Thursday, February 07, 2019

7th February,2019 Daily global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter




The State of the Union Between Ducks and Rice is Strong  

WASHINGTON, DC - The day after President Trump's State of the Union address, rice industry advocates took a break from pounding the halls of Congress for a luncheon that celebrates the unique relationship between rice and waterfowl at the annual Ducks Unlimited-USA Rice Congressional Luncheon.

Two hundred USA Rice Government Affairs Conference attendees and Congressional staff and Members gathered to talk rice and politics.

The menu consisted of several U.S.-grown rice and duck dishes including sushi, arancini, and spicy duck and andouille sausage gumbo served over rice.

"We've been hustling from meeting to meeting, on the Hill and off the Hill, for a day and a half now.  It's nice to have a slightly more casual setting to visit with, and feed, the hard-working Congressional staff with our sustainably-grown rice. This also provides the opportunity to  naturally talk about the great conservation story rice has thanks to the unique relationship between rice and ducks," explained California rice farmer and Chairman of USA Rice Charley Mathews, Jr.

"We look forward to this event every year so we can showcase our Rice Stewardship Partnership here in Washington," said Kellis Moss, DU's director of public policy, who worked closely with USA Rice to coordinate the event.  "We know the benefits rice provides for ducks everyday but it's great to have rice growers in town to help us tell our story to our friends and colleagues in Congress and the Administration who we need as our advocates on policy and legislation."

The break didn't last long.  Soon after the luncheon, the USA Rice Hill teams were back on schedule with a host of meetings that took them right into the dinner hour
.


USA Rice Daily

NFA awaits arrival of last batch of imported rice
Published February 6, 2019, 10:00 PM
By Madelaine B. Miraflor
The National Food Authority (NFA), which will soon no longer be allowed to import rice, is now waiting for the delivery of the last batch of imported rice it procured last year.

NFA logo (Photo courtesy of wikipedia)
A data from the state-run grains agency showed that of the rice imports contract awarded last year, a total of 1.01 million metric tons have already been delivered in the country.
To recall, NFA was authorized to procure as much as 1.25 million MT of rice through a series of government-to-government importation and open tender scheme last year. Most of this supposed needed supply, or around 750,000 MT, was only secured in the last few weeks of December.
NFA said that the balance of 236,196 MT of rice from last year’s importation is now in “transit and expected to arrive soon”.
“With the continued arrival of our rice imports, we are making the low-priced good quality NFA rice more accessible to more consumers across the country,” NFA acting administrator Tomas R. Escarez said.
“As rice import deliveries come on a staggered basis, through the various designated ports across the country, we deliver rice to our outlets on a first in-first out basis to avoid deterioration and ensure that what we sell are fresh stocks all the time,” he added.
As of now, NFA’s share in the rice market already went up from an average of 9.18 percent in 2018 to 11.76 percent for the month of January 2019, thanks to the imported supply that arrived and was delivered to the agency’s warehouse.
This will be the last batch of imported rice to enter the country that will pass through the supervision of NFA.
Once the Rice Tariffication Bill is either signed by President Rodrigo Duterte or lapsed into law by February 17, NFA will no longer have regulatory functions and will only be allowed to boost its stocks through local palay procurement.
There are now groups asking Duterte to veto the bill, saying that leaving rice importation to the ‘open market’ will be dangerous.
The Rice Tariffication Law, according to Federation of Free Farmers, will “practically remove all” restrictions on rice imports and will allow any importer to bring in unlimited volumes of rice from abroad and and at any time, even if local farmers are harvesting.
This, as importers will only need to secure a food safety certificate from the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI).
In an open letter to Duterte, the grains industry stakeholders, including the farmers, describe this certain provision of the Rice Tariffication Law as “anti-people.”
Moreover, they said the removal of the stabilization and regulatory functions of the NFA will expose rice prices and supply to manipulation by the private sector. They also fear that the absence of government control will lead to a more powerful rice cartel in the country.
Amid these concerns, Escarez said NFA will do its best to sustain the presence of NFA rice in the market to ensure that its target beneficiaries – the poor and marginalized sector – will have continuous supply of affordable good quality rice anywhere in the country.
NFA had so far accredited more than 6,000 additional rice outlets in January 2019, bringing the total outlets selling NFA rice at P27 and P32 per kilo to 26,879 nationwide.
“We assure our NFA rice customers, especially those in highly urban, marginalized areas and island provinces, that their low-priced good quality rice will be available throughout the year. Based on our average daily sales, our imported rice stocks will last until August this year,” Escarez said.
Rice prices seen to increase
Louise Maureen Simeon (The Philippine Star) - February 7, 2019 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — Local farmers yesterday warned the government of an increase in rice prices as the measure on unlimited rice importation is expected to be enacted into law.
The Federation of Free Farmers cautioned President Duterte on signing the rice tariffication bill, saying it would make the government “inutile in responding to price spikes in the future.”
The measure was submitted to the Office of the President last month. It will lapse into law if not acted upon by Feb. 17.
Aside from removing volume restrictions and imposing tariffs on rice imports, the bill removes the powers of the National Food Authority in regulating the rice industry.
Efforts on to secure GI tag for ‘royal rice’



MYSURU, FEBRUARY 07, 2019 00:29 IST
UPDATED: FEBRUARY 07, 2019 00:29 IST
Description: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/70zo0u/article26197328.ece/alternates/FREE_660/27BGRICE

