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20.08.2014

India - Heavy rainfall damages crops in Kashmir, farmers incur losses

Heavy rainfall and strong winds caused huge damage to crops and vegetable farms in Kashmir, leaving farmers in distress over expected losses.The windy storms triggered by heavy rainfall have lead to massive damage of crops, on which farmers depend for their livelihood.One of the farmers, Sadiksun on Tuesday expresses his disappointment and said they have been incurring heavy losses due to incessant rains which have damaged their standing crops."And the entire crops were damaged. What will we do now. We are facing much difficulty. We are poor people, we only survive on our crops. Now it's all gone," said he.Earlier this month, inadequate rainfall and weak monsoon in many Indian provinces has affected the farming of paddy and left the farmers worried. Every year, by this time, the state witnesses good rainfall but many districts are still reeling under weak monsoon, making it difficult for the cultivation of many crops like Paddy.However, the continuous downpours across the country have also raised threats of flood like situation endangering human lives and loss of property.Meanwhile, another Farmer, Abdur Rehman urged the provincial government to extend their help to farmers who are have lost their produce due to unexpected and unseasonal rainfall."Government should come and look into this and provide us help. We will be very grateful," said Rehman.Recently, hailstorm had also damaged paddy crop, vegetable fields and fruit orchards at Rafiabad, Laser, Saripara, Budden Tragpora and Rohama in Baramulla district of the province.The hailstorm also affected fruits in most parts of Kashmir. Farmers have appealed the authorities to compensate the loss.Half of India's farmland lacks access to irrigation, making many farmers particularly dependent on monsoon rains. The nation plans to expand irrigation coverage by at least a tenth by 2017 to cut its dependence on the seasonal rains.Source - http://www.business-standard.com/

20.08.2014

New satellite data will help farmers in drought

The past two winters have been the driest for California since 1879 according to NASA newsletter released on Monday.NASA will introduce Soil Moisture Passive satellite this winter. It will launch to collect data that farmers and water managers need to manage the agricultural situation.There will be two microwave instruments set atop the soil on the Earth’s surface. SMAP, as it is called, will map the entire globe within two- three days. It is easy to determine a difficult year for agriculture in California when snow cap melt down on mountains is seen in California. The difficulty is that other parts of the world require soil measurement, as there are no other observations such as mountain caps.“Agricultural drought occurs when the demand for water for crop production exceeds available water supplies from precipitation, surface water and sustainable withdrawals from groundwater,” said Forrest Melton, a research scientist in the Ecological Forecasting Lab at NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.It is difficult to manage planting if only underground water is available. Planting can be delayed and set in a timeline with better reports of soil moisture content.NASA will also be measuring the atmospheric carbon dioxide from NASA’s Langley Research Center in late August. Climate change adds pressure to determining the situation of agriculture and its forecast.The forests of Northern California and along the Oregon coast and the cornfields of Indiana all require NASA to record the levels of carbon dioxide. If there is insufficient water to sprout roots then there is not only a loss of food but a loss of plant and tree life which means that photosynthesis cannot be performed. This process is needed to maintain the cycle for farmers to produce food. A lack of soil moisture and carbon dioxide imbalance leads to a process that increases drought conditions.A new system that uses laser light to measure atmospheric carbon dioxide will be on board a DC 8 for the flights. The project named ASCENDS, which stands for Active Sensing of CO2 Emissions over Nights, Days and Seasons will bring a period instead of a question mark to the level of carbon dioxide according to Byron Meadows, NASA Langley’s ASCENDS project manager.The measurement helps the projection of how much damage will occur due to loss of trees and other indicators in the calculation of climate change.NASA’s OCO-2, Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) instruments has its first mission dedicated to carbon dioxide. According to project leader, Dr. Christian Frankenberg, a research scientist for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, explains that this will test the waters to see how far we can go with space-based carbon dioxide information. He states, "I am hoping that the mission’s legacy will eventually be a more complete picture of the planet’s carbon budget and a more definitive answer to which areas of the world are absorbing our carbon emissions."The bottom line for California farmers and those around the world means that information on how to plant and utilize the cycles become more important than over a century past.Source - http://www.examiner.com/

