Thursday, August 06, 2020

6 August ,2020 Daily Global Regional Local Rice E-Newsletter


 

 

Basmati GI tagging: Chouhan slams Punjab CM over letter to PM

06 AUGUST 2020  Last Updated at 4:34 PM | SOURCE: PTI

 Bhopal, Aug 6 (PTI) Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Thursday criticised his Punjab counterpart Amarinder Singh over his letter urging the Centre not to allow GI tagging of basmati rice to MP.

Taking to Twitter, Chouhan alleged that the Punjab CM''s letter was "politically motivated".

Amarinder Singh has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging him not to allow geographical indication (GI) tagging of basmati to Madhya Pradesh in the larger interest of Punjab and other states that already have GI tag for basmati.

In his tweet in Hindi, Chouhan said, "I strongly condemn the letter written by the Punjab Chief Minister to @PMOIndia regarding allotment of GI tagging. It is politically motivated."

"This is not an issue of Punjab or Madhya Pradesh, it''s a subject pertaining to the whole country''s farmers and their livelihoods," he said.

Apart from Punjab, other states that already have GI tagging for basmati are Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Delhi, western UP, and select districts of Jammu and Kashmir. Madhya Pradesh has sought inclusion of its 13 districts for GI tagging for basmati.

However, the Punjab CM has urged the PM to direct the concerned authorities not to disturb the status quo in this matter, saying that is was essential for safeguarding the interests of farmers and basmati exporters of India.

He also contended that any dilution of registration might help Pakistan, which also produces basmati as per GI tagging in the international market.

Countering his argument, Chouhan said, "The case of APEDA (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority) with Pakistan has no relationship with Madhya Pradesh''s claim as it is under the GI Act of India. It is not connected to inter-country claims of basmati rice."

He asserted that GI tagging was a matter of pride for farmers and recognition of their years of toils.

"The matter should not be turned into a Punjab vs Madhya Pradesh tussle. GI tagging will provide stability to basmati prices in international markets and bolster our exports," the MP CM said.

The Punjab chief minister has alleged that MP''s move infringes the GI tagging procedure and laws.

However, Chouhan said, "Madhya Pradesh has a written recorded history since 1908 of basmati production in 13 districts. Records of supplying seeds to farmers in MP in the year 1944 was recorded in the records of Scindia State."

He said that the Indian Institute of Rice Research, Hyderabad, had recorded production of basmati rice in their Production Oriented Survey Report for the last 25 years.

"Basmati exporters of Punjab and Haryana are procuring basmati rice from MP. This is also supported by Government of India data of export from the Mandideep (industrial area), Madhya Pradesh," he added.

In June, Madhya Pradesh Agriculture Minister Kamal Patel had said that the state government would move the apex court to challenge a Madras High Court''s ruling in the matter of not providing the tag to MP''s basmati-growing regions.

The MP government and a basmati growers'' association had lost two separate cases in the court filed in 2016 to challenge the exclusion of the districts from a map submitted by the APEDA for the tags.

Patel said they condemn Punjab CM''s move.

MP Home Minister Narottam Mishra said the Congress is anti-farmer and that is why Punjab was opposing Madhya Pradesh''s claim. PTI LAL MAS NP NP

https://www.outlookindia.com/newsscroll/basmati-gi-tagging-chouhan-slams-punjab-cm-over-letter-to-pm/1910359    

Pakistan's exports rebound after four months of decline

 05 AUG 2020

NEWS

DAWN

Published 05 Aug,2020 via Dawn ISLAMABAD - Pakistan’s exports bounced back in July following a steep fall for four consecutive months since March when the government imposed lockdowns to contain the spread of coronavirus.

The new fiscal year started with a positive note as export proceeds grew 5.8 per cent to $1.998 billion in July, from $1.889bn in the corresponding month of last year, data released by the Ministry of Commerce (MoC) showed on Tuesday.

In rupee terms, the export proceeds jumped 11.3pc year-on-year in July.

Visible improvement was observed in export orders from international buyers, mainly in the textile and clothing sectors since May. The decline had widened in April with a plunge of 54pc, which relatively improved but still came in at 35pc contraction in May and 6pc in June.

In FY20, exports fell by 6.83pc or $1.57bn to $21.4bn, compared to $22.97bn the previous year.

Imports fall 4.2pc in first month of FY21

The continuous decline in imports is also providing some breathing space for the government to manage external account despite a downward trend in exports the last four months.

In July, the import bill decreased by 4.2pc to $3.54bn, as against $3.696bn over the corresponding month of last year.

During 2019-20, the import bill witnessed a steep decline of $10.29bn or 18.78pc to $44.509bn compared to $54.799bn last year.

The country’s trade deficit also came dipped by 14.7pc in July from a year ago, mainly due to a fall in imports and paltry growth in export proceeds. However, imports are also expected to bounce back in the coming months following abolishing of regulatory duty on imports of raw materials and semi-finished products.

In absolute terms, the trade gap narrowed to $1.542bn in July, as compared to $1.808bn over the corresponding month of last year. During FY20, it narrowed to $23.099bn, from $31.820bn.

Data breakdown shows that export of 10 products posted impressive growth during the month under review: worn clothing and clothing accessories surged by 2,078pc, followed by food preparation 344pc, made-up clothing accessories, knitted or crocheted 313pc, tarpaulins, awnings and sunblinds 154pc, tracksuits 135pc, gloves, mittens and mitts 83pc.

Similarly, export of fish and fish products soared by 50pc, jerseys, pullovers, cardigans, waistcoats and similar articles 44pc, women’s garments 34pc, leather apparel 28pc, made-up articles of textile materials 27pc, home textiles 24pc, copper and articles thereof 19pc, and men’s garments 10pc.

The export proceeds of some important products posted a decline during the month under review including wheat, wheat flour, cotton, synthetic filament yarn, raw leather, ethyl alcohol, cotton yarn, plastic products, tanning, dyeing extracts, rice and cement.

Meanwhile, top 10 importing products which increased in July were: soya beans up by 616pc, petroleum coke 192pc, palm oil 190pc, rubber 36pc, fruits and vegetables 24pc, pharmaceuticals products 17pc, inorganic chemicals 14pc, iron and steel 12pc, tea 11pc, plastic products 8pc, electrical and electronic equipment 5pc.

On the other hand, items that saw a decline in imports included rape seeds, cotton yarn, motor cars, footwear, parts and accessories for tractors, petroleum gas, petroleum oils, coal, machinery, fertilizers, organic chemicals, petroleum oils excluding crude and paper and paperboard.

Commerce Adviser Abdul Razak Dawood underlined that the MoC will be evaluating its geographical diversification in order to realign the focus towards new opportunities. He also advised the ministry officers to extend all kind of necessary support to exporters in order to achieve the targets, not only in terms of numbers but also with regards to intended policy outcomes.

Published in Dawn, August 5th, 2020

Copyright © Pakistan Herald Publications (Pvt.) Ltd. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).

https://www.salaamgateway.com/story/pakistans-exports-rebound-after-four-months-of-decline

 

Trade Center Being Planned To Enhance Pakistani Exports To Georgia; Shehbaz Khan

 

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Description: Trade center being planned to enhance Pakistani exports to Georgia; Shehbaz Khan

A Georgia-based Pakistani is contemplating to set up a trade center in order to enhance Pakistani exports to Georgia and its neighbouring countries in addition to strengthen trade relations between business communities of two countries

FAISALABAD, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 6th Aug, 2020 ) :A Georgia-based Pakistani is contemplating to set up a trade center in order to enhance Pakistani exports to Georgia and its neighbouring countries in addition to strengthen trade relations between business communities of two countries.

These views were expressed by Colonel (R) Shahbaz Khan during his meeting with Rana Muhammad Sikandar Azam Khan President Faisalabad Chamber of Commerce & Industry (FCCI). He explained his attachment with Pakistan Army and told that he had an opportunity to serve the UN forces. During this period he remained posted at Congo and after his retirement, he settled in Georgia. He said that there is no Pakistani embassy and hence there is a wide gap between trade potential and actual bilateral trade. He said that he has a property in Georgia in which a trade center could be established to facilitate Pakistani exporters. Colonel (R) Shahbaz Khan also spelled out his plan to provide space for display of Pakistani products in addition to allocating part of this premises as warehouse and a residential block for the Pakistani visitors.

Regarding the import of Georgia, he said that Pakistan could export rice, hospital linen, bed sheets and towels etc. He requested President FCCI to give his input regarding this plan so that he could materialize it. Rana Sikandar Azam Khan FCCI President appreciated the patriotism of Colonel (R.) Shahbaz and said that after defending the geographical boundaries, now he is committed to serve Pakistan in the field of economy. He appreciated the proposal of establishing a trade center in his personal property and assured his full support to make this project successful. He said that he could arrangea trade delegation for Georgia so that our members could personally explore the potential of Georgian market.

During this meeting Dr. Sajjad Arshad, Ayub Aslam Manj and Rana Ikramullah were also present.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/business/trade-center-being-planned-to-enhance-pakista-994428.html

External account position remains stable in FY2020

APP

August 06, 2020

ISLAMABAD -Despite challenging global environment, the country’s external account position remained stable during the fiscal year 2020. The current account deficit continued to narrow, even though both exports and imports have fallen sharply since the coronavirus outbreak, official document revealed. During FY2020, current account deficit was reduced by 77.9 per cent to $ 2.9 billion (1.1 per cent of GDP) against $ 13.4 billion last year (4.8 per cent of GDP). The exports from the country declined by 7.2 per cent to $22.5 billion during FY2020 compared to exports of $ 24.3 billion last year, it said adding that the exports values were suppressed due to weak terms of trade, despite significantly higher quantum exports. 