Rajamudi is a traditional red rice variety of Old Mysore region

If all goes as planned, Rajamudi, a traditional red rice variety of Old Mysore region, which was patronised by the “royals” (and hence the nomenclature), will join the league of Basmati and get a Geographical Indication (GI) tag in recognition of its unique qualities.
The Department of Agriculture and Agricultural Price Commission have joined hands with Sahaja Samruddha, an NGO working on conservation of traditional and indigenous varieties of agricultural crops, to set the ball rolling.
This is the first case of an agricultural crop from the State being promoted for GI status though fruits such as Kodagu orange or Nanjangud rasabale have been accorded GI tags given their distinctive nature.
“The best quality of Rajamudi is cultivated in Mysuru-Hassan-Mandya belt and we intend to prepare a database of the number of cultivators engaged in production of Rajamudi, the acreage under cultivation and then proceed further,” said Krishnaprasad of Sahaja Samuruddha.
A Rajamudi utsav and a consultative workshop have been planned in Mysuru at the office of the Command Area Development Authority (CADA) on February 9 and 10 to take forward the agenda. The exercise will help document the knowledge and culture associated with Rajamudi cultivation and conserve it for posterity.
There are various strains within Rajamudi which have to be identified and classified and hence farmers, experts from the Department of Agricultural Science, Bengaluru, Agricultural Price Commission, and paddy researchers will participate in the workshop, which is the first step in the long journey to procure the GI tag.
What is significant is that cultivators of other varieties of rice in Karnataka such as Ratnachoodi, Gandhasale, and Salem Sanna, which are equally exotic, will also take part as there are long term plans to secure GI status for some of the lesser-known but unique rice of the State, said Mr. Krishnaprasad.
Describing the history associated with Rajamudi, Mr. Krishnaprasad said that it was cultivated in large swathes of land under the princely Mysuru ruled by the Wadiyars, who preferred it to other forms of rice.
It was also a preferred choice of the maharajas to procure it from farmers in lieu of tax.
There is high volatility in world rice market’

The Hitavada     
Date: 07 Feb 2019 09:21:20
 
Business Bureau,

Ajay Sharma, Managing Director, Lama Rice Pvt. Ltd while sharing his views on global rice scenario at a technical session organised by Vidarbha Industries Association (VIA) and Chirag Agri Ventures Pvt. Ltd said, “In our country traditional farming, use of old seeds and no intervention of technology are the major factor affecting the growth rice industry. Farmers of India are still using the seeds variety of 120 to 140 days with low yield.” Description: http://thehitavada.com/Encyc/2019/2/7/404_09_22_45_There_is_high_volatility_in_world_rice_market_H@@IGHT_490_W@@IDTH_700.jpg

He shared some vital information of rice industry. The world production of rice has been increased at a faster rate than the world population over last three decades. China is the world’s largest producer and consumer of rice. India is the largest exporter and Philippines is largest importer of the rice. Most of the rice is produced, consumed and traded by the Asian countries and main exporters are India, Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan and China. The Indian rice market was opened up at the end of 1994 resulting in a quantum jump in exports. Milled rice export from India has reached a high level during 1995 to 1998. India exports about 4 million tonne of Basmati and 8 million tonne of non Basmati rice. Rice is staple food of 70 per cent of the world’s poor living in Asia. Foreign exchange rate is an important factor affecting global rice trade because international rice price is quoted in US dollars. “There is high degree of volatility in the world rice market, because a small change in production or consumption brings a relatively large change in its total trade and rates also varies due to international market,” Sharma said..

He said, “Our country is lacking on the side of testing of raw material in milling plants. De-stoning is very essential in rice mills, stones damages polishers. Drying and parboiling helps to reduce broken percentage in milling process and polish is also good in order to improve shelf life of rice. Millers should be equipped with sorting and grading machines, these machines helps to produce marketable material in domestic as well as international markets,” he said.

In global market, Thailand and Vietnam are the major competitors in rice trading. Parboiled rice is the majorly traded variety. Sharma also shared few facts of India in comparison with world.  In last few years major technical investments has been done in Punjab and Haryana. He said,  “We are not taking efforts to provide export quality material. APMC plays very important role to set up linkages between farmers and millers.” He said, Nagpur has very conducive eco-system export category materials, produces produced under radius of 300 km and has low pesticide residue in crops. He added, rice industry needs to be upgraded, people who want to start work in this segment have bright future.

Atul Pande, President of VIA, Dr Suhas Buddhe, Secretary, Arun Khobragade, Chairman of VIA Agro Cell, Girdhari Mantri, Harshwardhan Harde and others were present.
Revolutionary new method for creating disease resistant crops: research
Source:Xinhua Published: 2019/2/6 14:30:26
A global collective of scientists have drastically streamlined the time it takes to find and introduce disease-resistance genes from wild plants into domestic crops such as rice, wheat and potato, a research revealed on Tuesday.

Scientists from the John Innes Center in Britain, along with colleagues from Australia and the United States have created a database known as AgRenSeq, where researchers can easily search for resistance genes already discovered in wild relatives of modern crops.

The study was co-authored by a global expert in cereal rust genetics, Professor Harbans Bariana from the University of Sydney, who said that this technology will underpin fast-tracked discovery and characterization of new sources of disease resistance in plants.

Once researchers have identified resistance genes using AgRenSeq they can clone them and introduce them to domestic crops to protect against diseases and pests such as rusts, powdery mildew and Hessian fly.

"We have found a way to scan the genome of a wild relative of a crop plant and pick out the resistance genes we need and we can do it in record time," Dr. Brande Wulff, a project leader from the John Innes Centre, said.

"This used to be a process that took 10 or 15 years and was like searching for a needle in a haystack," Wulff said.

"We have perfected the method so that we can clone these genes in a matter of months and for just thousands of dollars instead of millions," Wulff said.

