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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/

21.07.2014

USA - Forage options may be solution for storm damaged fields

What kind of crop it is; how badly it was beaten by the wind, rain, and hail; and what a farmer hopes to get out of it now have to be considered, but ag specialists say turning those storm damaged fields into livestock feed sources can pay off in more ways than one.UNL Extension Forage Specialist Bruce Anderson talked with farmers at crop disaster outreach meetings in Blue Hill and Gibbon last week. He says what looks like a total loss might yet provide food.“When we look at a lot of these hailed crops that we’ve got throughout the region, one of the things that we may be able to do in those areas is convert some of them as a salvage operation to some forages,” he says.Chopping what’s left of the corn for silage is a common answer, but late-growing plants or cover crops like turnips, oats, and some ryes can put extra nutrition in the fields for livestock come fall.“Get them planted, oftentimes during the month of August, so that they’ll be ready for use later in the season and provide feed that maybe we’re losing as result of the hail from other crops,” says Anderson.Many farmers put cattle on stalks after harvest anyway, so experts say a ruined field can still have benefits.“If there is such a thing [as benefits] when you lose a crop, is the ability to maybe make a few dollars, especially a corn farmer, renting out those acres to a livestock producer,” says Webster County Extension Educator Dewey Lienemann.Injured plants have disadvantages too - specialists say growers should be mindful of nitrogen buildup as too much can be bad for animals.“There could be some toxins like aflatoxins and actually some other poisons that can be detrimental to livestock, so it goes beyond the nitrate level as well,” says Lienemann.“While they’re something that we have to respect and should be testing for in some of these feeds, they’re not something to fear or completely run away from,” says Anderson.Experts say it’s not as perfect as harvesting a healthy grain crop, but forage and grazing options may blunt some of this loss.“You graze it much like you would a pasture, you don’t want to abuse it or overuse the forage source out there, and also you don’t want to pack the ground any more than you have to, so use common sense,” says Lienemann.“Looking at some of the opportunities we may be able to take advantage of to kind of maybe make the best out of a bad situation,” says Anderson.The forage specialists have some of the same advice as agronomists do with storm damage - they say waiting to see what regrows is okay to do, and they say insurance payments may dictate what can be planted now.Source - http://www.nebraska.tv/

