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16.09.2014

USA - Wheat farmers file crop insurance claims in North Dakota

Crop insurance agents say they have begun receiving claims and expect more than the usual number to come in because a lot of wheat still unharvested.A snowy April and wet May delayed planting, even preventing it in some cases. These days wet, cool weather continues to delay harvest and crop quality is becoming an issue.North Dakota' wheat crop is struggling with the sprouting of grains, kernel and hail damages. These conditions are preventing farmers from getting a high enough price for the grain or even selling it at all. Crop insurance is kicking in to prevent revenue loss.Source - http://www.agweb.com/

16.09.2014

Mexico - Oil spill affects 10,000 tons of orange in Nuevo Leon

Producers from the Township of Cadereyta Jiménez estimated that at least 10,000 tons of oranges had been lost because of the lack of irrigation caused by the oil spill into the San Juan River that a clandestine outlet on Pemex’s pipeline caused.The producers presented their estimates at a meeting with deputies of the Special Investigative Committee of the oil spill in the San Juan River. According to Francisco Javier Limon Guzman, deputy of Santa Isabel’s common land, the orange trees haven’t been irrigated since August 16, when the clandestine outlet on kilometre 463.5 of the Madero-Cadereyta pipeline was detected."There are two or three early orange varieties, one is cut at the beginning of the month, and, in fact we already lost that one. Then there is the late orange, which we can start cutting from December 15. We are talking about 20,000 tons in all the area," he said.Half of that amount, he said, would result in beeing affected by the ecological contingency in the San Juan River, so we would need to bring citrus from other areas of the country to supply local demand. Limón Guzmán noted that the authorities are aware of the issue and have been waiting for Pemex to perform actions to clean up the affected area.Within this process, he said, the landowners have presented documents that show which plots have been affected and are expecting compensation from Pemex."We need to water the trees so that the fruit can develop and so that the trees can bloom next year. Hence, this is affecting us," he said in an interview."Yes we will be affected. One of our production is its developmental stage and the other is about to be cut, but when the tree lacks water it feeds from itself so the oranges become loose and start lacking juice," he said.It was agreed, at the meeting with local representatives, that the needs of the affected population would be monitored in order to try the ecological problem more quickly.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

16.09.2014

India - Floods hit paddy, maize in JK

The crop losses in Jammu and Kashmir floods are likely to cut the food production of the state by half as paddy and maize has suffered maximum damage in the worst ever torrent witnessed in last six decades.Sources said that while the losses on account of crop damage may run in several hundred crores, the state is likely to face food crisis in view of steep fall in the production of food grains, vegetables and other crops.“We are producing 18 to 19 lakh metric tons of food grains in the state and our requirement is 26 lakh metric tons” a senior official of Agricultural department said and added “As per initial estimates the food production this year will be somewhere between 8 to 9 lakh metric tons as major part of paddy and maize crop has been damaged in the floods”. He said that the food production would be hit in future as well due to the fact that thousands of hectares of agriculture land have been washed away across the state.The consequences of massive loss to the standing crops in the fields has already started showing up with sky rocketing increase in the prices of vegetables and fruits, he added.“The crop loss would also affect the state’s economy in view of the fact that agriculture is major contributor to its Gross Domestic Product “he said adding that the state would incur over two hundred crore loss only on account of low food grain production.When contacted Director Agriculture, Jammu , S S Jamwal, said that around 50 percent of Paddy crop has been damaged in the rice production rich pockets of Jammu.He added that in Jammu, Samba and Kathua districts around 5000 hectare paddy land has been washed away which would leave far reaching affect on its production.He said that the damage to the land under Maize crops is more alarming as initial assessment show that around 3 lakh hectare of such land has been washed away in Jammu region alone.He further added that the seasonal vegetable production would also be badly hit as the floods have caused extensive damage both to the standing crop and the fresh seedlings across the region.Source - http://www.greaterkashmir.com/