The team are highly optimistic about their work, predicting it to be utilized in protecting many crops with wild relatives including soyabean, pea, cotton, maize, potato, wheat, barley, rice, banana and cocoa.

"If we have an epidemic, we can go to our library and inoculate that pathogen across our diversity panel and pick out the resistance genes."

"Using speed cloning and speed breeding we could deliver resistance genes into elite varieties within a couple of years, like a phoenix rising from the ashes," Wulff added.

This quick rice dish puts end to lentil confusion

Spiced Lentils and Rice helps cooks to learn the facts about this sometimes mysterious ingredients. (The Washington Post/Tom McCorkle)
  
As versatile and nutritious as they are, lentils can be confusing. Even once you learn the differences in cooking times and textures among red, brown, green and black varieties, along comes something to muddy the issue.
Here’s an example. By “green lentils,” do I mean the large, khaki-colored ones, sometimes called brown lentils — or on some packages called just plain lentils? They’re the most common variety, cook in about 20 to 30 minutes and hold their shape but get nice and tender. Or do I mean the French ones, sometimes called lentils du Puy, that are smaller, darker and speckled, take longer and stay firm when cooked? (They’re perfect for salads.)
I was thinking about this, yet again, when I tried a Jamie Oliver recipe for spiced lentils and rice that unfortunately perpetuates even more lentil confusion. The ingredient list calls for dried red split lentils, but the directions ask you to employ some of the lentils’ cooking water at one point and to drain the lentils at another. Both are impossible, really, because as anyone who cooks red (a.k.a. orange, a.k.a. yellow) lentils knows, they turn to a beautiful mush during cooking, absorbing the liquid and making them ideal for soups, stews and, of course, dal. To make matters even more head-scratching, the photo of the finished dish in Oliver’s book clearly shows distinct, large green lentils scattered among the grains of brown basmati rice, curls of soft onion and wilted kale.
Just to be sure, I first tried the recipe as written, and my suspicions were confirmed: No. But in subsequent tests, when I made it with large green/brown lentils (not French), it worked like a charm. And the dish comes together in a flash, thanks to precooked, shelf-stable rice, which is getting easier to come by in supermarkets, and jarred Indian curry paste, which adds a backbone of complexity.
The recipe is from a book whose title promises a five-ingredient limit, but there are actually nine. Oliver, like many others, makes the constraint work only by exempting some staples - in this case, olive oil, water, salt and pepper. I’m giving you the accurate count because, the way I see it, clarity beats confusion every time.
SPICED LENTILS AND RICE
Servings: 4
Ingredients:
2 cups water
About 3 ounces (1/2 cup) dried brown or green lentils, rinsed and picked over (do not use French du Puy)
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons Indian curry paste, such as balti, tikka or tandoori paste
2 medium yellow onions, thinly sliced
8 ounces kale leaves, stripped from the stems
8 1/2 ounces (2 cups) cooked brown basmati rice, such as Seeds of Change brand
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, or more as needed
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Steps:
Boil the water in a small saucepan over high heat. Add the lentils; once the water has returned to a boil, reduce the heat to medium-low, cover and cook until the lentils are tender, 20 to 25 minutes.
Meanwhile, heat a large skillet over medium heat, pour in the oil, and, once it shimmers, stir in the curry paste and cook until very fragrant, 1 minute. Add the onions and cook, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes, then reduce the heat to medium-low and cook for 15 minutes, stirring frequently, until the onions have softened.
Meanwhile, chop the kale leaves. When the onions are ready, stir the kale into the onions. Scoop out 1/2 cup of the lentils’ cooking water and add it to the skillet. Increase the heat to medium, cover tightly and let the mixture cook until the kale wilts, 2 minutes.
Drain the lentils and add them to the skillet, along with the cooked brown rice. Cover and cook for 3 minutes, until the rice is heated through. Uncover, add the salt and pepper, stirring to incorporate. Taste, and add more salt, as needed.
Nutrition: Calories: 280; Total Fat: 7 g; Saturated Fat: 1 g; Cholesterol: 0 mg; Sodium: 330 mg; Carbohydrates: 46 g; Sugars: 3 g; Protein: 10 g.

Kharif production expected to fall further in second estimate

THE ASIAN AGE. | SANGEETHA G
Published : Feb 6, 2019, 3:08 am IST
Updated : Feb 6, 2019, 3:08 am IST
Among cereals, rice was least affected by the irregularity in monsoon as it is grown mostly in well irrigated areas.
Description: Among cereals, rice was least affected by the irregularity in monsoon as it is grown mostly in well irrigated areas.
 Among cereals, rice was least affected by the irregularity in monsoon as it is grown mostly in well irrigated areas.
Chennai: Kharif production of coarse cereals, pulses, oil seeds and cotton are expected to fall in 2018-19, finds the second estimate of National Bulk Handling Corporation.
In its first estimate, NBHC had found that in the year 2018-19, the production of coarse grains, pulses and cotton are expected to decline by 9.78 per cent, 2.68 per cent and 4.57 per cent over 2017-18. However, in the assessment, the pulses and oil seed have marginally pushed themselves further in the negative region with an expected decline of 2.68 per cent and 5.36 per cent over the last estimate.
Among cereals, rice was least affected by the irregularity in monsoon as it is grown mostly in well irrigated areas. For the year 2018-19, rice production has expected to decline marginally by 0.73 per cent over last year and decline marginally by 1.91 per cent over last estimate. However, basmati rice production is expected to fall by about 9.24 per cent to 5.18 million metric tonnes. But this short fall is being compensated by the increase in the non-basmati rice.
Maize is expected to decline significantly by about 10.41 per cent over last year. The decline in the sowing area in Karnataka and Telangana was the main cause for the decline in production. "Maximum Stress is expected in Maize as the production is expected to decline by over 10 per cent and we can expect an import of about 3-5 million metric tonnes,” said Hanish Kumar Sinha, Head - Research & Development, National Bulk Handling Corporation (NBHC). Jowar is expected to decline by 10.59 per cent over last year. However, production of minor cereals, small millets, ragi and bajra is expected to improve.
Pulses production is projected to drop marginally to 9.10 million metric tonnes from 9.35 million metric tonnes last year due to the fall in urad output by 10.11 per cent. Urad output was hit as farmers shifted to soybean in some parts of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra.
Total oilseeds production is estimated to be 19.87 million metric tonnes, which is 5.36 per cent lower than last year’s production of 21.00 million metric tonnes.
French, German farmers destroy crops after GMOs found in Bayer seeds

