Friday, August 21, 2020

21st August,2020 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter

  

Means our death': Egyptian farmers fear effect of Ethiopia dam

The prospect of the mega-dam is a new worry for Egyptian farmers with water scarcity already a major problem.

Description: Ethiopia says electricity generated by its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is a crucial lifeline for the country [AFP]

Ethiopia says electricity generated by its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is a crucial lifeline for the country [AFP]

In the winter of 1964, Makhluf Abu Kassem was born in an agricultural community newly created at the far end of Egypt's Fayoum Oasis. His parents were among the village's first settlers, moving there three years earlier from the Nile Valley to carve out a new life as farmers. 

It was a bright and prosperous start. The region was fertile and for 40 years they made their living growing corn, cotton and wheat.

Now 55, Abu Kassem looks out at what is left of his shrivelling farm, surrounded by barren wasteland that was once his neighbour's farmland - victims of dwindling irrigation in recent years. 

"There used to be enough water to make all this area green ... Now, it is as you see," he said. 

In the past, he and other villagers irrigated their farms through canals linked to the Nile River, Egypt's lifeline since ancient times. It provides the country with a thin, richly fertile stretch of green land through the desert. 

But years of mismanagement, corruption and increasing population led to the loss of at least 75 percent of farmland in the village and the surrounding areas, according to Abdel-Fattah el-Aweidi, head of the Gazaer Qouta Agriculture Association overseeing the area. 

Now, Abu Kassem fears a dam Ethiopia is building on the Blue Nile, the Nile's main tributary, could add to the severe water shortages already hitting his village if no deal is struck to ensure a continued flow of water. 

"The dam means our death," he said.

Description: Egypt Nile Waters

Farmers sit under the shade of a tree surrounded by barren wasteland that was once fertile and green Qouta town, Fayoum, Egypt [AP]

Fight for resources

The exact effect of the dam on downstream countries Egypt and Sudan remains unknown. For Egyptian farmers, the daunting prospect adds a new worry on top of the other causes of mounting water scarcity.

Egypt is already spreading its water resources thin. Its booming population, now more than 100 million, has one of the lowest per capita shares of water in the world, at about 550 cubic metres per year, compared with a global average of 1,000.

Ethiopia says the electricity generated by its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is a crucial lifeline to bring its nearly 110 million citizens out of poverty. 

Egypt, which relies on the Nile for more than 90 percent of its water supply, including drinking water, industrial use and irrigation, fears a devastating effect if the dam is operated without taking its needs into account. 

It wants to guarantee a minimum annual release of 40 billion cubic metres of water from the Blue Nile while Ethiopia fills the dam's giant reservoir, according to an irrigation official. That would be less than the 55 billion cubic metres Egypt usually gets from the Nile, mostly from the Blue Nile.

The shortage would be filled by water stored behind Egypt's Aswan High Dam in Lake Nasser, which has a gross capacity of 169 billion cubic metres of water. 

Description: Egypt Nile Waters

Egyptian farmer and shepherd Abu Mazen walks his sheep in Second Village, Qouta town, Fayoum, Egypt [AP] 

"If the dam is filled and operated without coordination between Egypt and Ethiopia, its effect will be destructive to the whole Egyptian society and the state will not be able to address its repercussions," said Egypt's former Irrigation Minister Mohammed Nasr Allam. 

It is estimated that a permanent drop of five billion cubic meters of Nile water to Egypt would cause the loss of one million acres (400,000 hectares) of farmland, or 12 percent of the country's total, he said. 

Sudan says the project could endanger its own dams, though it would also see benefits from the Ethiopian dam, including cheap electricity and reduced flooding. 

Abu Kassem's village, with the bland bureaucratic name of Second Village, was one of multiple agricultural communities created in Egypt in the 1960s by the socialist government of President Gamal Abdel Nasser. Built on reclaimed desert, it depends for irrigation on the Yusuf Canal, which flows from the Nile through Fayoum, fanning out in a series of channels. 

The villagers enumerated the variety of crops they used to farm, ranging from cotton and vegetables to wheat and grains. 

Now, most of the village's lands are barren. Almost all the Nile water that used to reach it is diverted into other agricultural projects or used for the growing population before it reaches Second Village, farmers say. Similar shortages of water have grown more common even in communities in the Nile Valley and the Delta, where farmers also face increasing salinity. 

To irrigate, the village farmers now depend on wastewater from nearby towns, which is a mix of agricultural drainage and sewage. 

On Abu Kassem's 16-acre farm (6.5 hectares), only a single acre is now cultivated. His family tried growing corn, but the plants died. They, like most others in the area, switched to growing olive trees, which use less water. But even those suffer. 

"These trees haven't seen water in over 40 days," Abu Kassem said, showing a shrivelled fruit.

With the water waning, many of the village's 12,000 people have left, including Abu Kassem's three brothers and his four sons. 

Ihsan Abdel-Azim, 53, the wife of one of Abu Kassem's brothers, moved with her family to work as doormen in Cairo in 2001. 

"We had no choice at the time," the mother of five said, sitting among her grandchildren during a visit to the village earlier this month. "Cultivating the farm became insufficient to feed my children. All roads led that way."

Description: Egypt Nile Waters

Farmer Makhluf Abu Kassem stands on a land that was once fertile, in Second Village, Qouta town, Fayoum, Egypt [AP]

Deadlocked talks

Years-long negotiations among Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia failed to reach a deal on the dam. The dispute reached a tipping point earlier this week when Ethiopia announced it completed the first stage of the filling of the dam's 74 billion-cubic-meter reservoir. 

That sparked fear and confusion in Sudan and Egypt. Both have repeatedly insisted Ethiopia must not start the fill without reaching a deal first. 

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said the filling occurred naturally, "without bothering or hurting anyone else", from torrential rains flooding the Blue Nile. 

Sticking points in the talks have been how much water Ethiopia will release downstream during the filling if a multi-year drought occurs and how the three countries will resolve any future disputes. Egypt and Sudan have pushed for a binding agreement, while Ethiopia insists on non-binding guidelines. 

In recent years, the Egyptian government accelerated its efforts to modernise the country's irrigation systems, including lining canals and encouraging farmers to adopt drip and spray irrigation, which use less water. 

The government also slashed cultivation of water-consuming crops, such as rice, and threatened to fine farmers who grow such crops in areas not specified for its cultivation. 

President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi said in televised comments late in July his government allocated more than $62.5bn for investments to preserve water until 2037. 

He reiterated warnings that the Nile is "a matter of life" for Egypt and acknowledged the anxiety gripping the country. 

"I am also concerned," he declared.

 

 

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/08/russia-accused-blocking-alexei-navalny-treatment-germany-200821063439472.html

 

Rice prices increase as exporters grapple with floods, coronavirus

Reuters BENGALURU | Updated on August 21, 2020  Published on August 21, 2020

Demand is huge for Indian rice due to lower prices, but exports are getting affected by floods and the coronavirus outbreak in Andhra Pradesh

https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/agri-business/rice-prices-increase-as-exporters-grapple-with-floods-coronavirus/article32409675.ece

 

 

India rice prices rise as exporters grapple with floods, coronavirus

 

Nakul Iyer

·         AUGUST 20, 2020 / 5:38 PM /

 

BENGALURU (Reuters) - Rice export prices in top-hub India edged higher this week as floods and surging coronavirus cases hammered supply and export logistics.

A worker carries boiled rice in a wheelbarrow to spread it for drying at a rice mill on the outskirts of Kolkata, India, January 31, 2019. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/Files

India’s 5% broken parboiled variety rose to $383-$389 per tonne from last week’s $382-$387, with exporters struggling to fulfil orders due to limited availability of containers and workers at the country’s biggest rice handling port, Kakinada, in the state of Andhra Pradesh.

“Demand is huge for Indian rice due to lower prices, but exports are getting affected by floods and the coronavirus outbreak in Andhra Pradesh,” said Nitin Gupta, vice president for Olam India’s rice business.

With 2.84 million total COVID-19 cases, India is the worst-hit country in Asia and third only behind the U.S. and Brazil in terms of the number of cases.

Floods in neighbouring Bangladesh damaged rice crops worth 363.34 billion taka ($4.29 billion) on around 100,000 hectares, Agriculture Minister Abdur Razzaque said.

Bangladesh, the world’s third biggest rice producer, often relies on imports to cope with shortages caused by floods and droughts.

Meanwhile, Vietnam’s 5% broken rice rates were unchanged at $480-$490 a tonne on Thursday, its highest since late 2011.