16.09.2014

Canada - Snowstorm deals crop yield a major blow

Crop yields were dealt a major blow with the snowstorm that hit Central Alberta beginning on Sept. 8.The overall picture of the crop won’t be known until later this month after the temperature – which was expected to moderate late last week – goes up and farmers try to salvage what they can from what was a short 2014 growing season.“It will be a very difficult harvest because you’re going to have crop lying every which way. It’s not like you get a strong wind that lays the crop down in one direction and you swath either at a perpendicular angle with the heads coming in first. You can’t do that (with snow),” said Harry Brook, a crop specialist with Alberta Agriculture and Rural Development, adding that yield losses will be higher if farmers aren’t able to pick the crop that has fallen in the field.“It slows down harvest and makes it that much more difficult,” he said, adding that quality could also be affected if crops hadn’t properly matured yet.One of the other issues that farmers are caught with now, Brook said, is that because many farms are so large, it takes longer to harvest a crop. When adverse weather hits in the middle of harvest, it slows harvest down even more.“It’s always a rush to get the crop off before winter hits and now with lodging, it’s going to slow things down, and people who have a lot of acres to harvest, it makes it that much more difficult to get them all done in time,” he said.Brook said because canola is a fairly hardy plant, quality might not be harmed that much, but the same cannot be said for barley.“You could go from a malt to a feed variety fairly quick. If you start getting weather on it, you get staining … and that downgrades it,” he said.Hard Red Spring #1 wheat, with 13 per cent protein, had been fetching $5.73 per bushel as of Sept. 10, but could go down to as low as $5.13 per bushel. If the quality of Red Spring #1 is downgraded to feed grain, it could go as low as $3.83 per bushel.Canola #1 was fetching $9 per bushel on Sept. 10, but if it comes in as worse quality, the price could drop to $7 per bushel.Brook said snow this early isn’t a recent phenomenon, noting that about 20 years ago a snowstorm hit in the third week of August, killing any chance farmers had for a good crop.“Freezing temperatures, heavy snow, everything was lodged. It was a lot earlier than this one and it was devastating that year. There was an awful lot of canola that wasn’t ripe and most of the cereals weren’t ripe,” he said.Source - http://www.mountainviewgazette.ca/

16.09.2014

India - Central team assesses crop loss in Kaithal

A team of the Centre on Sunday visited the district to assess the loss to crop caused by drought and untimely rains in certain parts. The state government had demanded a compensation of Rs. 4,548 crore from the Centre to compensate farmers.The team, accompanied by officials of the agriculture, seeds, fertilisers and revenue departments of the Haryana government, visited Pinjupura, Kalayat, Balu, Bata and Kelram and Titram villages.At Pinjupura village, sarpanch Balwant Singh informed the team that farmers of the area had to spend heavily on diesel to run tubewells due to monsoon failure.He said crops of paddy, cotton, jwar and bajra had suffered massive damage because of the deficiency of water. The water level had gone down by about 10 ft, forcing the farmers to dig that deep for installing tubewells.Some residents of Balu village said failure of monsoon in July and untimely rains in September had made their lives miserable.Labh Singh of Pinjupura village said paddy crop drew sustenance from rainwater, canal water and tubewells. The failure of rain in July had reduced the quantity of water in canals too, which damaged the paddy crop badly, he said. Kaithal additional deputy commissioner Arvind Malhan and deputy director of agriculture, Rohtas while taking the team around areas of Pinjupura village, said paddy had been sown in 56,000 hectares and cotton in 13,000 hectares but these crops had suffered badly due to failure of monsoon and recent untimely rain.Rohtas said crops sown on 500 hectares in Kalayat, 400 hectares in Bata and 50 hectares in Pinjupura had been damaged.Source - http://www.hindustantimes.com/

16.09.2014

USA - Door County farmers recovering from July hail storm

A fast-moving hail storm two months ago, is having a lasting impact on crops in Door County.Farmers in the area say the damage was the worst they ever saw.Apple grower Bob Fellner says he sees reminders every day from July’s hail storm.“They just didn’t size up at all. These should be about the size of a baseball right now. Maybe a little smaller, and they’re not even the size of a racquetball,” said Fellner of Fellner Orchards.Apples are rotting on the branch. Fellner says 60 acres were lost when a hail storm swept through his orchard and parts of the Town of Sevastopol just north of Sturgeon Bay.“You can’t sell for deer apples. Juice companies won’t take them. So these are a complete loss,” said Fellner.At the Peninsular Agricultural Research Station, Superintendent Matt Stasiak says every type of fruit crop on the 20-acre was affected by the hail.“It came down for 33 minutes. A three-minute hail storm is a long time, so physical damage to the apples was beyond anything we have seen or could imagine,” said Stasiak.The storm cut a narrow path of damage through parts of Northern Door County. Other farmers in the area say besides being a little late, this year’s crop looks pretty good.“They’re just a little behind due to the cold Spring and the late bloom. The cooler Summer, we had cool weather all Summer. So it’s taking just a little longer to mature the crop,” said Dave Schartner, Schartner’s Farm Market.Schartner expects to pick many of his apples in about a week.Fellner says, his hail-damaged apples are just part of his problem. He is making plans to replant about 1,000 apple trees killed by the last Winter’s harsh conditions.“It is what it is. Every year you go on. We’ll have to tighten our belts a little bit this Winter, and go from there,” said Fellner.Farmers say the next concern for their crops is freezing conditions.They say the first frost in the area generally occurs in the first week of October.Source - http://fox11online.com/