19.08.2014

As risk of drought rises, Australian farmers struggle to invest

When a scorching drought struck eastern Australia in 2006, cattle farmers Robyn and Paul Kendal had to slaughter nearly all their livestock and spend around a year of their normal turnover on feed to keep the remainder alive.With a recurrence of El Nino, the weather pattern behind the drought, looming and dry conditions already affecting an area larger than South Africa, another major drought could be one struggle too many for farmers such as the Kendals."In 2006, we saw the lowest amount of rains here since records began...and we still haven't recovered from that even today," said Robyn Kendal, whose 3,000-acre (1,215 hectares) cattle farm is about 500 km (300 miles) southwest of Sydney.Already one of the world's top agricultural producers, Australia has ambitions of becoming a "food bowl" to Asia as it tries to diversify its economy to counter the waning of a decade-long mining boom that brought the country riches.That goal is threatened by its harsh climate - private insurance to protect against drought is generally too expensive for farmers, undermining their capacity to invest to boost output as they must if Australia is to feed more of Asia's fast-growing middle class.Drought is a traditional foe in Australia, the world's third-biggest beef exporter and a big producer of crops such as wheat and sugar. But an inability to contain the risk means less money available to channel into new equipment or technology for farmers already saddled with a record A$64 billion ($59 billion) of debt."In Queensland, farmers' interest payments as a proportion of their receipts is twice what it is elsewhere in the country," said Peter Gooday, head of farm analysis at the Australian Department of Agriculture."If you are struggling to meet your interest payments then that is your first thought rather than investing."Australia and New Zealand Banking Group estimates that an additional A$600 billion in additional capital will be needed between now and 2050 to generate growth and profitability in agriculture, but current investment levels are well short.According to a recent farmer survey by Rabobank, only 25 percent of farmers said they planned to increase investment this year, amid concerns over forecasts for an El Nino - the chances of which the Australian Bureau of Meteorology has put at least 25 percent.LOW SUBSIDIESThe government does provide federal loans during tough times, as well as subsidies for fuel and tax breaks but, unlike in agricultural rivals such as the United States and Brazil, it does not subsidize insurance to pay out if drought hits output.According to an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development report, just 3 percent of total Australian farm receipts come from subsidies, ranking it the second lowest in a group of 34 countries, behind only New Zealand.Traditional crop insurance in Australia typically covers only sudden disasters such as fire or hail. Drought damage is seldom covered and, when it is, the price is prohibitive.Drought insurance would cost around A$15-30 a hectare, a government report estimated, so for the average farm size of 3,000 hectares (7,400 acres) that would mean A$90,000, more than half of the profit the average grain farmer made last year, data from the government's commodity forecaster shows.Other more exotic financial instruments such as weather futures - which pay out if a predetermined amount of rainfall does not materialize - have also failed to take off in Australia, with farmers complaining that rainfall is measured at weather stations often far from their land.AFFORDABLE INSURANCE?Insurers say the reason drought cover is so expensive is due to a lack of historical data or knowledge of the productivity and yields of different pieces of land under dry conditions.Some major insurers plan to use satellite technology to get better data on things such as biomass and soil moisture to use in models that, based on weather forecasts, can determine yield estimates and make drought crop insurance more affordable.Farmers could buy insurance against the risk of yields falling below that estimate, while insurers could share the burden using the reinsurance market, lowering costs.Using specialized sensors, satellites can zoom in and gather data from a single agricultural plot, monitoring crop growth.Satellites are already monitoring land in Europe to verify subsidy claims under the Common Agricultural Policy, and they are being used in Asia and Africa to monitor food production in nations most vulnerable to extreme weather.John van Vegt, Managing Director of insurance broker AgriRisk Services Pty Limited, said yield index products could emerge in a few years, though there was a lot of work to do."I think there would be an appetite from farmers," he said. "It would be in a language they could understand."DROUGHTS AND PRODUCTIVITYThe 2006 drought resulted in Australia's agricultural GDP falling by nearly 30 percent, according to government data, and the country's weather bureau is forecasting that such events will become harsher and more frequent.The drought in Queensland alone last year meant farmers in the state recorded their lowest income on record, with the average farmer making a loss of A$77,000, according to government data.With more than 80 percent of Queensland declared by the state government to be in drought, the outlook for the state's agricultural producers looks bleak.The dry weather means that the current wheat harvest for the 2014/15 crop year in Queensland is seen falling to 1.33 million tonnes, the Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) said in June, 12 percent below the five-year average. And analysts say that figure could fall even more with dry weather seen continuing until October at least.Cattle farmers in the state, Australia's largest livestock producing region, are also struggling. Unable to find enough food or water for their animals, farmers have been forced to slaughter their livestock at record levels, pushing prices to all-time lows earlier in the year.With such poor returns, farmers in Queensland will remain hamstrung in their capacity to invest in new technology - a key driver behind Australian agricultural productivity gains.A 2011 study by ABARES said around two-thirds of the increase in the monetary value of agricultural production in the last 50 years in Australia was down to gains in productivity, primarily driven by new technology."You do need investment to improve productivity but I think it goes both ways," said Graydon Chong, senior grains analyst, Rabobank in Sydney. "In order to encourage investment, Australia’s agricultural sector needs to show growth in yields."Source - http://uk.reuters.com/

19.08.2014

USA - California’s drought could cause massive crop failure, national ripple effects