On the other hand, Imports declined by 18.2 per cent to $ 42.4 billion as compared to $ 51.9 billion last year. Consequently, trade deficit reduced by 27.9 per cent to $ 19.9 billion against the deficit of $ 27.6 billion last year. Export of services declined by 8.6 per cent to $ 5.4 billion as compared $5.9 billion last year while the import of Services declined by 24.3 per cent and was recorded at $ 8.3 billion compared to $ 10.9 billion last year. Quoting Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), it said the textile sector exports decreased by 6.0 per cent in value over the last year while Basmati rice registered a growth of 35  per cent (quantity) and 24.6  per cent (value). Other varieties of rice decreased by 5.3 per cent (quantity) and 3.5 per cent (value). 

ANF seizes 484kg drugs, arrests 07, impounds 03 vehicles in countrywide operations

 

The Petroleum group import is recorded at $ 10.4 billion (share of 23.4 per cent in total imports) decreased by 27.8 per cent (value), of which import of petroleum crude decreased by 40.4 per cent (value) and 24.5 per cent (quantity). Import of petroleum product increased by 3.7 per cent (quantity) and declined by 24.5 per cent (value). It is pertinent to mention that despite being confronted with multifaceted challenges, Pakistan’s economy witnessed significant improvement in some of its sectors during Fiscal Year 2020. The sectors that showed positive improvements included external account, which had been stabilized with current account deficit reduced by 78 per cent. Likewise, the workers’ remittances surged to a historic high level of $23.1 billion during FY2020 compared to $21.7 billion during FY2019, witnessing a growth of 6.5 per cent and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) increased by 88 per cent and reached $ 2.6 billion during FY2020 as compared to $ 1.4 billion in FY2019.

Only solution govt has is to increase prices of whatever is short: Hassan Murtaza

 

https://nation.com.pk/06-Aug-2020/external-account-position-remains-stable-in-fy2020

 

 

Ford announces new CEO as it eyes bigger electric push

Published August 5, 2020, 10:00 PM

by Agence France-Presse

NEW YORK  (AFP) – Ford announced Tuesday that Jim Hackett would resign as chief executive and be replaced by auto veteran Jim Farley as the car giant pushes further into digital and electric investment.

The move follows a bumpy period for Ford after some manufacturing stumbles and a major corporate restructuring that has yet to boost profitability.    Hackett, 65, will retire and hand over the job to Farley, 58, on October 1, but stay on as a special advisor through March 2021. Farley came to Ford in 2007 after a long tenure at Toyota and currently serves as chief operating officer.

Hackett, who had no auto industry experience prior to Ford, joined in 2017 after a career at furniture company Steelcase and was known for his skills in turning around struggling organizations. He also had a stint in the athletics department at the University of Michigan.

Hackett has unveiled an $11 billion cost-savings programs that has involved closing plants in Europe and Latin America

He has overseen major shifts at the 117-year-old Detroit firm, including phasing out most sedan models in the US market and launching the Mustang Mach-E, an all-electric sport utility vehicle built on one of the auto industry’s most iconic brands.

Both moves drew criticism, with some analysts pointing out that ending sedan-building in the truck-centered US market alienated some customers, and design mavens decrying the Mustang’s makeover into a suburban-oriented mainstay.

The company also botched the 2019 rollout of the Explorer SUV due to manufacturing fumbles that the company blamed on an overly-ambitious plan.

Ford’s share price has fallen during Hackett’s tenure amid doubts over long-term direction as it has lagged rival General Motors.

Chairman Bill Ford credited Hackett with ”taking on the tough issues and slaying the sacred cows.”

Ford, the great-grandson of company founder Henry Ford, said during a briefing with reporters that Hackett’s mission at the outset of his appointment included preparing the company for a successor.

Ford characterized Farley as a true car person, noting he enjoys racing vintage cars as a hobby.

 ‘All in’

Farley said during the briefing that there were no major strategic differences between him and Hackett and that he was ”all in” on the outgoing CEO’s emphasis on refashioning car design around digital capacities.

Bill Ford said the board had talked casually about looking at outside candidates, but that momentum built for Farley as he helped lead the response to the coronavirus pandemic, which involved shutting plants for several weeks and then reopening them.

Analysts said Ford faces challenges ahead.

”Hackett was an unorthodox CEO pick to begin with, as an external candidate with no prior auto industry experience, and his tenure was marred by a deteriorating bottom line,” said CFRA Research analyst Garrett Nelson.

”While Ford’s new vehicle lineup has shown some promise with the Mustang Mach-E and Bronco, we think Farley will have his work cut out to ‘right the ship,’ as Ford remains in the middle of a multi-year restructuring and we don’t see its vehicle sales returning to pre-COVID levels anytime soon.”

Cox Automotive analyst Michelle Krebs recalled an early public appearance by Farley in which he invoked his grandfather’s experience at Ford and talked about how coming to the company was like coming home. Farley again mentioned his grandfather on Tuesday.

The remarks suggest that Farley understood what ”makes vehicle products something more than a commodity,” Krebs said.

”The road ahead for Farley and Ford will be anything but easy as the industry struggles to adopt new technologies, new global regulations and high customer expectations. In times of transformation, leaders that dream big and lead with emotions often rise to the top,” Krebs said. ”And that certainly seems to be the case right now with Jim Farley.”

https://mb.com.ph/2020/08/05/ford-announces-new-ceo-as-it-eyes-bigger-electric-push/

 

Rice subsidies create complacency, says economist

Nicholas Chung

Description: https://s3media.freemalaysiatoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Farm-Sawah-padi-Bernama.jpgMalaysia produces only 70% of rice requirements and Bernas has been granted an extension on its licence to import rice. (Bernama pic)

PETALING JAYA: A national policy of self-sufficiency in rice supply is needed, says an economist, urging that the government look into raising padi harvests with simple high-yield methods already used elsewhere.

The economist, Barjoyai Bardai, said the government should not rely on Padiberas Nasional Bhd (Bernas). Putrajaya’s decision to extend Bernas’ rice import license should only be a temporary solution to ensuring Malaysia’s food security.

“We know Malaysia only produces 70% of the rice it consumes. We still need to import. Our cost of production is relatively high compared to the price to import, so there are some elements of subsidy.

“In the longer term, we should think of taking back Bernas from a private entity to government control so that Bernas can really function with the ultimate objective of Malaysia being self-sufficient in rice,” he told FMT.

Barjoyai said the agriculture and food industry ministry should gear the industry towards getting rid of subsidies.

Other countries such as Indonesia had made use of simple technologies and innovations that helped increase paid harvests almost three times more than what Malaysia produces.

Indonesia’s planting method could generate 15 tonnes of padi per hectare, compared to 5 tonnes in Malaysia. “The Kelantan state government actually experimented with it on 30 acres of land in Kota Bharu, and it produced a yield of about 12 tonnes. I don’t know why they weren’t willing to embark on this,” he said.

“I think it’s because everyone has grown complacent with the existing system, where farmers get subsidies. And we don’t want to lose that subsidy.”

Tey Yeong Sheng, of Universiti Putra Malaysia’s Institute of Agricultural and Food Policy Studies, said extending Bernas’ monopoly on rice imports would see no change in the industry’s existing structure.

The renewed concession means that Malaysia was allowing “what did not work and what has not worked well” to expand, he told FMT.

He said Malaysia missed out on decades worth of opportunities to develop the industry, which was still troubled by “below-cost” ceiling prices and stagnant productivity.

He said Bernas should create a more competitive market, allowing other entreprenuers to grow.

However, imports of cheaper rice was not an alternative. Farmers would be hurt, although consumers would benefit.

On Tuesday, Agriculture and Food Industry Minister Ronald Kiandee said Bernas will be allowed to remain the sole gatekeeper in managing the country’s rice supply.

He told the Dewan Rakyat that this was to ensure food security in the country with the pandemic affecting the global food chain.

https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2020/08/06/rice-subsidies-create-complacency-says-economist/

 

Rice strategy awaiting rejig

PUBLISHED : 6 AUG 2020 AT 07:23

NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS

WRITER: PHUSADEE ARUNMAS

Description: Thai jasmine rice varieties on display at the Thai Hom Mali Rice Awards organised by the Commerce Ministry and the Internal Trade Department. Varuth HirunyathebThai jasmine rice varieties on display at the Thai Hom Mali Rice Awards organised by the Commerce Ministry and the Internal Trade Department. Varuth Hirunyatheb

Commerce Minister Jurin Laksanawisit pledges to speed up adjustment of the Thai rice strategy as quickly as possible as the industry faces a slew of challenges including a strong baht and rising production costs.

Mr Jurin said after presiding over a Thai hom mali fragrant rice fair on Wednesday that rice exports have fared poorly since the beginning of last year because of foreign exchange swings and the ascendant baht, making Thai rice more expensive than competing grains.

"The ministry is pursuing a rice strategy to improve competitiveness, covering all systems including marketing, cultivation and R&D of new rice varieties," Mr Jurin said. "We are also working to find ways to reduce production costs for farmers, to make Thai rice more affordable."

He said the ministry is promoting seven rice products and seed development as part of a marketing-led production strategy for 2020-24 recently announced by the ministry.

The four-year strategic plan will focus on Thai hom mali rice, Thai fragrant rice, soft-textured white rice, hard-textured white rice, parboiled rice, glutinous rice and specialty rice.

