Will
the United Kingdom Ever Leave the EU?
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM --
The EU-27 approved a new official Brexit deadline here last week of October
31, 2019. This is the third official date for the Brexit; the original
plan was to leave the EU on March 29, but repeated failure of the UK
government to gain Parliament's approval of an exit deal negotiated by Prime
Minister Theresa May and fear of a "hard Brexit" has resulted in a
series of postponements. According to the new roadmap, the UK can leave
the EU before the Halloween deadline if Parliament ratifies the current exit
agreement. Prime Minister May and the leader of the opposition Labour
party are reportedly in negotiations on a plan acceptable to Parliament.
"Last week's events leave U.S. rice exporters facing the status quo for now and uncertainty for the longer term," said USA Rice COO Bob Cummings. EU import duties continue to apply on U.S. rice exports to the UK, and EU and UK government plans to divide up the zero-duty tariff rate quota for 38,721 metric tons (milled basis) of U.S. rice between the UK and the remaining EU-27 remain under negotiation in the World Trade Organization. "Our main goal of a U.S.-UK free trade agreement keeps getting pushed back as long as the UK remains in the EU or remains as part of the EU customs union, which is a major component of the prime minister's exit plan." Despite strong rhetoric on both sides of the English Channel, economic assessments of the costs to both the UK and EU-27 economies of a hard Brexit prevailed in granting another extension and more time for a negotiated outcome. The UK Parliament remains fragmented among many different interest groups including those who oppose and support different Brexit scenarios, and even supporters of a second referendum to avoid Brexit altogether. "The prime minister's exit plan is supposed to cover the transition while the UK and the EU negotiate their long term economic relationship. The longer this transition lasts, the longer the delay in a U.S.-UK trade agreement," concluded Cummings. |
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2 Arkansas Clearfield rice varieties
to be available in 2020
STUTTGART — Two new high-yield,
Clearfield®rice varieties developed by the University of Arkansas System
Division of Agriculture will be widely available from Horizon Ag in 2020.
Professor Xueyan Sha, Arkansas
Agricultural Experiment Station rice breeder based at the division’s Rice
Research and Extension Center near Stuttgart, released two new Clearfield
varieties, according to a news release.
The two varieties are a
long-grain rice, CLL15, and a medium-grain rice, CLM04, that will be part of
the Horizon Ag lineup next year, said Tim Walker, Horizon Ag general manager.
“These Clearfield varieties will
provide farmers with outstanding yield and grain quality combined with the
agronomic characteristics rice farmers need to manage their crops for maximum
profitability,” he said.
Sha said CLL15 is a semi-dwarf
rice that averaged 186 bushels per acre in 42 state and regional trials during
the 2016 to 2018 growing seasons. Milling yields were comparable to other
Clearfield varieties with head rice yield of 59.8 percent and total milled rice
of 69.5 percent in 22 statewide and regional trials.
CLL15 has improved blast
resistance compared to other Clearfield varieties and good straw strength,
making it moderate resistant to lodging, Sha said.
CLM04 is an early maturing,
semi-dwarf rice with outstanding yield potential, good milling and grain
quality, Sha said. In 43 state and regional trials from 2016 to 2018, it
averaged 198 bushels per acre, slightly better than CL272 and Jupiter, and
slightly below Titan.
Milling yield averaged 60.1
percent head rice to 68 percent total rice in 23 state and regional trials, Sha
said. Its chemical composition is nearly identical to Jupiter, which is part of
CLM04′s breeding lineage, making it a good choice for cereal companies.
Compared to other popular medium
grain varieties, Sha said, CLM04 has good lodging and blast resistance.
Clearfield rice was developed at
Louisiana State University when rice breeder Tim Croughan discovered a breeding
line of rice with a naturally occurring genetic mutation that was tolerant to
the imidazolinone family of herbicides, said Bob Scott, Rice Research and
Extenstion Center director.
LSU licensed the genetic material
to American Cyanamid, now BASF, which shared the breeding material with the UA
System Division of Agriculture about 1999, Scott said. Horizon Ag is a seed
technology company licensed by BASF to market Clearfield rice varieties.
