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23.07.2014

Poland - 20% less apples expected

According to the Polish department of agriculture, apple production is expected to decrease in the 2014/15 season compared with last season. This year the prediction is that Polish growers will only harvest 2.6 million tons of apples, a decrease of 20%. The reason for this decrease has to do with unfavourable weather conditions in the beginning of the year.The 2013/14 Polish apple production reached 3.12 millions tons, an increase of 9% compared with the previous season, and the best season in the last ten years. Poland is the biggest apple producer in the EU and the fourth largest apple producer in the world, with only China, the U.S. and Turkey producing more apples than Poland.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

23.07.2014

Argentina - Emergency status granted for vegetable, strawberry and avocado crops

Tucuman's avocado, strawberry and vegetable producers will be granted tax exemptions as compensation for the losses they suffered last year due to the effects of drought and frosts.The decision was made last Wednesday. An Agricultural Emergency was declared for those sectors, in the same way as it was done in May for the citrus and sugarcane productions, which were also affected by adverse weather conditions."The National Committee for Agricultural Disasters and Emergencies met to discuss the approval of several requests for provincial emergencies affecting different crops as a result of the effects of bad weather," said Bartolomé Del Bono.He recalled that "Tucuman requested an emergency status for citrus, sugarcane, avocado, strawberry and vegetable crops. At the previous meeting, in May, the requests for citrus and sugarcane were addressed, which were already approved by the committee. Yesterday, it was the turn for avocados, strawberries and vegetable crops, which were also approved.""This entails several benefits under national law, including lines of credit with rates subsidised by the National Bank, extensions for credit payments they may have with this bank, etc.," he stressed.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

23.07.2014

USA - Study: Drought will only cost California agriculture 3% of revenue

With 79% California in “extreme drought” status, and the agriculture industry suffering its greatest loss of water ever recorded in state history, the $50 billion annual sector will only suffer about $1.5 billion in losses or 3%, of revenue according to a new UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences study.The direct cost to the agriculture industry will include $810 million in crop losses and $500 million in extra energy costs for drilling and pumping more groundwater. Despite farmer and rancher resilience, the industry could implode if the drought keeps going for the next two years: "Failure to replenish groundwater in wet years will continue to reduce groundwater availability to sustain agriculture--particularly more profitable permanent crops--during California’s frequent droughts,” said the report.The study’s results mirror a preliminary report issued in May that reassured the industry that the economic impact of the appeared to be minimal for 2014. Two months before, the federal Central Valley Project and the State Water Project announced, for the first time in history, a “zero allocation” of water to local agencies and districts in the San Joaquin Valley.Yet after both of California’s powerful Democrat Senators bucked environmentalists and fought in Washington, D.C. and Sacramento for reconsideration, the SWP raised its allocation to 5% in April 2014.Of California's 8 million acres of irrigated land, only 410,000 acres or 5% went fallow this year due to lack of water. About 3.2 million acres, or 40% of California's irrigated crop land, is planted with trees and vines that might have died off without ground water pumping and the water allocation.The updated report estimates that the industry this year will lose 6,400 jobs in crop production, or 3% of the average 200,000 farm worker jobs in the San Joaquin Valley. That works out to about 1.5% of the state's total average farm employment of 400,000.The study highlights the creativity and resilience of state’s farmers, ranchers and water districts in responding to a second continuous year of drought. Economic actions included transferring water to high-value crops.The report recommends enhancing California’s water trade market and streamlining the regulations around water transfers. This year, some transfers took several months and many bureaucratic signatures before being approved.The UC Davis study suggests that as the coming California water bond debate picks up steam that watersheds, storm water, groundwater aquifers, and water supply systems be treated as an integrated system statewide.Source - http://www.breitbart.com/