The rice market will also be divided into three categories: Thai hom mali and fragrant rice for the premium market; soft-textured white rice, hard-textured white rice and parboiled rice for the mass market; and glutinous rice and specialty-quality rice for the specialty market.

Mr Jurin said the Commerce Ministry will work closely with the Thai Rice Exporters Association to seek new trade partners to expand the export market, as Thai rice remains in strong demand globally given its quality.

He confirmed that the strong baht and the coronavirus pandemic are the main obstacles for rice exports this year.

Mr Jurin has already ordered commercial ambassadors in various countries to accelerate seeking new markets and promote Thai rice to reach more consumers in overseas markets.

Charoen Laothammatas, president of the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said rice export prospects look gloomy due to the stronger baht and higher prices.

The free-on-board (FOB) price of Thai white rice 5% is now quoted at US$460 a tonne, while Indian white rice stands at $370 a tonne, leading importers to buy more Indian rice, Mr Charoen said.

He urged the government to speed up finding ways to reduce logistics costs, including transport costs.

The association recently lowered its rice export forecast for 2020 to 6.5 million tonnes, the lowest in 20 years, from an earlier forecast of 7.5 million, citing a host of headwinds, including the virus crisis that weakened global demand, a strong baht making Thai rice more expensive and continued drought cutting into production.

https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/1963447/rice-strategy-awaiting-rejig

‘Madhya Pradesh should not get GI tag for basmati rice’, Punjab CM writes to Prime Minister

 

SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

CHANDIGARH, AUGUST 05, 2020 22:28 IST

UPDATED: AUGUST 05, 2020 22:29 IST

Description: https://th.thgim.com/news/national/other-states/asmi50/article32279434.ece/alternates/FREE_660/6TH-RICE

The Chief Minister Amarinder Singh, in his letter, has said GI tagging of Madhya Pradesh basmati would negatively impact the State’s agriculture and India’s basmati exports.

Amid Madhya Pradesh government’s push for the Geographical Indication (GI) tag for basmati rice, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking his personal intervention against allowing this in the larger interest of Punjab and other States which are already basmati GI tagged.

Apart from Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Delhi, Western Uttar Pradesh and select districts of Jammu and Kashmir have GI tagging for basmati.

The Chief Minister said India exported basmati to the tune of 33,000 crore every year.

Any dilution in registration may give advantage to Pakistan (which also produces basmati as per GI tagging) in the international market in terms of basmati characteristics, quality parameters.

Also read: Madras High Court dismisses Madhya Pradesh’s plea on GI tag for basmati rice

The Chief Minister, in his letter, has said GI tagging of Madhya Pradesh basmati would negatively impact the State’s agriculture and India’s basmati exports. Madhya Pradesh has sought inclusion of its 13 districts for GI tagging for basmati.

Urging Mr. Modi to direct the authorities not to disturb the status quo in this matter, the Chief Minister said this was essential for safeguarding the interests of farmers and basmati exporters of India.

Place of origin

“As per the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999 a geographical indication tag can be issued for agricultural goods that are originating in the territory of a country, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristics of such goods is essentially attributable to its geographical origin. GI tag for basmati has been given on the basis of the traditionally grown areas of basmati due to special aroma, quality and taste of the grain, which is indigenous to the region below the foothills of Himalayas in the Indo-Gangetic Plains and basmati of this area has distinct recognition across the world,” the Chief Minister has pointed out.

Also read: Indian basmati rice all set to get GI tag

Capt. Singh said Madhya Pradesh did not fall under the specialised zone for basmati cultivation. “It was for this reason that the State was not included in the indigenous area of basmati cultivation in India.” Madhya Pradesh’s move is a direct violation of the GI tagging procedure and laws. Any attempt to breach the GI tagging areas will not only hit the status of aromatic basmati cultivation in India’s specialised areas but will also negate the purpose of GI tagging regulation in the Indian context.

Demand rejected

The Chief Minister said Madhya Pradesh had earlier attempted to get the GI tag for basmati cultivation in 2017-18. However, Registrar of Geographical Indications (RGI), constituted under the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registrations and Protection) Act 1999, rejected the demand after investigating the matter. The Intellectual Property Appellate Board, Government of India, had also discarded the State’s claim. Later, Madhya Pradesh challenged these decisions in Madras High Court, but did not get any relief.

“The Central government had also constituted a committee of eminent agricultural scientists, which, after thorough deliberations, rejected the State’s claim,” said Captain Singh.

A letter from the Editor


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We have been keeping you up-to-date with information on the developments in India and the world that have a bearing on our health and wellbeing, our lives and livelihoods, during these difficult times. To enable wide dissemination of news that is in public interest, we have increased the number of articles that can be read free, and extended free trial periods. However, we have a request for those who can afford to subscribe: please do. As we fight disinformation and misinformation, and keep apace with the happenings, we need to commit greater resources to news gathering operations. We promise to deliver quality journalism that stays away from vested interest and political propaganda.

 

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/madhya-pradesh-should-not-get-gi-tag-for-basmati-rice-punjab-cm-writes-to-prime-minister/article32279435.ece

 

 

In effort to block Philippines’ GMO Golden Rice, activists falsely link nutrition-enhanced staple to COVID

 

Cameron English | August 6, 2020

Description: stop golden rice

This article or excerpt is included in the GLP’s daily curated selection of ideologically diverse news, opinion and analysis of biotechnology innovation.

Anti-biotech groups in the Philippines are trying to link the COVID-19 pandemic to Golden Rice as part of a week-long effort to derail  commercialization of nutritionally enhanced staple food. Critics, led by Stop Golden Rice Network (SGRN), say the approval is part of an onslaught to advance “corporate control in food and agriculture.” According to Cris Panerio, national coordinator of farmer-scientist group MASIPAG:

The pandemic exposed what we feared a long time ago – that our food system has become so flawed and weak, it will inevitably fail to sustain our needs. … There are enough reasons to safely conclude that multinational corporations are exploiting the dire situation of our food system during COVID-19 as a pretext for further greedy gains.

Description: unnamed file

The new campaign is a desperate attempt to derail the roll-out of Golden Rice, which is expected later this year. Food safety regulators in the Philippines finally approved the crop for human consumption on December 18 of last year after two decades of deliberations, protests and missteps by scientists. According to the International Rice Research Institute:

After rigorous biosafety assessment, Golden Rice ‘has been found to be as safe as conventional rice’ by the Philippine Department of Agriculture-Bureau of Plant Industry. The biosafety permit, addressed to the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) and International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), details the approval of GR2E Golden Rice for direct use as food and feed, or for processing (FFP).

Last December, after the approval, Greenpeace claimed that Golden Rice violated the ‘precautionary principle,’ which stresses the hypothetical risks and minimizes the demonstrated benefits of consuming the crop. Moreover, there is no evidence to support the allegation that Golden Rice—approved well before the international spread of COVID-19—is being advanced as a way to exploit the current crisis.

Rice that saves lives

Golden Rice contains high levels of beta carotene, a precursor to vitamin A, and was developed to combat severe nutrient deficiencies that can lead to blindness, anemia and weakened immune function that boosts the severity of infectious diseases—jeopardizing the health of Description: unnamedmillions of impoverished people. As the GLP reported last November:

[R]oughly 250 million people, mostly preschool children in southeast Asia, are vitamin A deficient. Between 2
50,000 and 500,000 of them go blind every year—and half die within 12 months of losing their sight. Genetically engineered Golden Rice …. could alleviate much of this suffering without otherwise harming human health or the environment, according to a mountain of studies.

SGRN and its allies nonetheless oppose the introduction of Golden Rice, labeling it a “Trojan horse” that will allow biotech giants like Bayer to expand their footprint in the developing world. The three scientists who developed Golden Rice—Adrian DubockIngo Potrykus, and Peter Beyerargued in a recent GLP article that such opposition is a last, desperate attempt to salvage the anti-GMO movement, which has receded as one country after another has embraced transgenics to reduce agricultural chemical use, increase yield and, in the case of Golden Rice and a few other crops, enhance nutrition:

Golden Rice is created to deliver a consumer benefit, it is not for profit—for multinational agribusiness or anyone else; the technology originated in the public sector and is being delivered through the public sector. It is entirely altruistic in its motivations; which activists find impossible to accept. So, the activists believe suspicion against Golden Rice has to be amplified, Golden Rice has to be stopped: “If we lose the Golden Rice battle, we lose the GMO war.”

Although Bayer and Syngenta helped develop the enhanced rice variety, they don’t stand to profit once the crop is approved, as science writer Matt Ridley pointed out in January:

Potrykus and Beyer insisted that the technology be donated free to benefit children suffering from vitamin A deficiency and Syngenta gave up its right to commercialize the product even in rich countries. Given the scale of human suffering Golden Rice could address, there may be no better example of a purely philanthropic project in the whole of human history.

Description: a aca a b c eA crowd breaking through a fence to destroy an experimental field of genetically modified golden rice in the Philippines. Credit: Philippine Department of Agriculture Regional Field Unit 5

Claims of corporate subterfuge are further undermined by the fact that the Philippines has grown insect-resistant GMO Bt corn for 17 years—which means biotech companies are clearly not using Golden Rice to sneak GMOs into the country. Moreover, high-profile legislators not only supported the release of Golden Rice, they have endorsed simplified regulations that will enable the use of new breeding techniques including CRISPR gene editing. For these reasons the USDA has called the Philippines a “regional biotechnology leader.”