15.09.2014

Pakistan - Flood damage in Punjab

The riverine floods have been raging in Punjab for more than a week now. After wreaking a heavy devastation, the flood water cleared the rice zone and by the weekend was on the rampage in the southern part of the province, known as the cotton belt. It is expected to leave Punjab by mid-September to enter Sindh.Though it is too early to assess the final figure of the damage it has wreaked on the hapless farmers in the rice belt initial estimates put up by the official agencies are alarming.By Thursday evening, the flood, to varying levels, had affected well over 1m acres of the rice zone. It hit 1.8m people,mostly farmers, along with, if farmers’ representatives are to be believed, 0.8m livestock. Damages to southern part of the province are so far excluded from the tally.Since the flood entered Pakistan through the rice zone (upper and central districts of the Punjab), the crop was first to take the hit. According to growers, out of these 1m affected acres, 0.7m were under the rice (read basmati – the premium variety) crop and the rest mainly fodder.Both these crops are highly important for the farmers; one sustaining their lives, the other their livestock. With both these crops greatly impacted, the farmer may have a financially difficult – some put it as disastrous – year ahead. As per farmers’ initial claims, they fear 10-15pc loss in rice yield, which in monitory terms means anything between Rs20bn to Rs25bn. What makes it worst for farmers is they would suffer the entire loss individually; the government would not suffer even a rupee on this account.Even if 10 acre per family is taken as an average, these floods have already financially destroyed over 70,000 farming families in one part of the province and repeating the performance in the other part.What makes these floods psychologically more damaging for farmers, is the reality that the flood pattern has been same for the last many centuries. These areas, because they fall on the foothill of the water generating systems, suffer the most.The water runs down quickly from hills, leaving no time for them to recover, and the successive governments have left them at the mercy of this unchecked quantum and flow of floods.This year, the Met office issued an alert on September 1, and this alert was converted into a warning on September 3 and floods hit the area on 4th. It indicates the speed of water with which it hits the region. If flood data is something to go by, the current one is flood number 24 during the last 50 years, making it almost alternate year phenomenon. During the last four years, it has been the second major flood in the same area. Despite this documentation, the floods visit these areas regularly, and remain completely unchecked.As history has it, three rivers — Jehlum, Chenab and Ravi — broke their banks this year as well and inundated vast areas. But even before them, these were their tributaries (called nullah in vernacular) that had caused and spread the main damage before falling into main rivers and causing cumulative flooding and ringing national alarm bells.The river Jehlum was tamed to some extent by Mangla dam, though it could still be questioned whether more water could have been absorbed in the lake through in-time controlled releases. Still, it took a large impact. It was Chenab, along with four major tributaries — Dek, Basanter, Dain and Palkhu — that devastated the rice zone. For the last 67 years, these tributaries have been converted into a recipe for disasters by different state and private structures, hampering their flow instead of making efforts to smoothly channelise them into Chenab.Railway lines, roads and bridges have been built by the state with narrow passages, which become part of the problem in times of floods. As population grew, residential colonies emerged, on the beds to further complicate the situation.The official response to this recurring tragedy is also a classic case of knee-jerk; a well advertised compensation package, which has no relation with the scale of loss. Even this year, both federal and provincial governments put together have so far announced Rs2bn against initial estimates of around Rs25bn losses of rice zone alone.This compensation package is not for crop losses alone, but includes all kind of losses; deaths, total or partial home damages, medical and other logistics. Without belittling the importance of compensation, however meagrer, one may legitimately ask the basic question: does it provide permanent solution to this regular crisis? Of course not!Building new dams might be contentious given the nature and mistrust among the provinces, but managing these tributaries is certainly not. Why are they allowed to run amock every second year and cause huge human, infrastructural and financial losses? This needs to be answered before the next time we experience flood-related national sense of déjà vu.Source - http://www.dawn.com/