23.07.2014

Philippines - Storm damaged 13% of coconut trees

A typhoon that pummelled a large part of the Philippines early last week damaged about 13% of its coconut trees, the government said, further clouding the already weak prospects for the nation’s most valuable agricultural export this year.United Coconut Associations of the Philippines has so far retained its estimate of a 24.5% drop in coconut oil exports this year to 850,000 tons, but had already warned that fast-spreading pest infestation could further hurt output.Typhoon Rammasun, which killed at least 54 people in the Philippines, is the strongest storm to hit the Southeast Asian country after Super Typhoon Haiyan in November last year.Rammasun’s strong winds left 1.45 million coconut trees totally felled or crownless, while more than 43 million trees were slightly damaged, the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA) said.Just last month, the PCA said a fast-spreading insect infestation had damaged more than 2 million coconut trees in the world’s top exporter of coconut oil.Still reeling from damage to about a tenth of its estimated 340 million coconut trees from Haiyan, the country has taken emergency measures to head off the infestation that it fears could severely cripple its coconut exports.Rammasun crossed the Philippines’ major coconut plantations in both the Bicol and Southern Tagalog regions, with more than a million trees totally felled or left crownless in the hardest-hit Camarines Sur province alone, the PCA said in a report seen by Reuters on Friday. Damaged trees in Batangas, Cavite and Quezon provinces totalled 355,000, according to the report submitted to Secretary Francis Pangilinan, the country’s food security chief.“The PCA will validate the exact damage in coconut population, number of farmers affected and the total income losses,” PCA Deputy Administrator Roel M. Rosales said in the report.The country’s annual exports of coconut products, including coconut oil, averaged $1.3 billion in the past two years. Preliminary industry data showed January-May coconut oil shipments plunged 49% from a year ago to 302,297 tons as a result of the typhoon devastation in November. United Coconut Associations of the Philippines, which for now has retained its estimate for a 24.5% drop in coconut oil exports this year to 850,000 tons, has said the insect infestation could further hurt output.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

22.07.2014

USA - Lawmakers urge quick farm bill implementation

Implementation of the new farm bill’s crop insurance provisions was front and center during a recent hearing of the House Agriculture Committee's Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management.One of the chief concerns of lawmakers was the right of farmers to quickly utilize an Actual Production History (APH) adjustment. APH is a tally of a farm’s crop yields over many years. The adjustment in the farm bill aims to help disaster-hit farmers by allowing them to exclude a crop year from their APH history if a yield is less than 50 percent of the 10-year county average.The APH adjustment “is meant to be self-executing,” said Texas Rep. Mike Conaway, chairman of the subcommittee. “Farmers were not meant to have to ask permission to exclude qualifying yields.”Georgia Rep. David Scott, ranking member, backed up Conaway’s worries and, pointing to major crop losses in the Southeast due to freeze damage, said there is “great concern” regarding the Risk Management Agency (RMA) imposing a “downward trending adjustment on APH in Georgia and South Carolina while waiving the requirement in all other states. That’s not right.”The APH was also part of Oklahoma Rep. Frank Lucas’ talking points. “For anyone who’s facing the prospect of drought, or has suffered prolonged drought, this provision is designed to provide immediate relief.”Following a series of poor crops due to drought in Lucas’ home state, “the APH adjustment would provide widespread relief for wheat producers planting and insuring their crops this fall. Congress was clear: all producers affected by drought should be able to exclude those years. They should be able to do so immediately.”With so much riding on the APH adjustment, the lawmakers were surely disappointed with testimony of Michael Scuse, USDA Under Secretary. Scuse said the adjustment in APH “will be available for crops planted in the fall of 2015. This was one of the few crop insurance provisions that did not exist in either the House or Senate version of the farm bill prior to conference. While (the RMA) understands how important this provision is to many farmers who have suffered from natural disasters, it is not possible to implement this provision for the 2015 crop year.”Part of the problem with quick APH adjustments, said Scuse, was that the RMA must gather 20 years of crop data from every U.S. county. Further, while USDA agencies were able to get a jump-start on some farm bill provisions, the APH adjustment was placed in the legislation late during conference. Scuse did tell the subcommittee he would provide them details on the APH adjustment in several weeks.Conaway was also wary of the USDA’s implementation of conservation compliance. “This was never a smart provision and the interim rule explains why so many of us were concerned with it. For example, page 11 of the rule says that if a farmer plants a crop next spring and is found to be non-compliant on June 1 even if he or she was to come back into compliance by July 1, the farmer would still be denied premium support for 2015. This effectively means no insurance.“As bad as the compliance provision is, the objective was to impose the penalty in the following year -- and only if the producer did not come back into compliance.”Such provisions, said Conaway, help explain why farmers and ranchers are “scared to death about regulatory overreach of the administration.”Title 11 of the farm bill “specifically enhances coverage of the permanently authorized federal (crop) insurance program,” said Scott. “It is very important that we understand this farm bill completely changes -- completely -- the way in which farmers receive assistance. Farmers must now make a decision about which crop insurance program they must sign onto this fall -- either the Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) or Price Loss Coverage (PLC). And once they make that decision they are committed to it for five years.”“For this reason it is critical that we take the time and make sure our farmers get the correct information to make the right decisions.”To help implement ARC and PLC, Scuse said farmers could expect the Farm Service Agency to provide data on current base acres, yields and recent planting history in late summer. That will be followed in the fall with a chance to update a farm’s yields and reallocate base acres. Contracts for either ARC or PLC will be signed by 2015.Source - http://deltafarmpress.com/

