, the Forestry Code, the Local Government Code, the Agriculture Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (ACEF), among others, are Olympian in their purposes and comprehensive in their coverage. For sure they can be improved further but all the essential principles, purposes and directions are there. All that remain to be done is to translate the intents of these laws into well-thought out programs and implement them.
For specific subsectors we have laws creating the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), the SRA, the NFA, the National Irrigation Administration (NIA), the Land Bank of the Philippines, the Agri-Agra Law requiring all banks to set aside at least 25% of their loan portfolios for agriculture, and further support for inclusive financing through rural banks and microfinance institutions (MFIs), crop insurance, and the agricultural loan guarantee fund.
Had these implementing agencies been performing their mandates well, agriculture should not be floundering. Up to the last two years of the administration of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ten years ago, most of these agencies can claim lack of funds to rationalize their underperformance. But not anymore. Since the presidency of Benigno Aquino, and to date under President Rodrigo Duterte, lack of funds for Department of Agriculture (DA) and its agencies has ceased to be an excuse.
Let me illustrate with some examples:
The liberalization of rice imports by itself will bring down the price of rice to consumers but does not address the plight of farmers.
The problem all along with our domestic rice industry is two-fold: 1) our low yields and relative high cost of production, and 2) low income of farmers from rice alone, both of which can be ameliorated by further intensification of rice culture with high yielding hybrids and inbreds, and partial diversification to other high value crops. In both cases, farmers’ control over the timeliness and volume of irrigation water are crucial.
Unfortunately, the large irrigation systems are designed for rice and are ill-suited for the intermittent needs of water of the other crops. The obvious solution is to embed the small irrigation units (shallow tube wells, water pumps and farm ponds) being promoted and financed by the Bureau of Soils and Water Management (BSWM) into the large irrigation systems administered by NIA. Since both BSWM and NIA are under the DA, a single department order should suffice. Clearly no need for further legislation.
Just like rice, coconut suffers in 1) its low productivity versus its dominant competitor, the oil palm, and 2) low income of farmers from coconut alone. The four strategic technological directions are clear: 1) massive replanting with very productive indigenously-developed hybrids, 2) intercropping with other more profitable tree crops, 3) integrated, wet coconut processing at the village level to create more livelihoods in the country side and derive greater value added through processing of all parts of the fruit, and 4) market and product development support to the domestic oleo-chemical industry.
Again no further legislation or policy reform is needed for PCA to adopt this four-track modernization strategy. What are needed are 1) setting of targets, 2) intelligent program planning, 3) resolute execution, and 4) monitoring and feedback. All of these powers reside with the PCA board and its administrator (The utilization of the coconut levy funds is another story).
For access of small farmers to affordable credit, we have the Land Bank of the Philippines. With its annual net income of ₱15 billion which is ten times the annual General Appropriations Act funding for subsidized credit under AFMA, Land Bank can do much much more than what it is doing now. In the first place, Land Bank should reconstitute its original cadre of farm credit officers when it first started 50 years ago. These dedicated farm credit supervisors unfortunately were phased out when Land Bank became a universal bank to enhance its bottom line.
Instead of being required to remit half of its ₱15 billion annual income to the National Treasury, Land Bank may be exempted and allowed to utilize all its margins for subsidized rural credit as originally intended.
The commercial banks which are unable and/or unwilling to extend credit to small farmers, and hence unable to comply with the 25% Agri-Agra credit requirement may course their investments through Land Bank.
Again these courses of action are well within the existing powers of the executive and the authority of the Land Bank board and its president.
To be continued . . . Part 2
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Dr. Emil Q. Javier is a Member of the National Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) and also Chair of the Coalition for Agriculture Modernization in the Philippines (CAMP).
For any feedback, email eqjavier@yahoo.com

