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25.07.2014

New tool for improvement of Brazilian grapes

The Brazilian Enterprise for Agricultural Research (Embrapa) has launched SISALERT, a warning system that reports the threat of mildew and powdery mildew; two of the diseases raising the greatest concerns amongst grape growers of the São Francisco river valley, which will no longer require a weekly schedule of applications of protective and curative fungicides.Simply with Internet access and a few clicks on the computer, producers will be in control of the SISALERT (System Risk Prevention of Epidemic Diseases of Plants) digital platform and will be able to request the system for information on the risk of the appearance of the fungi that cause mildew and powdery mildew.The system is still being fine-tuned; however, in tests carried out during different stages of the vine pruning, Embrapa researchers and the Federal University of Passo Fundo in Rio Grande do Sul reported successful control rates ranging between 75 and 94%.The system collects and processes meteorological data obtained from automatic weather stations predicting growth and crop development, in addition to diseases. In summary, it compiles information about the host-pathogen-environment interaction simulating the risk of disease and supplying this information to the producer.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

25.07.2014

USA - Feds offer farmers retroactive aid for 2012 freeze

New York farmers whose crops suffered from the 2012 spring freeze can now apply for retroactive disaster recovery funds, according to a Monday announcement from Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.The U.S. Department of Agriculture'sFarm Service Agency will accept applications for its Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program beginning 24 July, according to the release. Eligible farmers can sign up for assistance for losses to bush and tree fruit crops because of the "devastating" frost and freeze during the 2012 crop year, Schumer said."When this kind of weather disaster happens, it should be up to the federal government to lend a hand to the local farmers that need assistance," Schumer said in the release.The program, authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill, will help farmers, particularly those who grow fruit, recover from loss of income as a result of weather-related or other natural disasters, the release said. Farmers will be able to purchase insurance now to cover their losses retroactively.Farmers in more than 51 counties in New York are eligible for relief funding, including Chenango, Delaware, Otsego and Schoharie Counties, the release said.During the unanticipated freeze of spring 2012, the USDA issued a total of four federal agriculture disaster declarations for 51 counties in New York, representing $2.09 billion in agricultural production, the release said. After a particularly warm winter, many crops on New York farms blossomed earlier than usual and were consequently exposed to early spring freezing temperatures, destroying or heavily damaging many of them.Particularly hard-hit were fruit producers, including cherry and peach growers, all of whom would be eligible for relief under the new provision, according to the release.Farmers will have to pay a small fee to enter the program based on the value of production and acres planted, the release said. Each farmer will be eligible to receive up to $125,000 in assistance. Applications must be submitted to FSA county offices by Sept. 22, 2014.Source - http://insurancenewsnet.com/

25.07.2014

Africa - Mozambique: Coconut disease sweeps across nation

The non-governmental organisation Concern Worldwide US has warned that an insect-borne infection known as coconut lethal yellowing disease has spread across Mozambique, reducing entire coconut groves to bleak graveyards of a once thriving industry.What used to be vibrant coconut groves in Quelimane, in Zambezia province, are now flat wastelands with thin, bare trunks rising from the earth. The effects are devastating, as many people rely on coconuts for food and income. Now that coconuts are sparse, the quality of life has greatly decreased.According to the "Huffington Post", Mozambique was formerly one of the world's largest producers of coconuts, producing over 62,000 tonnes of dried coconut flesh. This was used for exports, making oil, and consumption. Today, reports estimate that half the country's coconut trees have died - and the disease is still spreading.Lethal yellowing disease has been found in other parts of the world including the West Indies, Philippines and parts of Southern Florida. It is a virus-like bacterium spread by insects. In Mozambique, it was spread by rhinoceros beetles laying their larvae inside fallen trees and attacking newly planted saplings.Infected trees normally die within three to six months, and the only known cure is to plant resistant varieties of palm.Huge efforts have been made to revive the coconut industry. The United States government, through its now defunct Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), financed the Farmer Income Support Project, which helped over 277,000 farmers hit by coconut lethal yellowing disease. Six hundred thousand infected coconut trees were cleared and replaced by more than 780,000 seedlings.Meanwhile, Concern Worldwide is providing seeds, tools, and training to farmers throughout Zambezia province to cultivate tomatoes, sweet potatoes, and lettuce as well as staple crops such as sorghum and rice.However, Concern is particularly promoting sesame as a cash crop, which it views as a possible income replacement for coconuts. The organisation has been working with farmers to provide seeds and demonstrate best practices.Concern Worldwide US operates in 26 countries to provide humanitarian aid and long-term solutions to poverty.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