When the winter rains failed to arrive in this Sacramento Valley town for the third straight year, farmers tightened their belts and looked to the reservoirs in the nearby hills to keep them in water through the growing season.When those faltered, some switched on their well pumps, drawing up thousands of gallons from underground aquifers to prevent their walnut trees and alfalfa crops from drying up. Until the wells, too, began to fail.Now, across California’s vital agricultural belt, nervousness over the state’s epic drought has given way to alarm. Streams and lakes have long since shriveled up in many parts of the state, and now the aquifers — always a backup source during the region’s periodic droughts — are being pumped away at rates that scientists say are both historic and unsustainable.One state-owned well near Sacramento registered an astonishing 100-foot drop in three months as the water table, strained by new demand from farmers, homeowners and municipalities, sank to a record low. Other wells have simply dried up, in such numbers that local drilling companies are reporting backlogs of six to eight months to dig a new one.In still other areas, aquifers are emptying so quickly that the land itself is subsiding, like cereal in a bowl after the milk has drained out.“How many straws can you stick into one glass?” asked John Viegas, a county supervisor who, after months of fielding complaints from constituents about water shortages, recently was forced to lower his own well by 40 feet. “People need to realize you can’t water everything.”The shrinking of the aquifers has added a new dimension to the concerns over the historic drought that continues to shatter records across the Western United States. The parched zone now spans a dozen states and nearly 600 counties, from southern Texas to the northern Rockies, and includes fields and grazing land that produce a third of the country’s beef cattle and half of its fruit, vegetables and winter wheat. Prices for most of these products have soared this year.Hardest hit is California. As of last month, nearly 60 percent of the state is officially in an “exceptional” drought — the highest level, above “severe” — and meteorologists are seeing no immediate change in a relentlessly dry forecast. Indeed, scientists are warning that the state’s cyclical droughts could become longer and more frequent as the climate warms.If that happens, the elaborate infrastructure built to deliver water to the state’s 38 million residents and 27 million cultivated acres may not survive the challenge, new research suggests. Already the drought has led to the “greatest water loss ever seen in California agriculture,” said a study last month by researchers at the University of California at Davis.A massive shift to groundwater helped farmers survive this year, but if pumping continues at current rates, some of the state’s aquifers could soon be depleted, the study warned. One of the authors, Richard Howitt, a professor emeritus of resource economics, likened the problem to a “slow-moving train wreck.”“A well-managed basin is used like a reserve bank account,” Howitt said. “We’re acting like the super rich who have so much money they don’t need to balance their checkbook.”The study estimated that 5.1 million acre-feet of water will be pulled from the state’s underground reserves this year, a volume roughly equivalent to the storage capacity of Lake Shasta, the state’s biggest reservoir and third-largest lake after Lake Tahoe and the Salton Sea.Damage to aquifers is viewed as more serious because, once depleted, an aquifer takes far longer to replenish — often decades or more, compared with a few years for an empty reservoir, said Thomas Harter, a groundwater specialist from the university’s Land, Air and Water Resources department.“It’s a downward path,” he said. “We cannot do what we did this year on a permanent basis.”Droughts in California are hardly new. Big ones come around every decade or two, the Western equivalent of the super-hurricanes that occasionally strike the East. The archeological record points to far worse droughts in the distant past, including some that lasted more than 50 years.But that was before millions of people lived along the coastal bays, and before the state’s great Central Valley sprouted one of the most productive agricultural districts in the history of the planet.Still, the current drought is the worst in California’s recorded history, and some of the costs are as visible as the retreating shorelines and bone-dry marinas of the state’s fresh-water lakes. Dozens of California cities and towns have imposed tough restrictions on water use and many have posted fines of up to $500 a day on violators. In the state’s parched woodlands, fire crews chased 140 new wildfires in just the past week.Large cities such as Los Angeles have coped with the water shortage so far by drawing from dedicated reservoirs constructed after previous dry spells, part of a celebrated “drought-proofing” effort promoted by politicians and urban planners. But those stores of water could also be threatened if the drought continues, scientists say. State officials have already had to scramble to find drinking water for smaller towns and villages where supplies have all but run out.In the state’s farm belt, the drought’s effects are less obvious, obscured by miles of still-lush walnut orchards and vast rice plantations where the knee-high green stalks mature in shallow pools of brown water. But the damage has been severe, here, too. Some of it is visible in dry irrigation ditches and barren fields belonging to farmers who received no water allotment this year. Other wounds are hidden, such as aquifers that became contaminated with salt or farm chemicals after months of overpumping, or household wells that now pull up nothing but air.It was never supposed to get this bad. For decades, the Central Valley’s farmers relied on their own form of drought-proofing: a vast network of reservoirs and irrigation canals built over decades to capture annual snow melt from the Sierra Nevada mountains. And to recoup the costs of expensive irrigation systems, they switched to more profitable crops such as almonds, walnuts and rice, which require still more water.But no one counted on having consecutive seasons in which the mountain snows never arrived. This year, the high peaks have been all but bare, causing the already depleted reservoirs to drop further. What was left in the canals had to be divvied up among thousands of farmers based on a complex seniority ranking, with large quantities set aside by law to ensure the survival of natural wetlands and salmon fisheries downstream.Jeffrey Sutton, who supervises 140 miles of irrigation channels in the western Sacramento Valley for the Tehama Colusa Canal Authority, warned his customers to expect less water this year. It was even worse than he feared: While some farmers ended up with 75 percent of their usual allotment, many others received nothing at all.“This was the first year it ever went to zero,” Sutton said from an office overlooking the network’s cement-lined main channel. “You can’t allocate water that’s not there.”Some farmers could afford to cut back on spring planting, but those with permanent crops — peach orchards and almond trees that pay off slowly after years of investment — had to scramble to find alternate supplies. Some others paid hefty fees to buy water rights from their neighbors, while others joined the race to drill, installing new wells at a cost of thousands of dollars each.For Sutton, whose family has farmed the region for three generations, any outing to church or the local store was apt to include an awkward exchange with a neighbor worried about what could happen if the drought lingers for a fourth year.“It is unparalleled crisis, unlike anything we’ve experienced,” he said. “People are emotional. There’s a fear of losing farms that have been passed through families for generations.”For Willows, Calif., farmer Joe Carrancho, the immediate worry is how long he can continue paying his 14 employees, men who have tended his rice farm for years and are “damn-near family,” he says. Carrancho, 71, is regarded as one of the luckier ones, having lost only 25 percent of his usual water allotment this year. Still, with a quarter of his fields now idle, he says he will have to stretch to make payroll while keeping up payments on the $500,000 rice harvester sitting in his barn.“I’d much rather be growing rice here,” said Carrancho, kicking up dust in an empty field of pecan-colored earth beside his modest ranch house. “I have 25 percent less production, but no one is giving me a 25 percent break in my bills.”In the state capital, worries over the shrinking water supply have kindled fresh conflicts along the state’s traditional fault lines: rural and urban, environmentalist and property owner, Republican and Democrat. Opposing factions have clashed repeatedly in recent weeks over how the government should address current and future water shortages.On Wednesday, state lawmakers passed a $7.5 billion bond measure that, if approved by voters this fall, would expand the state’s reservoirs and improve water recycling and other conservation measures. Two separate measures undergoing debate would impose the most significant restrictions on groundwater use in California history.Farming groups say they are open to compromise, though many in their ranks are scornful of any talk of regulating water that lies under private lands. Many farmers also insist that government agencies helped instigate the current crisis, both by mandating the diversion of millions of gallons of water for environment uses, and by allowing runaway urban development in the some of the state’s driest regions.Yet, agriculture’s huge appetite for water makes it an easy target for state officials looking for ways to conserve. Irrigation accounts for 41 percent of the state’s water use, compared with 9 percent for urban water systems. And the recent shift to crops such as alfalfa and rice has prompted questions about whether this drought-prone region is suited for water-intensive agriculture.“We’ve reached a tipping point where the surface water is no longer enough, yet there are increasing demands from both agriculture and the environment,” said hydrologist Graham Fogg, a groundwater management expert.A short-term solution, strongly favored by growers and some elected officials, is to increase the state’s water storage capacity, either with new or expanded reservoirs or dedicated aquifers underground. Farmers say extra storage will allow them to meet their needs even if droughts become more frequent.“Our best storage is those mountains,” said organic rice grower Bryce Lundberg, gesturing to the normally snowcapped Sierra Nevada peaks, visible from his fields in Richvale, Calif. “When you see snow up there, the mountains are essentially holding water for California. But if climate change is happening, we need to invest in storage, because if we’re not seeing white mountains, we need to see blue water.”But environmentalists and many scientists argue that any long-term solution would have to balance competing interests, including the need for clean water for growing cities as well as thriving habitats for fish and wildlife. A recent modeling study by researchers at UC-Davis’s Center for Watershed Sciences suggested that California’s economy could weather far more severe water shortages — and even a decades-long drought similar to the ones that occurred millennia ago. But doing so would require not only more storage for water, but also a general willingness by all sides to make do with less.“Keeping the balance may mean reducing the number of irrigated acres, but if you manage the system well you can still do amazing things with it,” said Jay Lund, a professor of civil and environmental engineering who participated in the exercise. Lund said he believes Californians are more capable of adjusting, compared with people in other water-challenged parts of the world, because they already possess experience and expertise and “because we happen to be rich, which helps.”Despite his engineer’s optimism, Lund keeps a prayer of sorts taped to his office door. It is a two-word play on the University of California’s motto, “Fiat Lux,” or, in Latin, “let there be light.”“Fiat Pluvia,” Lund’s sign reads.Let there be rain.Source - http://www.nhregister.com/