Related article:  GMO blight-resistant potato expected to help over 300,000 farmers in Uganda cut pesticide use, boost yields

 

In an email to GLP, Ed Regis, author of Golden Rice: The Imperiled Birth of a GMO Superfood, summed up the situation this way:

This latest campaign against Golden Rice is yet one more installment in the long-running soap opera that pits corporate villains against helpless farmers, and now also illogically throws the Covid-19 crisis into the mix.

But neither this lurid stagecraft nor the apocalyptic rhetoric of the protesters has anything to do with Golden Rice, which is governed by the Golden Rice Humanitarian Board, not a corporation, and which will be given away free to small landowner farmers who may plant it or not as a matter of their own individual choice. Nobody is holding a gun to their heads and nobody’s rights are being infringed by the planting or use of Golden Rice.

Cameron J. English is the GLP’s managing editor. BIO. Follow him on Twitter @camjenglish

The GLP featured this article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion and analysis. The viewpoint is the author’s own. The GLP’s goal is to stimulate constructive discourse on challenging science issues.

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https://geneticliteracyproject.org/2020/08/06/in-effort-to-block-philippines-gmo-golden-rice-activists-falsely-link-nutrition-enhanced-staple-to-covid/

 

Jollibee suffers P12-B H1 loss in, sees better H2

Published August 5, 2020, 10:00 PM

by James A. Loyola

Jollibee Foods Corporation (JFC) reported an attributable net loss of P11.96 billion in the first half of 2020—a 578 percent fall from the net income of P2.5 billion in the same period last year.

 In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, the firm said attributable net loss in the second quarter of 2020 amounted to P10.17 billion, 1077 percent lower than the profit of P1.04 billion in the same period of 2019.

The attributable net loss for the second quarter of 2020 included the cost for Business Transformation of P7.0 billion. Excluding this cost for Business Transformation, the net loss would have been P3.2 billion.

The losses also included significant costs incurred in response to the crisis such as emergency response fund for employees and workers, assistance to front liners, health workers and low income households, partly offset by economic stimulus packages received from the Singapore and China governments.

 “The business results were very bad but in line with our forecasts. We are now focusing on rebuilding our business moving forward along with implementing major cost improvement under our Business

Transformation program,” said JFC Chief Executive Officer Ernesto Tanmantiong.

He added that, “We expect sales and profit to improve over the next few months. Our business building effort includes introducing exciting new products, launching new marketing campaigns, opening cloud kitchens, introducing improvement in our delivery systems and opening new stores at selected locations particularly in North America, Vietnam, Malaysia and China.”

Tanmantiong said “We plan to open a total of 338 stores worldwide in 2020. We expect sales and profit to increase significantly in 2021 to a point closer to the levels of 2019 and to grow at least at historical growth rate of 15% annually by 2022.”

System wide sales, a measure of all sales to consumers, both from company-owned and franchised stores, declined 24.5 percent to P85.83 billion in the first half of 2020 from P113.71 billion in the same period last year.

For the second quarter, system wide sales dropped 48.4 percent to P30.68 billion compared to P59.43 billion in the same quarter last year with same store sales decline of 41 percent as the business felt the full impact of government restrictions intended to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the beginning of the second quarter, 50 percent of JFC Group’s stores worldwide were temporarily closed. By the end of the quarter, 88 percent of all stores were already open.

However, most of the stores that were open relied heavily on delivery and take-out businesses while practically all dine-in operations were either still closed or had low level of sales volume.

Revenues decreased by 46.6 percent to P23.3 billion for the quarter versus year ago and was down by 25.3 percent to P62.76 billion in the first half of 2020.

As JFC’s stores resumed operations all over the world, the speed of recovery in same store sales varied across different countries and territories.

In April, global same store sales declined by 47 percent with the Philippine business declining by 57

percent, China down by 37 percent, North America  lower by 25 percent and Europe, Middle East and Asia (EMEAA)  down by 45 percent.

In June, global same store sales improved compared to April’s to negative 39 perent with the Philippine business lower by 48 percent, China by 25 percent, North America by 9 percent and EMEAA by 22 percent.

JFC estimates that financial performance will get progressively better in the next two quarters of the year as stores will have been being reopened and sales will have been gradually building up. Total EBITDA is forecasted to be positive by the fourth quarter of 2020 with the Philippines, China, Vietnam, Europe/Middle East and Other Parts of Asia forecasted to generate net operating income by that time. This assumes that government restrictions related to the control of the pandemic will not be re-imposed.(

https://mb.com.ph/2020/08/05/jollibee-suffers-p12-b-h1-loss-in-sees-better-h2/

Rice Tariffication Law: Good or bad?

Description: DR. FERMIN ADRIANO

By DR. FERMIN ADRIANO

August 6, 2020

“It is the height of foolishness to do things over and over again and expect a different result.” – Albert Einstein

After the country’s membership to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1994, the most significant change in our agricultural policy landscape is the passage of Republic Act 11203, or the “Rice Tariffication Law” (RTL), in February 2019. The RTL removed the quantitative restriction (QR) or import ban on rice, and in the process, lifted the sole authority of the National Food Authority (NFA) to import rice. It allowed private traders to import rice provided that they pay the corresponding tariffs (taxes) for the imported stocks.

The passage of RTL took more than 25 years. Upon our accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO), the Philippines applied for the exemption of rice from trade liberalization (as provided for by the WTO Agreement on Agriculture) for ten years, arguing that our rice farmers could not compete with cheap imported rice. We claimed then that the 10-year grace period was needed to allow the government to provide the necessary assistance to our rice farmers to raise their productivity and make them competitive vis-à-vis their foreign counterparts. After the expiration of the 10-year grace period, the Philippines requested for a 10-year extension, this time noting that it was in a better position to help rice farmers realize the goal of raising their productivity. By then, the “Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act” (AFMA) of 1997, creating the Agricultural Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (ACEF), was in place to provide both the structure and funds to attain its productivity-enhancing goal for the rice sector.

The second extension expired in 2014. Sadly, successive political administrations in the past failed to do their homework properly of increasing the productivity of our rice farmers. As a result, we just maintained the QR policy for another five years, arguing that it was necessary for our food security.

‘Lazy man’s’ policy

However, when we experienced a rice shortage in 2018 because of a miscalculation by NFA on the entry of our rice imports, resulting in a significant rise in our inflation (rice price is a key factor in computing inflation rate) to more than 6 percent in the third quarter of 2018, our economic managers were alarmed. They resurrected the arguments long made by reputable economists and agricultural economists from the University of the Philippines Los Baños, UP School of Economics, and Ateneo’s Department of Economics that rice tariffication was needed to replace the policy of maintaining QRs. Economists viewed QR as a “lazy man’s” policy because there was no urgency in implementing productivity-enhancing measures for as long as the import ban was maintained.

Studies after studies conducted by the UP and Ateneo scholars have identified a number of benefits a shift to rice tariffication will bring. One, it will save the government an enormous amount of money because NFA operated at a loss, “buying high” (i.e., palay or unmilled rice from farmers) and “selling low” (i.e., rice to consumers), which was a sure formula for financial bankruptcy. At that time, it was calculated NFA had already incurred an accumulated debt of around P170 billion. Second, it will prevent many rent-seeking activities emanating from G2G (government-to-government) transactions. It is an open secret among those who know the rice trading business that a commission for every kilo of rice imported is given by the wholesaler to the seller, and that there are contracts that could be cornered along the logistics of rice imports (e.g., shipping, cargo handling, trucking, barging, bagging, among others). Also, it is well-known that some farmers’ groups actually front for private traders to gain access to the minimum access volume (MAV) of rice, which comes at a lower tariff.

Third, it will force the government to finally do its job of improving rice farmers’ productivity. This is the reason behind the creation of the Rice Competitive Enhancement Fund (RCEF), a yearly P10-billion fund, that will come from the proceeds of tariffs imposed on rice imports by private traders. Fourth, the more than 100 million rice consuming Filipinos will undeniably benefit from lower priced and quality rice. Lastly,, it will lower the inflation rate because seasonal rice shortages will be prevented and will tame rice price increases during the lean palay harvest season. After the passage of the RTL, inflation dropped from its peak of 6 percent in the third quarter of 2018 to its lowest of less than 2 percent in the same quarter of 2019.

On the negative side, RTL resulted in the expected drop in palay prices, which went down to lower than P13 per kilo for wet palay during the latter part of 2019. It was during this period when detractors of the law launched a cacophony of organized and calibrated vicious attacks on our economic managers and implementors of RTL. They wanted to reverse RTL, return to the QR regime, hence continue with the old order that existed for more than three decades despite its massive failure in uplifting the plight of our rice farmers and the burden of high rice prices it imposed on our rice consumers.

Less than a year and a half after RTL’s passage, rice prices have remained stable despite the lean palay harvest season. More importantly, local supply has remained steady amid the coronavirus pandemic. In fact, the ending rice stock of 2.675 million MT in 2019, due to the liberalization of rice trading, is the main reason rice prices and supply are stable. As for palay prices, the Phiippine Statistics Authority reported that dry palay was selling above P19 per kilo during the last week of May. In other words, the drop in the palay prices experienced during the second half of 2019 was a temporary phenomenon.

If the entry of rice imports can be scheduled better during the coming peak harvest season (late September to early December), a significant drop in palay prices can be prevented.

And with multiple assistance extended by the Department of Agriculture (DA) to rice farmers through RCEF programs and the Rice Resiliency Program, expect a surge in rice supply due to increased farm productivity. These are positive indications that RTL is working.