25.07.2014

Concerns grow over damage to EU wheat crop quality

Europe is heading toward a large wheat harvest this year but concerns are mounting that much of it could only be fit to feed animals after heavy rain earlier this month.Damage levels are unclear for now with farmers and analysts still assessing the state of crops as harvesting resumes in many countries, but there is little doubt there be will less wheat meeting milling standards than initially thought."In light of the good yields expected we can still hope to see a good milling wheat output but we are certainly heading toward a lower quality than average," Benoit Fayaud from analysts Strategie Grains said, adding it was too early to have a clear picture of the European crop's quality.The quality issue mainly concerned western Europe, Romania and Bulgaria, he said.The consultancy last week again raised its monthly estimate for soft wheat production in the European Union to 140.5 million tonnes, now 4 percent above last year's crop.In France, the EU's largest wheat producer and exporter, operators said only 30 percent of the crop had been cut as of Wednesday after rain over the weekend delayed harvesting.Field work was resuming around Paris and in eastern France with initial results showing some damage, mainly in the measurement of milling quality, known as Hagberg numbers.Average Hagberg could fall as low as 140-160 seconds in France this year, against 99 percent of the crop meeting the key level of 220 seconds in 2013, traders said."What was still good milling wheat 15 days ago has just become feed wheat," a broker in eastern France said.Premiums for higher-quality wheat have soared in French ports on fears that this year's harvest would be spoiled by poor quality.In an opposite move, feed wheat has been sold at a discount as traders anticipate hefty supplies of low-quality wheat.But some French traders were more cautious."We must wait. A maximum 30 percent of the crops have been harvested and on the Atlantic coast, results are good. For the north, we'll know more next week when the harvest will be more widespread," one trader said.PICTURE STILL UNCLEARIn Germany, the EU's second largest wheat producer, rain fell just as harvesting started, raising concerns of some loss of quality and that some of the crop had been flattened."However, the picture is still unclear and we do not know if damage has been suffered nor the possible extent," an analyst said. "Weather in the north and north east of the country has been much better and I do not think there will be any quality problems in north Germany."About 15 percent of Germany's crop has been harvested. Forecasts are for showers in much of Germany including the north between Friday and Monday.Germany's farm cooperatives association on July 7 pegged the 2014 wheat crop of all types would rise 1.8 percent on the year to 25.46 million tonnes.In Britain, the wheat harvest has barely begun but the outlook is generally favorable with production expected to rebound after two consecutive poor crops."We've only really heard of one or two crops which have been harvested and we are not even at one percent at this stage," said analyst Susan Twining of crop consultants ADAS.The International Grains Council has forecast a UK wheat crop of 15.5 million tonnes, up 30 percent from last season.Source - http://www.globalpost.com/