Odisha government stops paddy purchase two months early, farmers angry 

The State Government’s decision has evoked sharp criticism from the farmers and political parties as huge quantity of paddy is stacked outside mandis for days together.
Published: 17th February 2019 03:21 AM  |   Last Updated: 17th February 2019 10:56 AM  |  
Description: http://images.newindianexpress.com/uploads/user/imagelibrary/2018/11/22/w900X450/PADDY.jpg
Representational image of Herbicides being sprayed in a paddy field
By Express News Service
BHUBANESWAR: Going back on its promise to procure as much paddy from the farmers, the State Government has decided to stop procurement of the principal food grain two months ahead of the closure of the current kharif marketing season (KMS).
The State Government’s decision has evoked sharp criticism from the farmers and political parties as huge quantity of paddy is stacked outside mandis for days together.
The order of the Food Supplies and Consumer Welfare department to the district collectors to close paddy procurement by the end of this month came as a surprise as the current kharif marketing season ends on April 31.
Announcing the food policy for 2018-19 KMS in September last year, the State Government had said there is no bar for procurement of any higher quantum if more paddy comes to the mandi from registered farmers. The past practice of deducting three quintals of paddy per member in the family of a farmer for consumption of marketable surplus of paddy has been waived.
The State Cabinet, while approving the food policy, had authorised the Food Supplies department to revise the target if the need arises. 
The State Government had decided to procure 37 lakh tonnes of rice (55 lakh tonnes of paddy) during 2018-19 KMS beginning November last year from farmers who are registered in the online portal of Food
Supplies and Consumer Welfare department.
Justifying the decision for an early closure of paddy procurement, Food Supplies and Consumer Welfare Minister S N Patro said this year’s procurement has surpassed the target by 45 per cent.
Since the Government has already purchased marketable surplus of paddy from farmers, the closure of procurement operation will prevent recycling of paddy by rice millers.
On the other hand, Opposition Congress and BJP accused the ruling BJD of showing undue favour to rice millers to meet their election expenses.
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Rice tariffication, political advertisements discount laws signed
In a text message last night to Palace reporters, presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo confirmed the signing of the rice tariffication law.
Christina Mendez (The Philippine Star) - February 16, 2019 - 12:00am
Description: https://media.philstar.com/photos/2019/02/15/gen6-duterte-signs_2019-02-15_23-06-57.jpgMANILA, Philippines — President Duterte has signed into law a measure lifting quantitative restrictions on rice importation.
In a text message last night to Palace reporters, presidential spokesperson Salvador Panelo confirmed the signing of the rice tariffication law. 
Duterte also signed a measure granting discounts to candidates for political advertisements, according to Senate President Vicente Sotto III.
The Palace has yet to release copies of the new laws.
In October 2018, Duterte certified the rice tariffication bill as urgent “to address the urgent need to improve availability of rice in the country, to prevent artificial rice shortage, reduce the prices of rice in the market, and curtail the prevalence of corruption and cartel domination in the rice industry.”
A month after Duterte certified the measure as urgent, a report on the bill was ratified by the bicameral conference committee.
Local rice producer have oppose the measure, saying it would kill Filipino rice farmers.
Under the rice tariffication law, quantitative restrictions on rice importation are lifted and private traders are allowed to import the commodity from countries of their choice
The law imposes a 25-percent duty on rice imports from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations member states and a 50-percent rate on imports from non-members of the regional bloc.
The measure will also create the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) or a special rice buffer fund, with an initial P10-billion annual fund, to ensure rice production competitiveness.
Concerns have been raised that the fund may be misused by corrupt officials.
The country’s economic team has been pushing for rice tariffication, saying this should bring down the prices of the country’s staple and weaken inflation.
The rice tariffication law replaces the government’s quantitative restrictions on importation of the staple with a 35 percent tariff.
Duterte’s economic managers have identified rice tariffication as one of a means to meet the country’s commitments to the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Under the law, the tariff of rice imported from Asean member states will be 35 percent. For non-Asean member states, the tariff will be 50 percent or the tariff equivalent calculated in accordance with the WTO agreement on agriculture.
“One of the key features of the bill is also the creation of the RCEF, which shall consist of initial appropriation of P10 billion a year until all duties collected from the importation of rice can replace it,” Sen. Cynthia Villar, sponsor and principal author of the bill, earlier said.
The fund will be used to provide different forms of assistance to the country’s rice farmers such as the development of inbred rice seeds for our farmers, the development of rice farm equipment and skills enhancement.
Villar noted the staple is the only agricultural commodity in the country that has a quantitative restriction, limiting the inflow of imported rice in the country.
The law would in effect remove all unnecessary intervention of the government in the rice market, as recently announced by Duterte.
Duterte also signed the bill pushed by Senators Aquilino  Pimentel III and Richard Gordon mandating radio and television stations as well as newspapers to give candidates high discounts for their political advertisements.
“Free expression of our people’s will is better ventilated during an election period if all those who vie for the votes of our people are undeterred in delivering their messages to their voters, especially if the deterrence is the prohibitive cost,” Pimentel said last year in sponsoring the bill.