19.08.2014

France - Bad weather effects melon production

In the publication from the Minister of Agriculture it is indicated that on the 1st August melon production in 2014 was estimated at 257,200 tons.The first productions under low shelters benefited from a 300 ha increase in acreage and higher yield thanks to the weather in the spring. Productivity benefited and harvest in mid-June was double that of the year before.Open air fields that have now reached maturity have less to harvest due to rain and cold temperatures. Hail notably damaged melon fields in the South-West. 
Melons are also effected by increasing pests. This plus the bad weather will lead to an increases in field loss.
This decrease in yield in July led to a decrease in availability and melon prices increased to the level of prices in 2013.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

19.08.2014

Australia - Citrus growers struggle amid drought, rising salinity

Primary producers in Queensland's biggest citrus-growing region say drought and rising salinity is making their recovery from devastating floods last year even harder.More than 200 producers in the Wide Bay-Burnett region received disaster relief assistance after the 2013 floods. But hundreds more were affected, and many now are struggling with both dry conditions, and increased salinity in their groundwater.Gayndah grower Ken Roth said he lost hectares of trees in the floods.The dry conditions means growers must irrigate more, but doing it with salty water causes problems for both new and established trees.Mr Roth said a lot of trees had no leaves."Very de-foliaged on the bottom of the trees through the salt, but long-term it can make deadwood come through the whole tree, and that really knocks your quality of fruit around [because] the deadwood scratches the little fruit and makes it unsaleable," he said.Government to hold workshops for farmersThe Queensland Government increased its salinity monitoring in response to farmers' concerns.Department of Natural Resources and Mines land services manager Paul Harris said department records showed electrical conductivity readings - the measure of salinity - had increased after previous floods."The salt's come from two main sources," Mr Harris said. "When you get the big flood events associated with the cyclones like we did in the Burnett you get a flushing through the landscape. It's coming from the shallow soils and also through the landscape itself, but you also get a secondary effect - a recharge of the groundwater systems."Mr Harris said the State Government would hold workshops for affected farmers to try to help them manage the problem and reduce long-term damage to soils."This is something that's happened before," he said. "We do have to manage it carefully to make sure there are no long-term effects on the farms and on our production systems, but we should take heart because it may trend down in a year, maybe two years' time, depending on weather conditions and surface water flows."Local industries battle tough timesWith the harvest in the North Burnett just finishing, the region's fruit processing cooperative, Gayndah Packers, noticed some growers harvesting good fruit and receiving good prices.But cooperative manager Barry Scott said others struggled with the after-effects of the flood."We've had two floods, a mini-drought, we're on the verge of another drought. The salinity is the result of the floods, you've had frosts, you've had hail," he said. "It's tough for the grower, tough for the industry at the moment, but generally it cycles through and we just have to keep going until the good cycle comes around."North Burnett Deputy Mayor Faye Whelan said that was contributing to a regional downturn in business turnover and confidence."The town's obviously had some tough times," Councillor Whelan said. "I think two floods in a row is a very big thing to counteract, such a big impact takes time."But she was yet to notice anyone leaving."I'd be very surprised if any of these growers actually threw the towel in, because I think they're stayers and they'll fight till the end," Ms Whelan said. "I'd say they'll go out yelling and screaming if they have to, but they'll be there to the end, so I'm very proud of them."Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