“Supplies are thin as local traders have increased their purchases recently and the summer-autumn harvest has ended,” a trader based in Ho Chi Minh city said.

The return of the novel coronavirus to Vietnam late last month has also prompted the hoarding of rice domestically, the trader noted.

Traders expect prices to stay elevated for the next few months until a new harvest in October.

Supply concerns also pushed Thailand’s benchmark 5% broken rice prices up to $480-500, its highest since July 2, from $465-$500 last week,

“It seems like the rice harvest in the provinces will not be so great,” a Bangkok-based trader said.

Demand for Thai rice has remained flat this week as prices were high, traders said.

(Refile to fix the spelling of Ho Chi Minh city in eighth paragraph)

Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Patpicha Tanakasempipat in Bangkok; editing by Arpan Varghese and Amy Caren Daniel

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

https://in.reuters.com/article/asia-rice/india-rice-prices-rise-as-exporters-grapple-with-floods-coronavirus-idINKBN25G1DS

Why farmers are not cheering their exceptional feat this kharif season

Highest rice acreage in six years, more farmers in farms, a bounty monsoon and an expected bumper harvest don't enthuse farmers as their earning dips  

 

Description: https://www.downtoearth.org.in/static/new_assets/img/logo.png

By Richard Mahapatra
Last Updated: Wednesday 19 August 2020

It is a piece of news that everybody would love to cheer about, except those who made this possible.

The current kharif season is exceptional. In comparison to last year, over eight million more hectares of farms are under cultivation this season.

There are more people engaged in cultivation now due to the huge reverse migration of workers after the countrywide lockdown over the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Most of them are those who had quit farming.

All types of crops have reported an increase in acreage. But the increase in acreage of rice — the staple crop in kharif that sustains the maximum number of farmers — is the highest in the last five years. The monsoon is expected to be above normal.

To add to the cheer, the State Bank of India (SBI)’s latest research report shows that the agriculture sector has been immune to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Rather, this is the only major economic sector that would witness a growth rate of three per cent this fiscal year; the rest are going to shrink significantly.

Before this, to provide relief to farmers amid the countrywide lockdown, the Union government increased the minimum support price (MSP) of 14 kharif crops on June 2, 2020.

Hopes float in the corridors of the finance ministry. Many have started talking in terms of this fuelling the revival of the country’s economy, if not this fiscal, then definitely in the next one.

Basically, it is premised on the belief that an increase in agricultural yield will lead to more income; and this, in turn, would lead to more consumption among rural Indians. So, the revival of the rural economy would ultimately add on to the sluggish national economy.

But, as usual, farmers don’t seem to be jubilant. In recent times, they don’t see a natural correlation between their physical yield from farming and that of income from it. Rather, the more they produce, the less they earn for their produce.

This is despite the consistent increase in demand for food in the country. Immediately after the declaration of MSP, farmers were on streets, demanding more assured prices, citing huge losses even with enhanced support price.

India ranks second in agricultural production globally, overtaking countries such as the United States, Russia and Brazil. But our farmers’ per capita income from farming is negligible in comparison to these countries.

According to a report by the Organisation of Economic Cooperation Development and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Indian farmers have lost Rs 45 lakh crore due to “non-proper” pricing of the product between 2000 and 2017. Even MSP, that the government pursues as the primary support system to ensure fair price, covers just six-10 per cent of farmers.

This is also a concern for the political leadership as the promise to double farmers’ income by 2022-23 is hardly 30 months away. Arguably, this year would have been that springboard to catch up with the target, given all favourable conditions.

By 2022-23, to achieve this target, a farmer’s annual income has to be Rs 192, 694 (2015 price), from Rs 96, 703 in 2015-16. This needs a 10.4 per cent annual income growth till that target year, according to the government's own estimate.

To achieve this growth rate, the current income ratio of a farmer has to fundamentally change: The current 60:40 ratio of income from farm and non-farm has to be turned into 70:30. But this involves a farmer increasing his / her investment on farming by 12.5 per cent annual. This is possible if he / she earns enough to invest more.

And the government committee that recommended various ways to double farmers’ income clearly said that the biggest challenge is to monetise farmers’ produce, meaning to ensure more economic return. This has not been possible. Rather, in the last five-six years, farmers are increasingly facing a market glut.

If farmers from this exceptionally favourable year can’t earn, it is going to be a troubling time for the country and also for the government’s target to double farmers’ income. Going by the prevailing situation, there is not much to be expected in terms of the government actually ensuring a fair price for the expected bumper harvest in winter.

Its own stock of food grain is already too high to accommodate further, thus curtailing its capacity to buy more at MSP. For the farmers, it means another round of distress selling or even not being able to sell their harvests. This is a loss in income as usual and an addition to its legacy debt burden.

The SBI research estimates that due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the per capita loss for the whole of India is around Rs 27,000. This is also for the farmers who would be incurring further losses this year due to the market glut.

It is a scary climax to a seemingly milestone year for farmers. And for those who hope a rural revival would lead to a national economic boom, the same research report says that the rural revival would have not much impact on the country’s gross domestic product as the urban population spends more than the rural people on food and other commodities. And they are not spending now due to loss in income. 

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/blog/agriculture/why-farmers-are-not-cheering-their-exceptional-feat-this-kharif-season-72929

 

Govt distributes 13,000 tonnes of rice among flood affected people

By City Desk
20th-Aug-2020       

A total of 13, 000 tonnes of rice has so far been distributed among the flood affected people across the country.  "The government has distributed a total of 13,000 tonnes of rice among the flood hit people in 33 districts in the country," said an official press release on Tuesday.
So far 19,510 tonnes of rice has been allocated and 12,948 tonnes of rice has been distributed among the flood victim people of the country.  The government has also distributed Taka 2.94-crore cash among the flood victims and Taka 1.05-crore has also been given for purchasing baby food till August 17, 2020, it said.
In addition to this, the district administrations have distributed more 1,41,842 packets of dry food among flood affected people.  Besides, 400 bundles of corrugated iron sheet have been allotted and so far 100 bundles have been distributed.
The government has opened 1,017 flood shelter centers in the flood prone areas where 24,100 people have taken refuge.  In the flood affected district, a total of 866 medical teams have been formed where 241 of them are functioning.
The flood affected districts include Dhaka, Gazipur, Tangail, Manikganj, Faridpur, Munshiganj, Gopalganj, Rajbari, Madaripur, Shariatpur, Kishoreganj, Mymensingh, Netrokona, Jamalpur, Chandpur, Noakhali, Lakshmipur, Brahmanbaria, Rajshahi, Naogaon, Natore, Sirajganj, Bogura, Rangpur, Kurigram, Nilphamari, Gaibandha, Lalmonirhat, Sylhet, Moulvibazar, Hobiganj and Sunamganj.

http://thedailynewnation.com/news/260672/govt-distributes-13000-tonnes-of-rice-among-flood-affected-people.html

 

Farmers fight to save output as floods, virus hit

Since mid-July, Huang Xiaoping has been busy working in his 110-hectare paddy field, harvesting early rice and sowing for the next season.

Huang also runs a rental business involving farm machinery in a village near the Dongting Lake, China’s second-largest freshwater lake ,in the central Hunan Province, helping local farmers during the “double rush” season.

“We need to fight the current flood and strengthen the embankments,” Huang said.

China’s Ministry of Emergency Management said rain-triggered floods had affected some 54.8 million people in 27 provincial-level regions as of late July, causing direct economic losses of 144.43 billion yuan (US$20.8 billion).

Restrictions on food exports and panic hoarding in some countries and regions, as well as rampant desert locust, have adversely affected food production.

“The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2020” report released by five agencies, including the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, projected that COVID-19 could push up to 132 million people into starvation globally this year.

Although downpours and floods destroyed vast stretches of farmland and agricultural facilities, flood control situation in the hard-hit provinces of Jiangxi and Anhui is improving as the water level in major waterways continues to recede.

The flood control and drought relief headquarters of the two provinces have successively downgraded their emergency response level since early August.

In the face of the floods, the Chinese provinces have been mobilizing resources, using upgraded technology, and providing material support to ensure grain security and make up for losses in production.

Description: Farmers fight to save output as floods, virus hit

Xinhua

Villagers transplant rice seedlings in Gaitian Village in Lixian County, central China's Hunan Province.

For farmers like Huang, time is the essence. In the low-lying township of Liaonan near the Poyang Lake in Jiangxi, Wu Baolin was busy sowing seeds of late rice with two workers. He saw some two hectares of his crops damaged in the floods.