22.07.2014

USA - Farmers bit by frost receive financial aid

Farmers who lost crops in the winter of 2012 may finally receive some relief for their suffering.When the Farm Bill was enacted this year, the USDA made disaster assistance programs a top priority.The winter of 2012 was a harsh one, and many fruit farmers lost revenue due to the freezing temperatures. Through the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program, NAP, many of these farmers will be able to apply for assistance.To qualify, farmers must have grown a crop on a bush or tree that was not covered by a catastrophic risk protection level crop insurance. In addition, the farmer must have also lived in a county that received secretarial disaster designation due to frost or freeze.This makes almost the entire Upper Peninsula eligible to apply. The only county not affected by the new program is Keweenaw.Payments will be calculated using several factors, including acreage and yield.The deadline to apply for NAP is September 22.Source - http://abc10up.com/

22.07.2014

Canada - Strawberry farmer loses 70% of crops to tropical storm

Strawberry crops in southern New Brunswick were hit hard during post-tropical storm Arthur. About 120 mm of rain fell on Brian Walker’s Mill Stream farm over a 24-hour period as Arthur rolled through the Maritimes on July 5.Walker says floodwaters coated his strawberries in silt and nearly 70 per cent of his crop is a write-off. “I thought I was in for a great season, but Arthur really did a number on us,” says Walker.Walker says his farm has flooded three times this year. Prior to that, it had not flooded since 1991. With no insurance, Walker is afraid he may have to rethink his strawberry business, if he doesn’t receive compensation.“Other sectors get compensation, so I think strawberry producers should as well,” says Walker.Walker says strawberries are a significant part of his income and estimates Arthur slashed $100,000 from his bottom line.Public Safety Minister Bruce Northrup is urging Walker to apply for disaster relief assistance. “Other farmers in the area have filled out their paperwork and got it into us,” says Northrup. “We’re fortunate we have a satellite office here in Sussex where people can go and get information, but we haven’t got that information out there yet and we’re in the process of getting that information out there.”Northrup says the province will give more direction on compensation options for people early next week. In the meantime, he is asking people to be patient.Walker says this year’s bad weather has motivated him to get crop insurance. He says he never had it before because things were never this bad.“I did everything I could possible to have a good crop this year, but Mother Nature took it away from us.”Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