PARIS (Reuters) - Bayer said on Wednesday that farmers in France and Germany were digging up thousands of hectares of rapeseed fields after traces of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) banned for cultivation were found in seeds sold by the company.

FILE PHOTO: A farmer drives his tractor behind a rapeseed field in Estourmel near Cambrai, France April 26, 2018. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo
GMO crops are widely grown across the world, but they remain controversial in Europe, where very few varieties are authorized for growing and some countries like France have completely outlawed their cultivation, citing environmental risks. Checks by the French authorities during the autumn showed minute quantities of GMO seeds, estimated at less than 0.005 percent of the volume, in three batches of rapeseed seeds sold under the Dekalb brand, Catherine Lamboley, Bayer’s chief operating officer for France, said.

Dekalb was previously a Monsanto brand before the U.S. company was taken over by Bayer last year. The GMO found, which is a rapeseed variety grown in Canada, is not authorized for cultivation in Europe, although it is allowed in imports destined for food and animal feed, Lamboley said. Bayer issued a product recall but some of the seed had already been sown, representing about 8,000 hectares in France and 2,500-3,000 hectares in Germany, which are in the process of being dug up, Bayer said.

It was not yet known what caused the contamination of the rapeseed seeds, produced in Argentina in a GMO-free area, Lamboley said. “We decided to immediately stop all rapeseed seed production in Argentina,” she told Reuters in a phone interview. Bayer’s Argentine rapeseed seeds were destined for the European market and represent 12 percent of its rapeseed supply for France, the company added. Bayer declined to estimate the overall cost of the GMO contamination but said it will offer compensation of 2,000 euros ($2,277.80) per hectare to affected farmers, suggesting a payout of around 20 million euros in France and Germany.


High-margin pickup trucks drive GM profit
The compensation reflected the loss of rapeseed fields this season and the fact farmers would not be able to grow the crop next either as a precaution to avoid re-emergence of the GMO strain, Lamboley added. The order to destroy some crops is another blow for European rapeseed growers who had already cut sowings sharply due to dry weather. However, the area is small compared to the total French winter rapeseed area, which the farm ministry in December forecast at 1.23 million hectares. The corresponding German crop area is seen at close to 1 million hectares. ($1 = 0.8780 euros)
‘No more limit’: Philippines import cap removal could see 1.2m MT of rice entering the country

The Philippines’ lifting of a 20-year old rice import cap is likely to result in some 1.2 million metric tons of rice being imported into the country in the wake of ongoing shortages and price hikes, the National Food Agency (NFA) has said.


Paddy rice production reaches 7.4 million in 2018
 Cambodia produced 7.4 million tonnes of paddy rice in 2018, a 3.5 percent increase, according to the Ministry of Agriculture’s annual report. In its report, the ministry said total production in 2018 was only 88.47 percent of what the government expected, adding that 2.4 million hectares were harvested out of 2.7 million hectares of available agricultural land. On average, each hectare produced 3.07 tonnes of rice, the report says, noting that in 2006 the average yield was only 2.6 tonnes. The report shows that 96 percent of the land was cultivated using machinery, while livestock was used in only 3.5 percent of land. “Hoping to help hard-working farmers during the wet season, the ministry also rolled out initiatives to provide technical assistance for the benefit of farmers dealing with natural disasters and pests,” the report reads. Veng Sakhon, the Minister of Agriculture, said yield increases were made possible by better irrigation systems and the use of technology. He noted that the government has accelerated work on identifying the best areas to grow each variety, which also played a role in boosting yields. “Officials are studying what environment and conditions are best for each rice variety so that we can maximise yields and quality, as well as resilience to disease and climate change,” Mr Sakhon said. Chim Yoab, a rice farmer in Takeo province’s Bati district, told Khmer Times that she is able to harvest rice twice a year – in the wet and in the dry season – because she enjoys access to irrigation. “Yields are quite irregular,” she explains. “When it rains a lot yields are very high, but during droughts, they are significantly lower.” On average, she produces three to four tonnes of rice per hectare, she added. Last year, total exports of milled rice decreased by 1.5 percent, reaching only 626,225 tonnes, which were sent to 61 different countries around the world. China was the biggest buyer, importing 170,154 tonnes.

Duterte urged to veto rice tariffication bill

February 06, 2019

BUTIL Rep. Cecil Chavez yesterday pleaded in behalf of the farmers to President Rodrigo “Rody” Duterte to veto the rice tariffication measure which underlying justification is unrealistic ill-advised, and should not be the anchor of the country’s rice supply stabilization program.