“Both of these new varieties will
fill current needs for Southern rice farmers today and will be valuable
additions to the Horizon Ag variety lineup,” Walker said. “Since 2001, Horizon
Ag has brought forward rice varieties that have enabled farmers to meet the
challenges they face while producing a product that returns more to their
bottom line.
“CLL15 and CLM04 will continue
that 20-year legacy,” Walker said.
To learn more about Division of Agriculture rice breeding and
research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu. Follow us on
Twitter at @ArkAgResearchand Instagram at
ArkAgResearch.
For more information about CLL15 and CLM04 in seed production,
visit www.horizonseed.com.
The University of Arkansas System
Division of Agriculture offers all its Extension and Research programs to all
eligible persons without discrimination.
— Fred Miller is science editor with the U of A Division of
Agriculture.
Gila-river-Centre for Biological
Diversity
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The Center for Biological
Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than
1.4 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of
endangered species and wild places.
American Rivers believes every
community in our country should have clean water and a healthy river. Since
1973, we have been protecting wild rivers, restoring damaged rivers and
conserving clean water for people and nature. With headquarters inWashington,
D.C., and offices across the country, we are the most effective river
conservation organization in the United States, delivering solutions that
will last for generations to come. Connect with us at AmericanRivers.org.
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NFA shores up inventory with domestic palay procurement of
1.26 million bags as of April 12
THE National Food Authority (NFA) said Tuesday that its
purchases of palay, or unmilled rice, amounted to 593,123 bags during the month
as of April 12, bringing its running total for the year to 1.26 million bags.
In a statement, the NFA, whose importing function was taken away
by the Rice Tariffication Law, limiting it to the role of maintaining a buffer
stock from domestic rice purchases, said including the last of its rice
imports, the buffer stock now stands at 1.86 million bags.
“We are hoping that this will continue as we fulfill our
mandated level of buffer stock. Our palay procurement activities will continue
for as long as there are palay farmers willing to sell to us, to give them a
fair price for their palay,” Tomas R. Escarez, NFA officer-in-charge
administrator said in the statement.
Procurement operations in the month to April 12 in San Jose,
Occidental Mindoro generated 93,699 bags, while Isabela province supplied
79,020 bags; Nueva Ecija 72,420; Bulacan 52,856 bags; Mamburao, Occidental
Mindoro 31,907 bags. The NFA’s Northwestern Cagayan-Apayao (Allacapan) office
procured 23,629; Tarlac province 19,484 bags; and North Cotabato 17,896 bags.
With the signing of the Rice Tariffication Law or Republic Act
11203 and its Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR), the NFA has been
stepping up its domestic procurement to fulfill its mandate of maintaining the
equivalent of 15-30 days of the country’s rice consumption.
The law was enacted after inflation spiked in 2018, in part due
to the depletion of the NFA’s reserves. Poor families depend on subsidized NFA
rice for access to the staple, and the lack of supply in NFA warehouses
increased the pricing power of private dealers selling their grain at
commercial rates.
“The IRR of the Rice tariffication Law or RA 11203 has been
signed and the role of the NFA has been refocused to buffer stocking. Based on
the IRR, the NFA must now adopt a policy of maintaining a buffer stock
equivalent to 15-30 days of national rice consumption, sourced from local
farmers only. To be able to meet that, we have to buy around 15M to 30M bags of
palay,” Mr. Escarez said.
The NFA recently increased its palay procurement target for 2019
to 14.46 million bags from 7.78 million bags. On the average, it is currently
buying 73,233 bags per day.
“More farmers are selling to NFA because we have increased our
effective buying price. The NFA started implementing an additional P3.00 per
kilogram Buffer Stocking Incentive (BSI) in October, in addition to the
previous P0.20/kg drying, P0.20/kg delivery, and P0.30/kg Cooperative
Development Incentive Fee, increasing the agency’s maximum buying price for
palay from P17.40/kg for individual farmers and P17.70 for members of farmer
cooperatives/organizations to P20.40/kg and P20.70 per kg, respectively,” he
said.