24.07.2014

Canada - Record rains cut wheat acreage to three-year low

For the first time in 47 years of farming, Giles Norek got ten inches (25 centimeters) of rain within 48 hours on his Saskatchewan crops. Half of his 12,000 wheat acres were flooded by the late-June deluge, and the plants that weren’t killed are struggling to survive.“All in all, it’s a pretty big disaster,” Norek, 63, said in a July 18 telephone interview from his farm in the rural municipality of Spy Hill. Even as the weather has been drier since, he’s not expecting damaged plants to recover. “Some of it isn’t going to make it. It isn’t going to become a good crop,” he said.Widespread flooding after record rainfall in parts of the Canadian Prairies last month is exacerbating the outlook for smaller wheat seedings, which the government had already forecast would fall 7.4 percent this season. Municipalities in Saskatchewan and Manitoba declared a state of emergency after the June storms. The nation is the world’s third-largest exporter, trailing the U.S. and Australia.“In a lot of areas, we’re hearing of some major losses,” Alyssa Mistelbacher, a market analyst with FarmLink Marketing Solutions in Winnipeg, Manitoba, said in a July 21 telephone interview. “Wheat production will fall, but to what degree, it’s hard to tell right now.”Sowings will probably drop to 23.5 million acres, 9.8 percent smaller than a year earlier and the lowest since 2011, according to the average estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of seven analysts. The government forecast 24.1 million acres in June, before the worst of the rain.CANOLA ACRESAs many as three million acres in Saskatchewan and 2.5 million acres in Manitoba have been flooded and are unlikely to produce a crop, according to estimates from Saskatchewan’s government and Keystone Agricultural Producers. The nation’s canola plantings will decline to 19.1 million acres, down 5.8 percent from the government’s June forecast, and oat seedings will fall six percent, according to the analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.Statistics Canada is scheduled to release its next crop forecast on Aug. 21 in Ottawa.While warm, dry weather in July has allowed producers to return to the fields in southeastern Saskatchewan, some plants remain underwater. Half of the fall-cereal crops and 57 percent of spring cereals in Saskatchewan are behind their normal stage of development, the government said in a July 17 report.FARMER LOSSESManitoba farmers may lose $1.1 billion ($1.02 billion US) from the recent rain and flooding, according to Keystone Agricultural Producers, a Winnipeg-based farm group. As much as $500 million Cdn of those losses may not be covered by existing insurance programs, Doug Chorney, the president of Keystone, said July 18. Farmers who filed claims for excess moisture in 2011 are now paying higher deductibles for less coverage, and programs currently only cover between 50 percent and 75 percent of losses on seeded and unseeded acres, he said.The outlook for a second straight bumper global wheat crop may limit price gains for Canadian farmers looking to recoup part of their losses. World inventories next year will rise 2.8 percent to the highest since 2012, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Futures tumbled 13 percent this year to $5.2475 a bushel at 11:07 a.m. in Chicago.Walter Finlay is still knee-deep in water three weeks after torrential rains flooded almost a third of his 3,000-acre farm in Manitoba, where he grows wheat and canola. He’s unable to spray more than half of his crop for weeds because his equipment keeps getting stuck in thick, wet mud.To access parts of the farm, “I have to go through water,” Finlay, 61, said yesterday in a telephone interview from his farm near Souris, Manitoba. “Some of it is three or four inches. Some if it is two feet.” The rains have “stunted” the wheat crops, and “it’s still not a healthy green color in lots of cases, because of the excess water,” he said.Source - http://www.bnn.ca/

24.07.2014

Asian Citrus Holdings says typhoon Rammasun impact "significant"

Asian Citrus Holdings Ltd Tuesday said Typhoon Rammasun has had a significant impact on its business in China.The orange plantation company said the typhoon, which hit Vietnam and China Monday, had caused widespread damage in Guangxi, China, where its Hepu Plantation is located.Asian Citrus said the damage in the area was significant and it would take some time for the group to assess the physical and financial losses caused by the storm.In a statement, the company said it would provide a more detailed update on the damage caused when it is practicable.Asian Citrus shares were down 3.7% to 13.13 pence on Tuesday.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

24.07.2014

Canada - Some crop damaged after weekend hail

Various crops in the Vulcan county were damaged after the hail storm this past weekend.The storm was widespread in some small areas of the county, inflicting severe damage in the areas hit.There is no way of predicting hail, said Terry Olsen assistant agricultural field man of Vulcan County agricultural services.“Taking out hail insurance is the only way of protecting yourself.”While the hail storm damaged crops in certain areas, according to Olsen the rest of the crops are in good condition. The rain this past weekend helped the other crops because there needs to be subsequent moisture to form a decent crop and now the crops are going into bloom and forming seed, said Olsen.“This year has a possibility of being a significantly decent crop,” he said.The crops are doing better than last year. Currently, the eastern part of the county is experiencing drier crops and the western crops have more moisture. Olsen said due to the heat this summer, the crops have also been ripening quicker, potentially meaning an earlier harvest.“Hopefully, we won’t get any more hail and everyone will have a decent harvest,” Olsen said.Source - http://www.vulcanadvocate.com/