22.07.2014

USA - Relief for fruit growers devastated by weather disasters

Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), Chairwoman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, today announced that many fruit growers across the country whose farms were devastated by extreme weather conditions in 2012 will now be able to apply for disaster relief from the USDA. The new buy-up provisions in the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), authored by Chairwoman Stabenow as part of the 2014 Farm Bill, will extend relief to growers who suffered from disasters but did not have access to crop insurance.Chairwoman Stabenow led the effort to create new risk management tools and level the playing field for fruit and vegetable growers in the 2014 Farm Bill by including the new buy-up provisions in NAP, as well as creating new crop insurance options for fruits and vegetables for the first time ever."Family farms and businesses shouldn't have to go under because of a few days of bad weather," Chairwoman Stabenow said. "That's why it was so crucial when writing the 2014 Farm Bill to make sure that growers of all crops have access to relief to keep their farms running."Frosts and freezes in 2012 destroyed crops like cherries and apples in Michigan and across the country, leaving so many fruit growers who did not have access to crop insurance struggling to keep family farms from going under. I'm proud that these hard working farmers will finally be able to access relief to help keep their businesses operating, and continue growing the economy."Eligible producers from states across the country who experienced losses in 2012 due to frost or freeze, and who did not have access to crop insurance, will be able to apply for assistance beginning today, July 22, through their local Farm Service Agency office.Source - http://insurancenewsnet.com/

22.07.2014

USA - Farmers face many changes in new farm bill

Although sign-up is months away, agricultural landowners and producers need to begin planning for decisions they will have to make because of the new federal farm bill, an agricultural economist suggests.The Agricultural Act of 2014, signed into law in February, authorizes U.S. nutrition and agriculture programs through 2018 and updates how the government calculates support payments. A change in the new law is the end of direct payment subsidies that farmers received regardless of yield, price or acreage.Instead, farmers will have to choose between the agriculture risk coverage (ARC) and price loss coverage (PLC) income support programs. ARC is based on revenue while PLC is based on price. That makes the choice between the two hinge largely on which crops a farmer grows.“Rice producers are more concerned about price risk,” said LSU AgCenter economist Mike Salassi. “Because rice is irrigated, the yields don’t vary from year to year as much as crops like corn or soybeans, which would prefer the ARC program. Most of the rice growers are going to pick the PLC program.”Under PLC, farmers are paid if the price of rice drops below $14 per hundredweight.Growers will have the opportunity to update their program yield for PLC, Salassi said. The updated program yield will be 90 percent of the average rice farm yield for the 2008-2012 crop years. Most program yields for rice were set in the 1980s, he said, and yields have improved significantly since then.The ARC program could help corn and soybean growers because it addresses both yield and price risks, Salassi said. Payments are based on income per acre, so if yields drop, “that could trigger some payments,” he said.Farmers will also be able to reallocate their base acres based on their 2009-2012 planting history. Base acres, which are used to calculate both ARC and PLC payments, are the average number of acres of a crop grown over a four-year period.“If a farm had 80 acres of rice base and 20 acres of wheat base, but in the past four years they’ve planted all rice, they could reallocate it,” Salassi said.A supplemental coverage option, which pays for part of the deductible of regular crop insurance, is available to farms in the PLC program. The program will begin in 2015 for corn, grain sorghum, rice, soybeans and wheat in selected Louisiana parishes.Cotton is no longer included because of trade distortion concerns, but a new Stacked Income Protection Plan for those growers is in the works, Salassi said.The deadline for signing up for the 2014 crop will be sometime in early 2015. The exact date will depend on how soon staff in Washington write regulations for the new farm bill.Source - http://www.dailyworld.com/

22.07.2014

Jamaica - Portland crops hit hard, livestock in danger as grazing fields disappear