Chavez also warned the promise of at least P10 billion yearly in support fund to rice farmers under the rice tariffication measure will not also work “given the inefficiency of the institutions that will oversee the P10 billion fund.”
“There is also the temptation that the bureaucrats that will oversee the P10 billion fund will treat it as a generic government revenue which can be diverted to other concerns that are not related to helping and supporting the almost 3 million Filipino rice farmers, “ said Chavez.
Chavez said her main opposition to the measure is that a permanent policy of rice importation is an “existential threat” to the country’s rice supply stabilization program, given the volatile nature of the global rice supply.
“Put simply, unlimited rice importation is a threat to the country’s national food security goals,” said Chavez.
She also warned that the country’s rice farmers will cease to exist in a few years should the government stick to a policy of unlimited rice importation. Chavez said that a close study of the global rice supply market would show a “ very thin  global surplus”.
“Any minor tweak in the rice production in China and in the Indo-China regions would send global supply into a tight, pricey market which would be beyond the capacity of the Philippines to buy,” she said.

NFA awaits arrival of last batch of imported rice

Published February 6, 2019, 10:00 PM
By Madelaine B. Miraflor
The National Food Authority (NFA), which will soon no longer be allowed to import rice, is now waiting for the delivery of the last batch of imported rice it procured last year.
NFA logo (Photo courtesy of wikipedia)
A data from the state-run grains agency showed that of the rice imports contract awarded last year, a total of 1.01 million metric tons have already been delivered in the country.
To recall, NFA was authorized to procure as much as 1.25 million MT of rice through a series of government-to-government importation and open tender scheme last year. Most of this supposed needed supply, or around 750,000 MT, was only secured in the last few weeks of December.
NFA said that the balance of 236,196 MT of rice from last year’s importation is now in “transit and expected to arrive soon”.
“With the continued arrival of our rice imports, we are making the low-priced good quality NFA rice more accessible to more consumers across the country,” NFA acting administrator Tomas R. Escarez said.
“As rice import deliveries come on a staggered basis, through the various designated ports across the country, we deliver rice to our outlets on a first in-first out basis to avoid deterioration and ensure that what we sell are fresh stocks all the time,” he added.
As of now, NFA’s share in the rice market already went up from an average of 9.18 percent in 2018 to 11.76 percent for the month of January 2019, thanks to the imported supply that arrived and was delivered to the agency’s warehouse.
This will be the last batch of imported rice to enter the country that will pass through the supervision of NFA.
Once the Rice Tariffication Bill is either signed by President Rodrigo Duterte or lapsed into law by February 17, NFA will no longer have regulatory functions and will only be allowed to boost its stocks through local palay procurement.
There are now groups asking Duterte to veto the bill, saying that leaving rice importation to the ‘open market’ will be dangerous.
The Rice Tariffication Law, according to Federation of Free Farmers, will “practically remove all” restrictions on rice imports and will allow any importer to bring in unlimited volumes of rice from abroad and and at any time, even if local farmers are harvesting.
This, as importers will only need to secure a food safety certificate from the Bureau of Plant Industry (BPI).
In an open letter to Duterte, the grains industry stakeholders, including the farmers, describe this certain provision of the Rice Tariffication Law as “anti-people.”
Moreover, they said the removal of the stabilization and regulatory functions of the NFA will expose rice prices and supply to manipulation by the private sector. They also fear that the absence of government control will lead to a more powerful rice cartel in the country.
Amid these concerns, Escarez said NFA will do its best to sustain the presence of NFA rice in the market to ensure that its target beneficiaries – the poor and marginalized sector – will have continuous supply of affordable good quality rice anywhere in the country.
NFA had so far accredited more than 6,000 additional rice outlets in January 2019, bringing the total outlets selling NFA rice at P27 and P32 per kilo to 26,879 nationwide.
“We assure our NFA rice customers, especially those in highly urban, marginalized areas and island provinces, that their low-priced good quality rice will be available throughout the year. Based on our average daily sales, our imported rice stocks will last until August this year,” Escarez said.

Bumper harvest at last for rice outgrowers
·        Kevine Omollo

·        Posted On: 06th Feb 2019 00:00:00 GMT +0300
Description: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/images/tuesday/wnwpg7pwhc6iledk65c59eade88797.jpg
Monica Awino spreads rice to dry before milling at Nyang'ande in Nyando, Kisumu county on February 03,2019. The farmers in the area have devised modern farming methods to boost their yield. [Photo: Denish Ochieng/ Standard]
As Monica Awino spreads her rice in the sun to dry at her Nyang’ande home in Nyando, she expects a windfall.
For over two decades, Ms Awino toiled and prayed for a better harvest in vain.
However, the past two seasons have seen her prayers shift from better harvest to reliable market, courtesy of a new technology dubbed system for rice intensification (SRI).
The system, borrowed from Mwea Irrigation Scheme, involves intensive utilisation of water, where farmers have equal access to the limited commodity for a particular number of days, then they give it to other farmers, and the cycle continues.
The system also promotes mechanisation, use of certified seeds and intensive sensitisation. This has seen the likes of Awino embrace team work right from land preparation, planting, harvesting and marketing.
Three plots away from Awino’s is Jack Otange's land. He has been in the trade for 10 years.
The 30-year-old farmer has three quarters of an acre. Last week he harvested 32 bags of paddy rice, a big improvement from the 10 bags he used to get.
Hybrid seed
Just like Awino, he planted a hybrid seed, Arize 644, which has become the scheme’s preferred variety in the recent past.
Austin Abuto, whose 1.1 acres earned him 50 bags, said the development has revived people’s hopes in rice farming.
“I first ventured into the trade in 1992, but I pulled out after it proved not viable. But five years ago, with news of improved farming techniques, I got back to the farm and I do not regret.”
However, Mr Abuto is worried about the low prices coming with the bumper harvest.
In 2015, a group of farmers from the scheme visited Mwea Irrigation Scheme in Kirinyaga County for a learning tour, and this has changed their farming for the better.
“We realised that apart from lack of uniformity, our people had not embraced the spirit of mechanisation due to the small size of parcels here,” said Paul Omanga, who was in the tour team.
Dr Omanga later mobilised farmers through Nyabon, a technical advisory team implementing farm mechanisation at the scheme, organised them into four blocks, making it easy to pool resources and seek the assistance of other players.
“Convincing farmers to come together was not an easy task, and the first season saw only 50 acres of land put into use. In the second season, there were 25 more acres, and today the entire scheme, lying on 100 acres, is utilised,” said Omanga.
This has pushed up the harvest, with farmers like Awino lacking space in their houses to store the produce. They have come together to construct a makeshift store at Nyang’ande market.
Rice production in Nyanza is set to increase further after the Government released Sh100 million to revamp Kibos rice milling plant.
Yesterday, The Standard learnt that the Lake Basin Development Authority (LBDA), which manages the mill, had received the money from the Treasury.
Annual production
The plant will now produce up to 24,000 tonnes of rice a year, an improvement on the initial annual production of less than 10,000 tonnes.
Ken Obura, the Chief Administrative Secretary for EAC, urged farmers to grow more rice because of the revitalised and expanded operations.
He spoke just a day after the new LBDA managing director, Raymond Omollo, took over from Evans Atera.