24.07.2014

Philippines - Typhoon Glenda's toll on the farm sector climbs to P8.313B

Farm-sector losses brought about by Typhoon Glenda climbed to P8.313 billion, with the fisheries taking the biggest hit.In a report, the Department of Agriculture (DA) said the toll on the fisheries sub-sector reached P5.156 billion, largely on account of the destruction of fish cages and aquaculture equipment in Laguna de Bay and Taal Lake.The Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) earlier warned of a shortage in the supply of fresh water fish because of the extensive damage caused by "Glenda."The crops sub-sector sustained the second biggest loss, with 95,324 hectares of land in 8 regions believed to have been affected by the typhoon.Rice production registered P988.533 million in losses, with 48,622 metric tons of palay planted across 50,999 hectares of land compromised. According to the DA, 33,595 hectares can still be recovered.Damage to corn production reached P988.123 million, as 75,322 metric tons of the crop planted across 36,874 hectares were compromised. About 23,034 hectares can still be recovered, the DA said.The typhoon also destroyed P517 million worth of farm and fishery infrastructure.Source - http://www.interaksyon.com/

24.07.2014

Spain - Good prospects for this year’s table grape campaign

The table grape campaign in Vinalopó, Alicante, is currently in full swing with the early white seeded variety Victoria and the white seedless Superior, but with lower volumes compared to last year's bumper crop."This week we will start working with the red seeded Red Globe variety and soon we will have Italy, a white seeded variety," explains Eduardo Costa, sales manager of the young company IMG. "From September, we will have Crimson white seedless grapes and red seedless Autumn Royal.” It is a campaign with fewer kilos, but with better quality and larger calibres."The quality of these table grapes is truly satisfactory this year. Furthermore, as a result of the dry weather and the arrival of high temperatures, the ripening has accelerated and the fruit reaches high Brix levels, with a yellowing of the skin that indicates that the fruit is at its best for consumption," he affirms.Egypt and Chile’s off-season table grape campaign lasted longer than usual and the first batches of grapes did not reach high prices despite the low volumes available; however, according to Eduardo, "as imports have finished, the market has become hungry for Spanish grapes and prices remain stable despite the increase in supply. All indications are that, unlike stonefruit, table grape prices will not drop.”IMG mainly ships its seeded grapes to supermarket chains in Portugal, but it also exports them to the Netherlands, Scandinavia and Germany. "Southern Europe and the Mediterranean continue to prefer grapes with seeds, but consumer trends are increasingly moving towards seedless grapes," says Eduardo. "I think seeded grapes could even disappear in less the ten years."The Valencian company is currently also distributing peaches, nectarines, apricots and flat peaches, which, despite their higher quality this year, have failed to increase in price due to oversupply."Since the start of IMG’s operations in March we have been very pleased with the progress and how sales are going, as well as with the addition of new clients who have placed their trust in us," concludes Eduardo Costa.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

24.07.2014

Israel - Farmers doubtful they will received full compensation for conflict damages

Farmer Guy Kahlon, whose agricultural plots are located as close as 17 km. from Gaza, has little hope that he will ever receive state compensation for the millions of shekels he has lost during the current conflict.Kahlon’s farmland located closest to the Gaza Strip is a 30-hectare plot in Moshav Klahim, in the Merhavim region. He has additional land at two other farms – in Ganei Yohanan near Rehovot and at Kedma in the Yoav region.Kahlon received direct damage from a rocket that slammed into his Kedma watermelon patch on July 11, and the Tax Authority has already confirmed that he will receive several thousand shekels in compensation. “The moment the missiles fell, all of workers left,” he told The Jerusalem Post on Monday.Like other farmers in the South, Kahlon said he doubts he will ever be compensated for the approximately NIS 2.5 million in indirect damages he estimates suffering thus far. He and his colleagues never received such compensation following November 2012’s Operation Pillar of Defence against Hamas, due to their location more than 7 kilometres from Gaza, he explained.“The farmers didn’t get the compensation from the last time, Pillar of Defence, as of now,” said Yaron Solomon, head of the Settlement Department and coordinator of the economic, finance, and agriculture committee of the Israel Farmers Union. “The only farmers who got compensation were the farmers in the range of 7 kilometres from the border.”Due to the lack of fortified shelters in the fields, farmhands are not willing to come to pick fruits and vegetables, causing enormous financial losses to farmers and price hikes in the produce market, Solomon explained.“What we need is a very, very fast program for compensation to the farmers,” he said. “Time is crucial at the moment.”For farmers who file loss claims, there is a “green line” category and a “red line” category, Solomon explained. In the green category, farmers sign a document allowing them to receive payment for between 10 and 15 percent of their losses without need for proof. In the red category, which allows farmers to receive greater compensation amounts, they must provide documentation monitoring their losses and presenting their typical income, by means of a lawyer and bank statements, he said.Solomon also doubts that the farmers will receive proper compensation. “They haven’t paid for years back, so who says they are going to pay now,” he said. “And the problem is, the farmers need the cash flow.”A Tax Authority spokeswoman said confidentiality laws prevented the authority from addressing the veracity of Kahlon’s specific claims. The spokeswoman did stress, however, that the authority paid about NIS 40m. in compensation for indirect damage to farmers during 2012’s Operation Pillar of Defence.“However, there is an essential difference between the situation of the farmers found within a range of up to 7 kilometres from the Gaza Strip, who were ordered not to enter their work areas,” the spokeswoman said.These farmers were asked to submit claims according to the green or red categories, while farmers located between 7 and 40 kilometres away from Gaza were not given an evacuation directive and have filed differently categorized claims, the spokeswoman explained.“In Operation Protective Edge, we have not yet determined the final format of indirect compensation for damages, and the issue is currently under intensive examination in the Tax Authority,” she said.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