The continuous drought is creating havoc in the lives of east Portland farmers who have suffered heavy crop losses and are now losing their livestock.The ongoing dry spell, considered to be the worst in recent times, is close to crisis level, and according to former Portland parish manager of the Rural Agricultural Development Authority, Ridley Badresingh, unless it rains soon, farmers could suffer a 100 per cent loss of crops."Many of our crops have simply dried up," said Badresingh.He added: "I am a ginger farmer, and I forced myself to plant a crop recently, as the soil was already prepared, but it was too hot for planting. It simply means that reaping has been set back for approximately four months, and that is dependent on the rains," he said.Badresingh continued: "My bananas and plantains have suffered the worst, as the tree trunks have broken in half as a result of the dry spell. The peppers, cabbage, pak choi, tomato and pumpkin have simply dried up, and those that are putting up a fight are slowly withering away."Badresingh said it is anybody's guess what will happen if it does not rain soon as yams, cocoa, and dasheen are also suffering from the intense heat. The month of May, which is a traditional rainy month for Portland, failed to produce any showers.A somewhat similar situation exists with livestock farmer Kenneth Rowe of Hector's River, who is finding it extremely difficult to adequately provide grass and other shrubbery for his herd of goats, as vegetation has either dried up or is been exhausted."I am a small farmer and I have 54 goats, comprising rams, heifers, and kids, which are allowed to roam on a three-acre property, which once had lush vegetation. Now, since there is no rain, the area of vegetation, which was easily replenished in about three weeks, is now bare. Grass is drying up, and I am running out of feeding ground for my herd. I would welcome even a short five-minute sprinkle right now."Among the farming communities in east Portland suffering from the drought are Commodore, Kensington, Happy Grove, Hector's River, Black Rock, Priestman's River, Top Hill, Barracks, Long Road, Windsor Forest, Zion Hill, and Reach.Source - http://jamaica-gleaner.com/

22.07.2014

West European Wheat Threatened by Late Rains

Late rains that have fallen on wheat fields in Western Europe might decrease the quality of the commodity because of the damage inflicted on the crop. The French research firm specializing in agro-economic European markets of grain, Strategie Grains, commented that it had rained in some areas exactly at the point when crop was at its most vulnerable stage – ripe and ready for cutting.“Wheat elsewhere got rain instead of the sunshine and warmth it needs to ripen and develop quality. The harvest looks to be large but quality is still unknown, we urgently need more sun,” the agency added. France is EU’s largest producer of wheat, so nervousness mounts that the quality of the crop will not be sufficient. This week, dry and warm weather finally allowed French farmers to resume harvesting. Analysts say that the country will harvest 37 million tons of soft wheat this year, a bit more than last year’s 36.8 million tons surpassing the five-year average.Paul Gaffet of crop consultancy, ODA, said that the quality was certainly not looking good although the extent of the damage is not yet known. Several clients of the consultancy have reported about 30 percent of germinated grains. Other observers have also reported germination, which can be so serious that wheat may be eventually degraded even to animal-feed quality.Worries remain specifically in the east of France, where weather conditions were especially wheat-unfriendly compared to the west of the country. In Germany, the EU’s second largest wheat producer, rain has also been causing troubles with the quality and harvest cannot start as soon as it was wished for. Germany’s wheat harvest of all types will go up 1.8 percent compared to last year’s good crop to 2.46 million tons. The German farmers’ association, DBV, reported that some areas of winter wheat had been knocked over by the very heavy rainfall, which might cause pre-harvest sprouting. Although rains give a rise to concerns, most analysts remain positive about the overall picture about the quality loss.Source - http://eubulletin.com/