“The harvest is finally guaranteed even if it might be delayed,” Wu said, adding that there is no time to lose when it comes to growing crops.

In Anhui, replantation of single-cropping rice has been carried out on every piece of farmland where the floodwater has receded. As of early August, more than 100,000 hectares of crops had been resowed, accounting for 38 percent of Anhui’s total area of farmland needing replantation, according to the provincial department of agriculture and rural affairs.

China’s total grain output consists of three parts — early rice, summer grain and autumn production. Summer grain is the first season of the annual grain production, which accounts for more than a fifth of the annual output.

Various measures have been adopted by authorities to ensure stable grain output amid efforts to control the COVID-19 epidemic, such as fully implementing support policies like the minimum purchase price for rice and wheat and improving the quality of spring plowing.

As the world’s top food producer and consumer, China saw its grain output reach a

HKSAR LegCo session to start in mid-October: gov't gazette

1       

The Legislative Council (LegCo) of China's Hong Kong Special Administrative Region will start its 2020-2021 session on October 14, according to the Gazette of the HKSAR government on Friday.

HKSAR Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced the date in a statement following a decision of China's top legislature earlier this month for the sixth HKSAR LegCo to continue performing duties for no less than a year in a bid to address the vacancy caused by the postponement of the LegCo election.

The election for the seventh-term LegCo members of the HKSAR, originally scheduled for September 6, 2020, will be put off for a year due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Lam has said the decision of the top legislature maintains the constitutional and legal order of the HKSAR and ensures the normal governance of the HKSAR government and the normal operation of society.

https://www.shine.cn/news/nation/2008194513/

 

Ensuring national food security

Thursday, 2020-08-20 17:47:39

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Description: https://en.nhandan.org.vn/cdn/en/media/k2/items/src/899/c9242757f955013e31981dd754d627bf.jpg
Rice harvesting in Vietnam's Mekong Delta region.

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NDO – The Politburo recently signed the promulgation of Conclusion No. 81-KL/TW on ensuring national food security until 2030.

Accordingly, the Politburo has urged the Party Committees, Party organisations and authorities at all levels to pay attention to directing localities and units to improve agricultural land use efficiency and maintain 3.5 million hectares of rice land with annual rice output at a minimum of 35 million tonnes, serving as the core in ensuring national food security.

In addition, the Politburo has requested the effective use of the rice land fund with strict plans, as well as the improvement of the lives and income of people in rural areas.

It can be seen that ensuring food security still remains one of Vietnam’s key priorities, particularly in the context of a changing domestic and international situation like at present. Specifically, Vietnam is one of the countries most affected by climate change, natural disasters and extreme weather patterns (storms, floods, droughts, extreme heat and extreme cold). Due to the impact of climate change and rising sea levels, Vietnam’s agricultural sector is at risk of losing 7.2 million tonnes of rice and having 32.2% of agricultural land affected by the end of the 21st century. If the average temperature increases by 10 degrees Celsius, rice output will decrease by 10%, corn production down 5-20%, and the demand for irrigation will surge by 10%. This will adversely affect food production and threaten food security for the poor and near poor. Meanwhile, global food demand has also expanded due to increased population, increased per capita income and changes in diet. According to the United Nations, the world’s population will increase from the current 7.5 billion people to about 10 billion by 2050, which also means agricultural production needs to grow by 70% to meet the population’s demand for food at that time.

In the face of subjective and objective conditions mentioned above, the task of ensuring national food security has become extremely urgent, in which due attention must be paid to rice, a strategic commodity with direction impacts on food security and socio-economic stability. Together with maintaining 3.5 million hectares of rice cultivation land, another big problem relates to improving the income and lives of rice farmers. In recent years, the Party and State have issued policies to support rice farmers. However, often times, farmers still suffer when the rice price falls and even plunges to below the production cost, causing losses for many farming households and driving them to abandon their fields in some localities.

Therefore, in order to effectively implement Conclusion No. 81-KL/TW on ensuring national food security until 2030, competent agencies will need to develop mechanisms and policies to appropriately and effectively support farmers, thus helping bring rice farming households into professional production households; encouraging rice production in the form of connecting cooperatives with businesses and associating production with processing, preservation and consumption; and efficiently building large-scale fields and production areas with geographical indications and market connections. In particular, preferential policies should be effectively implemented to support farmers, cooperatives and enterprises in successfully applying technological advances to move step by step towards modernising the rice commodity industry, thus contributing to ensuring food security and improving rice farmers’ income.

https://en.nhandan.org.vn/business/item/8995902-ensuring-national-food-security.html

 

 

Bulletin on the Output of Early Rice in 2020

 

National Bureau of Statistics of China2020-08-20 09:30

 

National Bureau of Statistics of China

August 19, 2020

 

According to the sampling survey of early rice harvesting by on-site measurement, the sown area, yield per unit area and total output of early rice in China in 2020 are estimated as follows:

 

The total sown areas of early rice was 4,751 thousand hectares (71,260 thousand mu), which increased 300.7 thousand hectares (4,511 thousand mu) over last year, and an increase of 6.8 percent.

 

The yield per unit area of early rice was 5,745 kg/ha (383 kg/mu), decreased 157.3 kg/ha (10.5 kg/mu) over last year, with a drop of 2.7 percent.

 

The total output of early rice was 27,290 thousand tons (54.6 billion jin), increased 1,028 thousand tons (2.06 billion jin) over last year, with an increase of 3.9 percent.

 

Output of Early Rice in 2020

 

Regions

Sown Area

(thousand hectares)

Total Outputs

(10,000 tons)

Yield per Unit Area

(kg)

 

 

 

 

National Total

4750.7

2729.3

5745.0

Beijing

 

 

 

Tianjin

 

 

 

Hebei

 

 

 

Shanxi

 

 

 

Inner Mongolia

 

 

 

Liaoning

 

 

 

Jilin

 

 

 

Heilongjiang

 

 

 

Shanghai

 

 

 

Jiangsu

 

 

 

Zhejiang

101.2

62.8

6202.0

Anhui

170.3

91.2

5355.3

Fujian

97.7

62.2

6362.4

Jiangxi

1217.5

646.7

5311.6

Shandong

 

 

 

Henan

 

 

 

Hubei

122.4

68.3

5578.6

Hunan

1225.7

718.7

5863.7

Guangdong

869.1

518.5

5966.0

Guangxi

805.2

476.8

5921.0

Hainan

110.0

65.9

5989.5

Chongqing

 

 

 

Sichuan

 

 

 

Guizhou

 

 

 

Yunnan

31.5

18.3

5806.9

Tibet

 

 

 

Shaanxi

 

 

 

Gansu

 

 

 

Qinghai

 

 

 

Ningxia

 

 

 

Xinjiang

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notes:

1. Provinces (autonomous regions and municipalities) not listed has no early rice production.

2. Due to round-off, the national total is not equal to the total of provincial production.

 

Annotations:

 

Explanation on the Early Rice Output Survey

 

1. Survey Coverage

 

The data released by NBS on the early rice output, were estimated from the sample survey taking the province as the total population.

 

Sample survey and on-site measurement conducted in the counties (cities) are organized by the Survey Organizations of NBS at provincial level.

 

2.Survey Sample

 

The sample survey on early rice output consists of sown area sample survey and yield per unit area sample survey.

 

The sample survey on early rice sown areas is conducted in more than 3,000 sample land segments selected in national survey counties (cities). The early rice sown areas at province level is estimated based on the basic survey data.

 

The survey on yield per unit area of early rice is estimated by on-site measurement, which is conducted in the selected 20,000 small sample plots from almost 7,000 sample land segments selected from survey villages in national survey counties (cities).

 

3. Output Measurement Method

Description: img

 

The on-site measurement refers to the investigators in the grass roots, before harvesting, in accordance with System of Statistical Report for Agriculture, Forestry, Animal Husbandry and Fishery, stepping in the field and estimating the output of planting land plots one by one, and ranking them by output, then selecting a certain segment and marking them out. During harvesting period, investigators of the survey organizations at county level or assistant investigators will put sample and select sample on-site, and then estimate the yield per unit area through threshing, drying, water-checking, weighting and other steps on the selected land segments. The survey organizations at province level estimate the provincial (municipal) average yield per unit area based on the data from the selected land segments.

 

The outputs of early rice are multiplied by the sown areas from sample survey and the yield per unit area.