15.09.2014

Italy fears smallest grape harvest since 1950

The only winning move in a cold and rainy summer, such as the current one, is to redouble your care for grape vines. This is what many Italian wine makers were counting upon, as their 2014 harvest started off quite inauspiciously.Italy might face the worst grape harvest since 1950, a preliminary report by national farmers association Coldiretti stated earlier this week. Grape ripening has been hindered by an unusually overcast weather and frequent storms. With more grapes possibly damaged and an higher spoilage in the vineyards, the report forecast Italy's production to drop 15 percent, to 41 million hectolitres from 48.16 million hectolitres last year.If confirmed, Italy would lose its "supremacy" as world's biggest wine maker by volume to France's advantage.Yet, with only about 20 percent of grapes so far been picked, several vintners seemed resilient to the pessimistic outlook and still upbeat about the ultimate quality of their vintage."The summer started quite badly here, with heavy rains. Yet, I call ourselves lucky," Luigi Roagna told Xinhua."We had to deal with more grape diseases, such as late blight, but our vineyards mainly stretch over sandy soil, which is capable to absorb a lot of water," he added.Roagna run the "Conti di Roero" winery in Vezza d'Alba, in the northwest Piedmont region. Surrounded by a beautiful landscape recently included in UNESCO World Heritage List. Roagna and his wife Daniela take care of 15 hectares of vineyards, and usually produce around 100,000 bottles a year.But not this year."I reckon our production will be cut by 30 percent, partly due to the bad weather but also to our own choice," he said. "We have made a painstaking selection of wine grapes through the summer, and we will keep working in the vineyards, discarding less-than-perfect fruits, until the end of the season."Thanks also to traditional hand-harvesting, which helps isolating every unhealthy grape, they were confident some of their finest products, such as red wines Roero and Nebbiolo d'Alba, would meet the best expectations.Piedmont, which gives some of Italy's greatest red wines such as Barolo and Barbaresco, was indeed one of the regions most hit by bad weather and its volume might drop 10 percent, Italian Association of Enologists predicted.But the vintner trusted the remaining, crucial, weeks before harvesting. "Our vineyards just need warm days and cool nights until beginning of October. If so, the vintage will be good despite all the problems," Roagna said.A colleague from the central region of Marche echoed his words."Our harvest will start off a little later than usual, due to the rains, but seven to ten days of sunshine would be now enough for our best grapes to reach the perfect balance between sugar levels and acids," Raffaele Paolini told Xinhua.His "PS Winery", founded with Dwight Stanford in 2008, has 6 hectares of both autochthonous and international varieties, and supplies 30 to 40 quintals per hectare. Their Syrah and three red wines were selected for the prestigious Merano Wine Festival 2014.Paolini acknowledged their production would decrease this year. Some grapes, such as Merlot and Montepulciano, have already shown a 20 percent loss. As organic winery, furthermore, they use nothing but sulphur and copper fungicides, and biological treatments were more difficult to implement with heavy rains and a damp soil.Yet, Paolini sounded confident."Our best wine, a red called Confusion, is a Bordeaux-style blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, and Petit Verdot," he explained. "These French grapes suffer less from rains, and they are healthy, by the result of our latest tests. This is why we are optimistic."Since Italy stretches for more than 1,100 kilometres from north to south, furthermore, vintners also warned preliminary nationwide estimates on the harvest can be a little "risky," and what would be bad for some regions might be good for others."We know several northern wineries have faced difficult weather conditions, and we feel very sorry. Yet, a cooler summer was actually good for our vineyards," Patricia Toth, winemaker at Sicily's Planeta winery, told Xinhua.With 360 hectares and a production of around 2.2 million bottles a year, Planeta might also see a 20 to 30 percent decrease in its harvest, Toth said. Yet, this would result from a chilly spring, not a wet summer."Only June rainfalls were abundant in Sicily. We have had short-duration rains in latest weeks, then, but they were needed to our vineyards, especially those on the slopes of Mount Etna," she said.The chance of Italy losing the crown of world's biggest wine maker did not seem to worry the enologist, who was quite prudent regarding early estimates made by Coldiretti and Assoenologi.Some vintages, such as this one, could be very difficult to assess since results would not be homogeneous and there could be huge disparities from region to region, even from area to area, Toth explained."In our winery, for example, we are seeing an outstanding quality of white grapes and French varieties in the western part of Sicily, where harvest is well under way. We are also satisfied with the Moscato di Noto, our non-fortified sweet wine, whereas I don't deem it proper to speak about our eastern vineyards, since they have not been taken into the winery," she said.Source - http://www.globalpost.com/