19.08.2014

Azerbaijan - Drought damaging harvests

Drought in Azerbaijan has damaged some agricultural products, Azerbaijan's head agronomist of the Central Botanic Garden, Asif Mehraliyev said. He said lack of irrigation systems has negatively impacted the growth of fruits and vegetables.He noted that the drought will adversely affect the productivity of rain-fed viticulture that is developed in the foothills regions such as Shamkir, Dashkesen, and Gadabey.In general, rain-fed fruit and vegetable cultivation is mostly applied in the mountainous areas of the country.Experts had warned about the danger of the abnormal heat since April. However, farmers said the heat did not damage the fruit yield.Hasan Hasanov who has his own fruit farm said the drought has not basically affected the yield of summer fruits. He said the drought has had a greater effect on the autumn and winter fruits which are growing now and because of drought they are not growing well."The trees don't have enough water. No rain has fallen for the past two months and the water in the rivers has decreased. Water also evaporates from the cracks on earth," he said.Hasanov added that drought slows the development of not only the fruit cultivation, but also the growth of young, not yet fruit-bearing trees.The Azerbaijan National Academy of Science has recommended the population to use water collected in reservoirs properly as rainfall has dropped significantly this year and some rivers have dried already.Most reservoirs in Azerbaijan use the water of Kura and Araz rivers. A drop of water has also been registered in the Kura River.According to the National Hydrometeorology Department of the Ecology and Natural Resources Ministry, water richness currently holds 70-80 percent of decade norm in Quba-Khachmaz region of Greater Caucasus, 20-100 percent in Lesser Caucasus rivers, 20-30 percent in Lankaran-Astara region rivers, while 110 percent in the rivers of Nakhchivan AR.The department also predicts short-term rain in some places of Absheron peninsula on August 13-14, as well as thunder and rain mainly in northern and western regions.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

19.08.2014

China - Dry spell threatens peach production

Major peach-producing regions in China’s Liaoning province are drying up, threatening this year’s harvest.Jinzhou is known as the "hometown of yellow peaches." August is traditionally when the fruits are plucked. However this year, over 80 percent of the region’s peach tree farmlands are affected by the extreme drought. The output is estimated to fall by half. With the drought disrupting water supplies in the region, some farmers have to cover a few miles to get water for irrigation.Despite their best efforts, peaches are still withering to the size of a ping-pong ball."Peaches were picked and discarded to protect the peach trees. Because the fruit absorbs water which the trees desperately need. So we just pick the peaches that are too small to be sold, and let them rot on the ground," Peach farmer Liang Shousheng said.A reduced harvest is also affecting peach processing companies.Niu Mingwei, manager of one of these companies, has had to cut down on orders due to the shortage."Many of our clients order our product in advance, and now we are afraid of taking too many orders. We only take the most recent orders, based on the current production capacity. We won’t take orders unless we get enough peaches," Niu said.To cope with the aftermath brought up by the drought, the local government has set up 32 water supply stations in the region.Water trucks have also been dispatched to provide irrigation water for remote mountainous regions."The water we provide is free, fruit farmers only need to pay for their transportation expenses," Huang Guoqiang, general agronomist with Forestry & Water Conservancy Bureau, said.Everyday over 10,000 tons of water are being transported to irrigate some 2,000 hectares of peach farmlands in the region.Local authorities are also working to protect local processing companies.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

19.08.2014

India - Horticulture farmers hit by flash floods in Uttarakhand

A cloud burst in Uttarakhand left a massive swathe of destruction, washing away homes and schools, besides leaving villages and farms submerged after flash floods. Areas in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Assam were inundated as rivers overflowed after Nepal was forced to open dam gates upstream. At least 50 people are estimated to have died in Uttarakhand. Officials in neighboring Uttar Pradesh state reported 34 deaths while nine are said to have died in Bihar.Farmers are trying to cope with the situation where possible. "It's a challenging situation with 120 villages hit by the floods. We estimate over 25,000 hectares largely under paddy to be impacted. Sugarcane crop is unlikely to see any major loss," said Amrit Lal Meena, agriculture secretary, Bihar. Farmers in these villages could sow short-duration paddy or opt for early rabi sowing of maize, pulses --masur, chana--and oilseeds such as mustard, he said. Paddy has been sown on 85 per cent of the targeted 34 lakh hectares in the state.Most parts of the flood-hit regions are totally marooned and can only be reached by helicopter, said AK Bishnoi, Uttar Pradesh director of agriculture. "The districts of Bahraich, Shravasti, Balrampur, Gonda, have been severely impacted. We assume over 65,000 hectare under paddy, sugarcane and pulses to be affected by the floods," Bishnoi said. He said that if the water remained stagnant it could damage the paddy. "We are advising farmers to go for 60-day oilseed crop, toria, if their farms are flooded," he said.Horticulture farmers have been badly hit, said Anuj Kumar, managing director of Knids Green Pvt., which procures 10-15 tonnes of vegetables a day from producer companies in Bihar and individual farmers and traders in different states. "The immediate impact of the floods has been on horticulture farmers, who were harvesting the crop," he said. "Prices have increased by over 50 per cent to 100 per cent, so there is some comfort to farmers."In Patna, lady finger, which was quoted at Rs 25 a kg in retail two days ago, was being sold at Rs 45-50 a kg. Potato prices had increased by 50 per cent to Rs 30 a kg, while cucurbits had doubled to Rs 30 a kg, said Kumar.Vegetable vendors in Delhi reported a jump in prices. "Prices of most vegetables have increased by Rs 5-10 a kg in the past two days," said Ranjit Singh, a vegetable vendor in the Mayur Vihar area of New Delhi. He said prices of potatoes, onions and tomatoes had also seen an upswing.The weather office forecast heavy rainfall over east and northeast India and parts of the south in the next 48 hours. "We don't see any possibility of heavy rains over Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh in the next 72 hours. However, in isolated pockets of east India, heavy rains are expected. These are not going to be as intense as it has been in the past four days," said BP Yadav, head of the National Weather Forecasting Centre at the India Meteorological Department in New Delhi.Rain over the past few days is expected to help sowing of paddy and maize in Bihar, said Meena. "Twenty-nine out of 37 districts in the state have received less-than normal rainfall. We expect sowing to pick up this season," he said. The seasonal monsoon deficit in the state is 10 per cent. IMD data showed that 57 per cent of the country — 20 out of 36 subdivisions — received normal monsoon rainfall this season.Source - http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/