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), the
average farmgate price of palay continued to fall to P18.87 per kilogram (/kg)
as of April 5 from P18.96/kg in March. There are some areas where the grain
sells for as little as P14/kg.
The farmgate price has been trending downwards since the law
started moving towards full implementation, with a liberalized import policy
expected to bring in more cheap foreign rice to compete with domestic grain.
Prices have also fallen despite widespread damage to the standing crop caused
by the El Niño dry spell.
As of April 2, El Niño damage, mainly to the rice and corn
crops, was P5.05 billion, on lost volume of 276,568 metric tons (MT). The dry
spell has affected 177,743 hectares of agricultural land and 164,672 farmers.
Damage to the rice crop accounted for P2.69 billion of the total and lost
volume of 125,590 MT, affecting 111.851 hectares and 108,845 farmers. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang
Sri Lanka trade deficit falls in
Jan, vehicle, gold imports down
Apr 17, 2019 13:53 PM GMT+0530 |
0 Comment(s)
ECONOMYNEXT- Sri Lanka's external
trade balance fell to a 617 million US dollar deficit in January 2019 from a
1.05 billion US dollar deficit a year earlier amid higher exports and falling
imports, official data showed.
Exports for January grew 7.5 percent from a year earlier to 1.04
billion rupees, while imports fell 17.8 percent to 1.66 billion US dollars, the
central bank said.
January was the second consecutive month in which exports had
exceeded 1 billion US dollars.
In industrial exports, earnings from textiles and garments grew
9.5 percent from a year earlier to 475.9 million US dollars in January.
"Textiles and garment exports increased as a result of high
demand for garments from the EU and the USA as well as non-traditional markets
such as India, Japan, Australia, China and Canada," the central bank said.
Rubber product exports grew 13.5 percent to 80.7 million US dollars.
Food, beverage and tobacco exports grew 10.2 percent to 53.1
million US dollars driven by higher tobacco exports.
Petroleum product exports fell 28.9 percent to 37.5 million US
dollars.
"Export earnings from petroleum products declined significantly
in January 2019 for the second consecutive month due to lower bunkering and
aviation fuel exports driven by significantly lower bunkering quantity,
reflecting the intense competition faced by Sri Lankan ports from regional
ports mainly in India and Singapore."
Agricultural exports grew for the first time in 11 months due to
higher seafood and coconut export growth.
Tea export earnings however fell 0.9 percent from a year earlier
to 110.8 million US dollars despite higher volumes.
Meanwhile, imports fell for the third consecutive month, driven
by policy measures of the central bank.
In consumer goods, food and beverage imports fell 39.5 percent
to 111.2 million US dollars with higher availability of domestic rice, and
falling demand for dairy and vegetable imports.
Personal vehicle imports fell 47.9 percent to 49.5 million US
dollars, with the central bank imposing higher duties and margin requirements,
which were only removed in April.
In intermediate goods, fuel imports fell 9.1 percent to 329
million US dollars.
"Expenditure on fuel imports declined due to lower average
import prices and lower volumes of crude oil and refined petroleum products
despite a higher import volume of coal."
Gold imports were negligible, from 93.7 million US dollars a
year earlier, as the central bank had imposed higher duties to curtail gold
smuggling to India.
Fertilizer imports fell 91.2 percent to 3.7 million US dollars.
Investment goods meanwhile fell 8.8 percent to 398.5 million US
dollars.
"Lower expenditure on commercial cabs and auto trishaws
categorised under transport equipment, and iron and steel categorised under
building material, mainly led to this decline," the central bank said.