SSS contribution hike also signed

Also signed was the law amending the charter of the Social Security System (SSS) to raise member contributions.
SSS president and chief executive officer Emmanuel Dooc earlier said the bill is expected to generate P16 billion in premium collections in a year and the adjustments would be able to help extend the fund life of the SSS.
The bill would repeal the 21-year-old Social Security Law or Republic Act 1161 as amended by Republic Act 8282, and expand the powers of the SSS to ensure the long-term viability of the system.
 In particular, the amendment aims to empower the Social Security System Commission to increase benefits, condone penalties and rationalize investments, among others.
The bill would ensure mandatory SSS coverage for overseas Filipino workers.
The President also signed the New Central Bank Act increasing the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ capitalization from P50 billion to P200 billion and strengthening its regulatory powers. – Christina


Agribusiness Conference Offers Lay of Land for Agriculture

by Todd Traub  on Friday, Feb. 15, 2019 12:01 pm   3 min read
Description: https://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.inarkansas.com/104843/amanda-countryman.jpg
Amanda Countryman
Jonesboro was the jumping off point for a whirlwind world tour Wednesday.
At the 25th Arkansas State Agribusiness Conference held on the Arkansas State University campus, speakers and panelists touched on the evolution, business and current state of the U.S. agriculture industry. But national, worldwide and political issues dominated the day.
In this age of trade wars and tariffs and the erosion of long-standing trade relationships, their impact on agriculture was a recurring theme.
“Without a strong export market we do not have strong domestic prices,” Riceland Foods Senior Vice President of Operations Terry Harris said in his issues and outlook presentation on rice, Arkansas’ No. 1 agricultural export.
Among the day’s topics were the U.S.-China trade war and resulting tariffs; the United Kingdom’s continuing, problem-plagued efforts to leave the European Union via “Brexit”; the EU’s Brexit response; NAFTA and the trade agreement that replaced it; and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which the U.S. abandoned last year.
The evolution of the family farm as a business and the impact of the 2018 Farm Bill also were spotlighted for discussion, while the afternoon issues and outlook sessions focused on the rice, cotton, poultry and beef industries as well as credit, tax and legal issues.
“Agriculture has been a bright spot for the U.S. economy,” said Colorado State associate professor of agricultural economics Amanda Countryman in her presentation on U.S. trade policy.
The China-U.S. trade war, which began with the U.S. slapping duties on imports of Chinese solar panels and washing machines followed by retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods, came in for heavy review. In a state where agriculture is the leading economic sector, the subject was timely.
Long accused of stealing intellectual property and criticized for lack of production reform, China nevertheless was the largest U.S. agricultural export market in 2017, before the trade war began. In 2018, China was among Arkansas’ top 10 trade partners, importing $363 million worth of products and accounting for 5.7 percent of the state’s exports.
It was clear Wednesday that trade and agriculture are inseparable. Harris noted that 20 percent of all U.S. agriculture is exported, with rice and soybean exports approaching 50 percent.
But the consensus was that China had to be confronted, and the speakers agreed with the administration’s strong stand even as the tariffs have negatively affected U.S. soybean farmers, among others.
“We’re not the only ones in the world who are unhappy with China,” Countryman said.
Other Trump administration decisions drew less favorable reviews. Countryman was critical of the hasty withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and described it as a lost opportunity for the U.S. to band with nations like Australia and Japan, shape policy in the region and potentially influence China.
“It was sad because I was excited about the trade opportunities the U.S. had moving forward with the TPP,” Countryman said.
From the farmer’s perspective, the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) drafted last year to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) — largely seen as a benefit to farmers — has done little to no harm. And the 2018 Farm Bill was a bipartisan miracle, said Mississippi State professor of agriculture and economics Keith Coble.
The bill passed the House by a 369-47 vote and the Senate by an 87-13 margin and allocates an additional $1.8 billion over a five-year period. Of a total outlay of $428 billion, 76 percent goes toward nutrition, 9 percent to crop insurance, 7 percent each to commodities and conservation and 1 percent to other programs.
“The 2018 Farm Bill was an early Christmas present,” Coble said.
The USMCA still must be ratified by Congress, and with mid-term elections over and a presidential election looming in 2020, agri-journalist and policy analyst Jim Wiesemeyer said not to hold your breath on much more meaningful, new legislation until then.
“If you don’t get anything done this calendar year, it’s going to get increasingly hard to get anything done in the 2020 election year,” he said.
The evolution of the business of farming and the state of U.S. agriculture, as described by luncheon speaker and U.S. Farm Report host Tyne Morgan, plus afternoon issues and outlook sessions on Arkansas’ chief agricultural commodities, rounded out the day’s schedule.
Morgan touted the resilience of agriculture in the face of falling commodity prices and other challenges and setbacks. Thanks to farmers’ innovativeness and record crop production — as well as the 2016 election results — Morgan said food companies and the media are taking a fresh look at the role farming plays in America’s success.
“I know we’re holding strong because of the people in this room,” she said.
FPCCI rice body appoints convener
KARACHI: Rafique Suleman, former chairman, Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP), has been appointed as the convener of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) Central Committee on Rice (2019).
He has already served as FPCCI Committee on Rice Exports chairman during the year 2015 and 2016. Additionally, Muzammil Chappal and Faisal Anis have been appointed as deputy conveners in this committee.
Suleman has served as chairman, as well as senior vice chairman and treasurer of REAP. He belongs to a business family, and has been a leading rice exporter for the last many years.
He said that currently rice export trade was facing many local and international challenges.