18.07.2014

Africa - Coffee insurance cuts bitterness of extreme weather for Kenyan farmers

Coffee, once a reliable cash crop in Kenya, has been hard hit by the country's erratic weather patterns. Some farmers have swapped to more climate-resistant crops; others struggle through, making barely enough to live on.But for a growing number of Kenyan coffee farmers, an insurance plan that protects their harvest against losses to extreme weather and weather-related ailments is making coffee growing a less bitter experience.In collaboration with international institutions such as the Foundation for Sustainable Development, the World Bank, the Rockefeller Foundation and the U.K.'s Department for International Development, Kenyan insurance companies have over the past few years put in place index-based weather insurance to provide a financial cushion for farmers who lose crops due to flooding, drought, or other climate-linked disasters.“Agriculture insurance is particularly important in Kenya and elsewhere in Africa today as extreme weather patterns generated by climate change are introducing greater volatility to food production and food prices,” said Wilson Songa, Kenya’s principal secretary for agriculture.Since the scheme was launched in 2011, hundreds of Kenya's farmers have reaped the benefits.Last year Peter Chege, a farmer from Gacharaigo village in central Kenya, lost his harvest to coffee berry disease, a common ailment caused by a fungus, after his farm experienced heavy rainfall. But as a member of the insurance scheme, he was compensated for the loss, meaning the damage wasn’t financially devastating."Coffee output is poor here because of diseases brought on by changes in weather,” said Chege. “Even when we are not so badly hit, we must still buy chemicals to spray against these diseases, and most of us cannot afford them."Two decades ago, Kathuni Ntaari’s farm would have been teeming with activity during the coffee-harvesting season. Villagers would swarm Ntaari’s home because he was known to pay generously anyone who sought casual work at his coffee farm.Today, however, the graying elder painfully picks the berries alone, barely able to earn enough to provide three meals a day for his family.At its peak in the mid-1980s, coffee was one of the best paying farm investments in Kenya, with the country exporting up to 130,000 tonnes every year.But since then, variations in weather conditions have seen a sharp decline in coffee output. Now Kenya has around 170,000 acres of land under the crop, producing about 50,000 tonnes annually.‘I WAS ONCE RICH.. BUT NOT ANYMORE’“I was once rich because of coffee, but not anymore," said Ntaari. “But I cannot leave it because I still hope it will once again be a money making crop.”Such determination is rare in Ntaari’s village in Muiru, eastern Kenya. A number of his desperate neighbours have cleared their coffee bushes to plant staple crops such as maize and beans. For those who have stayed with coffee, the pinball income the crop generates is largely used simply to cover basics such as food and school fees.As Kenya’s population grows, more farmers do not have enough land to grow sufficient staple foods, said Dennis Maina, a field officer working with partners such as the plant-science company Syngenta East Africa to decide how the coffee-insurance scheme should be distributed. Those that do sometimes “suffer crop failure due to climate-linked tragedies like landslides and frost," he added.Devoting a small portion of their earnings to insurance can help some Kenyan coffee farmers move on from mere survival and get a steadier profit from coffee, Maina said.“All a farmer needs to enlist with the scheme is a piece of land, coffee, and some savings to buy the premium," he said. “But there are challenges, such as establishing how much premium a farmer should pay per acreage as well as what should be paid to farmers depending on how bad a season has been."THE PROBLEM OF MICROCLIMATESFiguring out the correct cost of coverage is made more difficult by Kenya's microclimates, pockets of weather - some measuring just a few kilometres - that differ from the climates of the surrounding areas.Chege’s village, for example, is chilly at the time of year when the coffee is flowering while Ntaari's village, about 200 kilometres away, sits in searing heat.According to a 2012 report on index-based weather insurance by Adaptation to Climate Change and Insurance, a bilateral project between the Kenyan and German governments, the temperature extremes are detrimental to the coffee crops in both villages.The Arabica bean, which accounts for 99 percent of Kenya’s coffee, requires temperatures in the range of 18 degrees Celsius to 21 degrees Celsius for optimum production, the report says. Above that, the coffee can develop tumours and shed flowers resulting in depressed yields. Temperatures below the threshold can lead to diseases such as coffee berry disease.With microclimates causing wildly varying temperatures across small areas all over Kenya, insurers are still struggling to develop effective index insurance, which usually relies on payouts being triggered after a certain temperature or rainfall threshold is reached.Vincent Nduati, of UAP Insurance, said coffee insurance currently relies primarily on rainfall data to determine payouts.But even the currently flawed system is proving a lifeline for farmers who refuse to give up on coffee.“Coffee insurance is good because even when output is low I am assured of something to fall back on to maintain the crop until the next harvest,” Chege said.Source - http://www.trust.org/

18.07.2014

India - Yavatmal to receive highest crop insurance amount in Maha

Yavatmal district will receive the highest amount of crop insurance fund in the state for 2013-14, with only two of its tehsils getting the benefit, officials said today.Only two tehsils- Umarkhed and Mahagaon, out of the 16 tehsils in the district, will get a sum of Rs 34.68 crore, of the total Rs 88 crore sanctioned as for Maharashtra in 2013-14 as crop insurance benefit, District Agriculture Superintending Officer Dattatraya Gaikwad said here."This year, only two tehsils- Umarkhed and Mahagaon will be benefited under crop insurance scheme. The benefit was calculated on the basis of productivity in the respective regions, and production of cotton and soybean in the remaining 12 tehsils was comparatively better, hence insurance benefit was not given to the farmers in other tehsils," he said.Gaikwad further said that the volatile crops like soyabean cultivating farmers in the two tehsils will get Rs 29.68 crore as crop insurance.District Collector Ashwin Mudgal confirmed that the district has topped in the state with regard to crop insurance benefits."The 70 per cent of the premium for cotton is borne by the state government while 50 per cent of the premium for other crops is also borne by the government against the small land holders," Mudgal said.Source - http://www.business-standard.com/