15.09.2014

USA - Floodwaters wreak havoc on Montana crops

The round hay bales in the Saco flats have turned dark with mud and mildew.The high-water mark rises halfway up these slumping, soggy bales – thousands of which dot the fields along U.S. Highway 12 – bearing the ruin of a rare August flood.For five days, rain washed over the Musselshell and Milk River basins, dropping as much as 8 inches in an area stretching from Winnett north to the Canadian border. August rainfall records were broken in 20 towns. In many places, those records were shattered.The flooding damaged fields, roads and bridges in three counties and the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation, prompting the Gov. Steve Bullock to declare a state of disaster. The havoc wreaked on farmers’ nerves was just as swift.Three weeks after the storm, Glasgow farmer John Lacey picked up a wad of stinking alfalfa and put words to his crop and the outlook for producers on the Hi-Line.“It’s a bad deal,” he said.Just how bad, the farmers don’t yet know. They have been paralyzed by the wet conditions, as the area’s major crops begin turning to mush in the fields.That’s the trouble with this storm: While the plains residents are no strangers to flooding – the Hi-Line was underwater for several months during spring 2011 – not since 1986 has such heavy rain struck at this time of year, when a sizable fall harvest was just getting underway.*****As a result, the livelihood the farmers were preparing to take to the bin and to the bank has been exchanged for uncertainty that will linger long after the puddles dry up.“The timing was absolutely horrendous,” said Dick Cotton, who grows spring wheat and barley on the Milk.“It’s junk,” he said of his crop. “I think it’s all lost.”As of last week, one-third of the state’s spring wheat remained in the ground. In northern areas like Valley County, Montana’s top producer of spring wheat, the proportion of unharvested crop is much higher.Fields have yet to dry out, so producers can’t get their combines to crops that weren’t harvested before the storm.“I might take up drinking because I have time now,” Chris Christensen, of Hinsdale, joked.Christensen was among the 30 or so farmers and ranchers who spent a cold, rainy morning last week at the Elks Lodge in Glasgow to find out how much of their crop yield may be covered by insurance.Insurance representatives described the basics of grain quality and outlined rules that govern crop protection.Heavy rain near harvest time affects wheat by causing it to germinate while still in the soil. It’s called pre-harvest sprouting, and it degrades the quality of the wheat by breaking down the protein and starch content.Poor-quality wheat makes for sticky dough not suitable for baking. It’s typically destined for livestock feed and is sold at a fraction of its former value.A “falling numbers” test, performed by the State Grain Lab in Great Falls, is used to gauge the crop quality by measuring the thickness of a sample mixture of flour and water. Undamaged grain will yield a high number; lower falling numbers indicate a discounted market value.*****The State Grain Lab typically sees less than 1 percent of grain with low falling numbers, said bureau chief Jeff Rumney. But as samples from affected areas start to trickle in, the discounted proportion has already jumped to 20 percent.For those who have it, insurance will cover a portion of the discounted grain sales, but the profits that seemed within reach likely are gone.The financial picture won’t emerge for the farmers until they are able to get combines into the fields and harvest what they can.“When will we know?” one farmer asked presenter Jenifer Hansen, a senior claims supervisor for Rain and Hail LLC.“When’s it going to quit raining?” Hansen replied.At this point, more harsh weather may actually be the best option for producers, Hansen said. The worry, for farmers with insurance, is having a crop whose value is diminished but not so severely that their policies help with the loss.“If I were them, I’d pray for more rain,” she said.As Hansen clicked through her slideshow, Lacey, the Glasgow farmer, was inside the local abstract office. He and his wife, Kim, have had enough of this flooding; he wants to build a dike.Their farm is located at a spot where a large drainage area meets the steep banks of the Milk River and is pinched between rushing and rising water.With a couple of inches in his rain gauge on Aug. 23, a Saturday, Lacey took a sleeping aid to help him through the night – an unusual step for someone who said he doesn’t like any drugs.By Sunday morning they had bigger problems: Rain was pouring over the gauge and floodwaters were rising toward the enclosure for his 488 sheep.The sheep were herded onto trailers and moved to higher ground 12 miles away, Lacey said.Lacey said he and Kim aren’t looking forward to pulling tree limbs from fences, disposing of dead alfalfa or patrolling for an invasion of thorny weeds that tend to take root after flooding and stick to the wool of his sheep.“This is what two-and-a-half tons of alfalfa looks like when it’s underwater for 10 to 12 days,” he said as he stood in a brown field adjacent to the river. “It just screws up your management.”Christensen, wearing a cowboy hat, paisley shirt and belt buckle, does some mental math as he drives his truck between fields of hay, his biggest product.The rain dumped just before he and son Chisholm could bale their second cutting. The harvested alfalfa instead is growing white mold as it lies in the field.The Christensens are assuming everything covered by floodwaters is a loss, and like most hay producers, their hay isn’t insured.He figures around 200 acres are trashed and will need to be reseeded and leveled before they can return to production, at a cost of around $350 per acre and a lot of work.The events, Christensen said, “pulled the rug out” from what would have been an excellent year.He noted how recurring floods are compounding earlier damage and changing the local landscape. In the town of Hinsdale, the steep banks of the Milk are eroding in broad sections, threatening some homes at the water’s edge.*****As in 2011, water seeped into basements and crawl spaces in homes along the Hi-Line, and some sandbags were filled. But this time residents seem to have taken the impacts in stride, as many already had sump pumps on hand.The roof on Hinsdale school, where Christensen serves on the school board, was being replaced when the storm hit. Water flowed into the kitchen and poured through trophy cases, he said. Class was canceled for a day, as in Saco, but community members pitched in and got the school running the next day.And county officials are relieved that no injuries were reported and the flash floods didn’t strand anyone with a medical emergency.The 2011 flood season is the reference point for disasters in the area, but the two events are quite different, said Tanja Fransen, NWS Warning Coordination Meteorologist.In 2011, high snowmelt signaled the spring flooding that would follow. The runoff was augmented by severe rains in May, then another event in June, which essentially turned the entire season soggy.“This time, it was five days,” Fransen said. With only two inches predicted, residents didn’t have much time to prepare.The flash floods caused significant damage to infrastructure. The Valley County road department identified 37 road washout sites, some of which are still impassable.Todd Young, assistant road foreman, stood over one huge washout in a small drainage area south of Glasgow that sloughed off a chunk of road 100 feet long and 10 feet wide.“It’s impressive, in a sense,” he said.Source - http://missoulian.com/