The construction sector was experiencing a slowdown due to over
90 billion rupees in overdue payments from the government for infrastructure
projects, which had squeezed liquidity of contractors. (Colombo/Apr17/2019)
Nigeria produces 90% of rice it consumes
Aanu Adegun
The minister of agriculture and rural development has claimed that
Nigeria is producing 90 per cent of the rice it consumes - According to Ogbeh,
support of the present administration triggered a visible shift to eating what
Nigerians grow - Going further, the minister said Nigeria is now a major actor
in agricultural exports to other African countries, Europe and American
countries Chief Audu Ogbeh, the minister of agriculture and rural development
on Tuesday, April 16, expressed satisfaction that Nigeria was now producing 90
per cent of the rice it consumed locally. Ogbeh disclosed this at the 2019
Annual Research Review and Planning meeting held at the newly commissioned
Balarabe Tanimu Conference Hall at the Institute for Agricultural Research
(IAR), Zaria, Kaduna state. The theme of the meeting is: “Harnessing the
Potential of Agricultural Export in Nigeria: The Role of Key Stakeholders”.
READ ALSO: 3 policemen, 4 others sentenced to death for kidnapping Ogbeh, who
was represented Dr Karima Babangida, the director, extension services of the
ministry, said that the support of the present administration had triggered a
visible shift “to eating what we grow rather than eating imported food’’. “One
very good example that we see today is the locally home grown Nigerian rice,
hitherto, Nigeria has been a major and largest importer of rice from Thailand
and this implies largest importer in the world. “But today, we have been able
to achieve a paradigm shift in the right direction and we are now producing 90
per cent of the rice we eat in the country, I think we should appreciate our
farmers here. “Nigeria does not only have the capacity to feed itself, it also
becomes a major actor in agricultural exports to other African countries,
Europe and American countries, including the Far East, especially China,” he
said. According to him, the same thing is happening in other sectors of the
agric economy, with collective efforts of stakeholders, Nigeria will have a
favourable balance of trade in food items. PAY ATTENTION: Install our latest
app for Android, read best news on Nigeria’s #1 news app Meanwhile, Legit.ng
had reported that Audu Ogbeh, Nigeria’s minister of agriculture and rural
development, on Thursday, April 4, urged youth in the country to engage in
farming before they make moves to seek for political positions. Minister Ogbeh
reportedly said this in Abuja during the signing of a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) between two companies, the Nigeria Agricultural
Mechanisation and Equipment Leasing Company (NAMEL) and the MANTRAC Nigeria
Limited. NAIJ.com (naija.ng) -> Legit.ng. We have upgraded to serve you
better. Unemployed graduates are too many in my ghetto | Legit TV. Source:
Legit.ng TAGS: FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OF NIGERIANANRICE FARMERS ASSOCIATION OF
NIGERIA (RIFAN) HOT: UBI FRANKLIN BANKY W WEDDING DPR RECRUITMENT THE RICHEST
FUJI MUSICIAN IN NIGERIA ANKARA GOWN WITH LACE Read more: https://www.legit.ng/1233867-nigeria-produces-90-rice-consumes-minister.html
Ogbeh says Nigeria now produces
90% of rice it consumes
WorldStage Newsonline—-Nigeria’s
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, on Tuesday
expressed satisfaction that Nigeria was now producing 90 per cent of the rice
it consumed locally.
Ogbeh disclosed this at the 2019
Annual Research Review and Planning meeting held at the newly commissioned
Balarabe Tanimu Conference Hall at the Institute for Agricultural Research (IAR),
Zaria, Kaduna State.
The theme of the meeting is:
“Harnessing the Potential of Agricultural Export in Nigeria: The Role of Key
Stakeholders”.
Ogbeh, who was represented Dr
Karima Babangida, the Director, Extension Services of the ministry said that
the support of the present administration had triggered a visible shift “to
eating what we grow rather than eating imported food’’.
“One very good example that we
see today is the locally home grown Nigerian rice, hitherto, Nigeria has been a
major and largest importer of rice from Thailand and this implies largest
importer in the world.
“But today, we have been able to
achieve a paradigm shift in the right direction and we are now producing 90 per
cent of the rice we eat in the country, I think we should appreciate our
farmers here.
“Nigeria does not only have the
capacity to feed itself, it also becomes a major actor in agricultural exports
to other African countries, Europe and American countries, including the Far
East, especially China,” he said.