Pakistani exports to KSA fall by $200m in five years


Description: https://profit.pakistantoday.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/8-5-696x418.jpg
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s export to Saudi Arabia has plunged by $200 million in the last five years, according to statistics available with Pakistan Today.
Total trade between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia currently stands at $3.3 billion. Pakistan’s share in the bilateral trade stands at a meager $300 million, whereas the Saudis earn around $3 billion.
A considerable decrease has been witnessed in the Pakistani export to KSA in the last five years, as Pakistan’s exports stood at $505.4 million in 2013-14, compared to $305.6 million in 2017-18.
Pakistan exports rice, onion, towel, furniture, leather, garments, footwear, fish, fruit, vegetables, textile products, whereas the country import’s petroleum products, petrochemicals, biochemical products, plastics, steel products, copper etc. from KSA.
Sources said the exports have declined because the exporters preference to send edible items to KSA via UAE.
They said Pakistan can increase its exports through textile and cosmetics, as around 2.6 million Pakistanis are residing and working in Saudi Arabia. However, due to a lack of focus on research and development as well as value addition, the government is giving chances to other countries to capture the Saudi market, they added.
All Pakistan Fruit and Vegetable Exporters Patron-in-Chief Abdul Waheed said that the cost of vegetable and fruit production is very high in Pakistan as compared to other countries. In addition, the government is not paying any heed to research and development, innovation and branding of products.
“This is why food and vegetable export is just $620 million. If the government starts paying attention on this front, Pakistan’s fruit and vegetable export can grow to $2.5 billion in just five years,” he stated.
It is pertinent to mention that the Saudi vegetable market was valued at $11.2 billion in 2017, and is expected to register a CAGR of 4.7pc during the forecast period (2018-2023). Likewise, the Saudi fruit market was valued at $34 billion in 2017 and is expected to register a CAGR of 4.1pc during the forecast period (2018-2023).
Advisor to Prime Minister on Commerce Abdul Razaq Dawood had said that Saudi Arabia was interested in Pakistan’s agriculture sector in order to increase the growth livestock in Pakistan and then we can export them.
Nearly six in 10 Pakistanis normally eat roti at lunchtime: survey

ISLAMABAD: According to a Gilani Research Foundation survey carried out by Gallup & Gilani Pakistan, nearly 6 in 10 Pakistanis report that they normally eat roti at lunch time exclusively.
According to a press release, a nationally representative sample of men and women from across the four provinces was asked, “What is eaten in your household for lunch as a matter of routine?” In response to this question, 58 percent said roti, 14 percent said rice, 22 percent said both roti and rice, while 6 percent did not know or did not wish to respond.
The study was released by Gilani Research Foundation and carried out by Gallup & Gilani Pakistan, the Pakistani affiliate of Gallup International. The recent survey was carried out among a sample of 1,142 men and women in urban areas of all four provinces of the country, during 24–28 January, 2019. The error margin is estimated to be approximately ± 2-3 percent at the 95 percent confidence level.