15.09.2014

Ukraine - Sunflower seed harvesting campaign slowed down

In 2014, the general production of sunflower in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts to decrease significantly due to the military actions continuing, stated the State Statistics Service of Ukraine.According to the data of the Agency, the agrarians of Donetsk oblast harvested 89.1 thsd tonnes of sunflower seeds, down 35.1% compared to 2013.The general production of the oilseed in Luhansk oblast decreased by 58.7% - to 36.6 thsd tonnes.As for the other crops, the agrarians of Donetsk oblast have produced 2.1 mln tonnes of grains (up 11.7% compared to 2013), and Luhansk - nearly 1 mln tonnes (+8.3%).Source - http://www.apk-inform.com/

15.09.2014

Pakistan - Flood causes colossal losses to rice crop

The flash flood and heavy rains caused colossal losses to standing rice crop specially the Basmati rice in Punjab which may consequently have widespread impactions on food inflation, decline in rice export, and to the revenue collection for the government as well.The Union of Small and Medium Enterprises (UNISAME) has invited the attention of Ishaq Dar federal finance minister (FM) to the colossal loss suffered by the rice sector due to heavy floods in Punjab which has swept away the standing crop of rice. The floods have disabled the rice sector which was already in turmoil due to high cost of production, load shedding and tough competition from neighboring country.President UNISAME Zulfikar Thaver has urged the FM to exempt the rice sector from with holding tax to give the sector some relief.He said by virtue of being an export industry the sector deserved tax exemption but the finance ministry had levied with holding tax since the last several years and had not spared the rice sector from taxes. Some relief could also be given to the sector by reducing import duties on rice packing materials, insecticides, pesticides, fumigation medicine and fertilizers.Thaver called for facilitating the rice sector by removing all hurdles in all spheres and expressed surprise that although the ministry of commerce (MoC) had accepted the fact that the Quality Review Committee (QRC) was of no practical benefit to the rice industry and had advised the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) to submit a procedure for its closure and decided to give golden handshake to its employees and close the QRC for good. It is very strange that the government is lethargic on important issues and delays matters to the point of frustration.He said it is very important that the MoC does not procrastinate on important issues and acts diligently in the best interest of the rice sector to enable it to meet global challenges.The UNISAME chief also pointed out that it is apprehended that the floods God forbid could cause damage to the rice crop in Sindh and this will be unfortunate as the Irri 6 rice of Sindh is an export earner bringing in valuable foreign exchange.The Sindh government is always wise after the event and although it was forewarned about the floods it never took concrete steps to prepare in advance.Source - http://pakobserver.net/