18.08.2014

USA - 18 counties record alien fruit fly, bane of berries, grapes, cherries

A tiny fruit fly known as the spotted wing drosophila has farmers who grow raspberries, blackberries and nearly any other type of thin-skinned fruit in Arkansas on the alert.The little bugs were first found in North America in California in 2008 and since then have been making their way across the United States, damaging fruit crops along the way. The University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Research and Extension said recently that infestations have been found in 18 Arkansas counties, with the highest concentrations of the pests in Benton, Johnson and Washington counties.Donn Johnson, professor and fruit and nut research extension entomologist for the division, said the key to holding the pests at bay and minimizing the damage they cause is awareness, education and vigilance.He said the state has been holding workshops and fielding calls about the bugs to help farmers deal with the bug, which requires increased use of approved pesticides.Sorting out the economic impact as the invasive pest makes its way across the country is difficult, experts say. In 2009, loss estimates for California were from zero to 80 percent based on location and the type of crop involved. Thin skinned fruits, including cherries, raspberries, blackberries, blueberries, strawberries, table grapes and wine grapes, are particularly vulnerable.According to the 2012 Census of Agriculture, Arkansas had 305 farms producing noncitrus fruit on 2,006 total acres, down from 395 farms totaling 3,384 acres in 2007. Grape farms were a little less than half that number with 145 farms totaling 919 total acres.In 2012, there were 126 blackberry farms with a total of 480 acres in the state; 131 domestic blueberry farms with 310 total acres; 28 raspberry farms totaling 26 acres; and 56 strawberry farms with 63 total acres.Johnson said the key difference between the spotted wing drosophila and the standard vinegar fruit flies common to Arkansas is where the bugs lay eggs. The flies most people see seek out rotting fruit to lay their eggs while the spotted wing flies prefer a fresher target and therefore can cause much more damage."This one gets on fruit that's almost ripe," Johnson said.The flies came from Japan and other areas of Southeast Asia, Johnson explained. He told a recent conference in Florida to discuss the influx that every state except Alaska has reported the insects. He said in Arkansas the flies increased dramatically during the last week of June and into July.In less than a month the population went from less than two per trap per week to 93 per trap per week, according to a news release last week . While in Arkansas the flies have been discovered in blackberries, raspberries and late season strawberries, it's yet to be discovered in any samples of blueberries or grapes.Spotted wing females lay their eggs in fruit and within a few days it will begin to break down as larva develop inside and feed, leading to discoloration and softening, with the fruit sometimes caving in on itself. The adult female lays just one egg per fruit but in her short lifespan can lay as many as 350 eggs.To be on the lookout for the bugs, farmers are advised put traps in the field three weeks before ripening begins and check them weekly. Information on how to build and bait traps can be found at uaex.edu/publications/pdf/FSA-7079.pdf. To make certain the flies are spotted wing drosophila, farmers can take them to their local county extension office for examination.Once detected, the best way to stop insects is weekly spraying of a recommended insecticide, experts with the extension service say. Farmers should spray again after rain and alternate types of recommended insecticides to help stop the fruit flies from growing resistant.To help avoid damage by the fly, frequent and complete harvesting is suggested. Fruit not usable for market should be frozen for four days and disposed of or "solarized" by placing in a bag or under black plastic sheet to heat in the sun, which stops the flies from reproducing.Sherry Sanders, the division's extension agent in White County, was the first to discover the flies in Arkansas, in 2012.She said battling the bugs statewide, with farmers and homeowners who grow berries for their own consumption taking part, is an important aspect of keeping the flies from spreading farther."You have to watch for them and you have to have your arsenal ready," Sanders said, referring to keeping a variety of approved pesticides on hand for immediate use when the bugs are detected.She added that proper use of pesticides is important, urging users to follow the directions on the label to ensure effectiveness, be aware of limitations on when fruit can be picked once it is sprayed, to not spray in rainy conditions, and to spray in the late evening or at night to avoid harming honeybees."Timing is crucial," Sanders said.In 2008, California, Oregon and Washington state combined produced 76 percent of the U.S. commercial raspberry, blackberry, cherry, strawberry and blueberry crops, for a total value of $2.6 billion. A report by Douglas B. Walsh of Washington State University Irrigated Agriculture Research and Extension Center in Prosser, Wash., and others in 2011, assuming a yield loss of 20 percent in those five crops in the three states, indicated a potential annual loss of $511 million due to the flies."The damage has been hard to quantify since contaminants in the fruit aren't always detected," said Mark Bolda, strawberry and caneberry farm adviser with the University of California Cooperative Extension service in Santa Cruz County."However, shippers here in California have taken a zero tolerance to infestation, so the losses to the grower who doesn't address the issue can be very significant."The eFly Spotted Wing Drosophila Working Group, organized to develop management strategies, includes entomologists, extension professionals, fruit growers and fruit marketers. A 2013 survey of growers in 28 states including Arkansas found losses due to the flies across all crops stood at $27.6 million, the group said in a report.Johnson said detecting the flies and using pesticides properly will work as a stopgap but added long-term solutions that don't involve pesticides are being examined, including the use of screens or row covers. He said he has been working on solutions for organic farmers with the help of a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.Sanders said when the spotted wing drosophila was first detected on the West Coast and began to get closer and closer to Arkansas, she began to worry."I thought, uh-oh, we're next," she said.Source - http://www.nwaonline.com/