18.07.2014

USA - $2.2 billion agriculture loss in California may shift crop insurance purchases

A combination of high insurance premiums and infrequent loss events has led a significant number of California crop insurance clients to limit their purchases to catastrophic crop insurance (CAT) policies only, shunning more robust offerings like yield or revenue coverage. However, one crop insurance expert believes the state’s current severe drought may change that practice soon.David Graves, manager for the American Association of Crop Insurers, told Insurance Business the record-breaking drought in California has left many policyholders responsible for large portions of their losses because they opted for low levels of insurance coverage.“There are large numbers of farmers in California who, when they do go buy insurance, buy a CAT policy,” Graves said. “Well, you’ve got to just about lose everything [to qualify for a payout], and it only pays for a very minimal percentage of your loss. It could be as small as 25%.”Not that there isn’t a reason for that. CAT policies are generally much more affordable for farmers who grow thousands of acres of high-price crops like grapes or citrus, which trigger much higher premiums for yield or revenue protection coverage.California farmers may have also foregone beefier crop insurance policies due to a low rate of loss incidents, Graves said.“If your farm doesn’t have a history of frequent losses, then you’re willing to basically roll the dice and self-insure,” he pointed out, noting that California hasn’t experienced a drought of this severity since the 1976-1977 drought.However, farmers may reassess their buying patterns in the wake of this drought, which is already estimated to cause up to $5bn in losses from farming and related businesses, according to the California Farm Water Coalition.“When you get into these periods of drought, there aren’t many farmers that can withstand a significant loss several years in a row,” Graves said. “These kinds of weather systems provide at least ample food for thought for the decision makers about what kind of risk management plan they’re going to operate for their farming enterprise.”Graves now sees crop insurance purchases in California heading in the direction Midwestern buying patterns did several years earlier.CAT policies were once very popular in the Midwest, he noted, until major loss events from hailstorms and other catastrophes underlined the importance of more a robust risk management approach, which typically includes revenue protection coverage.“In wheat country, farmers have just about graduated from buying only CAT coverage,” Graves said. “I expect that will be the case in California in a few years as well.”Source - http://www.ibamag.com/

18.07.2014

USA - Farmers need to plan for changes in new farm bill

Although signup is months away, if you are an agricultural landowner or producer you need to begin planning for decisions you will have to make because of the new farm bill.The Agricultural Act of 2014, which was signed into law in Feb., authorizes U.S. nutrition and agriculture programs through 2018 and updates how support payments are calculated. A change in the new law is the end of direct payment subsidies, which farmers received regardless of yield, price or acreage.Instead, farmers will have to choose between the agriculture risk coverage and price loss coverage income support programs. ARC is based on revenue while PLC is based on price, making the choice between the two hinge largely on which crops a farmer grows.LSU AgCenter economist Mike Salassi said, "Rice producers are more concerned about price risk. 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.According to Salassi growers will have the opportunity to update their program yield for PLC. 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. Payments are based on income per acre, so if yields drop that could trigger some payments.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.Salasssi said, "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."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, or STAX, for those growers is in the works.The sign-up deadline for the 2014 crop will be sometime in early 2015. The exact date will depend on how soon regulations for the new farm bill are written.Source - http://www.arklatexhomepage.com/