Proving detractors wrong

No wonder then that RTL detractors are now shifting the focus of their criticisms on: alleged non-collection of ACEF funds, or their release by Department of Budget and Management (proven wrong); lower RCEF tariff proceeds because of misdeclaration of imported rice (animal feed vs regular milled vs well milled), which is the main function of Bureau of Customs and not DA; and the slow and improper delivery of assistance to the palay farmers under RCEF. Expectedly, these detractors end up resorting to their usual pamphleteering technique of attributing all these problems to the RTL when the connection is ostensibly tenuous.

In the academic world wherein I grew my roots, we believe that “one’s criticism is only as good as one’s alternative.” Playing the nihilist role in the struggle for supremacy is the easiest job to perform as all one needs to do is give in to one’s anarchic tendency of destroying what others have painstakingly built. But for one to build a new and better order is the most challenging aspect of governance. As former Cuban revolutionary leader Fidel Castro once remarked: “It is much easier to topple a government than to build one.”

The alternative is to persist in doing things over and over and wait for a different result.

This seems to be what the RTL detractors want as they offer no better alternative than to revert back to the old ways. Albert Einstein, the genius of our times, already adjudged them foolish. I think that is the kindest description that one can give them.

www.manilatimes.net/2020/08/06/business/agribusiness/rice-tariffication-law-good-or-bad/751260/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=pk

 

Ana Caicedo Receives an Alexander von Humboldt Research Award

 

August 5, 2020

Description: Ana CaicedoAna Caicedo

Evolutionary biologist Ana Caicedo, associate professor of biology, has received an Alexander von Humboldt Research Award to support her collaboration with Detlef Weigel, head of the molecular biology department and executive director of the Max Plank Institute for Developmental Biology in Tübingen, Germany. Caicedo spent the recent spring semester there as a guest researcher while on sabbatical.

She studies how plants adapt to new environments such as those created by agriculture. Her research focuses on the domestication of crops – a recent study traced the evolution of tomatoes – and the evolution of agricultural weeds, such as weedy rice.

She says of the honor, “I’m delighted at being given this opportunity to work with collaborators in Germany. This award is particularly meaningful to me, given that many of Humboldt’s insights came from his explorations of South America, which is where I grew up.”

She adds, “The Humboldt will make it possible for me to collaborate with Detlef on trying to understand the evolution of agricultural weeds. In particular, we plan to focus on species from the genus Echinochloa– often called barnyard grass – which are among the worst weeds in the world and have evolved resistance to multiple herbicides.”

These weeds have worldwide distribution and invade rice fields primarily, she adds, but also wheat and other crops in countries where rice isn’t grown. “There is some taxonomic confusion among weeds in this group, and there are also some cultivated species whose relationships to the weeds aren’t known. I’m interested in determining the relationship among barnyard grass infestations around the world and why they are such successful weeds.”

The Humboldt Research Award honors scientists and researchers who have distinguished themselves through their fundamental findings over their scientific career and from whom further important achievements can be expected in the future. The foundation awards 100 such research awards per year. Award winners may be invited to spend up to one year cooperating on a long-term research project with specialist colleagues at a research institution in Germany. The award is valued at €60,000.

https://www.umass.edu/newsoffice/article/ana-caicedo-receives-alexander-von

 

Rice Contributes to Prolonged Low-Level Arsenic Exposure Leading to Increased Global

Premature Deaths, Study

Aug 05, 2020 10:25 PM EDT

Rice is the most important food crop, and a large part of the world's population consumes rice as their main food source. According to Ricepedia, nine out of ten people who eat rice are Asian, but lately, it is slowly growing popular in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean.

However, a recent study has confirmed that the increased global premature deaths every year can be linked to prolonged low-level exposure to arsenic in rice-based diets.

 (Photo : Pixabay)
Rice Contributes to Prolonged Low-Level Arsenic Exposure Leading to Increased Global Premature Deaths, Study

 

Arsenic Exposure in Rice-Based Diets

Arsenic is a well-known acute poison and a natural component present in the air, water, and land. People get exposed to arsenic by drinking contaminated water or using contaminated water to prepare food, and irrigation of food crops, industrial processes, eating food contaminated by arsenic and smoking tobacco.

People could get long-term exposure to arsenic when they drink water consume food with low-levels of arsenic. According to the World Health Organization, people could get cancers, skin lesions, and cardiovascular diseases if exposed in long-term to arsenic.

Of all food crops, rice tends to concentrate more inorganic arsenic. With over three billion people who consume rice as a major part of their diet, scientists estimate that it could give rise to over 50,000 avoidable premature deaths per year.

The study was conducted by researchers from the University of Machester and the University of Salford. They explored the relationship between rice consumption and cardiovascular diseases caused by arsenic exposure in England and Wales.

The researchers published their findings in the journal Science of the Total Environment, which showed a significant association between elevated cardiovascular mortality and the consumption of inorganic arsenic in rice.

The researchers ensured that other factors, such as obesity, smoking, age, lack of income, and education, are ruled out before making their conclusion.

One of the researchers, Professor David Polya from the University of Manchester said their study suggests that the highest 25% of people who consume rice in England and Wales may have a higher risk of dying due to cardiovascular disease from inorganic arsenic exposure compared to the lowest 25% of rice consumers.

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

Read Next: 

Is Rice Not Advisable to Eat? 

The researchers suggest that a more robust study should be conducted to confirm their findings. According to them, eating rice has many beneficial effects on human health due to their high fiber content.

Rather than avoid eating rice, the team suggests that people could consume a variety of rice, like basmati, and different types like polished rice, which are known to have lower inorganic arsenic contents compared to whole grain rice.

Lastly, people could also practice other positive behaviors, like eating a balanced variety of staples and not just rice.

https://www.sciencetimes.com/articles/26758/20200805/rice-contributes-prolonged-low-level-arsenic-exposure-leading-increased-global.htm

 

 

Uttarakhand: 600 Crore Rupees Rice Scam Caught In Special Audit

Uttarakhand: Big sport performed within the identify of rice, stunning issues revealed in 600 crore rip-off

BY ABIGALE LORMEN ON AUGUST 5, 2020

Description: घोटाला

, , Dehradun
Updated Wed, 05 Aug 2020 04:37 PM IST

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summary

·         State’s greatest rice rip-off surfaced in particular audit

Detailed

In Uttarakhand, the scandal of practically 600 crores of rice scams has been confirmed at each stage by the particular investigation report of the audit. Secretary Finance Amit Singh Negi has despatched this investigation report for 2015-16 and 2016-17 to Principal Secretary Food. It is obvious from the report that there was disturbance at each stage from paddy procurement to milling, packing, transporting to godowns. Even the state pool that provided rice to the PDS was not spared.

The rice rip-off within the state was revealed in 2017. It was additionally investigated by the SIT and estimated a rip-off of round 600 crore rupees. There have been many different instances of hera ferries in poor quota rice. Some officers have been additionally suspended on this.

Now it has additionally emerged within the particular audit that on this rip-off the sport was performed at each degree. Demonetisation was additionally taken benefit of and crores of rupees have been made within the sacks. According to the report, the federal government misplaced practically Rs 18 crore in meals safety. In the reimbursement of sacks, an overpayment of Rs 43 crore was proven. This is when the Special Audit staff didn’t conduct a full investigation resulting from non-cooperation from the events involved.

Main factors of audit report

1. About 250 crore rupees of rice have been bought from the millers with out contract beneath the state funded scheme.
2. The nodal company mandi committees assisted in procuring paddy from exterior as a substitute of mandi. This didn’t give farmers MSP. The mandis neither checked the accounts of the stockholders nor inspected the bought paddy.
3. Rules weren’t adopted within the course of of creating rice from paddy from uncooked broods.
4. In the Kharif season 2015-16 and 2016-17, the State Cooperative Marketing Association collected extra rice within the godowns than the paddy they bought. Rice price Rs 1.18 crore was deferred from the millers and over Rs 30.38 lakh was paid.
5. The facilities of the Department of Food and Civil Supplies issued checks price greater than two lakh rupees, made purchases with out verifying and bought greater than the quantity of weights on the fork.
6. Many disturbances have been additionally discovered within the State Pool godowns.
7. Under the National Food Security, a lack of 18.27 crores was incurred.
8. Artisans and millers confirmed an overpayment of Rs 43.38 crore in reimbursement of recent sacks.
9. In CMR rice dhulan, over 30 lakh rupees have been paid, 40 lakh beneath State Food Scheme.
10. Excess fee of 8.63 lakhs on account of Sukhai Kutai, place on mandi fees and weight can also be not clear. There have been additionally severe flaws in motion invoices and payments.
10. There has been a distinction of about 30 lakh rupees within the buy of uncooked brokers.
11. The state authorities had a transparent order that the acquisition of paddy could be accomplished by way of uncooked brokers within the mandis.

Documents have been additionally not discovered for investigation

The authorities had shaped a separate committee to analyze the funds made to the farmers. Evidence was additionally given to this committee by 304 out of 350 in 2015-16 and 361 out of 400 in 2016-17. It was stated to purchase paddy price Rs 1781 crore. Paddy buy of about Rs 217 crore was not confirmed resulting from lack of proof.