Bombay Lounge: Putting the color back in Indian food


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Hints of lemon, mint, cardamom, ginger, cinnamon, cumin and cloves envelop the senses in each bite of Aloo Gosht, a meat curry. The mutton is tender, delicate and fresh. The potatoes add texture to the sauce, which is spicy enough to enhance the flavors without being overpowering.
Before you know it, you are reaching yet for another mouthful of lamb, basmati rice and naan bread. A splendid example of northern India’s most popular dish cooked by Harsh Bathia of Bombay Lounge 93.
Indian Cuisine is as complex, diverse and rich as the country itself, and pin-pointing that one emblematic dish or single recipe to follow is a challenge few take on. However, Bombay Lounge 93, located a few blocks away from the park, offers guests a gastronomic experience of India’s classic dishes.
“You can’t describe Indian food in a sentence, because it is very varied, you can find every color, texture and food type in one plate,” explains Harsh. For him, food is an integral sensorial experience that starts with the eyes, and is capable of captivating the mind and the heart as much as the senses.
The chef understands the culinary nuances of each region of his country of origin, and has mastered cooking techniques in top-notch kitchens such as the Oberoi Hotel in Udaipur to deliver an authentic and well-executed menu.
Besides Aloo Gosht ($33,600), Bombay Lounge 93 offers a varied set of entrees and appetizers, including vegetarian options and a lunch special. The Butter Chicken ($33,600) is new to the list, and is faithfully carried out: the savory and velvety sauce melts with the meat in every bite, a definite must try.
With eight types of bread ($5,400- $6,300 per serving) and five different preparations of rice to choose from ($7,800- $11,700 per portion) there is almost never enough basmati and naan to finish an Indian meal, and that is also true at Bombay Lounge 93.
If appetizers are more your thing, the restaurant serves plenty of them. Pawan Singh is the chef in charge of preparing them, as well as all dishes cooked in the tandoori oven. Somosas, veggie or chicken ($14,000), are as tasty as the Mix Pagodas ($11,700) or the Bombay Paneer Shashlik ($18,600), which complements the assortment by adding a hint of cayenne pepper to the meal. Make sure to include Palak Paneer ($26,700). This cheese and spinach dish is creamy and well balanced, a real treat for those looking for soft texture and a sharp refreshing taste.
The idea behind Bombay Lounge 93’s appetizers is to enjoy an assortment of small dishes while sipping an after work cocktail, perhaps a Gin Tonic, with friends before heading back home or staying for dinner. However, food is the heart and soul of the restaurant. Appetizers and entrees at Bombay Lounge 93 are meant to be shared, which is good value for your money. Besides, the restaurant offers a lunch special during the week served as a Thali style meal in a rectangular tray that includes rice, a salad, a vegetable and a protein – plant based or animal. Most choices are available from the main menu, and the price varies from $21,900 to $38,700. Beverages are not included.
Try the mango lassy, a yogurt-based milkshake ($6,900) or salt one made with cumin and – yes – salt. And if you crave for a dish that is not on the menu, just ask, the staff will try to accommodate your cravings as best they can. In fact, customers can choose the level of spice in their meal, and enjoy Indian flavors regardless of the amount of chili.
The authentic menu of Bombay Lounge 93 comes as no surprise. Harsh Bathia opened and worked at Taj-Mahal in Usaquén before he took on Bombay Lounge 93. The Usaquén restaurant is close to celebrating its 5th anniversary and continues to offer guests a really good Indian meal.
Chefs Harsh Bathia and Pawan Singh of Bombay Lounge
Behind Taj-Mahal and Bombay Lounge 93 is Verónica Barquero, and her husband Raúl Buriticá and business partners and friends Amit Kataria and Sheenan Groover.
The two couples decided to open the second restaurant to offer clients South of Usaquén a more central option with a more modern feeling to it and the same high-quality standard.
“We, the Colombian couple (although I’m from Costa Rica), and our Indian friends, make a great team. We support each other. They contribute the Indian touch and we provide the Western feel of what can and cannot work here, and still, after five years in business, we remain the best of friends,” Verónica explains.
Friendship might be the key to the success of both restaurants. But, one thing is certain, Bombay Lounge 93 is an excellent choice to enjoy classic Indian food. Or, as Verónica would say, “we serve great Indian food to par with any good Indian restaurant anywhere in the world, whether it be Melbourne, New York, London or any other cosmopolitan city.”
Philippines liberates rice market

THE PHILIPPINES' Rice Tariffication Bill has been signed into law by President Duterte amid opposition from farmer groups and consistent prodding from economic managers and business organisations.