18.07.2014

India - Hailstorm damages crops in Kashmir, farmers incur losses

A hailstorm and strong winds, besides heavy rains caused huge damage to crops and vegetable farms in Kashmir, leaving farmers in distress over expected losses. Farmers in Rajouri district in of Jammu and Kashmir were worried as their crops have suffered massive damaged due to the hailstorm. Expressing their sorrow, farmers said that they invested huge amount of money for sowing high yielding vegetable seeds, but the hailstorm destroyed their entire fields.“I had sown high breed seeds for which we spent 8-9,000. The moment the crops got ready, hailstorm destroyed them. This is my only source of income. I am dependent on it. It’s been two weeks. Nobody from the administration (government) has come here. Therefore, we request them to come and see the damage and government should provide us some support,” said a farmer, Shabbir Hussain. Agriculture officer Rafiq Choudhary said that farmers must avail the benefit of number of schemes introduced by the provincial government for the growers who are faced with such problems due to natural calamity.“We can’t help it. This destruction has been caused by nature. But it would have been better if they had avail ‘Kisan (farmer) credit card’ scheme and had got their crops insured on time, because then they wouldn’t face this problem,” said Choudhary. The hailstorm also affected fruits in most parts of Kashmir. Farmers have appealed the authorities to compensate the loss. 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. Meanwhile, Indian farmers are adversely hit due to scanty rains, which raise concerns of a first drought in five years.Source - http://www.india.com/

18.07.2014

USA - Oklahoma wheat crop worst in nearly half century

Drought conditions that continued through spring, followed by a late freeze in April and untimely rains in June have produced the poorest Oklahoma wheat crop in nearly a half century, Oklahoma agriculture officials said.The official forecast is for 51 million bushels of Oklahoma's top cash crop, the lowest amount since 43 million bushels were harvested in 1957, according to Mike Schulte, executive director of the Oklahoma Wheat Commission.The harvest, which began in early June, was officially considered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to be 97 percent complete as of Monday, Schulte said."Right when it (harvest) was beginning to start we got untimely rains, and the farmers are grateful for the moisture, it just really came at a time when producers were trying to get out into the fields," Schulte said.Mike Cassidy, co-owner of Cassidy Grain Co. in Frederick in southwestern Oklahoma where harvesting begins, said harvesting never really even began this year."It was wrapped up before it started," Cassidy said. "Most of the acres got abandoned, and what was cut was mostly seed wheat for next year."Schulte said 105.4 million bushels were harvested last year, a number that was better than anticipated, but still below the average of about 118 million bushels per year during the previous five years.Joe Kelly, who said he planted about 1,500 acres on his farm near Altus but harvested only about 700 acres, said he reaped an average of six bushels per acre, well below his normal yield of about 35 bushels."Worst crop I've ever had. It was pretty well a disaster all across the board," Kelly said.Out of the approximately 4,200 bushels he harvested, Kelly said he has stored 1,700-1,800 bushels for use as seed for next year's crop.Farmers are able to offset their losses through crop insurance and, in some instances, by using the crop in feed for livestock.The price farmers were receiving for Oklahoma-grown wheat at mid-week, according figures provided by the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, ranged from $6.09 to $6.29 per bushel.Both Kelly and Schulte said it is difficult to pinpoint a price at which a farmer would break even because it depends on various factors that include the quality of the wheat, the number of bushels per acre and the world market."At six bushels an acre you could get $10 per bushel and not break even," according to Kelly, who said his crop cost him $80-$90 per acre.Kelly said recent rains, including precipitation that began Wednesday across the state, is providing hope for summer crops such as cotton, and he said farmers are not giving up on their livelihood."In September we'll start the process again, try again," he said. "It's part of our DNA. When it gets time to plant, we plant."Source - http://www.newsobserver.com/