24.07.2014

Germany - Hail destroys vegetables in Sennfeld

Last week Friday northern weather fell upon the German district of Schweinfurt (Bayern), the municipalities affected include Sennfeld and Gochsheim. While there was not much damage in the region, Sennfeld was hard hit by the sudden hail and lost a lot of vegetables in the field. "One hundred percent of the area in Sennfeld was in one way or another affected by the hail," says grower Sebastian Tietze. He guesses that in about 17 and a half hours 35 litres of rain fell (including hail) per meter squared.The zucchini for example are full of holes from the hail, says Tietze. Due to the hail stones one zucchini had 20 holes. On top of this all the leaves of the herbs and lettuce were damaged. Tietze is now wondering if he should leave the plants in hope that they will recover, or if he should just immediately plough them. The vegetables with holes are more susceptible to diseases. The intensity of labour increases because now the same area has a lower yield. The zucchini full of holes are virtually unsellable. Only sales on the weekly local market would be possible now because here people can explain why the zucchini looks the way it does. Supermarkets however will not take these vegetables. Sebastian Tietze cannot say how high the damage is yet.At the market last Saturday the locals could see the effects of the damage that occurred in Sennfeld, with many stalls being completely empty. Fresh lettuce was especially lacking. "The lettuce was completely destroyed and therefore we could not harvest it," explains Tietze.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