 

http://www.stats.gov.cn/english/PressRelease/202008/t20200820_1784289.html

China's early rice production increased 3.9 percent



Date

8/19/2020 2:54:18 PM

(MENAFN) On Wednesday August 19 the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) stated that China's early rice production accounted a 3.9-percent increase in 2020 subsequent to seven uninterrupted years of refuse.

The production arrived at 27.29 million tons, up 1.03 million tons from 2019.

Li Suoqiang an official with the NB S stated that the steady increase in early rice production was mostly because of a rush in the cultivation area, though severe floods in parts of southern China led to a drop in per unit area give way.

Li stated that a bumper summer crop and a boost in early rice manufacture laid a solid base for steady crumb manufacture of the year

https://menafn.com/1100662155/Chinas-early-rice-production-increased-39-percent

 

 

$800 for a tonne of rice in the country - Dr Mahendra Reddy

 

By Navitalai Naivalurua

Friday 21/08/2020

Description: https://www.fijivillage.com/news_images/15198553375f3f04096f4c72e467f5.jpg

Minister for Agriculture Dr Mahendra Reddy While opening the Rice Field Day demonstration in Nawaicoba in Nadi.

Minister for Agriculture Dr Mahendra Reddy has encouraged sugarcane farmers to complement their farm income and set aside one or two acres of land for rice production since the price of rice per tonne at the moment is $800.

While opening the Rice Field Day demonstration in Nawaicoba in Nadi, Dr Reddy says that each acre of rice could produce about 1.5 tonnes of paddy grain.

He says farmers need not worry about its market as Fiji Rice Limited would purchase rice at farm gate prices.

The Minister says that the Government wants to reduce the import bill for rice as on average Fiji imports $46.2 million of rice per year.

He adds $46.2 million is going out of the country in foreign currency, which means that US$20 million is going out every year for imported rice.

Dr Reddy says that acquiring 24,000 acres of land for rice production would be possible if the 12,000 sugarcane farmers set aside two acres of land each as this would also make the 80-90 per cent self-sufficiency rate achievable.

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Next up: a phone powered by microbial wires?

1.      Elizabeth Pennisi

 See all authors and affiliations

Science  21 Aug 2020:
Vol. 369, Issue 6506, pp. 904
DOI: 10.1126/science.369.6506.904

Summary

The discoverers of electric microbes have been quick to think about how these bacteria can be put to work. One potential use is to detect and control pollutants. Cable microbes seem to thrive in the presence of organic compounds, such as petroleum, so their presence may reveal undetected pollution. They might also aid cleanup, not just of organic compounds, but also nuclear waste. Electric bacteria are also giving rise to new technologies. Some have been genetically modified with the goal of making sensitive, wearable sensors. And fashioned into a film, nanowires also generate electricity from the moisture in the air. Now that researchers have coaxed a common lab and industrial bacterium, it should be easier for researchers to mass produce the structures and explore these and other practical applications.

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https://science.sciencemag.org/content/369/6506/904

 


12:00 AM, August 21, 2020 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:07 AM, August 21, 2020

Great leader of soil and people

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Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is seen wearing ‘mathal’ (a special hat) at a popular folk programme ‘Gambhira song’ on January 10, 1973. Photo: www.mujib100. gov.bd

Shykh Seraj

March 17, 1920. The river Madhumati was flowing at her own will while its tributary Baigar has been alongside for many years. The smell of Robi crop was all around in Tungipara. Sheikh family heard the cry of a new born. It was the moment of arrival of the liberator of (Bangalees) Bengalis, the people who were suppressed for ages. sGrowing up amid the joys and sorrows of Madhumati, the farming families and changes of seasons, this boy became a young man who always craved for emancipation. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who later became the ultimate leader of Bangladesh, brought us our independence and gave birth to a country named Bangladesh. I went to Tungipara in Gopalganj in March this year. Memories of the father of the nation were everywhere. Struggle of marginalized, peasants, and labourers gave him the impetus to enter politics when he was pretty young. The seed of politics and will to work for people were sown inside during his student life. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was an incomparable name in mass communication, oration and awakening the hardworking people in every corner of Bangladesh. If you go through his autobiography, 'The Unfinished Memories' and the 'Diary in Jail', you will get to know the depths of his mind, the landscape of his vision and his passion for the Bengal and its people. It is a new challenge for the people who have been deprived of land for many years. When day labourers of one district used to go to the other to harvest paddy, they would return with some paddies they received for their wages. They would carry those by boat. These people were called 'Dawal'. The autocratic government people started blocking the paddy boats of the Dawals and an announcement was made to confiscate the paddy and the boat if the paddy was not deposited to the government storage. Sheikh Mujib formed a movement on behalf of the Dawals and also awakened the ordinary people on behalf of the peasants and labourers.

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman played an outstanding role in every noteworthy movements for the betterment of Bengal. While Salam, Barkat, Rafiq, Jabbar and many others sacrificed their life in the Language Movement of 1952, Mujibur Rahman started a hunger strike at Faridpur prison. Bangabandhu became the leader with pure inspiration, and hope and aspiration of all the people residing in the then East Pakistan.

I saw an elderly farmer returning home from his farm work in Tungipara. I requested him to share any memory of Bangabandhu if it comes to his mind. "The government men were taking away rice from my house as I was in debt. Hearing the news, Sheikh Mujib came running and repaid the loan from his own pocket. After getting the money when policemen were leaving the spot Bangabandhu told them from the back, "The money has been paid, now you have to fix everything you have ruined." "Such a brave and kind man he was," added the old man. 

All that Bangabandhu did and said was for the people of Bangladesh, especially the marginalized and the peasants. He was always vocal. If we see the attendants of the March 7, 1971, speech of Bangabandhu, we'll see most of them were ordinary people--farmers, labourers, students and people from all walks of life, but a significant portion of them was farmers. Farmers were at the forefront in the steps taken by Bangabandhu during the Liberation War as well as after the independence of Bangladesh. Bangabandhu thought very intensely about ensuring the constitutional rights of the farmers. 

Article 14 of the constitution of Bangladesh states, "The main responsibility of the state is to liberate the working people--peasants and workers and to liberate other backward groups from all forms of exploitation." Article 16 of the constitution states, "In order to wipe out the discrimination in living standards between urban and rural people, he called for an agricultural revolution." He said, "No matter how boastful we try to be, we must not forget, we all are rooted in the soil and farming."

Description: https://assetsds.cdnedge.bluemix.net/sites/default/files/styles/big_1/public/news/images/seraj_24.jpg?itok=7bkC6NnU

During his visits across the nation, Bangabandhu drew attention to various issues like agricultural heritage of different regions, condition of farmers, diversified crops and their rotation. He reminded about the unique features of the soil of this country. Father of the Nation Bangabandhu as the head of the government and head of the state got only 1,314 days to rebuild independent Bangladesh. His visionary, long-term and well-thought-out vision is in every aspect of Bangladesh's development. During the post-liberated period in 1972, the production of food grains in the country was 1.1 crore (11 million) tonnes. It was not enough for 7 crore (70 million) people during that time. The Bangabandhu government had provided food subsidies for two years after independence to curb down the food shortage. In the first five-year plan, more investment was made in mainstream agriculture, irrigation and other input facilities. Cooperatives played an essential role in Bangabandhu's agricultural development and food security. He discussed his thoughts with eminent economists, university professors and many other people from relevant fields. He took various initiatives to make the plan up-to-date. He thought of a two-tiered cooperative. There has been much research on his cooperative ideas. Active researchers and economists of that time still carry that memory and strategies. Bangabandhu told everyone to become a down-to-earth person so that people can contribute to the country in the best manner possible. 

His speech at the Bangladesh Agricultural University on February 13 in 1973 provides a complete outline and philosophy for agricultural production and food production. He urged the agriculturists to go to the village. He said the gap between village and the city should be bridged. He also mentioned that modern and mechanized agriculture should be embraced. He also stressed on the issue that farmers should be honoured and respected. In 1973, Bangladesh Rice Research Institute was institutionalized through Act No 10. Initiatives for research of different crops, except rice, were taken at the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute. Horticulture Development Board, Cotton Development Board, Seed Certification Agency, Rubber Development Programme, Bangladesh Agricultural Development Corporation, Fisheries and Livestock Research Institute and Bangladesh Agricultural Research Council, the highest body for research coordination were reconstituted.

The ministry of jute was established to expand the potential of the golden fibre of Bengal. Today, Bangladesh's progress in agricultural development is appreciated and followed all over the world. We are getting excellent benefits of Bangabandhu's dream and initiatives. The world is amazed at the foresight of an undisputed leader.