15.09.2014

India - Natural disasters wreck lives of 2.5L Khammam ryots

Continuous natural calamities over the past three years - ‘Neelam’ cyclone in 2012, the Godavari floods and heavy rain in July-September 2013 and the same in 2014 -- have almost wrecked the lives of most of the farmers in the Khammam district.There are about 4.5 lakh farmers in the district. Among them, many as 2.5 lakh farmers, most of them living on the banks of Godavari river, have suffered huge losses due to the above-mentioned natural calamities in the past three years.Most of the farmers in the district are small and marginal farmers. They would cultivate crops by taking loans from private money-lenders.Having suffered huge crop losses due the natural calamities in the last three years, these farmers are now not only unable to clear their debts but are also leading miserable lives.According to K Narasaiah, a farmer from Tallampadu village near Khammam, some natural calamity-hit and debt-ridden farmers have been forced to turn into daily labourers.He added that if the government did not come to the rescue of these famers, several of them could end up committing suicide out of desperation.The ‘Neelam’ cyclone that hit the district on December 1, 2012, destroyed cotton, paddy, maize and other crops sown over an area of about 9700 hectares thereby causing huge losses to 29,400 farmers in 46 mandals of the district. The floods in Godavari following heavy rain in 2013 affected as many as 10,000 farmers. It not only damaged standing crop in about 7,000 hectares but also led to the collapse of over 2,000 houses in the district. The Godavari flood this month damaged standing crops on 10,000 hectares in 14 mandals of the district and completely dashed the hopes of any recovery (from last year’s misery) of 2,000 farmers in the district.Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com/

12.09.2014

Canada - Crop quality, quantity sliding

Western Canadian farmers who took off a record-sized, high quality crop in 2013 will likely be harvesting an average sized crop this year with below average quality, industry observers acknowledged last week.As of late last week, about 15 percent of Western Canada’s 2014 crop had been harvested but already there are worrisome signals that the quality will be much lower than expected.In many parts of the West, especially in southern and eastern Saskatchewan and southern and western Manitoba, untimely rains, disease, sprouting and lodging have dampened harvest expectations.The threat of frost damage is also weighing heavily on farmer’s minds, especially in areas where crop staging is well behind normal.Snow fell in parts of Alberta Sept. 8. Accumulations of five to 10 centimetres were expected in some areas, enough to delay an already late harvest for a few more days.“It’s very early on … so hopefully it’s going to change but what we’ve heard and seen so far is that rain has caused mildew in … wheat crops and grades are going as low as No. 3 and feed,” said Daryl Beswitherick, program manager of quality assurance with the Canadian Grain Commission.He said they are also seeing some sprouting.Fusarium damage is a major degrading factor in winter wheat samples from southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan, he added.Some winter wheat growers may have trouble finding a market for their grain unless fusarium damaged kernels can be cleaned out and de-oxynivalenol or DON can be reduced to levels tolerated by the commercial grain and feed industries.“The red winter wheat crop was really bad with fusarium this year,” Beswitherick said.Based on early samples, “most of the crop is feed or sample on account of fusarium damage.”Commercial tolerances for fusarium damaged kernels in red winter wheat are 0.8 percent in No. 1, one percent in No. 2, 1.5 percent in No. 3 and four percent in feed.Based on anecdotal reports and early samples submitted to the CGC’s harvest sample program, fusarium damaged kernels in red winter wheat are well above those thresholds.Samples that contain greater than four percent fusarium damaged kernels are usually blended and sold into low-value feed markets. Failing that, they are often dumped in the back 40.In spring wheat, fusarium damaged kernels do not appear to be as great a concern, Beswitherick said. But grade losses caused by mildew could be significant.“There are still some 2s out there but there seems to be more and more that we’ve seen in the 3 and feed range.”Sprouting is also evident in early-submitted lentil and canola samples and bleaching is expected to be common in pulses and cereals.One of the few bright spots this year, at least in terms of quality, is the Peace River region of northern Alberta and British Columbia.Crop quality was expected to be average or better than average, although yields in most areas were trimmed by early season dry weather. Frost and snow was expected in the region early this week.Saskatchewan Agriculture crop management specialist Shannon Friesen said the harvest is not off to a great start in her province.“A couple of weeks ago, things were looking pretty good and there was lots of optimism out there, it seemed,” Friesen said.“Since then, of course, we’ve got (a couple of weeks) of rain and heavy winds so we’ve had a lot of lodging and certainly the quality has deteriorated on a lot of the swathed crops and on some of the standing crops as well.”According to Friesen, regional crop reporters have identified sprouting and bleaching in cereals and pulses and yield losses caused by lodging and disease.“Overall, from what’s come off so far, some of it is good but the majority of it will likely be downgraded at the elevator,” Friesen said.Yield expectations are also being adjusted downward, she said.“Even from our earlier numbers, yields were looking to be about average but since the rains, things have dipped a bit ….”Generally, a harvest season that drags on into late September or early October produces lower quality crops with greater yield losses.Hot, dry weather for the rest of September would help reduce grade and yield losses, Friesen said.At CWB, weather and crops specialist Bruce Burnett said quality concerns are common in many crops.Winter wheat was badly affected by fusarium as was durum in eastern growing regions.It remains to be seen how badly fusarium will affect spring wheat crops in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, he said.Sprouting is more prevalent and is already evident in malting barley, spring wheat, durum and pulse crops, especially in areas that received repeated rainfall during the latter half of August and early September.“I think we’d be very fortunate at this point, if we wind up with an average quality crop, given the conditions that we’ve seen to date and the current weather forecast,” said Burnett.“For some crops like winter wheat and durum and some of the specialty crops, I think it’s an impossibility now.”Late seeded crops that are still maturing will have a chance of making the highest grades but only if they can escape frost over few next weeks.Source - http://www.producer.com/