24.07.2014

USA - Disaster declaration for farmers, ranchers affected by flooding

U.S. Senators Mark Pryor and John Boozman, along with Congressmen Rick Crawford (AR-1), Tim Griffin (AR-2), Steve Womack (AR-3), and Tom Cotton (AR-4) today announced that 23 Arkansas counties have been designated as disaster areas, allowing farmers and ranchers to receive assistance to recover from losses caused by severe weather in the state. In June, east Arkansas was ravaged by flash flooding, which devastated thousands of acres of crops and pastures.“Last month’s flash floods not only damaged Arkansans’ homes and businesses, but destroyed crops and washed away land used for livestock,” said Pryor. “Storms like these remind us of the importance of supporting disaster relief and helping our neighbors in need. I’m pleased the USDA will provide this assistance to help our farmers and ranchers recover.”“The severe weather conditions in Arkansas last month brought flash flooding, hail, and other destructive forces of nature that were devastating to agriculture producers in the path of these storms. As a result of this declaration, farmers will now be eligible to apply for emergency loans through the FSA to help them recover their losses and continue operations. Considering that agriculture makes up a large portion of our state’s economy, this relief is essential to many Arkansans who faced significant losses as a result of these storms,” Boozman said.“Arkansas’ First District has some of the most productive agricultural growers in the country, but this year’s widespread crop damage illustrates the uncertainty they face every day. Heavy rains and high water have hurt a wide range of crops grown in the First District, creating significant producer losses with few options to salvage the fall harvest,” said Crawford. “While a Secretarial Disaster Declaration does not solve the ongoing flooding dilemma facing our producers, it does provide emergency loan assistance to lessen uncertainty and get our growers back in their fields next year. I’m grateful Secretary Vilsack recognized that need.”“Agriculture is an integral part of Arkansas’s economy, and today’s declaration will provide essential assistance to help Arkansas’s farmers and ranchers recover from challenges caused by the recent severe weather,” said Griffin.“Arkansas’s farmers and ranchers are vital to our state’s economy. As they recover from this latest wave of severe weather, I’m grateful they will have much-needed assistance from USDA,” said Womack."I appreciate Secretary Vilsack's quick approval of Governor Beebe's disaster declaration request for the 23 impacted counties," said Cotton. "I have heard from many farmers about the impact of the recent flooding, and I look forward to working with our friends in Arkansas to make sure farmers are able to access the emergency funds they need."Under this designation, agricultural producers in Cross, Jackson, Independence, Lee, Lonoke, Monroe, Prairie, St. Francis, White, and Woodruff Counties will be eligible to apply for assistance from the Farm Service Agency, including emergency loans. Arkansas, Cleburne, Craighead, Crittenden, Faulkner, Izard, Jefferson, Lawrence, Phillips, Poinsett, Pulaski, Sharp, and Stone Counties have been named contiguous disaster counties. Arkansans can reach out to their local FSA offices for more information.Source - http://www.arkansasmatters.com/

23.07.2014

USA - Drones draw interest to crop scouting and other new farm uses

Remote sensors can play a big part of farming in the future. Those sensors can be on a 10-foot pole or a satellite 250 miles out in space.The sensors of most interest at an agriculture technology fair, July 17, were on an unmanned aerial vehicle, or drone, that looks like a toy helicopter. Farmers and agribusiness came to see, learn and do.“Remote sensors offer amazing potential in data collection for farmers, people who advise farmers and scientists,” said Bill Wiebold, University of Missouri professor of plant science. “This is tomorrow’s agriculture.”A technology-packed day at MU Bradford Research Center showed 100 participants current uses. Sensors were on highboys, four-wheelers and tractors.It was pictures from drones that drew gee-whiz comments.“Everyone who sees a drone thinks of new uses,” Wiebold said. “As an agronomist, I thought about improved scouting of crops for weeds, insects or fertility.“When I show these to beef farmers, they see ways to track their herds. When Bootheel farmers saw them, they thought of checking irrigation rigs.”Checking with drones to see if water pipes are flowing would save lots of walking. Seeing when crops need water does have commercial value, Wiebold said, but farmers gain personal enjoyment from doing a good job.Wiebold spent much of his talk on new limitations imposed by Federal Aviation Administration regulations.FAA, charged with safety of airspaces, is rewriting rules for commercial use of drones. That includes use by farmers. However, the FAA set back release beyond dates imposed by Congress, Wiebold said.“The latest rules are more restrictive, not less so,” Wiebold said. “Learn the rules and abide by them. We want to keep airspaces safe. Like the FAA, whose motto is ‘Safety is our passion,’ we are good stewards of airspace as we are of land and water.”Recreational use by hobbyists is less restricted, he said.“Slow clarification of rules for use on farms is frustrating, frankly.”Wiebold says his membership in the Academy of Model Aeronautics has been educational. Membership also provides insurance protection.“Prior to recent rule changes, farmers used model-aircraft drones on their own property as long as they did not invade privacy of others.”Wiebold showed videos, made before the restrictions, of his long-term Bradford research plots. “I gained a new perspective on what no-till ground looks like,” he said.Aerial observation could save lots of time for graduate students checking and recording their research projects, he added.All of his pictures were taken under 400 feet in the air.Wiebold advised learning to fly a drone using an inexpensive model. “It’s different to crash a $1,000 unit than a $9,000 sensor.”Satellite infrared photos of soybean fields reveal more information than pictures by cameras limited to visible light.An infrared picture of a field showed an unexplained dead spot, unseen from the ground. That was determined to be the site of a lightning strike.Aerial images lead to “directed scouting.” Pictures pinpoint where to go for an up-close look. “Without photos, you would never see those areas.”Wiebold said he has promoted intense scouting of corn and soybean fields for years. “When crop farmers see these videos, they become interested in scouting.” Aerial scouting seems easier than getting lost in a field of tall corn.Those at Extension meetings on drones get excited about what they learn, Wiebold said. “I’m accused of being a salesperson for drones. I have no financial interest.“I’ve had listeners at meetings go online and buy a drone while I’m still talking about them. Remote sensors are useful and available. It’s a matter of what platform delivers them best.”Source - http://www.porknetwork.com/