According to him, the same thing
is happening in other sectors of the agric economy, with collective efforts of
stakeholders, Nigeria will have a favourable balance of trade in food items.
Ogbeh stressed the need for all
stakeholders, researchers, extension service providers, farmers groups, policy
makers, development partners, input suppliers, agro-based NGOs among others
must all synergise to continue to harness the enormous potential in the
country.
He minister called for improved
crop varieties, both arable and tree crops, livestock and fisheries, adding
that it was the only way to improve comparative and competitive advantages and
become self-sufficient in food and agricultural production.
“The National Agricultural
Extension System also needs to strongly adopt best piracies in the cultivation
of the various commodities to ensure high quality farm outputs that in turn
determines the quality of the final product.
“The extension system has a
critical role to play in ensuring famers’ adherence to processes that assure
quality and traceable of farm produce,” he said.
Customs arrests suspected smugglers, intercepts 3,270 bags of rice
in Oyo, Osun
The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS),
Oyo/ Osun Area Command, on Tuesday said that it arrested no fewer than eight
suspected smugglers arrested in connection with smuggling of some prohibited
items into the country between January and March this year
The Customs Area Controller, Mr Abdullahi Argungu, made this disclosure while addressing a press conference at the command’s headquarters in Ibadan, the Oyo state capital He said the suspects were arrested by his men in different locations within the command’s area of coverage in the two states of Oyo and Osun Argungu insisted that the suspects who have been granted conditional bail would soon be charged to court after investigations have been concluded He said, “Eight (8) suspects were arrested and subsequently granted conditional bail and will soon be charged to court I must sincerely commend the dedication of my officers and cooperation of other units of service and the synergy enjoyed with other sister agencies Argungu further disclosed that the command between January and March, intercepted no fewer than three thousand, two hundred and seventy (3,270) 50kg bags of imported parboiled rice and seven hundred (700) 25 litres of kegs of vegetable oil, fifty bags of sugar, twenty bales of second-hand clothing and other contraband goods with duty laid value put at N105,728,974 66 He added that the command within three months generated the sum of N13,397,441,364 71 from excise duties in the first quarter of 2019
The Customs Area Controller said, “The command under my watch has continued to improve on its intelligence-driven strategy and has carried out series of operations at different locations within the command’s area of coverage, which has led to the following: One used ash colour Toyota Corolla with duty paid value put at three million, three thousand, six hundred and twenty eight naira (3,003,628 00) One used white colour Toyota Highlander with duty paid value put at (N4,072,713 00), One used black color Toyota Prado with duty paid value put at (12,112,448 00) One used black Peugeot 607 with duty paid value put at (1,253,056 00), three thousand, two hundred and seventy (50kg) bags of rice with duty paid value put at (49,634,676 00) Seven hundred (700) 25 litres of kegs of vegetable oil with duty paid value put at (N6, 828,344 44), fifty bags of sugar with duty paid value put at (00,977 00) Twenty bales of second hand clothing with duty paid value put at (N2,047,920 00), twenty nine means of conveyance with duty paid value put at (N25,975,212 22) The total duty paid value is put at (N105,728,974 66) In the area of revenue collection, the command collected the sum of thirteen billion, three hundred and ninety seven million, four hundred and forty one thousand, three hundred and sixty four naira and seventy one kobo (N13,397,441,364 71) from excise duties in the first quarter of 2019 Let me also inform you gentlemen of the press of the sentence of one Mr Bayo Mafo who was sentenced by the federal high court Ibadan to three years imprisonment for impersonating as a Customs officer and obtaining money under false pretences This is not serve as a warning to others who think they can continue to reap where they did not sow to desist from such illegalities