17.07.2014

Canada - Hail coverage for farmers increasing

Farmers in the “hail capital of Canada” are able to access increased insurance coverage for crops destroyed by major storms.Alberta’s Agriculture Financial Services Corporation (AFSC) has increased hail coverage following three years of record hail damage in the province.The agency is increasing coverage this year by a minimum of $75 to $225 per acres on dryland crops and $175 to $400 per acre on irrigated crops. Coverage for specialty crops is rising by $75 to $525 per acre on dryland crops and $275 to $950 on irrigated crops.The agency has also created special categories for high-value crops like chickpeas and canola, which can be insured for $325 per dryland acres and $425 for irrigated crops.Jackie Sanden, AFSC area program coordinator, is a result of rising production costs and requests from clients.As well, she said creating specific categories for canola and chickpeas provides more coverage for farmers growing those crops as they had previously been covered as a major crop.“The coverage levels this year are significantly higher because those crops are priced quite a bit higher in the commodity markets,” said Sanden.She said premium rates vary by township and can vary depending on losses in previous years.“Some of them have seen an increase and some have seen decreases,” said Sanden. “Overall provincially, I’d say on average there has been an increase because we’ve had some major incidents that have been high dollar, and of course that will increase premiums.”Last year saw the third highest amount of hail damage to crops in the 77 years AFSC has served as a hail insurer.The agency’s branches reported 522 storm cells last year from the U.S. border to Fort Vermillion in northern Alberta. More than $257 million was paid out on more than 6,400 hail claims across Alberta last year.The AFSC marked a record two years ago in 2012, which saw $445.6 million paid out on more than 8,400 claims.Sanden said it’s too early to know what to expect this year.As of July 7, AFSC had received 547 claims. By July 10, there were more than 1,100 claims.“In the Olds, Three Hills, Airdrie, Strathmore area there was a lot of storm activity on [July 6],” she said. “That has definitely resulted in claims being entered over the last couple of days… just like that we’ve doubled.”The increased hail coverage is good news to one Okotoks-area farmer.“With the price of seed and fertilizer and everything else we use these days, obviously the increase will help us watch our bottom line,” said Mike Imler.So far this year, he said he hasn’t seen any hail damage so far this year.He said he uses AFSC for insurance and he has seen more hail damage in the past three years.“It seems like in the past three years, for sure, we’ve always had a claim on something, because we have some area that gets hit,” said Imler.A senior climatologist with Environment Canada said it’s difficult to say whether hailstorms are becoming more prevalent, but Alberta is Canada’s hail capital.“I can’t tell you whether this is going to be a rip-roaring year with regards to an crop insurance agent’s nightmare… in terms of being pounded with basketball sized hail,” said David Phillips, Environment Canada senior climatologist. “All I can tell you is this, it’s very much part of your climate.”He said Alberta’s altitude contributes to the number of hailstorms it gets.“If you get a very warm day in Okotoks, the temperature could be 28 C degrees on the surface, but because you’re so elevated you wouldn’t have to go too high up in the atmosphere to find some very cold temperatures… because you’re higher up you’re closer to that freezing level,” he said.Source - http://www.westernwheel.com/

17.07.2014

USA - Hail insurance deadline approaching

As temperatures soar and storm clouds gather across most of Montana, now is the time to evaluate crop insurance needs. Montana farmers and ranchers can still purchase state hail insurance through Aug. 15.With last year’s record hail insurance claims, the Hail Board purchased reinsurance to ensure that any and all claims made by Montana producers covered by the state hail insurance program will be paid.County Department of Revenue offices will no longer be processing new policies; instead they will be providing information to interested parties on how to begin the process. Forms are also available at Montana State University Extension Offices and Conservation District Offices.At the request of producers and authorized by the State Legislature, the dry land hail insurance rate increased to $75 per acre and $114 per acre for irrigated land. The Hail Board also approved a five percent premium increase. Producers should contact the Montana Department of Agriculture to discuss coverage and rates.Source - http://www.laureloutlook.com/

17.07.2014

Czech Republic - Very low peach harvest

The harvest of early varieties like the Royal Glory has already started, although growers report that it will be about 40% smaller than last year.Not only is the crop's harvest poor, but also its sales, as stated by grower Miroslav Kostiha. "This year we have about two-thirds of the peaches we obtained last year; yet we sell them at a very slow pace; everyone still wants apricots," said Kostiha.There are also losses in Kobylská, although the culprit here is the lack of rainfall. As a result of this, the company estimates that the production will be 30% below average.Both peaches and apricots had a poor harvest compared to last year; a confirmation of what growers had predicted last spring due to the heavy effects on the crops of droughts and cold temperatures.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