18.08.2014

India - West Karbi Anglong reeling under floods

Following incessant rain in the high altitude areas of Hamren sub-division in west Karbi Anglong and release of excess water from the Karbi Langpi Hydro Electric Project, large areas on both sides of Kopili river have been inundated.The most affected areas are Baithalangso, Honkram, Umri, Maisam, Rongagora, Tharve, Borbil, Rongkram and Hatidubi. Road communication in several places connecting Hamren and Hojai sub-division of Nagaon district have been snapped since Thursday due to the flash floods.According to an Agriculture Department statement, several thousand hectares of paddy and other crops have been affected. In several villages, paddy and other cash crop stored in granaries have been damaged due to the unexpected deluge. According to preliminary survey, 35 villages located at Baithalangso, Hongkram and Maisam have been submerged under flood waters.Source - http://www.assamtribune.com/

18.08.2014

India - Odisha's farmers suffer huge crop loss in floods

The recent floods damaged standing paddy crops in Rajkanika, Aul, Garadapur, Marsaghai and Mahakalapada blocks in Kendrapada district."Floods caused extensive damage to paddy saplings. How will we repay the bank loan?" asked Sarat Jena of Ratanapur village. The floods also severely damaged large tracts of green gram, black gram and vegetable crops in the district.Deputy director of agriculture (Kendrapada) Prafulla Chandra Mishra said paddy crops on 30,659 hectare and jute and vegetable farming on 6,566 hectare were damaged at 509 villages in 156 gram panchayats.The authorities will pay compensation of Rs 4,500 per hectare to the farmers in non-irrigated lands whereas those in irrigated lands will get Rs 9,000 per acre."I raised paddy saplings on three acre last month. The floodwaters damaged all the paddy saplings," said Ramachadra Behera, a farmer of Aaitapur. Many areas at Garadapur and Marsaghai are still in knee-deep water.As most of the farmers did not insure their crops, they will not get proper compensation for crop loss, said Ramesh Behera, a farmer from Ratanapur."I was shocked after watching my agricultural field. I raised paddy on four acre and hoped to harvest in the first week of November. But floodwaters damaged the entire crop," said Arjun Swain of Basupur.Due to non-availability of flood-tolerant paddy seeds, farmers of flood-hit villages suffer huge loss of crops every year.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

18.08.2014

China - Drought could lead to complete loss of harvest in some areas

This summer has been one of the hottest in decades in Jilin Province, China, and several counties are facing the complete loss of their harvests.Currently, Changling, Nongan, Gongzhuling and 10 other agricultural counties in Jilin are facing a severe drought. The severity of the drought is comparable to that in 1951.A villager Ms. Lee from Wanglong village, Huajia Township, Nongan County, Changhun City, told Epoch Times: “The drought is very bad. All the corn leaves have turned yellow. Corns are not fully grown, only their tips are seen with barely any kernels.”Since July 1 this year, the rainfall in Jilin Province totaled only 4.4 inches, which is about 48 percent less compared to the same period from previous years. This year had the second lowest rainfall in history; the least amount since 1951.Government data indicates the drought has impacted more than 1.3 million acres of farmland in the major agricultural areas of Jilin with no improvements in sight. According to the weather forecast, the average rainfall could be as low as a third of an inch per day.Ms. Lee, a villager from Wanglong village said: “Even the water level of our own well is slowly dropping. It is only enough for domestic use. Our farmland has not been irrigated for over a month.”Mr. Sun from Zhen-Chai village, Nongan County said that all their cucumber plants have perished from the drought.Chinese media has reported two-thirds of the corn stalks have withered in some towns while others have completely perished.Local governments have not taken any measure to tackle this problem and villagers are on their own. A staff member at Jilin Grain Bureau only briefly told Epoch Times that the situation was “unclear” and then hung up the phone.Other Provinces ImpactedDuring the summer, a total of 12 provinces, including Shandong, Henan, Shaanxi Anhui, Hubei, Gangsu, and Xinjiang, have been affected by the drought. Over 14 million acres of farmland are affected.Henan Province, for example, is witnessing the worst drought in the last 63 year with 740,000 people facing a temporary shortage of drinking water. In Shandong Province the cost of the lost harvest is reaching $630 million.Source - http://www.theepochtimes.com/

18.08.2014

USA - California drought forcing farmers to switch crops

For more than 70 years, California's San Joaquin Valley has been a hub of cotton growing in the state, but years of drought are forcing California farmers to switch to crops that yield more in revenue for the water used.The crop of choice is the almond, the nut makes more money per acre than cotton and is increasingly popular in Asia. These crop switches are being driven by a three-year drought that climate scientists say will continue for many years to come.The crop switches affect many consumer goods, from the price of milk in China to the source of cherries eaten in North America. It has already inflamed competition for water between farmers and homeowners.In addition to the crop switches, California farmers have attempted to adapt further to the drought conditions by investing in complex irrigation systems and using treated waste water to feed crops."There will be some definite changes, probably structural changes, to the entire industry" as drought persists, says American Farm Bureau Federation President Bob Stallman. "Farmers have made changes. They've shifted. This is what farmers do."Industry observers suggest that California will ultimately move away from commodity crops produced in bulk elsewhere to high-value products that make more money for the water used. However, this could prompt farmers to abandon farms altogether due to the high cost of water associated with producing crops such as corn and cotton.Corn acreage in California is reportedly down 34% compared to last year, according to the USDA, while wheat acreage has fallen by 53%. These changes have a global impact as California, if it were a country, would be the world's ninth largest agricultural economy.Source - http://www.bignewsnetwork.com/