Rice Prices

as on : 07-02-2019 11:21:15 AM

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Prev.
Modal
Prev.Yr
%change
Rice
Barhaj(UP)
110.00
10
3998.00
2200
2250
-
Puranpur(UP)
95.00
-24.9
4889.50
2380
2400
6.97
Hapur(UP)
70.00
16.67
1100.00
2670
2680
-0.37
Mugrabaadshahpur(UP)
30.00
-21.05
284.00
2300
2300
-
Basti(UP)
29.00
-6.45
872.50
2260
2270
4.15
Khatra(WB)
28.00
16.67
440.00
2650
2650
3.92
Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)
15.00
7.14
201.00
2650
2650
3.92
Chandoli(UP)
12.00
-29.41
215.00
2355
2345
7.05
Etah(UP)
9.00
50
115.00
2530
2530
-
Utraula(UP)
9.00
12.5
69.00
1860
1860
16.25
Vilthararoad(UP)
8.00
-20
428.00
2150
2150
3.37
Chitwadagaon(UP)
7.00
75
250.00
2100
2150
NC
Kosikalan(UP)
6.50
NC
103.30
2680
2600
-
Ruperdeeha(UP)
6.00
NC
139.00
2000
1800
-
Mirzapur(UP)
4.00
-27.27
258.50
2265
2260
6.09
Alibagh(Mah)
3.00
NC
49.00
7200
7200
44.00
Murud(Mah)
3.00
NC
49.00
7200
7200
44.00
Amroha(UP)
2.00
NC
88.00
2600
2600
-
Jambusar(Kaavi)(Guj)
1.00
NC
16.00
3100
3400
-
Published on February 07, 2019

Rice Prices

as on : 06-02-2019 10:50:35 AM

Arrivals in tonnes;prices in Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
Price
Current
%
change
Season
cumulative
Modal
Prev.
Modal
Prev.Yr
%change
Rice
Khatra(WB)
24.00
-20
412.00
2650
2650
3.92
Falakata(WB)
20.00
NC
400.00
2600
2600
-
Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)
14.00
7.69
186.00
2650
2650
3.92
Ruperdeeha(UP)
6.00
NC
133.00
1800
1700
-
Doharighat(UP)
1.50
NC
46.50
2000
2000
-
Khairagarh(UP)
1.40
100
37.70
2530
2560
1.20
Jambusar(Kaavi)(Guj)
1.00
NC
15.00
3400
3400


Saltwater is invading rice fields and damaging crops

Rice is a staple for more than half of the world's population.


Rice is a staple food for more than half of all people worldwide. But in many regions, rising temperatures and more extreme weather are making it harder to grow rice.
For example, in the coastal wetlands of Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, droughts are becoming more frequent.
When there’s not enough freshwater flowing down the Mekong River, more salt water from the South China Sea washes into coastal waterways. It ends up on fields and in soil, where it can devastate rice crops.
Bjoern Ole Sander of the International Rice Research Institute says that in 2016, during a very hot, dry period …
Sander: “We had much higher levels of salinity in the water and that strongly impacted rice production.”
It’s a problem that will only get worse as rising seas push even more salt water inland.
So to help farmers cope, Sander’s organization is breeding new varieties of rice …
Sander: “… that are more tolerant to certain stresses like salinity stress or drought stress or heat stress.”
Other rice farmers have switched to raising shrimp, which can handle the saltier conditions.
So as the climate warms, farmers around the world will likely need to change how – or what – they farm.
Reporting credit: Sarah Kennedy/ChavoBart Digital Media.
Image credit: IRRI video screen capture.