17.07.2014

Philippines - Typhoon Glenda causes P2.3B agri, fisheries damage

Based on initial findings of the Department of Agriculture, Typhoon Glenda (Rammasun) inflicted P2.324 billion (US$53.3 million*) in damages to crops and fisheries, with Bicol and Quezon most affected.Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala said in a press conference on Thursday, July 17, that rice suffered the most damage among crops at P512.7 million ($11.8 million). This is equivalent to 80,781 metric tons of palay. But of the total 43,536 hectares damaged, more than half or 23,437 hectares, may recover.The second most damaged crop are high-value crops such as vegetables with losses amounting to P481.15 million ($9.6 million). Of the affected 4,604 hectares, 1,254 hectares may yet recover.Initial data showed corn was also heavily affected, with damage to the crop pegged at P391.65 million ($9 million).Damage to livestock reached P500,000 ($11,500) while damage to agricultural infrastructure such as irrigation canals, post-harvest facilities, and fisheries infrastructure amounted to P123.2 million ($2.8 million). The typhoon destroyed many fish cages in Laguna de Bay, Taal in Batangas, and Rizal.As for fisheries, the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) reported P810 million ($18.6) in total damages due to Glenda.Coconut, one of the country's top agricultural exports, suffered P4.61 million ($106,000) in damage. This is equivalent to more than 4,300 hectares of coconuts mostly in Quezon.The report covered 15 provinces and 4 regions including Quezon, Occidental and Oriental Mindoro, Bicol in Luzon and Leyte, Southern Leyte, Biliran, Samar, Eastern Samar and Northern Samar in Visayas.Prior to Alcala's news conference, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) pegged typhoon damage to the agricultural sector at an initial P668,233,477.94 covering only Region V for rice, corn, high value crops, and livestock.Effect on supply and pricesBased on the initial findings, it doesn't look like the damage will significantly affect the country's food supply, said Alcala."Every time we are hit by a storm, this is the time when we have buffer stocking. We have buffer stock in every region. After 5 to 7 days, the farmers will get back to their livelihood. By that time, we must be sure to have substitute crops to distribute to them if they were really hit," he told reporters in a mix of Filipino and English.He also said that most of the farmers only started planting because the rainy season began just recently. This means most of the affected crops are in their vegetative stage and are still likely to survive.If a farmer's palay or corn crop will not recover, the department will automatically distribute certified seeds to them for free. Municipal agriculturists and regional field officers already started yesterday, July 16, to validate the farmers affected.The agency needs the certification of the municipal agriculturists before they can supply substitute seedlings to farmers.Alcala also said that the agency will ask help from other less affected regions to boost supplies."Camarines Norte was not affected as badly. So we are asking the traders there if they can augment what Quezon cannot supply," he said.In fact, the typhoon may have been good for the agricultural sector in Northern Luzon since rains brought much-needed water to crops, said Alcala.The department will also assist provinces like Nueva Vizcaya and Benguet that need help in transporting their crops to Metro Manila.Source - http://www.rappler.com/

17.07.2014

Turkey - Sharp decline seen in hazelnut harvest

The hazelnut harvest in Turkey, the world's top producer, is estimated to decline by roughly 100,000 tons this year when compared to a year ago, an agricultural union said on Wednesday.Turkish Union of Agricultural Chambers (TZOB) President Şemsi Bayraktar said his union estimates a total hazelnut harvest of 371,185 tons this year. This estimate is 100,000 less than the figures predicted by TZOB for 2013, with the decline mostly due to unfavorable weather conditions in the leading hazelnut-producing provinces in Turkey this year. The Black Sea provinces of Sakarya, Ordu and Samsun are the top three hazelnut producers in Turkey and these regions are anticipated to suffer heavy losses in their harvests due to a frost that hit the area in March.The government's estimate for this year's hazelnut crop is 388,139 tons. Stressing that the TZOB's predictions overlap with the overall market expectations, Bayraktar said on Wednesday that the government needs to introduce measures to boost productivity in hazelnut fields.“The hazelnut harvest per decare [1,000 square meters] in Turkey is far below the global average. Figures from the FAO [UN Food and Agricultural Organization] shows that the global average is 143 kilograms but Turkey will see only 54 kilograms this year,” Bayraktar noted. One critical factor is that the poor harvest will also hit Turkey's hazelnut exports this year, the TZOB head said, adding that the average annual hazelnut production for a favorable export revenue for Turkey is 600,000 tons.Source - http://www.todayszaman.com/