There was lots of profit in demonetisation additionally
The report additionally revealed that money funds of about Rs 408.45 crore have been made after demonetisation. Out of this, proof of Rs 217 crore was not discovered. 65 p.c of the entire fee was made by way of the financial institution, 12 p.c in money funds throughout demonetisation and the remaining 23 p.c in money, besides demonetisation.

learn forward

Main factors of audit report

About Post Author

Description: https://ourbitcoinnews.sfo2.digitaloceanspaces.com/2019/07/Abigail-150x150.jpeg

Abigale Lormen

Abigale is a Masters in Business Administration by education. After completing her post-graduation, Abigale jumped the journalism bandwagon as a freelance journalist. Soon after that she landed a job of reporter and has been climbing the news industry ladder ever since to reach the post of editor at Our Bitcoin News.

https://ourbitcoinnews.com/uttarakhand-600-crore-rupees-rice-scam-caught-in-special-audit-uttarakhand-big-game-played-in-the-name-of-rice-shocking-things-revealed-in-600-crore-scam/

India: Monsoon Update - July 2020

August 4, 2020 

Attaché Reports (GAIN)

Locations 

South and Central AsiaIndia

On July 31, the Indian Meteorological Department issued its Long-Range Forecast for rainfall during the second half (August –September) of the 2020 Southwest Monsoon. The rainfall over the country as a whole during the second half of the season is likely to be 104 percent of the long period average (LPA). Below normal rains in Northwest and Central India in July offset the early start to the monsoon in June. The cumulative rainfall for the Southwest Monsoon 2020 reported by the Indian Meteorological Department, as of July 31, 2020, is in normal range similar to the fifty-year average of 452 millimeters. The kharif crop planting acreage is 14 percent higher than last year, with significant area increases for rice, pulses, and oilseeds.

India: Monsoon Update - July 2020

 

https://www.fas.usda.gov/data/india-monsoon-update-july-2020

 

Myanmar exports over 2.25 mln tons of rice, broken rice in 10 months

 

Source: Xinhua| 2020-08-05 20:15:00|Editor: huaxia

YANGON, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) -- Myanmar exported over 2.25 million tons of rice and broken rice as of July 17 this fiscal year (FY) 2019-2020, according to a release from the Myanmar Rice Federation on Wednesday.

"We are expecting to reach our target of 2.4 million tons of rice export in present fiscal year which will end in two months," U Myint Lwin, deputy chief executive officer of the federation, told Xinhua.

According to the figures released by the federation, the country exported over 1.4 million tons of rice and 839,956 tons of broken rice, earning over 678.29 million U.S. dollars.

This fiscal year's rice and broken rice export surpassed the last fiscal year's figures by 355,874 tons when Myanmar exported over 1.8 million tons of rice and broken rice in the corresponding period of last fiscal year.

In the first 10 months of this fiscal year, 85.12 percent of total rice export is done through sea route while 14.88 percent through border gates.

During the period, 30.20 percent of Myanmar's rice and broken rice are exported to African countries, followed by China with 27 percent and EU member states with 20.45 percent, respectively, the federation's figures said. Enditem

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-08/05/c_139267378.htm#:~:text=English.news.cn-,Myanmar%20exports%20over%202.25%20mln%20tons%20of,broken%20rice%20in%2010%20months&text=YANGON%2C%20Aug.%205%20(Xinhua,Myanmar%20Rice%20Federation%20on%20Wednesday.

 

POSCO International, RDA to support Myanmar rice industry

Posted : 2020-08-05 17:17

Updated : 2020-08-05 17:51

Description: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/upload/reporters_img/Kim_Jae-heun.png?123

6

Description: Posco International CEO Joo Si-bo, left, poses with Rural Development Administration Administrator Kim Kyeong-kyu during an MOU signing ceremony for support of Myanmar's farming market at POSCO Group's Seoul office, Wednesday. / Courtesy of POSCO International.

Posco International CEO Joo Si-bo, left, poses with Rural Development Administration Administrator Kim Kyeong-kyu during an MOU signing ceremony for support of Myanmar's farming market at POSCO Group's Seoul office, Wednesday. / Courtesy of POSCO International.


By Kim Jae-heun

POSCO International said Wedneday it signed a memorandum of understanding with the Rural Development Administration (RDA) in an effort to improve the value chain of Myanmar's rice industry.

RDA Administrator Kim Kyeong-kyu and POSCO International CEO Joo Si-bo met at POSCO Group's office in central Seoul to participate in the signing ceremony.

Through this deal, the two entities plan to establish a public-private cooperative relationship where the RDA will share its skills in rice production technology with Myanmar farms to produce quality raw materials while POSCO International will be in charge of processing and distributing raw local rice.

They also promised to train local farmers on cultivation techniques and post-harvest management. Post-evaluation will also be given to help them improve their rice quality. The two expect this cooperation between public and private firms to set a good example for Myanmarese farmers.

After acquiring a local rice processing plant with an annual capacity of 1.5 million tons in 2017, POSCO International established a new one capable of processing 8.6 million tons annually last year. It operates a rice processing and exporting business there.

Through the recent MOU deal, the company hopes to expand sales and improve profitability in China, Africa and Europe with quality raw materials processed in Myanmar.

The RDA also owns locale-customized rice production management technology through the KOPIA project, through which it has carried out cooperation tasks for rice variety development, improvement of cultivation technology and post-harvest management since 2014.

"Our partnership will serve as a meaningful opportunity to actively practice POSCO Group's corporate citizenship management ideology and enhance the national prestige of Korea by contributing to the increase of income for Myanmar farmers and development of Myanmar's rice industry," Joo said.


 

Arkansas Rice Federation Names New Executive Director 

 

By Josh Hankins

 

LITTLE ROCK, AR -- The Arkansas Rice Federation Board selected Kelly Robbins as the organization's new executive director, effective August 1.

He succeeds Lauren Waldrip, a partner at Campbell Ward, a Little Rock-based public affairs and public relations firm.
Description: C:\Users\abc\Downloads\unnamed.jpg
 
Most recently, Robbins served as executive director for the Arkansas Petroleum Council, and has previously served as executive vice president for three trade groups including the Associated General Contractors of Arkansas, the Arkansas Independent Producers and Royalty
Owners Association, and the Arkansas Forestry Association.

"Kelly has a proven track record in association management that will serve our industry well," said Arkansas Rice Federation Chairman David Gairhan.  "His years of lobbying experience will benefit Arkansas Rice and we look forward to working with him."
 
Robbins will oversee all trade association activities and manage contract work for the federation.
 
"It's an honor to join a well-established team of hardworking producers, millers, and merchants," Robbins said.  "With their ongoing input and guidance, Arkansas Rice will continue its successful efforts representing our important community to the public, consumers, and officials at all levels."

The Arkansas Rice Federation represents all aspects of the rice industry including the Arkansas Rice Council, Arkansas Rice Farmers, Arkansas Rice Merchants, and Arkansas Rice Millers.

 

 

 

Fred Miller

Eshan Shakiba discusses hybrid rice breeding efforts at the Rice Research and Extension Center during a rice field day. The Division of Agriculture hybrid rice breeder will be one of the presenters during an online rice field day Aug. 20.

USA Rice Daily

 

Rice leads off series of online research field days for Arkansas commodities

Online rice field day set for Aug. 20 at 6 p.m., with corn, soybean, and cotton field days to follow at 2-week intervals.

Fred Miller | Aug 03, 2020

Rice will lead off a series of online commodity-based field days designed to give Arkansans a first look at the latest University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture research and extension from the safety of their homes.

The rice field day will be held at 6 p.m. on Aug. 20, and will be followed at two-week intervals by corn on Sept. 3, soybeans on Sept. 17 and cotton on Oct. 1.

Social distancing protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic led the Division of Agriculture to take its annual agricultural field days online, said Nathan Slaton, associate vice president for agriculture and assistant director of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station.

“Field days are an important activity for the Division of Agriculture,” Slaton said. “They provide our farmers and other Arkansans an opportunity to hear directly from our scientists about research and extension programs that are important to them. Visitors also have an opportunity to ask questions and speak to us about the agricultural challenges they face and how we can assist them.

“In keeping with physical distancing precautions during the COVID-19 pandemic, we are moving our field days online to maintain that face-to-face interaction without the risk of spreading the virus,” Slaton said.

The rice field day will cover new varieties, the latest research in hybrid varieties, soil fertility, weed management, and disease and pest control. The event will open at 6 p.m. with a welcome from Bob Scott, former director of the Rice Research and Extension Center and new Division of Agriculture senior associate vice president and director of the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service.

Roger Pohlner, chairman of the Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board will give an update on the board’s activities.

Online presentations by Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station researchers and Extension Service specialists will include:

·         Weed Control in Rice — Jason Norsworthy, professor of weed science

·         Hybrid Rice Breeding — Ehsan Shakiba, assistant professor of hybrid rice breeding

·         Managing Potassium in Rice — Trent Roberts, associate professor and extension soil fertility specialist

·         Foliar Fungicides / Fungicide Seed Treatments — Yeshi Wamishe, extension rice pathologist

·         New Rice Varieties — Xueyan Sha, professor and rice breeder

A live question-and-answer session following the presentations will give participants an opportunity to interact with scientists and learn more about how the research applies to their crops and operations.

The field days are free, but registration is required to connect. Register for the rice field day here: https://bit.ly/ArkRiceOnline

For more information about the online field days and to register for the later commodity events, visit the 2020 virtual field day website: https://aaes.uark.edu/field-days. A recording of the field day will be available on demand from the website after the live broadcast on Aug. 20.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu. Follow us on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch and Instagram at ArkAgResearch.

To learn about Extension Programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.edu. Follow us on Twitter at @UAEX_edu.

Source: U of A System Division of Agriculture, which is solely responsible for the information provided, and wholly owns the information. Informa Business Media and all its subsidiaries are not responsible for any of the content contained in this information asset.

https://www.farmprogress.com/rice/rice-leads-series-online-research-field-days-arkansas-commodities

 

Consumption of inorganic arsenic bearing rice associated with elevated cardiovascular mortality

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.