Father of the Nation Bangabandhu is in the heart of our farmers and evolution of the farming sector of Bangladesh. Today, we're experiencing an extraordinary agricultural awakening. I have been walking in rural Bangladesh for more than four decades. In the farmer's field, I have seen many adverse conditions and hardships of the agrarian population. I have also witnessed thousands, lakhs of people focus on agriculture with confidence. This confidence comes from the great leader Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, whose motto was never to look back and fight back with what you have. Most profound homage on the 45th martyrdom anniversary of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his family members.

https://www.thedailystar.net/country/news/great-leader-soil-and-people-1948449

 

Stem-cell capsules could help people recover from heart damage

Description: https://s.yimg.com/g/images/spaceball.gif

Luke Dormehl

Digital TrendsAugust 20, 2020

Stem cells have been shown to be promising as a treatment for heart disease. But that’s only one part of solving the problem. Transplanted cells die after implantation due to the hostile environment they find themselves in, including the patient’s own immune system, which fights against the stem cells, even when they’re trying to help.

Researchers from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine may have come up with an answer. They’ve developed capsules which encase mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in a hydrogel material made out of brown algae. This shielded approach protects the stem cells from the host, while allowing them to perform the function of delivering reparative proteins that are secreted by the cells.

“Alginate is a naturally occurring polymer found in seaweed which can form a gel in presence of divalent cations,” Omid Veiseh, assistant professor in the Department of Bioengineering at Rice University, told Digital Trends. “The material can be fabricated into spheres quite easily, using reactions which are friendly to the cells we load into the capsules. Alginate hydrogel formulations are quite prevalent in various medical products, and are also used widely in the food industry. One such example is vegan caviar. The unique aspect of our approach is that our [capsules] are formulated using a version of alginate polymer we developed that is immunomodulatory. These polymers have been chemically modified such that the body no longer recognizes the material as foreign.”

Description: Stem cell heart disease

Rice University

More

The stem cell capsules have not yet been demonstrated in humans. However, in a study carried out using rodents, the stem cells were implanted next to wounded hearts using minimally invasive techniques. Within a month, the heart healing was 2.5x greater in animals that had been given the special shielded stem cells than it was in animals which had not been given these stem cells.

“The next step is to further develop the delivery strategy for how to get the shielded stem cell into position on top of the heart using minimally invasive catheters. and further validation in chronic heart failure models,” Ravi Ghanta, associate professor of surgery at Baylor College of Medicine, told Digital Trends. “With further development and testing this approach could be utilized in a variety of cell therapies for the heart.”

A paper describing the work was recently published in the journal Biomaterials Science.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stem-cell-capsules-could-help-185745514.html

 

 

Description: Reuters

ASIA RICE-INDIA PRICES RISE AS EXPORTERS GRAPPLE WITH FLOODS, CORONAVIRUS

8/20/2020

* Floods in Bangladesh damage $4.29 bln worth of crops- minister

* Vietnamese rates to stay elevated until October harvest- trader

* Demand for Indian rice still high- analyst

By Nakul Iyer

BENGALURU, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Rice export prices in top-hub India edged higher this week as floods and surging coronavirus cases hammered supply and export logistics.

India's 5% broken parboiled variety <RI-INBKN5-P1> rose to $383-$389 per tonne from last week's $382-$387, with exporters struggling to fulfil orders due to limited availability of containers and workers at the country's biggest rice handling port, Kakinada, in the state of Andhra Pradesh.

"Demand is huge for Indian rice due to lower prices, but exports are getting affected by floods and the coronavirus outbreak in Andhra Pradesh," said Nitin Gupta, vice president for Olam India's rice business.

With 2.84 million total COVID-19 cases, India is the worst-hit country in Asia and third only behind the U.S. and Brazil in terms of the number of cases.

Floods in neighbouring Bangladesh damaged rice crops worth 363.34 billion taka ($4.29 billion) on around 100,000 hectares, Agriculture Minister Abdur Razzaque said.

Bangladesh, the world's third biggest rice producer, often relies on imports to cope with shortages caused by floods and droughts.

Meanwhile, Vietnam's 5% broken rice <RI-VNBKN5-P1> rates jumped to $480-$490 a tonne on Thursday, its highest since late 2011, from $470 last week.

"Supplies are thin as local traders have increased their purchases recently and the summer-autumn harvest has ended," a trader based in Ho Ci Minh city said.

The return of the novel coronavirus to Vietnam late last month has also prompted the hoarding of rice domestically, the trader noted.

Traders expect prices to stay elevated for the next few months until a new harvest in October.

Supply concerns also pushed Thailand's benchmark 5% broken rice <RI-THBKN5-P1> prices up to $480-500, its highest since July 2, from $465-$500 last week,

"It seems like the rice harvest in the provinces will not be so great," a Bangkok-based trader said.

Demand for Thai rice has remained flat this week as prices were high, traders said. (Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai, Ruma Paul in Dhaka, Khanh Vu in Hanoi and Patpicha Tanakasempipat in Bangkok; editing by Arpan Varghese and Amy Caren Daniel)

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https://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/asia-rice-india-prices-rise-as-exporters-grapple-with-floods-coronavirus

Uka Eje: Access to Credit Remains Vital Factor for Scaling Agriculture 

 

Description: https://storage.googleapis.com/thisday-846548948316-wp-data/wp-media/2020/08/35fd2ab6-uka-eje-696x522.jpgUka Eje

In March 2020 when the government first imposed a total lockdown to minimise the spread of the COVID-19, there was a panic among food growers because it was the start of a new planting season. Even though essential workers were excluded from the directive, Agric-tech entrepreneurs like Uka Eje, Co-Founder & CEO of Thrive Agric, experienced logistical nightmares among others.

In this interview with Chiemelie Ezeobi, he maintains that until smallholder farmers are well funded, Nigeria will not self-actualise 

How did you get here? Give us an insight into the journey so far

I come from Benue State. Being an agrarian State a lot of farming activities happen there. While I was young, I noticed that my parents sent a lot of food to their relatives in the villages and for me that was absurd since I expected it to be the other way round. I started asking a number of questions and I noticed the reason was because farmers did not have all that they needed for farming. A lot of the rural farmers lacked best advisory support, best farming inputs and access to premium markets and this limited their output upon harvest. This situation still prevails till date among a lot of smallholder farmers.

You could have done anything else; why agriculture?

Agriculture has the potential to create immense impact on smallholder farmers and beyond these farmers, agriculture has the ability to transform multiple value chains. For instance, an increased production of paddy rice can lead to an increased entry of rice millers and rice retailers. This is one way that agriculture,by itself, has the power to open up multiple value chains and transform rural and urban communities.

One of the steps you first took was to build a supply chain for farmers in Northern Nigeria; how did that turn out? How sustainable has it turned out to be?

It turned out pretty well. The outcome of that has helped us to manage distribution of inputs to smallholder farmers in clusters. On top of this, we have also been able to build commodity distribution chains from farmers around various communities, which have enabled us to build firm relationships with food processing companies locally and internationally, therebybringing value to these farmers.

You have been able to identify three major challenges farmers face: finance, access to better inputs and low yields because of insufficient data and a lack of access to premium markets – what have you done with that knowledge?

This discovery was what made us embark on the journey as a company. We started working with smallholder farmers to give them access to finance, technology-enabled advisory and accessto premium market. So far, we have provided this service to over 50,000 farmers in Nigeria.

As the Founder and CEO of Thrive Agric, how have you bridged the funding gap since that seems to be at the core of your derivatives? 

Funding is a key factor to scaling agriculture whether as individuals – like a smallholder farmer, or collectively – as a corporate entity like Thrive Agric or a whole nation. Access to credit remains fundamental to accessing premium seeds, fertilizer and other farming inputs you can think of.  Farmers need to be able to concentrate on their job – farming – in order to achieve maximum yields, and not worry about storage or access to market. By funding the sector via ThriveAgric for instance, we are able to provide the farmers with not just expert advisory but also these guarantees, linking them with needed funding. These are people who otherwise aren’t included in the formal financial services hence will not qualify for loans. One key thing we have been able to do is to build a simple technology that links bank partners on-lend to smallholder farmers. We also have a platform that connects individuals to farmers for financing. We think it’s still early stage and there are so many opportunities yet to be unlocked.

Why do you target small holder farmers?

We believe that 80 per cent of food production in Nigeria is largely done by small holder farmers. As a company, we decided to expand the productivity of this 80 per cent population because in doing so we can invariably increase the agriculture potential of Nigerian and Africa. We believe that the smallholder farmer, if properly advised and properly linked with market access, would grow to large scale farmers in the coming years.