17.07.2014

Africa - AGRA invests 85 million dollars in smallholder farming

The Alliance for Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), has invested over 85 million dollars as grants, to expand the capacities of some 800,000 smallholder farmers, to access improved crop varieties, especially in the breadbasket areas in Ghana.The aim is to transform the agricultural potential of Ghana, which had been a priority of AGRA, with specific objective of transforming agricultural productivity among smallholder farmers to reduce poverty and food insecurity.Dr Kwasi Ampofo, Country Head of AGRA, disclosed this to the Ghana News Agency in Tamale on Wednesday.He indicated that some two million people would be reached through the grant system, to get them out of poverty by the year 2020, through sustainable use of quality seeds, fertilizer and policy reforms.AGRA, which is being funded by the Bills and Rockefeller Foundations, partners with some government and private sector implementing organizations, to roll out practical and effective projects that would be beneficial to the smallholder farmers to improve their economic conditions.“AGRA believes that Ghana has the potential to transform its smallholder farming into a commercially viable and sustainable enterprise.AGRA is focusing on strengthening smallholder agriculture in the country’s potential breadbasket areas,” Dr Ampofo said.Dr Ampofo said AGRA worked with seed value chain actors to get good seeds to farmers, built networks of agro-dealers to supply farmers with critical inputs, expanding farmer access to affordable credits and linking farmers to buyers.He indicated that AGRA’s breadbasket strategy was in line with the Government of Ghana’s Medium-Term Agricultural Development Plan, to transform the country’s agricultural sector.Madam Garcia Armelle Chedoi Honvoh, Head of Business Development of Image-AD Ghana, briefing journalists at Nyankpala, said her outfit had received 957,475 dollars under AGRA’s Market Access Programme, to provide mobile and internet-based software, that would link thousands of farmers in Ghana with a wide range of information and services, to boost crop yields and to locate buyers to make transactions more transparent.She said the project known as mFarms, had profiled over 20,000 farmers in Ghana on the platform, which allows them to build relationships with marketing agents and other aggregators for mutual benefits.Madam Honvoh indicated that the technology used mobile phones and software to send SMS and voice messages to farmers about extension services, marketing and all other important messages relating to agriculture, to ensure that smallholder farmers achieved increased productivity across the value chain.Mr Toatoba Joshua, Operations Manager of Savanna Farms Marketing Company, indicated that his company, which deals with farmers and buyers, had utilized the mFarms software and had achieved cost reduction since bulk messages could be sent to many farmers at a go, regarding agricultural produce.Madam Mariam Alhassan of Wumpini Agro-Chemicals, an agro-chemical dealer based in Tamale, said the company makes good use of the platform to sell its products to retailers.Source - http://vibeghana.com/

16.07.2014

India - Crop insurance: last date to pay premium extended to July 31

The State government has extended the last date for farmers to pay premium for weather-based crop insurance scheme to July 31.Minister of State for Agriculture Krishna Byre Gowda announced this in the Legislative Council on Tuesday. The extension of the last date — from June 30 — was made based on a demand by farmers following inadequate rainfall in the State. A Government Order in this regard was issued on June 28, he said.The weather-based scheme covers 19 crops, including jowar, ragi, bengal gram, potato, chilli, grapes, banana and cotton in Bangalore Rural, Bagalkot, Belgaum, Bellary, Bidar, Bijapur, Chikmagalur, Chitradurga, Chickballapur, Davangere, Dharwad, Gadag, Hassan, Haveri, Kolar, Koppal, Raichur, Ramanagaram, and Yadgir districts.Source - http://www.thehindu.com/

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