21.07.2014

There’s huge potential for increased food production on existing land

A systematic University of Minnesota study of global agricultural resources suggest that improving food systems in a few specific regions could make it possible to both meet the basic needs of 3 billion more people and decrease agriculture’s environmental footprint.The report focuses on 17 key crops that produce 86 percent of the world’s crop calories and account for most irrigation and fertilizer consumption on a global scale. It proposes a set of key actions in three broad areas that have the greatest potential for reducing the adverse environmental impacts of agriculture and boosting our ability meet global food needs.Simply reducing food waste in the U.S., China and India could yield food for more than 400 million people, the study found, after identifying leverage points where nongovernmental organizations, foundations, governments, businesses and citizens can target food-security efforts for the greatest impact. The biggest opportunities cluster in six countries — China, India, U.S., Brazil, Indonesia and Pakistan — along with Europe.On the environmental side of the equation, there are huge opportunities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the agricultural sector, especially in Brazil and Indonesia for deforestation; China and India for rice production; and China, India and the United States for crop fertilization.Agriculture is responsible for 20 to 35 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, largely in the form of carbon dioxide from tropical deforestation, methane from livestock and rice growing, and nitrous oxide from crop fertilization.“This paper represents an important next step beyond previous studies that have broadly outlined strategies for sustainably feeding people,” said lead author Paul West, co-director of the Institute on the Environment’s Global Landscapes Initiative. “By pointing out specifically what we can do and where, it gives funders and policy makers the information they need to target their activities for the greatest good.”The major areas of opportunity and key leverage points for improving the efficiency and sustainability of global food production are:1. Produce more food on existing land. Previous research has detected the presence of a dramatic agricultural “yield gap” — difference between potential and actual crop yield — in many parts of the world. This study found that closing even 50 percent of the gap in regions with the widest gaps could provide enough calories to feed 850 million people. Nearly half of the potential gains are in Africa, with most of the rest represented by Asia and Eastern Europe.2. Grow crops more efficiently. The study identified where major opportunities exist to reduce climate impacts and improve the efficiency with which we use nutrients and water to grow crops.With respect to nutrient use, the study found that worldwide, 60 percent of nitrogen and nearly 50 percent of phosphorus applications exceed what crops need to grow. China, India and the U.S. — and three crops, rice, wheat and corn — are the biggest sources of excess nutrient use worldwide, so offer the greatest opportunity for improvement.With respect to water, rice and wheat are the crops that create the most demand for irrigation worldwide, and India, Pakistan, China and the U.S. account for the bulk of irrigation water use in water-limited areas. Boosting crop water use efficiency, the researchers found, could reduce water demand 8 to 15 percent without compromising food production.3. Use crops more efficiently. The third major category of opportunities characterized for boosting food production and environmental protection relate to making more crop calories available for human consumption by shifting crops from livestock to humans and reducing food waste.The crop calories we currently feed to animals are sufficient to meet the calorie needs of 4 billion people. The study noted that the U.S., China and Western Europe account for the bulk of this “diet gap,” with corn the main crop being diverted to animal feed. Although cultural preferences and politics limit the ability to change this picture, the authors note that shifting crops from animal feed to human food could serve as a “safety net” when weather or pests create shortages.In addition, some 30 to 50 percent of food is wasted worldwide. Particularly significant is the impact of animal products: The loss of 1 kilogram of boneless beef has the same effect as wasting 24 kilograms of wheat due to inefficiencies in converting grain to meat.“Sustainably feeding people today and in the future is one of humanity’s grand challenges. Agriculture is the main source of water use, greenhouse gas emissions, and habitat loss, yet we need to grow more food,” West said. “Fortunately, the opportunities to have a global impact and move in the right direction are clustered.By focusing on areas, crops and practices with the most to be gained, companies, governments, NGOs and others can ensure that their efforts are being targeted in a way that best accomplishes the common and critically important goal of feeding the world while protecting the environment. Of course, while calories are a key measure of improving food security, nutrition, access and cultural preferences must also be addressed. But the need to boost food security is high. So let’s do it.”Source - http://summitcountyvoice.com/

21.07.2014

India - Late monsoon starts Indian farmer’s ‘journey to hell’