What are your high points so far?

The most exciting parts of this journey is in seeing farmers who produced one tonne in a hectare now being able to harvest four tonnes on the same hectare, which represents 4X more value and increased economic prosperity for them and their immediate community. These impacts make us see how our contribution to every individual farmer has an impact on the grand scheme.

Any challenges? How has the pandemic worsened or made the challenges easier? 

One massive challenge was the difficulty in moving goods from place to place. The announcement of the initial lockdown coincided with the start of a planting season when we needed to transport inputs from the manufacturers to farmer locations. There were a number of restrictions moving these goods and what would take two days took a lot more because of road blocks and access issues. We also experienced issues with the closure of some of our primary input producers further complicating our otherwise smooth system. The sum total of these challenges limited the total number of farmers we could reach for the season.

Knowing what you know now, would you still venture down this path again?

Absolutely. Beyond profits, I find venturing into agribusiness very exciting when I consider many factors. Our involvement produces impacts that we can see; impact ranging from higher crop yields for the farmers, better standard of living and economic prosperity for the nation. It’s rewarding.

Where do you see yourself and Thrive Agric in the near future?

In the next two years, 2023 to be exact, we plan to have provided these services to over a million smallholder farmers in Nigeria and steer massive economic prosperity for them. Africa is ripe for an agricultural revolution and I see Thrive Agricleading that revolution through technology.

https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2020/08/21/uka-eje-access-to-credit-remains-vital-factor-for-scaling-agriculture/

USITC Shines Light on Impact of Residue Limits on Exports, Including Rice  

 

By Peter Bachmann

 

WASHINGTON, DC -- Late last month, the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) released a long-awaited first volume report on the global economic impact of missing and low pesticide maximum residue levels (MRL) on international agricultural trade.  The USITC solicited comments from across the U.S. agriculture industry, following a request by the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and focusing on the financial toll that MRLs take on commodity export markets.

Both USA Rice and the California Rice Commission provided comments to the USITC in December 2019, outlining concerns in several countries where a lack of an MRL or low MRLs for crop protection tools used by U.S. rice farmers has impacted U.S. rice exports.  As pest pressures grow with the introduction of new invasive species and pests continue to develop resistance to several significant crop protectants, it has become increasingly important to have access to a full menu of products deemed safe by U.S. regulators and researchers.

In the U.S., crop protectants are registered and residue limits are set by the Environmental Protection Agency following a thorough, lengthy risk assessment process looking at effects on human, animal, and environmental health.  While this science-based process is cumbersome, it has proven effective.  The United Nations' Codex Alimentarius Commission is also responsible for setting non-binding international standards, using a science-based method and relying on significant research from around the world.

"Unfortunately, many countries do not use science-based risk assessments, nor do they defer to the U.S. or Codex standards, leading to arbitrary limits based on social research instead of science," said David Petter, Arkansas farmer and chair of the USA Rice Regulatory Committee.  "Japan, for example, tests U.S. rice and other imports for nearly 600 chemicals, when we can account for just over 40 crop protection products registered for rice use in the U.S."

The European Union is another market that is notorious for setting arbitrarily low residue levels as a result of social pressure from non-governmental organizations.  These limits provide little or no room for tolerance if a crop is affected by inadvertent drift from neighbors or other factors outside of a U.S. farmer's control.

"We appreciate the USITC's inclusion of input from USA Rice and the California Rice Commission in developing this report, and we are looking forward to reviewing the second volume set to be published early next year," said Petter.  "As more countries have joined the World Trade Organization and started reducing their tariffs and opening their markets up, many countries have turned toward non-tariff barriers like MRLs that inhibit the flow of imports, increasing the visibility of this issue."

USA Rice submitted additional input for the USITC's second volume of the report last month.  The USITC reports will ultimately be used as guidance for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative on the best actions to take on behalf of U.S. agricultural exports.

 

 

Golden Rice is 'trojan horse'

Stop Golden Rice Network

 

19th August 2020 | 

 

Independent Science News

Kervin Bonganciso/MASIPAG

Golden Rice will only strengthen the grip of corporations over rice and agriculture, endangering agrobiodiversity and human health.

The push for corporate-led solutions to hunger and malnutrition is alarming. In particular, Golden Rice is now being proposed as a solution to the worsening hunger and malnutrition associated with the pandemic.

Agrochemical transnationals (TNCs) and collaborating institutions such as the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) are using concerns over food security during the pandemic to push for an industrial agricultural system that is already discredited.

According to Pesticide Action Network (PAN) Asia Pacific, Jean Balie, IRRI’s head of Agri-Food Policy, has said that they are “looking to increase the mineral and vitamin content in rice grains” as a response to the pandemic, alluding to renewed promotion of the genetically-modified Golden Rice, which has recently been approved for commercialisation in Bangladesh and the Philippines.

Dangers

Golden Rice projects and applications are currently underway in three countries. The Philippines’ Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Plant Industry (DA-BPI) issued a Golden Rice permit for Direct Use for Food, Feed and Processing on 10 December 2019.

This was despite the standing challenge by farmers, scientists and civil society groups regarding Golden Rice’s unresolved safety and efficacy issues.

It was confirmed that Indonesia rice research centre (BB Padi) had grown Golden Rice in their testing fields in Sukamandi, West Java, in August 2019. But BB Padi is still awaiting permission from Indonesia’s biosafety clearing house for confined field testing in selected areas.

In Bangladesh, rumours have circulated that Golden Rice would be approved by the Biosafety Core Committee under the environment ministry last November 15, 2019. While there have been no specifics yet, proponents are optimistic that approval in Bangladesh will occur.

We, the Stop Golden Rice Network (SGRN), believe that Golden Rice is an unnecessary and unwanted technology being peddled by corporations purely for their profit-making agenda. Golden Rice will only strengthen the grip of corporations over rice and agriculture and will endanger agrobiodiversity and peoples’ health as well.

Therefore, farmers, consumers and basic sectors have been campaigning against the propagation and commercialization of Golden Rice since the mid-2000s, utilizing various forms and actions, including the historical uprooting of Golden Rice field trials back in 2013.

Malnutrition 

The importance of rice in Asian countries cannot be understated. Ninety percent of rice is produced and consumed in Asia. Rice is at the center of the social, cultural and economic activities of peoples across Asia. It is also a political commodity as rice is the staple food for a majority of the Asian population.

Asian countries such as the Philippines, Indonesia, and India are centers of origin of more than 100,000 varieties of rice. Also considered as among the most biodiverse countries in the world, a wide array of vegetables, fruits, root crops and cereals abound in the farms and forests of these countries, ensuring a dependable source of nutrition for the families and the communities.

Yet, malnutrition is prevalent, particularly among children and women. This is not simply because of the absence of an important nutrient or vitamin. It is caused by the “lack of access to sufficient, nutritious and safe food” due to poverty, and changing food production and consumption patterns.

This impact is seen in IRRI’s Green Revolution wherein many farmers across Asia have become bound to the expensive inputs and seeds peddled by huge agrochemical TNCs who promote a single-crop diet. As a result of green revolution, white rice has become dominant in once very diverse Asian diets; but white rice has a high glycemic index which causes diabetes and 60 percent of global diabetes cases are in Asia.

Packing more nutrients, like Vitamin A, in rice, which requires more rice consumption would make this worse. Especially with the new pandemic for which diabetes is considered a risk factor for severity of Covid-19.

Insecurity 

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN FAO) identifies the dominance of large corporations over food systems as among the factors that contribute to food insecurity and malnutrition.

In developing countries, large tracts of agricultural lands are being converted either to industrial and commercial land uses, or to large-scale mono-cropped plantations of cash crops such as pineapples, palm oil and bananas that hardly serve the nutrition needs of the people.

FAO further acknowledges that the changes in food systems and diets, such as the prevalence of highly-processed foods and displacement of traditional foods and eating habits also contributes to the worsening trend of food insecurity and malnutrition.

Given this context, we assert that Golden Rice is simply a ‘band-aid’ solution to the wide, gaping wound of hunger and poverty. Worse, the issues that continue to hound Golden Rice further prove the point that it is unnecessary and unwanted

The worsening land-grabbing and land conversion cases, liberalization of agricultural commodities and increasing control of corporations over agriculture and food, however, are preventing farmers and their communities from having access to these safe and nutritious foods.