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 David Polya, The University of Manchester

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 modeled 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.

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200804/Consumption-of-inorganic-arsenic-bearing-rice-associated-with-elevated-cardiovascular-mortality.aspx

 

 

Punjab CM urges PM not to allow GI tagging of MP basmati

CanIndia New Wire Service22

Chandigarh, Aug 5 (IANS) Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, seeking his personal intervention to not allow Geographical Indication (GI) tagging of 13 basmati producing districts of Madhya Pradesh in the larger interest of the other basmati producing state’s, including Punjab.

Apart from Punjab, other states which already have GI tagging for basmati are Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Delhi, Western Uttar Pradesh and select districts of Jammu and Kashmir.

Noting that the All India Rice Exporters Association is also opposed to consider any claim of Madhya Pradesh for GI tagging for basmati, raising concerns about its serious negative impact on India’s export potential, the Chief Minister noted that India exports basmati to the tune of Rs 33,000 crore every year, but any dilution in registration of Indian basmati may give advantage to Pakistan, which also produces basmati as per GI tagging, in the international market in terms of basmati characteristics and quality parameters.

In his letter to the Prime Minister, the Chief Minister has drawn his attention to the economically and socially important issue of geographical tagging, saying that GI tagging of Madhya Pradesh basmati would negatively impact the state’s agriculture and also India’s basmati exports.

Madhya Pradesh has sought the inclusion of 13 of its districts for GI tagging for basmati.

Urging Modi to direct the authorities not to disturb the status quo in this matter, the Chief Minister said that this was essential for safeguarding the interests of the farmers and the basmati exporters of India.

As per the geographical indications of the Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999, a “geographical indication tag can be issued for agricultural goods that are originating in the territory of a country, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristics of such goods is essentially attributable to its geographical origin”.

“GI tag for basmati is given to the traditionally growing areas of basmati due to their special aroma and quality and taste of the grain, which is indigenous to the region below the foothills of Himalayas in the Indo-Gangetic plains, and basmati of this area has distinct recognition across the world,” the Chief Minister pointed out.

–IANS

https://www.canindia.com/punjab-cm-urges-pm-not-to-allow-gi-tagging-of-mp-basmati/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pies, rice and dog food urgently recalled over salmonella and nut allergy fears

Some products may contain small pieces of sharp glass or ingredients not mentioned on the label such as nuts

Sophie Law

·         16:17, 4 AUG 2020

·         UPDATED16:25, 4 AUG 2020Bottom of Form

Description: https://i2-prod.dailyrecord.co.uk/incoming/article22468303.ece/ALTERNATES/s615/1_Shopping-Basket.jpgProducts may have even been exposed to harmful salmonella (Image: Getty Images)

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Food products that could be dangerous to eat are being urgently recalled by major supermarkets across the country.

Food Standards Scotland shared the alerts over items including beef pies, hot sauce, rice, scallops and dog food.

Some items may contain small pieces of sharp glass or ingredients not mentioned on the label such as nuts.

Other products may have even been exposed to harmful salmonella.

Customers are being advised not to eat any of the listed items and to return them immediately in exchange for a full refund. 

Here are all the latest product recalls and the actions you should take if you have purchased them:

Uncle Ben’s Brown Basmati rice

·          

Mars Food UK is recalling Uncle Ben’s Brown Basmati ready to heat rice pouches as some packs may contain pieces of glass.

The possible presence of glass makes this product dangerous to eat.

Pack size: 250g

Best before dates: 17 November 2020 to 24 May 2021

Highland Bay Seafoods Whole King Scallops

Highland Bay Seafoods is recalling their Baked Whole King Scallops with a creamy leek and kale sauce topped with mash potatoes because it contains fish which is not mentioned on the label.

This means the product is a possible health risk for anyone with an allergy to fish.

Product:  Baked Whole King Scallops with a creamy leek & kale sauce topped with mash potato

Pack size:  200g (2 scallops in a pack)

‘Best before’ end date:  07/2020, 09/2020, 12/2020 and 04/2021

Batch codes / Lot numbers:  R006, R007, R008 and 20106

Benyfit Natural Pet Food

Benyfit Natural Pet Food Ltd has taken the precautionary step of recalling several types of frozen raw dog food products containing beef because the products might contain salmonella.

These products have been sold by various independent pet food stores and online.

Product: Beef Meat Feast, Beef & Tripe, Beef & Ox, Succulent Beef, Raw Natural Working Dog Food Beef Complete,  Premium Beef, Unique Raw Chicken, Beef & Ox.

For more information on expiry dates and batch codes, click here.

S&B Golden Curry Medium Hot Sauce

JFC (UK) Ltd is recalling S&B Golden Curry Medium Hot Sauce Mix because it contains celery and mustard which are not mentioned on the label.

This means the product could pose a risk to those allergic to celery or mustard.

Pack size: 1 kg

‘Best before’ end date: 22 December 2020, 16 March 2021, 07 May 2021, 23 May 2021, 12 June 2021, 10 July 2021

Allergens: Celery, Mustard

https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/lifestyle/rice-pies-dog-food-urgently-22468115

 

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

 

Description: riceCredit: CC0 Public Domain

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 modeled increased risk is around 6% (with a confidence interval for this figure of 2% to 11%). The increased risk modeled might also reflect in part a combination of the susceptibility, behaviors 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 fiber 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 behaviors would be to eat a balanced variety of staples, not just predominantly rice.

https://phys.org/news/2020-08-global-mortality-linked-arsenic-exposure.html

Pokkali rice seedlings travel from Kerala to the Sunderbans

 

K. A. Martin

KOCHI: , AUGUST 05, 2020 21:09 IST

UPDATED: AUGUST 05, 2020 21:09 IST

Description: Khudiram Halder, who has brought pokkali seeds from Kerala, sowing them in his village in Mathurapur Block-2, Sundarbans, West Bengal.

Khudiram Halder, who has brought pokkali seeds from Kerala, sowing them in his village in Mathurapur Block-2, Sundarbans, West Bengal.   | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Saltwater resistant variety may help farmers tide over saltwater incursion caused by cyclone Amphan

Two farmers in South 24 Parganas district in West Bengal are betting on the pokkali variety of rice from Kerala to tide over a crisis-like situation created by severe seawater incursion into paddy fields in vast areas of the Sundarbans after the cyclone Amphan hit West Bengal on May 20.

The pokkali variety of rice is known for its saltwater resistance and flourishes in the rice paddies of coastal Alappuzha, Ernakulam and Thrissur districts. The uniqueness of the rice has brought it the Geographical Indication (GI) tag and is the subject of continuing research.

Ramkumar Mandal and Khudiram Halder, who have brought about 30 cents of land under pokkali sowing on an experimental basis, said from their village in Mathurapur Block-2 that they heard of the saltwater resistant pokkali rice through the Breakthrough Science Society, which has science clubs in the Sundarbans.

Eminent physicist Soumitro Banerjee of the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) in Kolkata, who is a member of the science society, said that pokkali rice had been in the news because of its uniqueness and also because a group of people in Kerala have been trying to revive the cultivation of the rice variety in the State. Dr. Banerjee said that the science society was aware of the problem facing the farmers in the Sundarbans and it was decided that pokkali seeds could be tried out as saltwater incursion had been quite serious in vast areas of the Sundarbans.

Mr. Mandal said that about 80% of the rice paddies in the Sundarbans faced the problem of saltwater incursion and if the pokkali experiment succeeded, it would be a good step to turn around the fortunes of the farmers. He said that the seedlings were doing well so far.

Vytilla-11 variety

Five kilos of Vyttila-11 variety of pokkali seedlings were sent by post by Francis Kalathungal, who is part of the Pokkali Samrakshana Samithi, which has been at the vanguard of a movement to revive pokkali cultivation and prevent it from dying out. He said on Tuesday that the success of the experiment in the Sunderbans will be a big boost to pokkali cultivation even in Kerala.

Vyttila-11 is the latest variety to come out of Kerala Agricultural University’s field station in Vyttila, said Dr. A. K. Sreelatha of the Rice Research Station. She said that Vyttila-11 promises better yield of about 5 tonnes per hectare than the previous varieties, and is crossed with the Jyoti variety of rice popular in Kerala. The crop duration is about 110 days.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/pokkali-rice-seedlings-travel-from-kerala-to-the-sunderbans/article32278833.ece

 

 

FDA announces limit on inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereals

By Dan Flynn on August 6, 2020

The Food and Drug Administration has announced the availability of a final guidance for industry entitled “Inorganic Arsenic in Rice Cereals for Infants: Action Level.”

“This guidance finalizes FDA’s action level for inorganic arsenic in rice cereals for infants of 100 micrograms per kilogram (μg/kg) or 100 parts per billion (ppb) and identifies FDA’s intended sampling and enforcement approach. The basis for the action level is set forth in the revised supporting document,” according to the agency announcement.

 The guidance identifies for industry an action level for inorganic arsenic in rice cereals for infants that is intended to help protect public health and is achievable with the use of current good manufacturing practices. It also describes intended sampling and enforcement approaches. It comes eight years after Consumer Reports (CR) first went public with the problem of the potentially dangerous presence of inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereals.

 CR applauded the FDA for taking the action but did reiterate its concern that limits are still needed on arsenic in other rice-based products and on heavy metals in baby food. And, the Healthy Babies Bright Futures (HBBF) alliance was more blunt, saying the organization’s research shows that FDA’s 100 ppb (parts per billion) “action level” is not a protective, health-based limit for babies.