Indian farmer Asghar Bhura scrapes a living by growing sugarcane, but this year’s late monsoon has left his tiny plot parched and he will earn nothing from his harvest.Bhura will have to go and work for a big grower to feed his family of six, making Rs250 rupees (Dh15.2) a day, as he did when India suffered its last severe drought in 2009.“I have no option but to become a bonded labourer just to feed my family one meal a day,” said Bhura, 50, looking at his stunted crop on his third of a hectare of land.Bhura’s borderline existence is shared by many farmers in the district of Shamli, in the sugarcane belt of India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, three hours’ drive north of the capital New Delhi.With this year’s monsoon rains several weeks late, the world’s second-largest sugar and rice producer is on the verge of widespread drought in the face of a developing Pacific Ocean weather event known as El Nino, which is often associated with drought in South Asia.In good years, the four-fifths of local farmers who tend a hectare or less, can get by. In bad years, they slide into debt.Some lose their land. Others are forced into servitude.Hunger for land and water feeds social tensions. In nearby Muzaffarnagar, communal clashes last year killed about 65 people, most of them Muslims, and displaced thousands more.India’s farm sector accounts for about 14 per cent of the economy but two thirds of its 1.2 billion people depend on farming to live. Most poor live on the land. Areas that lack irrigation are most vulnerable when the rains fail.Although the national weather office said on Thursday that the monsoon had covered all of India, rainfall in the first six weeks of the wet season has been more than a third below normal.A poor monsoon could raise imports of cooking oil to India, the leading buyer of vegetable oils. The country may also cede its position as top rice exporter to Thailand.Cane and basmati rice fields in Shamli, a district carved out of Muzaffarnagar three years ago, showed gaping cracks on a recent visit.“For me, my wife and two sons and two daughters, the journey to hell has already started. Our stomachs will be half empty soon,” said Bhura, whose gaunt face and unkempt beard betrayed anxiety and exhaustion.Late rainsEven if the monsoon revives during the rest of the planting month of July, farmers here expect losses of at least a fifth in summer-sown crops like rice, corn, cane, soybean and cotton.India harvested 348 million tonnes of cane last year, with an average sugar content of 11 per cent.Productivity in Uttar Pradesh typically lags that of other growing regions like subtropical Maharashtra due to poorer soils and a less favourable climate. Another two weeks without rain could lower both tonnage and sugar content, possibly to 8 per cent, local farmers reckon.Farmers worry the impact this year could be worse than five years ago, when India suffered its worst drought in four decades. Subsequent supply shortages from the country pushed New York sugar prices to 30-year highs.“The rains improved in early July five years ago, but this year the dryness stretched beyond the second week of July,” said Yogendra Singh, who mainly grows cane on five hectares of land.Cane fields here are irrigated with water from canals built during British colonial rule. But the sturdy crop, planted twice a year, only blooms when it rains regularly.“Canal water can initiate sowing activities in cane but water from the sky is vital for the nourishment and growth of the crop,” said Singh, who retired from the Indian Air Force two decades ago to join his three brothers in farming.Though production will fall this year, India will not have to trawl the global market for sugar because of surpluses piled up over the past four years.Crop switchOther farmers are turning away from cane to other crops that they hope will safeguard their incomes.“I have switched to cultivation of banana as it promises much higher returns than cane or basmati rice,” said Nameet Panwar, 24, who is just starting out farming one hectare of his family’s land.Panwar expects to earn a minimum of Rs1 million from growing bananas, he says, more than twice that of cane even if the sugar plant is harvested twice a year.Responding to the late monsoon, local authorities have put contingency plans into action, including providing quick-growing seed varieties of pulses to growers and ensuring adequate supplies of pesticides and insecticides at farmers’ doorsteps.“We too have in place a drought contingency plan to mitigate any situations arising due to rainfall that is 50 per cent below normal,” said district magistrate N.P. Singh. Marginal farmers would be given work digging wells.Source - http://gulfnews.com/