12.09.2014

USA - Potato farmers may face losses this harvest

Potato farmers in eastern Idaho are preparing for potato harvest, but this year it's something of a bittersweet occasion. Both yields and prices are down for many farmers and some worry if they'll turn a profit."This year has been a challenge," said Jared Wattenbarger, who's been growing potatoes on 125 acres near Shelley for the past six years.With harvest less than two weeks from now, Wattenbarger is also worried about the size of his potatoes."The rain affected the yields. The quality's there, but in this area the yields are down quite a bit," said Wattenbarger.He said heavy downpours hit during a crucial period for potatoes – when they would normally do a lot of their growing."The size profile just didn't happen. The spuds are a little smaller in our area," said Wattenbarger. "Everybody's hoping that Mother Nature's kind to us. It hasn't been really kind the last month, but we hope that she treats us well."The potato harvest is expected to begin Sept 22.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

12.09.2014

Bangladesh - Give fresh loans to flood-hit farmers: BB to banks

Bangladesh Bank (BB) on Thursday in a circular asked all banks to accelerate their loan disbursement process along with sanctioning fresh loans to the farmers, badly affected by the recent flooding in 21 districts."The central bank has directed all scheduled banks to speed up their credit activities besides sanctioning fresh loans in the flood affected areas so the farmers can get back to crop production to offset their loss to the natural calamity," BB General Manager for Agricultural Credit and Financial Inclusion Department Provas Chandra Malliktold.Source - http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/

12.09.2014

India - Bats become apple growers' new enemy

Besides the inclement rain, what is worrying the apple growers in Rohru and some areas of Jubbal now days the most are the bats (flying mammals), who are seen swarming in the orchards and eating into the growers' profit.However, the flying mammals play a crucial role in controlling pests, but the attack on apple trees not only destroy the crops but also damage the trees. There have been several reports of bats attacking the apple orchards in Rohru and its surrounded villages, including Chirgaon. Some areas have been reportedly facing the menace since last so many years.Vikas Negi, an orchardist from Chirgaon said, “In the past three to four days, the attacks have increased. This happens every year. During the apple season, the bats migrate from other areas and establish their colonies near the Pabbar river,” he said.The local orchardists, who have been facing the brunt, said, “The bats feed on ripe apples and leave a claw mark on the fruit, which damages the crop.”Meanwhile, Shimla zila parishad chairman and member of Dhagoli ward Chandreshwar Prasad said though the frequency of the attacks had been recorded low so far, but it had become a problem for the growers as they could nothing about the situation.The animal colonies can be noticed on Alnus trees, which are growing along the banks of Pabbar river and its tributary Sikhri Nullah. Rawal Chand, an orchardist and Shiladesh panchayat pradhan said, however, the bat raids had not started in their area so far, but reports had been coming from the nearby areas.“Our crop is not safe. Earlier, the bad weather hampered the crop growth and now reports of bat raids are coming as a bad news,” he said.Recent, studies that were conducted by high-altitude regional centre of Zoological Survey of India, Solan, observed that the problem was seasonal. “Flying mammals travel from one part to the other in search of food and controlling them is a tough task,” reads the study, adding that the bat could fly up to 30 km overnight.The study also observed that firing gun shots or beating drums was the only solution to stop the mammal from settling on trees, as loud noise could frighten them.Head of the Entomology department of Horticulture and Forestry University Nauni, Rakesh Gupta said, “Mainly two species of fruit bats are found in the apple region-fulvous fruit bat (Rousettus leschenaulti) and flying fox (Pteropus giganteus),” he said.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

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