Crop Per Drop: Irrigation Contest Winners Grow Most With Least
February 6, 2019 09:34 AM
Description: TRIO IRRI
Crop per Drop is the brainchild of Chris Henry, left, water management engineer at the UA Rice Research and Extension Center. Henry is pictured alongside Greg Simpson, center, irrigation program associate with the UA Division of Agriculture, and Tommy Young, Jackson County producer. ( Chris Bennett )
Who gets the prize for greatest yield by least water? Look no further than the 2018 winners of Crop per Drop, Arkansas’ Irrigation Yield Contest in corn, rice and soybeans, a first-of-its-kind competition measuring bushels and water use by adding a flow meter and rainfall to yield numbers.
Jason Bennett, Mikey Taylor, Matt Morris and Richard Morris won Arkansas’ unique irrigation battle in 2018 with the highest bushel yields per acre inch of water. Basic rules: Grow the most with the least. 30 acres of irrigated ground; 3 acres of skip-patterned harvest; and a maximum of one active metered water inlet.
Crop per Drop is the brainchild of Chris Henry, water management engineer at the University of Arkansas Rice Research and Extension Center (RREC) in Stuttgart. Henry’s team marked and sealed all flow meters to prevent tampering, and checked competition sites in-season. He believes an irrigation contest with practical value for growers equates to research fields across the state: “Maximum yield is easy; try doing it with just the right amount of irrigation. So many great growers try so hard to squeeze everything they can out of a field and we want to channel that focus and reward their efforts with this contest.”
Corn
Placing No. 1 in the corn category, Jason Bennett, Bassett, Ark., hit 226.9 bu. per acre corn with a water use efficiency of 10.55 bu. per acre-inch on just 8.4 ac-in/ac of irrigation water, while most Arkansas growers typically average 18.1 ac-in/ac of irrigation, Henry notes. Bennett used soil moisture sensors (multiple Irrometer Watermarks and an AgSense Aquatrac), the Arkansas Watermark mobile app, computerized hole selection (Pipe Planner), and surge valves (P&R Surge) during the contest. Average yield for all corn entrants was 217.5 bu. per acre, and the average water use efficiency for corn was 9.61 bu. per acre-inch.
Rice      
Topping all Arkansas rice growers, Lonoke County’s Matt Morris and his father, Richard, yielded 226 bu. per acres (Ricetec 7311) alongside a water use efficiency rate of 7.80 bu. per acre-inch on a meager 16 ac-in/ac of irrigation. (The average water use in the rice verification program in 2018 was 24.6 ac-in/ac.)

The Morris duo used a Davis Enviromonitor Weather Station, the UA “Rice Irrigation” mobile app, surface water reservoirs and tailwater recovery, alternate wetting and drying, and N-ST*Rnutrient management to place at the front of the rice group. Average yield for rice entrants was 210.7 bu. per acre and average water use efficiency was 5.17 bu. per acre-inch.  The contest field is also the oldest commercial rice field in Arkansas. 
Soybeans
Mikey Taylor of Phillips County topped all soybean growers in 2018, tallying 103 bu. per acre with a water use efficiency of 3.92 bu. per acre inch on 10.3 ac-in/ac of irrigation applied.

Arkansas farmers report 16.3 ac-in/ac of irrigation is typically needed to fully irrigate soybeans, according to Henry. Taylor used a mix of cover crops, variety selection and computerized hole selection (Pipe Planner) to lead the soybean category. Average soybean yield for contest entrants was 71 bushels per acre and average water use efficiency was 2.84 bushels per acre-inch.
Prizes included $10,000 in cash for the corn and soybean categories, and $11,000 in seed tote credit for the rice category. Winners also received a 10” portable flowmeter with FS-100 flow straightener; a 10” P&R Surge Valve and Star Controller; a 10” DamGates Surge Valve and Controller; $1,666 check from Delta Plastics; base station and soil moisture monitoring node from Trellis; three Watermark soil moisture sensors, a manual reader, and $500 cash from Irrometer—totaling over $21,485 each in cash and products. 
For more information on the Arkansas Irrigation Contest, see Crop per Drop or contact Chris Henry.

Palace: Duterte won’t veto rice tariffication bill
MANILA, Philippines — Malacañang on Thursday said President Rodrigo Duterte’s approval of the Rice Tariffication Bill would be “forthcoming” despite strong calls from farmer groups for the chief executive to use his veto power on the measure.Congress last year passed the Rice Tariffication Bill, which seeks to amend the Agricultural Tariffication Act of 1996.
Under the measure, individuals and businesses can import additional volumes of the crop from Southeast Asian countries like Thailand and Vietnam but will have to pay a 35-percent tariff. The collected tariffs will be used to fund mass irrigation, warehousing and rice research.
While the measure is expected to give households reeling from soaring prices a reprieve, farmer groups said replacing rice import limits with a system of tariffs would drive down prices for their produce and hurt their business.
At a televised press conference, presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo said Duterte will likely sign the bill despite resistance from industry stakeholders.
“Well, the long and short of it is that those he met last night were against. But according to the president, the policy would be to the greater good,” Panelo said.
“Yun ang ibibigay niya. So kahit na kumontra sila, mukhang itutuloy niya (So that’s what the president will give. Even if they are against the bill, the president will likely sign it),” he added.
The rice tariffication bill was submitted to Malacañang last January 15 for Duterte’s signature. Under the Constitution, bills sent to Malacañang will lapse into law if the president does not approve or veto them 30 days after transmittal. — Ian Nicolas Cigaral