21.07.2014

Canada - Virus devastates Quebec’s strawberry farms during peak season

July is peak season for strawberry-picking in Quebec, but many of the province's 700 berry farmers are seeing their crops devastated by viruses that are inhibiting growth."It's a disaster," says farmer Louis Marineau, who lost three fields of strawberries. "Half of our crops are gone. Fortunately, we have raspberries and blueberries too, or we would be out of business."The fruits are still safe to eat because the virus only stunts growthMany producers believe the virus originated from infected seedlings purchased at local nurseries. Plant scientist Nicholas Taylor thinks more factors may be at play, including growing conditions following a longer-than-normal winter season."The virus spreads around from aphids, which can thrive given the right seasonal conditions,” Taylor told CTV News. “This year was unique in the sense it was a verycold winter followed by a lot of snow."The extra moisture, Taylor says, became a perfect breeding ground for diseases.The presence of the virus has highlighted the need for new genetics and new strains of plants."Pathogens and viruses change over time. So plants that were previously resistant will gradually lose the battle to the virus or bugs over time," said Taylor.Unfortunately for Marineau, he doesn't have insurance for his decimated plants, and will have to start fresh.Source - http://www.ctvnews.ca/

21.07.2014

India - Compensation for loss of coconut increased

The State government has increased the amount of compensation for coconut farmers, whose crop has withered due to various factors in the region, said Horticulture Minister Shamanuru Shivashankarappa, here, on Sunday.He said, the compensation amount has been raised from Rs 12,000 per hectare to Rs 20,000. Responding to a question, an official said, a proposal has been sent to the Ministry of Agriculture to increase the relief amount to Rs 1,000 per coconut tree, in line with the Kerala model. However, the Centre has not yet approved it, he said.Speaking on the proposed turmeric processing unit at Chamarajanagar, Shivashankarappa said, the construction of a market to buy turmeric produced by farmers in the region, has improve the condition of farmers.“Earlier, farmers used to send their produce to Erode in Tamil Nadu for processing. Farmers used to bear the expenses of transport of their produce.However, with the launch of the market in Chamarajanagar, farmers are getting better price for their produce,” he said.He said, the amount of Revolving Fund, which is used to compensate the farmers, who suffer crop loss, will be increased regularly.During the year 2013-14, Rs 100 crore was sanctioned for the Fund, he said.He said, an association of farmers cultivating crops listed under Geographical Index — such as Nanjangud rasabale and Mysore mallige — has been formed to improve their cultivation in the district.Source - http://www.deccanherald.com/

21.07.2014

India - Banks wary of crop loan recovery

Private and public sector banks that have pumped in credit worth Rs 1,456 crore in the form of crop loans to farmers in the district are now worried about the repayment, given the scant rainfall in the district as July 15 passed by."The banks have collectively given out credit worth Rs 1,456 crore to farmers in the district against a target of Rs 1,950 crore. Though this was a remarkable achievement, the possible difficulty in repayment is a a cause for concern to the banks, given that there are no rains in the district. The last date of sowing for the kharif crop (July 15) has gone by. Even if the farmers sow now, it is less likely that they will get a good crop," a senior banking official said.July 15 has passed by and that is the time when farmers with crop insurance are able to benefit - if they have sown seeds. In Nashik there has been no sowing and that means farmers will not benefit from the sowing season, which will directly impact the repayment process."Considering that farmers have not been able to sow seeds given the failure of rainfall, recovery will also be stopped, we feel. But the government has not announced any such move at this point. Our recovery will start after the 120 day-cycle after July 15 - by which time the crop is estimated to be harvested. We are hopeful that there will be some decision from the government," bankers said.The district administration has said that announcing any compensation to farmers in case of less or no rainfall beyond its jurisdiction. "At the most, we can ask banks to hold the recovery drive only to a limited period, after which government orders will decide the future," a senior officer from the revenue office said.Shantanu Hingmire, a farmer from Madgsangvi village on the outskirts of the city, said that he had already taken a loan of Rs 31,000 from banks and has opted for crop insurance."Since there were no rains, we were unable to sow seeds in the fields and hence will get no insurance cover. We thought the rains will help, but there is no sign of the same. It rained good for two days, but that is too late and too little. We pray for better rains. We are sure the government will help the farmers if the case worsens," Hingmire said.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

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