The measure, considered a priority bill of the Duterte administration, will effectively open the country’s doors to unimpeded importation of rice and provide an annual subsidy of 10 billion peso (Bt6 billion) for the development of the rice industry. Economic managers and 13 business organisations had thrown their support for the law, noting that its enactment would help temper the country’s inflation, bring down retail prices of rice in the market and harness the country’s ability to ensure food security. However, industry groups, including the Federation of Free Farmers, Alyansa ng Magbubukid and Bantay Bigas, had urged Duterte to veto the bill, citing issues of smuggling and corruption in the rice trade as well as the limited role of the National Food Authority (NFA) under the law.

Under the tariff regime, the NFA would be limited to maintaining the country’s emergency stocks in time of calamities and would not be allowed to license importers and regulate the entry of imported rice in the market. It was not clear if it would still be allowed to sell subsidised rice in the market. Acting NFA Administrator Tomas Escarez said details of the agency’s function would be tackled in the implementing rules and regulations of the law, which has yet to be released. The Rice Tariffication Law allows the market to be flooded with rice imports so long as these are slapped a tariff at 35 per cent if coming from Asean members and 50 per cent for non-Asean states. Around 28 billion peso in revenues are expected to be collected by the government from these imports, which would be used to subsidise rice farmers to ensure their competitiveness. Senator Cynthia Villar, chair of the Senate committee on food and agriculture and the proponent of the bill, said that the money should be used to mechanise and modernise the sector, which has been lagging behind other rice-producing countries. Unlike in Vietnam and Thailand where farmers can produce a kilo of rice at 6 peso, Filipino farmers incur a production cost of 12 peso a kilo, making local rice costlier than imported rice. Whether or not relying on rice imports would benefit both local producers and consumers of the staple remains to be seen. Right now, the challenge is to make sure that rice farmers can compete at a price 35-per cent higher than imported rice, and give consumers the option to avail themselves of the staple at a more affordable price.  

Rice exports from India are set to swing in the last quarter of this year on a spate in orders after shipments slumped 14% in the last three quarters over high input costs and tepid demand from Bangladesh.

By Parshant Krar, ET Bureau|Feb 15, 2019, 02.33 PM IST
Description: Rice-agenciesThe non-basmati rice exports that are dependent largely on varieties grown in Chhattisgarh were affected as paddy supply dried up following announcement of higher than minimum support price (MSP).
Chandigarh: Rice exports from India are set to swing in the last quarter of this year on a spate in orders after shipments slumped 14% in the last three quarters over high input costs and tepid demand from Bangladesh.

“Consignments in January are better than the previous year and the trade is likely to attain levels close to the previous year,” a senior commerce and industry ministry official told ET.

Exporters have seen a surge in demand from the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the US this quarter. The official said the supply for exports has streamlined after being affected for the last few months of 2018 because of assembly polls in some states. A bumper yield in Bangladesh also took toll on Indian exports, he said.

The 5% subsidy on export value extended to non-basmati rice under the Merchandise Exports from India Scheme (MEIS) in November helped in recovery of trade, but margins remained thin, exporters said.

“Raw material (paddy) prices are still high as most farmers are inclined to sell to the state agencies in states, including Chhattisgarh,” said P Baskara Reddy, promoter of Kakinada-based Sri Chitra Agri Exports. He said the exporters hope that the scheme will be extended beyond March 26 and the incentive doubled to 10% under MEIS to complement the shrinking margins.

The announcement of higher price assistance by political parties just ahead of the harvesting season in the run-up to the assembly polls had spiked government procurement and dampened private purchase in states like Chhattisgarh where the procurement price was higher by 60%.

The non-basmati rice exports that are dependent largely on varieties grown in Chhattisgarh were affected as paddy supply dried up following announcement of higher than minimum support price (MSP).

Exporters are wary of such politically motivated price assistance. “Higher procurement price will subdue trade in the coming years. Direct financial assistance is a better route to support farmers,” Rice Exporters’ Association president BV Krishan Rao said. Higher procurement would lead to a surplus buffer stock and a situation where the government will have to auction its stocks at a loss, he said.

“Similar situation took place in 1999-2000 when Food Corporation of India had to release its brimming stocks at a discount after higher MSP had boosted federal procurement three-times over the buffer stock norms,” Rao said.

The rice procurement crossed 41 lakh tonnes so far compared to 32.5 lakh tonnes in Chhattisgarh in the last Kharif marketing season. “We have not taken export commitments this season as farmers are keen to sell to government agencies,” a senior executive of Uttar Pradesh-based Laxmi Rice Mills said.

While export of basmati rice has increased till December, non-basmati exports stayed downhill with 5.6 million tonnes of shipment till December as against 6.3 MT a year ago.