Trojan horse

In developing countries the challenges described above remain the main culprit of food insecurity and malnutrition. Both the development of biofortified crops like Golden Rice for solving health issues and corporate led projects in agriculture as ways to ensure food security represent a worrisome push for top-down and anti-diversity approaches to food and health that will ultimately undermine people’s capacities to strengthen their local food systems.

By emphasizing dependence on just a few market-based crops biofortification actually promotes a poor diet with little nutritional diversity

Golden Rice is a failed and useless product, and that is why we continue to resist and oppose it. Time and again, huge agrochemical companies, philanthrocapitalists and pseudo-public agencies have done everything in their power to deny the people’s right to participate in decisions about their food and agriculture.

Already, zinc and iron GM rice and thirty other GM rice are in the pipeline, with Golden Rice serving as the Trojan Horse to lure the people into social acceptance and false security.

Diet

More than resisting the release of Golden Rice however, we are pushing for safer, better and healthier alternatives to addressing VAD and other malnutrition issues.

VAD and other malnutrition problems can be mitigated and addressed by having a diverse diet. Nutrition does not need to be an expensive commodity, nor rely on advanced technology.

We believe that instead of pushing Golden Rice and biofortifying crops through genetic modification, governments should promote biodiversity in farms and on tables by supporting safe, healthy and sustainable food production.

We are also calling on governments to pay attention to the needs of our food producers, including facilitating access to lands to till, appropriate technologies and an agriculture policy that will promote and uphold the people’s right to food and the nations’ food sovereignty.

This Author 

Members of the Stop Golden Rice Network (SGRN) include: 

AGRA (Alliance of Agrarian Reform Movement), Indonesia
APC (Asian Peasants Coalition)
APVUU (Andhra Pradesh Vyavasaya Vruthidarula Union), India
BAFLF (Bangladesh Agricultural Farm Labour Federation), Bangladesh
Bangladesh Krishok Federation, Bangladesh
BINA DESA, Indonesia
CENDI (Community Entrepreneur Development Institute), Vietnam
Consumers Union of Japan, Japan
GM Free India Coalition, India
GRAIN
HEAD (Health Action for Democracy), Philippines
KMP (Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas), Philippines
Labour Resource Center (LRC), Bangladesh
MASIPAG (Magsasaka at Siyentipiko para sa Pag-unlad ng Agrikultura), Philippines
MONLAR, Sri Lanka
Narasimha Reddy Donthi, Telangana, India
NWFA (National Women Farmers and Workers Association), Bangladesh
ORRISSA (Organization for Rural Reconstruction and Integrated Social Services Activities), India
PAN Phils (Pesticide Action Network-Phils)
PANAP (Pesticide Action Network-Asia Pacific)
Peoples Coalition on Food Sovereignty, Global
PNSFP (Philippine Network for Food Security Programs)
RESIST! Agri-TNCs Network, Philippines
Save Our Rice Network, India
SERUNI (National Women’s Alliance), Indonesia
SHISUK (Shikha Shastha Unnayan Karzakram), Bangladesh
SIBAT (Sibol ng Agham at Teknolohiya), Philippines
SPFT (Southern Peasants Federation of Thailand), Thailand
SRD (Center for Sustainable Rural Development), Vietnam
TFIP (Philippine Task Force for Indigenous Peoples Rights)
THANAL, India
Save Our Rice campaign, India
Women’s Development Federation (WELIGEPOLA), Sri Lanka

https://theecologist.org/2020/aug/19/golden-rice-trojan-horse

 

 

Reminder: Register now for UC ANR California Rice Virtual Field Day

Description: tractor at sunset

Time is running out to register for the California Rice Virtual Field Day, which will be held on August 26, from 1 pm to 3 pm.

Here’s a link to register.  The registration fee is $20. 

The UC Cooperative Extension and California Rice Research Station will provide the latest information on variety development, disease and arthropod management, weed control, weedy rice, and fertility.

The full agenda is available here. 

Here are contacts for more information: 

Logistics and Registration: Rachel Palmer, ANR Program Support Unit, 530-750-1361.

Course Content: Whitney Brim-DeForest, UC ANR County Director, Sutter and Yuba Counties and CE Rice and Wild Rice Advisor.

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Description: In Memory: Dennis Lindberg

INDUSTRY NEWS • AUGUST 19, 2020

In Memory: Dennis Lindberg

We extend our condolences to the family and friends of Dennis “Denny”
Lindberg, who passed away August 14, at the age of 96 after a brief illness.  He is survived by his wife, Charlotte, daughter Sherry Lindberg and husband Ed Gilbertson; son Gary Lindberg and his wife Linda; Linda’s daughter Dawn and husband Steve Wicklander, and their son, Bryce. 

Description: http://www.calricenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Dennis-Lindberg-2015-1024x683.jpg

Denny was passionate about many things, including rice farming and his community of Richvale. He grew rice for more than 75 consecutive seasons, chaired the group that wrote the book, “Richvale: A Legacy of Courage, Dedication and Perseverance,” and provided written and video blogs for the California Rice Commission. Denny was also well-known for his scrap metal animal sculptures, which can be seen throughout the Richvale area. His civic work and love of community was evidenced by his being honored as “Outstanding Citizen of the 20th Century” by Lundberg Family Farms. 

“It was always pleasurable to work with and interact with Denny,” said Mark Kimmelshue of the Associated Rice Marketing Cooperative in Richvale.  “His support of and positive outlook for the California Rice Industry set an example for others and demonstrated his devotion to the industry and community he loved.”

No services are planned beyond private burial due to present restrictions.  Memorial contributions can be made to the Community Foundation of Richvale, care of Carl Hoff at BUCRA, P.O. Box 128, Richvale, California 95974; the Rice Research Trust, P.O. Box 3-6, Biggs, California 95917; or a favorite charity. 

Description: CRC Major Amendment Passes by Wide Margin

 

http://www.calricenews.org/2020/08/19/reminder-register-now-for-uc-anr-california-rice-virtual-field-day/

 

 

Registration Open for UC ANR California Rice Virtual Field Day

Description: tractor at sunset

Mark your calendar for the California Rice Virtual Field Day, which will be held on August 26, from 1 pm to 3 pm.

Here’s a link to register.  The registration fee is $20. 

The UC Cooperative Extension and California Rice Research Station will provide the latest information on variety development, disease and arthropod management, weed control, weedy rice, and fertility.

The full agenda is available here. 

Here are contacts for more information: 

Logistics and Registration: Rachel Palmer, ANR Program Support Unit, 530-750-1361.

Course Content: Whitney Brim-DeForest, UC ANR County Director, Sutter and Yuba Counties and CE Rice and Wild Rice Advisor.

http://www.calricenews.org/2020/08/03/registration-open-for-uc-anr-california-rice-virtual-field-day/

 

Industry News: Increased global mortality linked to arsenic exposure in rice-based diets

Rice is the most widely consumed staple food source for a large part of the world’s population

04 Aug 2020

Rice is the most widely consumed staple food source for a large part of the world’s population. It has now been confirmed that rice can contribute to prolonged low-level arsenic exposure leading to thousands of avoidable premature deaths per year.

Arsenic is well known acute poison, but it can also contribute to health problems, including cancers and cardiovascular diseases, if consumed at even relatively low concentrations over an extended period of time.

Compared to other staple foods, rice tends to concentrate inorganic arsenic. Across the globe, over three billion people consume rice as their major staple and the inorganic arsenic in that rice has been estimated by some to give rise to over 50,000 avoidable premature deaths per year.

A collaborating group of cross-Manchester researchers from The University of Manchester and The University of Salford have published new research exploring the relationship, in England and Wales, between the consumption of rice and cardiovascular diseases caused by arsenic exposure.

Their findings, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, shows that - once corrected for the major factors known to contribute to cardiovascular disease (for example obesity, smoking, age, lack of income, lack of education) there is a significant association between elevated cardiovascular mortality, recorded at a local authority level, and the consumption of inorganic arsenic bearing rice.

Professor David Polya from The University of Manchester said: “The type of study undertaken, an ecological study, has many limitations, but is a relatively inexpensive way of determining if there is plausible link between increased consumption of inorganic arsenic bearing rice and increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

Professor Polya from The University of Manchester said: “The study suggests that the highest 25 % of rice consumers in England and Wales may plausibly be at greater risks of cardiovascular mortality due to inorganic arsenic exposure compared to the lowest 25 % of rice consumers.

“The modelled increased risk is around 6 % (with a confidence interval for this figure of 2 % to 11 %). The increased risk modelled might also reflect in part a combination of the susceptibility, behaviours and treatment of those communities in England and Wales with relatively high rice diets.”