18.08.2014

USA - State’s crops in need of rainfall

The Madison area was one of the state's big winners last week when it came to much-needed rainfall.The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service on Monday reported that the capital area received 1.74 inches of rain for the week ending Aug. 10 — tops across Wisconsin's five weather reporting stations.The precipitation was a blessing for most famers as fields across the area had begun to show signs of stress due to drought-like conditions in recent weeks. Eau Claire was the other big winner for rain last week with a total of 1.61 inches.Less fortunate amounts, however, were recorded at Milwaukee (0.05) and Green Bay (0.03).“Corn, soybeans, and hay perked up in response to the rain, but areas that have been bypassed by recent storms were badly in need of moisture,” USDA said in its weekly crop update.Topsoil moistures fell on average last week with 43 percent short to very short on moisture statewide compared to 33 percent the week prior. Average temperatures also fluctuated from being normal at Eau Claire and La Crosse to 3 degrees below normal at Milwaukee.The average temperature in Madison last week was 70 degrees with a max high of 85 and low of 55.“The outlook here is starting to look a bit like last year, with the dry weather,” a Sauk County reporter said. “It is not near as severe as last year but there is still time for a lot of good looking corn and soybeans to go downhill.”USDA said 82 percent of the state's corn crop was silking as of Aug. 10 — up from 68 percent the week prior and slightly behind the five-year average of 88 percent. Twenty percent of corn has reached dough stage, up 12 points from the week prior.Corn condition statewide was 69 percent of fields in good to excellent condition, 20 percent fair, and 11 percent poor or worse.“Some corn is about 7 feet tall and some about 5 feet,” a Dane County field reproter said. “The color varies. Could be because it was wet early.”A Kewaunee County farmer said cool temperatures and limited rainfall there has resulted in not all corn plants showing tassels to date, which could translate to increased costs later.“Drying costs may be higher this fall when trying to dry this corn,” the reporter noted. “The same will also be said for the soybeans. All crops are behind in maturing.”Soybeans were 88 percent blooming by Aug. 10 with 65 percent setting pods — both totals well ahead of the five-year average. Soybean conditions were 70 percent good to excellent, 24 percent fair, 6 percent poor or very poor.“Small pockets of hail last weekend damaged some corn and soybeans,” said a reporter in Columbia County. “Some standing wheat was knocked flat as well.”Just under 75 percent of the state's winter wheat crop has been harvested for grain, an increase of nearly 30 points from the week prior. Around 92 percent of oats were turning color as of Aug. 10 with 38 percent harvested for grain.“Oats harvest for grain is in full swing with varied reports for the yields,” said an Eau Claire County reporter. “Producers are indicating 60 to 70 bushels per acre as an average with some fields reached 90 to 95 bushels per acre.”Second cutting alfalfa was 95 percent complete with third cutting 38 percent finished. USDA pegged overall hay conditions at 81 percent good to excellent.Pasture conditions declined 12 points to stand at 55 percent in good or excellent condition.Source - http://www.hngnews.com/

15.08.2014

India - Maharashtra mulling crop insurance on rain-related conditions

Maharashtra government plans to provide crop insurance to farmers based on the rain-related conditions, owing to fluctuations in the monsoon rainfall pattern over last two years."We have been observing uncertainty in rainfall during monsoon over last two years. While at some places there is heavy rain, at other places it is drought-like situation and then there are hailstorms, as occurred recently, which were not seen in last 100 years," Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan said at a function on Thursday.He said the state government has decided to set up "automatic weather stations" at various locations to aid farmers in receiving real-time information about prevailing weather conditions in their areas. "We want farmers to take help of modern technology in farming," he added.Chavan was addressing a function at the Maharashtra University of Health Sciences (MUHS) here, where he distributed awards, in eight categories, to 80 farmers from various parts of the state.Chavan alleged that farmers had to incur heavy losses due to the total ban imposed by Central government on the export of the produce.Chavan said the state government has built weirs at many places so as to make water available to farmers for their crops. "We have built weirs at many places and I will be inaugurating 3,000 'bandhare' (Kolhapur Type Weir or KT Weir). However, we need more funds from Central government for our irrigation schemes," the chief minister said.Chavan reiterated that Maharashtra is the number one state in country in terms of development and other aspects."The horticulture produce like grapes, pomegranates, etc. from the state are being exported," he said, adding that the government is trying to generate lakhs of employment opportunity for youths.Speaking on the occasion, state Agriculture Minister Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil observed that the state government has undertaken various initiatives for the benefit of farmers."We had organised a national-level agricultural exhibition, 'Krishi Vasant' at Nagpur and lakhs of farmers visited it. Our farmers have taken the state forward. We are now exporting sugar, grapes and other products," he said.State's Medical Education and Horticulture Minister Jitendra Avhad demanded that a pension scheme be introduced for farmers. "We have already appointed Amitabh Bachchan as the brand ambassador to promote horticulture produce. In previous UPA regime at Centre, Congress president Sonia Gandhi and then Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar took various decisions for the welfare of farmers," he said.Source - http://www.dnaindia.com/

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