23.07.2014

Jordan - Wheat subsidies may be too little too late

Jordan’s Cabinet on July 14 agreed to raise the price that the government pays for local farmers' wheat from 425 Jordanian dinars ($600) to 450 dinars ($635) per metric ton (2,205 pounds). After months of campaigning by domestic producers and the Ministry of Agriculture, the Cabinet took a long overdue step to boost the country’s wheat production.Besides offsetting rising costs of wheat seeds, the government also hopes to boost local output by paying far more than the international market price ($286), with “the ultimate goal of helping wheat farmers,” Agriculture Ministry spokesman Nimer Haddadin told Al-Monitor in an interview.Experts say that although the policy is a step in the right direction, it may have come too late. Farmers in the wheat-growing north, who have faced increasing losses over the last five years because of poor harvests, droughts and decreased trade due to the Syrian crisis, also remain skeptical.Abu Ibrahim, 82, has been growing wheat on his family’s farm near the northern town of Ramtha since Jordan’s independence in 1946. He remembers when the country had no need for imported wheat, “when towns were dotted with communal mills and bakeries and farmers could make a decent living.” In the 1980s, Jordan had nearly 2 million dunams (200,000 hectares) of rain-fed agriculture dedicated to wheat and barley. By 2000, it was 300,000 dunams (30,000 hectares). Today, Abu Ibrahim estimates that “only 50,000 dunams” are cultivated with wheat, “and it will soon be far less.”Before the arrival of cheap imports and in-kind food donations from the United States and Europe, Jordan produced nearly 150,000 tons of wheat a year. During the current fiscal year, it's hoping to harvest 20 tons, enough to satisfy domestic demand for 10 days. Rapid population growth, droughts, red tape and land fragmentation due to inheritance laws have played their part, yet Abu Ibrahim and many of his fellow farmers place much of the blame for wheat’s decline at the government’s doorstep. “They have no comprehensive plan,” he told Al-Monitor, adding, “Farmers have historically been ignored in favor of urban consumers, who benefit from cheap imports.”The Middle East is the largest importer of cereals in the world, purchasing roughly 27% of all globally traded wheat. Jordan is no exception. On average, countries in the region import 40% of the wheat they consume. During the last fiscal year, Jordan purchased 97% of its wheat needs on the international market. Faced with volatile prices, increased demand and high poverty levels in rural areas, the Cabinet’s recent decision hopes to boost food security while aiding development in Jordan’s poorer governorates.Wheat stands at the forefront of agricultural concerns for a number of reasons. First is the connection to the country’s bread subsidy, which relies heavily on expensive wheat imports — 200 million dinars or $282 million during 2013 — to provide Jordan’s residents with the basic foodstuff at a heavily discounted price — 0.16 dinars or 23 cents per kilogram (2.2 pounds). With the influx of refugees and the deteriorating economic situation, bread consumption has increased, especially among the poor. Given Jordan’s experience with social unrest following increases in the prices of basic foods, boosting local wheat production seems a policy worth pursuing.In addition, the 2008 surge in agricultural protectionism in wheat markets highlighted the need for domestic production. Unable to purchase the crucial foodstuff from drought-stricken exporters, many countries realized that trade-based strategies were not the universal solution to improving food security. Samia Akroush, director of the Socio-Economic Department at Jordan’s National Center for Agricultural Research and Extension (NCARE), said: “Wheat is a strategic crop, it cannot be neglected. Boosting local production is a food security issue of the highest order.”Besides a few notable exceptions, development in rural areas throughout the region has been lackluster. This has led to large-scale migrations from the countryside to the city, as well as an increased reliance on imports to fulfill food needs. Jordan’s soon to be released agricultural strategy for 2014-20 hopes to reverse the trend. The goal, according to various sources at the Ministry of Agriculture, is a full-fledged agricultural renaissance, a comprehensive plan that can simultaneously boost rural development, aid food security and combat the country’s rising import bill. The increase in the wheat-purchasing price is the first step.Wheat is grown mostly on small plots in the north of the country. Rain-fed family farms predominate, producing exclusively for the local market. This stands in contrast to the irrigated commercial agriculture operations in the East Bank of the Jordan Valley that profit generously from state-subsidized water. Big businessmen growing high-value products for export control the area irrigated by the King Abdullah Canal, and have profited immensely over the last decades. By incentivizing farmers to stay on rain-fed lands through higher prices and increased state assistance, the government hopes to boost economic growth in areas that have lagged behind Jordan’s cities.Outside observers predict that already minimal levels of wheat production will decline further because of urban sprawl, poor government regulation and persistent drought. With little incentive to innovate cultivation methods and meager assistance to implement new technologies, the typical yield in Jordan’s wheat farms is about 1 metric ton per hectare, a far cry from the world average of 3.25.For Halim Ben Haj Salah, regional coordinator for the West Asia Program at the International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA), the government’s decision is urgently needed. “It encourages producers to spend more on inputs. …” Currently, many farmers are not using herbicides or fertilizers,” he told Al-Monitor. Salah believes that “wheat yields are far too low in Jordan.” For him, the key lies in a comprehensive strategy that boosts cooperation among key stakeholders. “Farmers need to be open to new wheat varieties and technologies while the government needs to offer further assistance in the form of loans and technical guidance.”The Cabinet’s decision seeks to reverse decades of policy in which industry was favored over agriculture, cheap imports over local produce, urban expansion over rural development. The goal is to inaugurate a new phase in Jordanian agriculture.Jordan will never be able to produce sufficient food for its own population. Only 5% of its land is considered arable. Nevertheless, the agricultural sector plays a crucial role through its contributions to national income as well as employment. More than 15% of the population directly or indirectly makes a living from this sector.The current situation — nearly 90% of foodstuffs and 97% of wheat are imported — is, from a food security perspective, increasingly dangerous. By raising prices for what has long been considered a strategic commodity, Jordan joins other governments that have successfully used direct protection instruments to encourage domestic wheat production.The slogans, campaigns and ambitious policy plans have all been heard before. Buoyed by the March rains that saved this year’s crop from menacing droughts, Abu Ibrahim smiled when asked if the Cabinet’s recent decision may mark a turning point. “Rising world prices may mean we get some long-deserved attention, but age has taught me to eschew undue optimism,” he said.Source - http://www.al-monitor.com/