While more robust types of study are required to confirm the result, given many of the beneficial effects otherwise of eating rice due to its high fibre content, the research team suggest that rather than avoid eating rice, people could consume rice varieties, such as basmati, and different types like polished rice (rather whole grain rice) which are known to typically have lower inorganic arsenic contents. Other positive behaviours would be to eat a balanced variety of staples, not just predominately rice.

The lead author, Ms Lingqian Xu, is a President's Doctoral Scholarship Award recipient from the University of Manchester and supervised by Professor David Polya (The University of Manchester) and Dr Debapriya Mondal (University of Salford). Mr Qian Li is a former Masters of Pollution and Environmental Control (MPEC) student from The University of Manchester.

https://www.selectscience.net/industry-news/increased-global-mortality-linked-to-arsenic-exposure-in-rice-based-diets/?artID=52416

 

 

Xi Focus: China uses technology to secure harvests amid floods

Source: Xinhua| 2020-08-20 23:02:36|Editor: huaxia

HEFEI, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, has visited flood-stricken residents in east China's Anhui Province.

While visiting Funan County in the city of Fuyang, Xi checked the water situation of the Huaihe River and learned about local measures for flood control, disaster relief and post-flood production recovery. He also visited and consoled those affected by floods.

As floods have basically receded, local farmers in Anhui have resumed farming to secure a bumper harvest in autumn, with the help of agricultural technology.

Twenty-five-year-old Xi Wei manages an 87-hectare rice farm in the city of Wuhu. Every day he rides an electric bicycle to learn the growth of rice seedlings. From time to time, he stops for a quick check on soil conditions -- on his smartphone.

The farm is on the banks of the Zhanghe River, a tributary of the Yangtze River. It is a "smart" agricultural demonstration project initiated in 2018 by Zoomlion Agriculture Machinery Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science & Technology Co., Ltd., one of China's leading high-tech equipment manufacturers.

An app in his phone provides information about soil moisture and temperature. Sensors in the fields monitor the soil conditions around the clock and relay the readings to him via WiFi.

Xi Wei just checked the moisture of the soil in the paddy fields.

"It is necessary to drain all the water in the fields so that the permeability of soil can be increased, and the roots of the seedlings can grow deeper," he said.

Since the launch of the project, the company has installed many high-tech devices in the fields, such as soil sensors and insect-monitoring lamps. The data collected by these devices will be transmitted simultaneously by the Internet of Things (IoT) to smartphones and computers.

Despite the rare floods since mid-June, the rice seedlings in the fields have not been affected much because of the equipment embedded here.

"The information-driven rice planting is the primary feature of our fields. Meteorological stations, soil sensors, insect-monitoring lamps, and the IoT are cutting-edge tools we use to cope with natural disasters and mitigate losses," said Xi Wei.

The project also uses satellite navigation technology to level the fields to increase yield of rice.

"With the help of the global navigation satellite system, the machine levels the fields with an average error of less than 3 cm for each patch," said Xi Wei, adding that the result was impossible for the traditional farming machines.

With constantly improving flood prevention systems, water conservancy infrastructure and mechanization over the past few years, major grain producers in China have upgraded their capabilities in countering natural disasters.

China attaches great importance to food security. President Xi Jinping has spoken of the issue on many occasions. Grain production, with farmland as the fundamental element, is supported by water conservancy systems, facilitated by science and technology, and driven forward by policies. Issues relating to these key points must be addressed earnestly and properly to attain breakthroughs in grain production, he has said.

China issued a guideline regarding advancing the development of agricultural high-tech industry demonstration zones in 2018, highlighting the importance of technology in modernizing agriculture and the role of demonstration zones in spearheading the efforts.

The country has been promoting key technologies in agriculture, such as high-yield hybrid rice varieties developed by Yuan Longping, the "father of hybrid rice," and the wide use of smart farming machinery.

The application of agricultural science and technology has played a positive role in increasing grain output. In 2018, the contribution of scientific and technological progress to agriculture reached 58.3 percent, an increase of 42.8 percentage points from 15.5 percent in 1996, according to a white paper titled "Food Security in China" issued last year.

As the world's top food producer and consumer, China saw its grain output reach a record high of 664 million tonnes last year, the 16th bumper year in a row. The country's summer grain output reached a historic high of 142.81 million tonnes this year, up 0.9 percent from last year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

In addition to the improved infrastructure, Anhui has also been mobilizing resources and using upgraded technology to ensure grain security, and make up for losses from flood and other natural disasters.

In Funan County, Kang Guoping was busy shoveling up the ditches to clear the remaining floodwater in his farmland, ready to plant sweet potato seedlings distributed by the local government.

The flooding is unlikely to cause a sharp decrease in grain production since the reinforced dikes and embankments along the Yangtze River have made farmlands safer, said Wu Liquan, a professor at Anhui Agricultural University.

Improved irrigation and drainage facilities, coupled with advanced agricultural technologies, have further improved safety, according to Wu.

"I'm looking forward to a bumper harvest this year as my paddy fields have become more disaster-resistant, with the improved water conservancy facility and smart farming technology," said Xi Wei. Enditem

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-08/20/c_139305967.htm

 

House panel OKs bill creating the Bataan Rice Research and Development Center

Published August 21, 2020, 8:57 AM

by Charissa Luci-Atienza 

The House Committee on Agriculture and Food has passed a bill seeking the creation of the Bataan Rice Research and Development Center, which seeks to assist rice farmers in producing and marketing rice-based products.

Description: https://mb.com.ph/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/1-6.jpgMANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO

The panel, chaired by Quezon 1st District Rep. Wilfrido Mark Enverga approved the amended House Bill No. 4626, principally authored by Bataan 1st District Rep. Geraldine Roman during its recent virtual meeting.

“HB 4626 aims to establish a Rice Research Development Centre in the first district of Bataan. The original idea is to establish it in a town of Dinalupihan, after consultations with the president and members of the College of Agriculture of the Bataan Peninsula State University, I have decided and I am proposing for your consideration to amend the bill to rename it as Bataan Rice Research and Development Center to be located in the Abucay campus of the Bataan Peninsula State University,” Roman said in her sponsorship speech.

She said the Abucay campus of the state university is solely dedicated to students of agriculture.

“The idea is basically there will be research on how to develop rice derivatives and also teach our farmers. We will have laboratories there,” the House leader said.

“Bataan Peninsula State University, through its president, has expressed its excitement over this recent development.”

During the virtual deliberation on the bill, Philippine Rice Research Institute ( PhilRice) Executive Director John de Leon said they do not have disagreement with Roman’s proposal, but he suggested that PhilRice be considered as one of the agencies that “will collaborate” with the proposed Center.

HB 4626 seeks to help rice farmers augment their income by promoting and assisting them in the manufacture and marketing of rice-based products.

Roman said among the duties and functions of the proposed Center are to integrate, collate, and support research, programs and studies on rice-based product development and marketing; conduct continuing research on rice-based product development; undertake research and generate relevant, efficient, cost effective and scientifically viable approaches to achieve greater sustainability in rice-based product development; impart technical knowledge and train rice farmers on rice-based product development; and upgrade the entrepreneurial skills of rice farmers through training courses, seminars, and workshops.

She said the Center is also expected to collaborate with national, regional, and international research institutions with knowledge and expertise on rice-based product research and development. It shall coordinate with local government units, non-government organisations, and private sector groups and interests involved in rice-based product development, she added.

Roman said the Center is also tasked to facilitate access to loans to establish and operate a rice-based product development business, and encourage the creation of farmer cooperatives to achieve efficiencies in rice-based product development, better qualify for business loans, and boost marketing initiatives.

“It shall also receive and manage grants, aid, donations, or any kind of assistance or gratuity from donors, foreign or domestic, to better achieve the Center’s objectives,” she said.

Under the bill, the Center will be headed by an Executive Director who shall be appointed by the President of the Philippines upon the recommendation of the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture (DA)

The Executive Director shall be a recognized agriculturalist with extensive experience in rice-based product research and development or a highly regarded entrepreneur in the field.

HB 4626 provides that the amount necessary for the implementation of the proposed Act shall be charged affairs the appropriations of the DA. Thereafter, the required budget for the continued implementation of the proposed Act shall be submitted to the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) for inclusion in the General Appropriations Act (GAA).

The DA Secretary shall issue the implementing rules and regulations of the proposed Act within 60 days from its effectivity.

 

https://mb.com.ph/2020/08/21/house-panel-oks-bill-creating-the-bataan-rice-research-and-development-center/