The Customs Area Controller, Mr Abdullahi Argungu, made this disclosure while addressing a press conference at the command’s headquarters in Ibadan, the Oyo state capital He said the suspects were arrested by his men in different locations within the command’s area of coverage in the two states of Oyo and Osun Argungu insisted that the suspects who have been granted conditional bail would soon be charged to court after investigations have been concluded He said, “Eight (8) suspects were arrested and subsequently granted conditional bail and will soon be charged to court I must sincerely commend the dedication of my officers and cooperation of other units of service and the synergy enjoyed with other sister agencies Argungu further disclosed that the command between January and March, intercepted no fewer than three thousand, two hundred and seventy (3,270) 50kg bags of imported parboiled rice and seven hundred (700) 25 litres of kegs of vegetable oil, fifty bags of sugar, twenty bales of second-hand clothing and other contraband goods with duty laid value put at N105,728,974 66 He added that the command within three months generated the sum of N13,397,441,364 71 from excise duties in the first quarter of 2019
The Customs Area Controller said, “The command under my watch has continued to improve on its intelligence-driven strategy and has carried out series of operations at different locations within the command’s area of coverage, which has led to the following: One used ash colour Toyota Corolla with duty paid value put at three million, three thousand, six hundred and twenty eight naira (3,003,628 00) One used white colour Toyota Highlander with duty paid value put at (N4,072,713 00), One used black color Toyota Prado with duty paid value put at (12,112,448 00) One used black Peugeot 607 with duty paid value put at (1,253,056 00), three thousand, two hundred and seventy (50kg) bags of rice with duty paid value put at (49,634,676 00) Seven hundred (700) 25 litres of kegs of vegetable oil with duty paid value put at (N6, 828,344 44), fifty bags of sugar with duty paid value put at (00,977 00) Twenty bales of second hand clothing with duty paid value put at (N2,047,920 00), twenty nine means of conveyance with duty paid value put at (N25,975,212 22) The total duty paid value is put at (N105,728,974 66) In the area of revenue collection, the command collected the sum of thirteen billion, three hundred and ninety seven million, four hundred and forty one thousand, three hundred and sixty four naira and seventy one kobo (N13,397,441,364 71) from excise duties in the first quarter of 2019 Let me also inform you gentlemen of the press of the sentence of one Mr Bayo Mafo who was sentenced by the federal high court Ibadan to three years imprisonment for impersonating as a Customs officer and obtaining money under false pretences This is not serve as a warning to others who think they can continue to reap where they did not sow to desist from such illegalities
Arkansas declares war on cauliflower rice
Last month, Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson
signed into law truth-in-labeling
legislation sexily titled—all-caps their’s—“AN ACT TO REQUIRE
TRUTH IN LABELING OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS THAT ARE EDIBLE BY HUMANS; AND FOR
OTHER PURPOSES.” (As for other purposes?) The stated goal of this law is to
“protect consumers from being misled or confused by false or misleading
labeling of agricultural products.” Much of the law focuses on meat and dairy
products, and bars non-animal-derived versions of such foods from using terms
like meat and milk. This is similar to legislation passed in at least five
other states including Missouri, Wyoming, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Mississippi.
But
the Arkansas law also protects the term rice. Why? Because the state’s rice
farmers are concerned that consumers would be misled by products like cauliflower
rice, which do not actually contain any grains of rice. Cauliflower rice is
made by breaking down chunks of cauliflower into rice-sized kernels. But true
rice is now defined in Arkansas as “the whole, broken, or ground kernels or by
products obtained from the species Oryza sativa L. or Oryza
glaberrima, or wild rice, which is obtained from one of the four
species of grasses from the genus Zizania or Porteresia.”
Sorry, cauliflower rice, you’re now considered mislabeled.
Arkansas Online reports
the Arkansas Rice Federation and Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association both had
input on this legislation, which will go into effect later this year. One of
its sponsors, Rep. David Hillman, is a rice farmer and past chairman of the
Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board. The law imposes a $1,000 fine for
first-offense food mislabeling; funds raised by fines will be directed toward
the Agriculture Department’s Plant Board Fund.
So now the follow-up question is: What to call
the product formerly known in Arkansas as cauliflower rice? Cauliflower Ryce?
CauliCrumblies? Fart-Smelling TinyBits? You’re on your own, Razorbacks.
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