23.07.2014

USA - Area farmers hurt by 2012 frost now eligible for more federal aid

Farmers across the area are getting more help from the federal government after losing many of their crops nearly two years ago.Starting 22 July, farmers will be able to apply for retroactive disaster insurance. The program allows farmers who did not have insurance during the 2012 deep freeze to apply for back pay. Farmers in 51 counties including Genesee, Livingston, Monroe, Ontario, Wayne and Yates are eligible to receive up to $125,000 in assistance.Applications must be submitted by September 22, 2014.Source - http://www.whec.com/

23.07.2014

USA - Vineyards expect big crop losses

Grand Traverse region wineries won't have much to celebrate come harvest time this year.Sam Simpson, general manager of Good Harbor Vineyards in Lake Leelanau, expects to lose 70 to 90 percent of the vineyards' fruit this year. Higher quality grapes that trace their lineage back to Europe are in the worst shape.Harsh winter weather devastated vines in many vineyards.They’re a bit more optimistic at Bowers Harbor on Old Mission Peninsula. Kristy McClellan, the winery’s director of operations, said she hopes for a 60 to 70 percent harvest, but is preparing for just 40 to 50 percent of normal.Some vines died on Old Mission Peninsula, but the biggest hit to fledgling winery Hawthorne Vineyards will be the lack of fruit come harvest time.“It was terrible. It was brutal,” said Jan Van Maanen, Hawthorne’s tasting room manager. “They’re going to be doing a lot of rebuilding of the vineyards this season. It’s going to be critical to get everyone back to a healthy state.”Source - http://www.record-eagle.com/

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