Lancaster University Commends CSIR Over Progress Of Research Projects

By Eric Gyimah CSIR || Fumesua, Ashanti Region

Description: Lancaster University Commends CSIR Over Progress Of Research Projects
A team of researchers led by Prof. Nigel Paul from the Lancaster University Environment Centre has commended its research partners in Ghana for their commitment to the Recirculate project.
Prof. Nigel Paul and his team made the commendations during a project research review meeting with its Ghanaian stakeholders last week at Fumesua in the Ashanti region.
The review meeting was held for stakeholders to assess the level of progress of the Water for Food Production component of the Recirculate research project a year into its implementation and to deliberate on the way forward of the ongoing research work.
National stakeholders of the project present during the review meeting included the Water Research Institute, the Institute of Industrial Research and the lead institute - Crops Research Institute, all of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research( CSIR).
The Lancaster University's Principal Investigator of the Water for Food Production component of the Recirculate Project, Prof. Ian Dodd, during the review meeting, expressed satisfaction at the results achieved so far in the tomato and rice research activities respectively.
A project team member, Prof. Kirk Semple, pointed out that the entire Recirculate project is aimed at building the capacities of Africa's research forces using the Lancaster University's Environment Centre Eco-innovation module.
He, therefore, encouraged the research implementation team to continue working hard to enable the team to achieve the projected results at the end of the programme.
Dr. Stella Ama Ennin, Director of the Crops Research Institute (CRI) who welcomed stakeholders to the review meeting said the project is very significant to the Council's research agenda and the Ghanaian context of crop production.
She continued that water management in food crop production has become very critical in recent times in the face of climate and its related impact on agriculture, hence the need for industry players such as smallholder and commercial farmers to adopt efficient water and nutrients management approach in crop production.
Dr. Stella Ennin on behalf of the CSIR assured the Lancaster University team of her Institute's and the Council's continuous commitment towards the project.
Dr. Stephen Yeboah, a Research Scientist at the CSIR- CRI and leader of the Water for Food Production work package in Ghana, maintained that maximizing water and nutrients use in African agriculture has become an urgent priority for societies concerned about food security.
Dr. Yeboah noted that the Water for Food Production research is investigating water and nutrients management opportunities in the production of two important food crops in Ghana namely, rice and tomato.
Ing. Dr. Patricia Oteng- Darko, project team member also with the CRI stressed the importance of using different researched water saving technologies in rice and tomato production.
Ing. Oteng - Darko disclosed that the alternate wetting and drying system of irrigation can greatly help improve rice yield whilst saving substantial water in the production process.
The Water for Food Production component of the Recirculate project been implemented by the Crops Research Institute of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research ( CSIR-CRI) in partnership with the Lancaster University is being funded by the Global Challenge Research Fund.The project which commenced early last year is expected to end in the year 2022.

Policy on farm mechanisation in the works

february 07, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:06 AM, February 07, 2019

The government is set to frame a policy on agriculture mechanisation with the aim of increasing farm productivity by speeding up the process of adoption of low-cost but efficient machinery at grower's level.
A panel, formed by the agriculture ministry, has recently submitted the draft of the policy, which comes in the backdrop of rising cost of production owing to shortage of labour for cultivation.
The draft policy is aiming to encourage expansion of farmer-friendly machinery in view of small farm size, fragmented land ownership and types of soil. It is also targeting to increase cropping intensity with the view to boosting total crop yields.
A policy on farm mechanisation would be instrumental to ensure fast expansion of agri-machinery and address the problems of farm labour shortage and lower productivity, said MA Sattar Mandal, a member of the expert pool of the agriculture ministry.
“With farming becoming commercialised and production not rising for shortage of farm labours, there is no alternative to machines.”
So far, farmers have taken big strides in mechanised tilling and irrigation.
“Yet, there is a large gap in transplanting and harvesting,” said Mandal, a former vice-chancellor of the Bangladesh Agricultural University.
Now, up to 95 percent of land is tilled by power tillers and tractors.  Machines are also used for 90 percent of pesticide applications.
Most of the grains, particularly the staple rice, are threshed by machines, according to a previous estimate of the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE).
Progress in the use of mechanised plantation and harvesting has been sluggish in the absence of cost-effective machines that are suitable for many different types of land and fragmented ownership.
At present, only 1 percent of the plantation and harvesting are done by machines, according to the DAE.
“Now, farmers cannot plant and harvest crops timely owing to labour shortage. Mechanisation will enable them to overcome that problem and increase productivity,” said Mandal, who was involved in the drafting of the policy.
Since it is a laborious task, youths with low level of education are not showing interest in farming. “It is possible to make them interested through mechanisation,” said the draft policy.
The draft favoured continuation of subsidy for speedy mechanisation and suggested easy and low-cost credit to farmers and entrepreneurs, who sell mechanised cultivation on rental basis.
The policy also recommended rationalised tariff structure for import and domestic manufacturing of farm machinery.
To ensure optimum use of machines, it favoured block based cultivation by organising growers for tilling, planting and harvesting.
The draft policy said incentives would be given to encourage establishment of assembling industry.
The use of renewable energy would be encouraged in mechanised farming and steps would be taken to encourage conservation agriculture.
Apart from this, the draft policy noted areas such as haor, coastal zones, barind and hilly regions and said steps would be taken for fast expansion of mechanisation in these areas.
The policy favoured examination of quality of farm machinery and giving certification so that farmers get quality equipment.
If the farm mechanisation policy is implemented, it will be a real step towards building a developed Bangladesh by way of becoming self-sufficient in food production, said Alimul Ahsan Chowdhury, president of the Agricultural Machinery Manufacturer's Association-Bangladesh.
Mechanisation would expand fast if the government keeps the area open for the private sector instead of barricading it to just the public sector, said FH Ansarey, managing director and chief executive officer of ACI's agribusiness division.
“The government should encourage the private sector to focus on mechanisation in those areas where we are lagging behind.”
Subsidy should continue to facilitate expansion of mechanisation not just in the crop sector but also dairy in order to reducing farmers' production cost and increase their income, he added.
Md Nasiruzzaman, secretary-in-charge of the agriculture ministry, said the policy is prepared to popularise mechanised farming. 
“It would be finalised within this year,” he added.

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