“We’ve known for years that arsenic is found at troubling levels in infant rice cereals and can pose serious health threats to babies regularly exposed to it,” said Brian Ronholm, CR’s director of food policy.  “The FDA’s action is an important first step, but the agency needs to be far more aggressive in protecting young children from the dangers of arsenic and other heavy metals in food.”

Ronholm is a former deputy undersecretary for food safety at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Under the new guidance issued, the FDA has established the limit of 100 ppb for inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereal—not far from the 90 ppb limit recommended by CR. Infants and children are especially vulnerable to exposure to arsenic. It can cause damage to a baby’s developing brain even at low levels, according to CR.   Arsenic has also been proven to increase the risk of developing bladder, lung, and skin cancers, as well as heart disease and type 2 diabetes.

No federal limit exists for inorganic arsenic in most foods.  Since 2012, Consumer Reports has been calling on the FDA to set limits on arsenic in rice and rice products. Tests conducted by CR that year found varying levels of inorganic arsenic in more than 60 rice and rice products, including worrisome levels in infant cereals.

CR found that some infant rice cereals, which are often a baby’s first solid food, had levels of inorganic arsenic at least five times more than has been found in alternatives such as oatmeal. According to federal data, some infants eat up to two to three servings of rice cereal a day.  Eating rice cereal at that rate, with the highest level of inorganic arsenic CR found in its tests, could result in a risk of cancer twice as high as its experts calculated to be acceptable.

Subsequent tests by Consumer Reports in 2014 found that rice cereal and rice pasta can have much more inorganic arsenic than its previous test showed. CR concluded that one serving of either could put children over the maximum recommended amount they should have in a week.

And CR tests in 2018 of other packaged foods for babies and toddlers found troubling levels of inorganic arsenic, cadmium, and lead. CR found that at least two-thirds of the 50 packaged foods it tested had worrisome levels of at least one of these heavy metals. Fifteen of the foods would pose health risks to a child who regularly ate just one serving or less per day. Snacks and products containing rice and sweet potatoes were particularly likely to have high levels of heavy metals.

The risks from heavy metals grow over time, in part because they accumulate in the kidneys and other organs. Regularly consuming even small amounts over a long period of time may raise the risk of bladder, lung, and skin cancer; cognitive and reproductive problems; and type 2 diabetes.

“Parents can take a number of steps to limit their child’s exposure to heavy metals in food, but they should be able to expect that the government is putting public health first,” said Michael Hansen, senior scientist for Consumer Reports. “The FDA should set protective targets for reducing exposure to heavy metals with the goal of having no measurable levels in children’s food.”

For parents concerned about exposure to heavy metals, Consumer Reports recommends talking with a pediatrician to determine whether their child should be tested. Parents can reduce exposure by serving their child a broad array of healthful whole foods, limiting the amount of rice cereal in their diet, and being mindful of how much fruit juice they serve.

Arsenic is strictly regulated in drinking water, but unrestricted until now in infant rice cereals.  Healthy Babies Bright Futures (HBBF), which includes scientists, nonprofit organizations, and interested donors, says FDA has not considered IQ loss and other forms of neurological impact that children may experience from high exposures to arsenic in rice.

”And FDA failed to consider harm from multiple toxic heavy metals—arsenic as wells lead, cadmium, and mercury, that contaminated not only rice but other common baby foods as well—all of which contribute to risks for a baby’s healthy development,” the organization’s statement said.

An HBBF study in 2017 found toxic heavy metals in 95 percent of 168 baby foods tested. They also found rice cereals on average contained 85 ppl of arsenic.

“The FDA’s announcement is a step toward ensuring that babies’ brains are protected from exposure to harmful chemicals, but it is not a large enough step,” said Charlotte Brody,  HBBF’s national director. “When we released our baby food study in 2017, we suggested that the FDA set an enforceable, health-based limit for arsenic in infant rice cereal and other rice-based foods to protect infants from both cancer and neurological harm. Three years later, this newly announced guidance is not the solution. It’s just the first step in the right direction.”

HBBF said the FDA action will do little to lower babies’ risks from toxic heavy metals in rice-based foods. Because of their high levels of heavy metal contamination, 15 foods consumed by children under two years of age account for 55 percent of the risk to babies’ brains. Topping the list are rice-based foods — infant rice cereal, rice dishes, and rice-based snacks. These popular baby foods are not only high in inorganic arsenic, the most toxic form of arsenic, but also are nearly always contaminated with three additional toxic heavy metals, lead, cadmium, and mercury.

Lead and arsenic in rice-based foods account for one-fifth of the more than 11 million IQ points children lose from birth to 24 months of age from dietary sources, according to HBBF,  It says this concentrated risk underscores the need for more clear and protective action from the FDA and baby food companies.

The HBBK statement also says the lack of guidance has also played a role in inequality and racial health disparities, pointing to these findings:

·         Children with celiac disease often eat rice in place of gluten-containing grains. They ingest 14 times more arsenic than other children, on average.

·         National diet surveys show that Hispanic infants and toddlers are 2.5 times more likely to eat rice on a given day than other children.

·         Asian Americans eat nearly 10 times more rice than the national average.

·         Black toddlers are 2 to 3 times as likely to eat arsenic-laden rice snacks.

“Making the food that babies eat safe should be the baseline,” Brody said. “Setting a standard for the maximum amount of arsenic allowed in baby foods is a start to keeping them safe — but 100 ppb is still far too high. No amount of arsenic, lead or other toxic heavy metal is safe for babies.”

(To sign up for a free subscription to Food Safety News, click here.)

Tags: arsenicBrian RonholmConsumer ReportsFDAHealthy Babies Brigh

https://www.foodsafetynews.com/2020/08/fda-announces-limit-on-inorganic-arsenic-in-infant-rice-cereals/

 

Researchers use InSight for deep Mars measurements

Analysis of NASA lander seismograph data reveals boundaries from crust to core

Date:

August 5, 2020

Source:

Rice University

Summary:

Using data from NASA's InSight Lander on Mars, seismologists have made the first direct measurements of three subsurface boundaries from the crust to the core of the red planet.

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Using data from NASA's InSight Lander on Mars, Rice University seismologists have made the first direct measurements of three subsurface boundaries from the crust to the core of the red planet.

"Ultimately it may help us understand planetary formation," said Alan Levander, co-author of a study available online this week in Geophysical Research Letters. While the thickness of Mars' crust and the depth of its core have been calculated with a number of models, Levander said the InSight data allowed for the first direct measurements, which can be used to check models and ultimately to improve them.

"In the absence of plate tectonics on Mars, its early history is mostly preserved compared with Earth," said study co-author Sizhuang Deng, a Rice graduate student. "The depth estimates of Martian seismic boundaries can provide indications to better understand its past as well as the formation and evolution of terrestrial planets in general."

Finding clues about Mars' interior and the processes that formed it are key goals for InSight, a robotic lander that touched down in November 2018. The probe's dome-shaped seismometer allows scientists to listen to faint rumblings inside the planet, in much the way that a doctor might listen to a patient's heartbeat with a stethoscope.

Seismometers measure vibrations from seismic waves. Like circular ripples that mark the spot where a pebble disturbed the surface of a pond, seismic waves flow through planets, marking the location and size of disturbances like meteor strikes or earthquakes, which are aptly called marsquakes on the red planet. InSight's seismometer recorded more than 170 of these from February to September 2019.

Seismic waves are also subtly altered as they pass through different kinds of rock. Seismologists have studied the patterns in seismographic recordings on Earth for more than a century and can use them to map the location of oil and gas deposits and much deeper strata.

"The traditional way to investigate structures beneath Earth is to analyze earthquake signals using dense networks of seismic stations," said Deng. "Mars is much less tectonically active, which means it will have far fewer marsquake events compared with Earth. Moreover, with only one seismic station on Mars, we cannot employ methods that rely on seismic networks."

Levander, Rice's Carey Croneis Professor of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, and Deng analyzed InSight's 2019 seismology data using a technique called ambient noise autocorrelation. "It uses continuous noise data recorded by the single seismic station on Mars to extract pronounced reflection signals from seismic boundaries," Deng said.

The first boundary Deng and Levander measured is the divide between Mars' crust and mantle almost 22 miles (35 kilometers) beneath the lander.

The second is a transition zone within the mantle where magnesium iron silicates undergo a geochemical change. Above the zone, the elements form a mineral called olivine, and beneath it, heat and pressure compress them into a new mineral called wadsleyite. Known as the olivine-wadsleyite transition, this zone was found 690-727 miles (1,110-1,170 kilometers) beneath InSight.

"The temperature at the olivine-wadsleyite transition is an important key to building thermal models of Mars," Deng said. "From the depth of the transition, we can easily calculate the pressure, and with that, we can derive the temperature."

The third boundary he and Levander measured is the border between Mars' mantle and its iron-rich core, which they found about 945-994 miles (1,520-1,600 kilometers) beneath the lander. Better understanding this boundary "can provide information about the planet's development from both a chemical and thermal point of view," Deng said.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Rice UniversityNote: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

1.      Sizhuang Deng, Alan Levander. Autocorrelation Reflectivity of MarsGeophysical Research Letters, 2020 DOI: 10.1029/2020GL089630


Cite This Page:

Rice University. "Researchers use InSight for deep Mars measurements: Analysis of NASA lander seismograph data reveals boundaries from crust to core." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 5 August 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200805160929.htm>.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200805160929.htm