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04.06.2014

USA - 30% of peach crop destroyed by extreme winter cold

Remember all those cold nights this winter when the temperature dropped to double digits below zero? Peach farmers do, and now they're able to judge the damage the cold caused to their peach trees. But the crop loss varies greatly the farther the orchard is from Lake Michigan.Dave Rabe's peaches are looking good, thanks in part to his orchards' close proximity to Lake Michigan.Cold temperatures this winter did damage the state's peach crop."You are going to find about 70 percent of a crop overall. Some people got a full crop and some got hurt bad from the cold," Rabe explained.Farms on the lakeshore benefit from the big lake's protection. While farmers many miles inland reported multiple days with temperatures at 19 degrees below zero, the lowest it fell on Rabe's farm was 15 degrees below zero.Farmers in central southern Michigan and those on the east side of the state have reported the greatest peach crop damage."And even up by Hart they had some more damage," Rabe said.Most peaches grown on the lakeshore go to processing markets to be used in pies and canned. The supply of Michigan peaches sold in grocery stores and at farm markets will be tight, with peach prices similar or slightly more than last summer.A peach expert with Michigan State University says farms in Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio have much greater crop loss because of the cold winter. That's one factor that could create upward pricing pressure on peaches grown in Michigan.Source - http://www.wzzm13.com/

03.06.2014

USA - Rains forcing some farmers to miss deadlines

Minnesota is known as the Land of 10,000 Lakes. After heavy rains during the weekend, a few more appear to have materialized in Central Minnesota — but on land commonly used for farming.According to a U.S. Department of Agriculture crop progress and condition report for Minnesota, which was released Monday, the St. Cloud area has received 4.12 inches more rain than normal in the past month.Of almost four dozen locations measured around the state, only Becker (4.48 inches), Melrose (4.62) and Mora (4.64) had more.Heavy rains Saturday came just in time to push corn farmers beyond the deadline for getting their planting done in time to receive full crop insurance.Beginning last Sunday, farmers will take a 1 percent reduction in crop insurance coverage for every day it takes them to get a crop planted. Others will give up on what has been the second-wettest spring on historical record, drier than only the one in 1894, choosing instead to take prevented planting payments."There have been pockets that were quite severely hit," said Brian Buck, a Waite Park-based representative for AgStar Financial Services — one of the largest providers of crop insurance in the area."But there's also a lot of corn and soybeans that are not in. Fortunately, most people have crop insurance now. I think it's in the 70-80 percent range, so that helps. Basically, we've been talking to clients all last week as they saw the rain coming, and we'll be talking to people this week. Many will probably still plant corn and take a slight reduction on their crop insurance."The deadline to plant soybeans without penalty is June 10.Buck said some farmers, faced with the delay in planting, have switched from corn to soybeans to make the most of what growing season remains.According to the National Agricultural Statistics Service, 93 percent of expected corn acreage in Minnesota has been planted. While that's close to the five-year average, corn emergence is 13 percent behind.Soybean planting was 75 percent complete as of Monday.Dan Martens, a University of Minnesota Extension Service specialist based in Foley, said the forecast for the first two weeks of June are for continued cooler and wetter-than-normal conditions."We might get a day or two where we can get on some higher ground and plant something but, generally, the forecast does not look real hopeful for getting a lot of work done," Martens said on Monday as he inspected Central Minnesota alfalfa fields."We're also at a place where our first alfalfa crop is crying for harvesting now. The fields are also going to be too wet to get on and harvest for a while. By the time we can, there will be a lot of hay out there, but the quality won't be what we'd like."Alfalfa is grown to feed livestock on dairy farms.Martens said he plans to survey the area later this week to get an estimate on the number of acres affected by excessive rain."I know it is very significant," Martens said. "Technically, we have time to plant corn yet. But as wet as it is now on these loamy soils around the St. Cloud area, it's pretty unlikely we're going to be able to get back on these fields and plant corn in time to expect a yield that's going to be very economical."Martens said livestock and dairy producers will continue to plant corn in an effort to provide feed and silage for the coming winter."If the weather straightens out, it will be like last year," Martens said. "We had a very wet spring then, too, and we had some guys who were planting corn and some other crops during the first week of July — hoping to get some silage and other forage feed."Help, outlookPhyllis Framstad, executive director for the U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency in Stearns County, said she doesn't expect any significant government assistance because of the rain."To go in for a disaster, we should really have had a flood," Framstad said. "I know there are fields that have some pretty good gullies in them, but we've just had a lot of rain. If we got 10 inches of rain, that would cause major flooding — and the streets in St. Cloud don't count."What I'm telling our producers is to contact their crop insurance agent," Framstad said. "There aren't any programs for crop loss with FSA. The new farm bill has changed the programs over to where what the producers can sign up for are price loss or production loss (assistance). It will be a shallow loss program, and we don't have any official information yet because they're still writing rules and regulations."The forecast for this week looks clear Tuesday but with a 30-40 percent chance of thunderstorms Thursday through Saturday. The question then becomes how much drying can take place in the next few days."We had a window last week for a few days where a lot of crop got planted," Framstad said. "But some of that has washed down into a ditch by now. If it got planted, and it's sitting in some water, and that goes away in some nice weather the next day or two, it can sink in, sprout and come up. The stuff that is up, could sit in water for maybe a day — but not two or three."Source - http://www.sctimes.com/

03.06.2014

Europe Faces Cereals Crop Crash

Harvests of wheat and barley across Europe could be 20% lower by 2040 as average temperatures rise by 2°C. And by 2060, European farmers could be facing very serious losses.As the likelihood of weather extremes increases with temperature, the consequences of lower yields will be felt around the world. Europe produces, for example, 29% of the world’s wheat.Two consecutive studies in Nature Climate Change examine the challenges faced by the farmers—the first of the reports being by a team led by Miroslav Trnka, of the Czech Global Change Research Centre in Brno.They considered the impact of changing conditions in 14 very different wheat growing zones—from the Alpine north to the southern Mediterranean, from the great plains of Northern Europe to the baking uplands of the Iberian peninsula, and from the Baltic seascapes of Denmark to the fertile flood plains of the Danube.It is a given that farmers are at the mercy of the weather, and that crops are vulnerable to unseasonal conditions. But a rise in average temperatures of 2°C is likely to increase the frequency of unfavourable conditions.Incidence of droughtThe researchers, therefore, factored in such data as the numbers of days with very high temperatures, the incidence of drought, late spring frosts, severe winter frosts with too little snow, spells with too much rain, spells when the weather is too cool at the wrong time.Altogether, they totted up 11 sets of adverse conditions that could blight winter wheat in all 14 sample environments. They then used climate models to simulate the probability of things going wrong once, and also more than once, in any single growing season. And they found that, by 2060, the occurrence of adverse weather conditions would increase for all environments.“This is likely to result in more frequent crop failure across Europe,” they conclude. “The study provides essential information for developing adaptation strategies.”Adaptation strategies—according to Frances Moore and David Lobell, of Stanford University, California, in the second of the Nature Climate Change studies—are exactly what European cereal farmers should be thinking about.They analysed the yield and profit records from thousands of European farms between 1989 and 2009. They then matched the data with climate records to test performance under a suite of different weather histories, and ran simulations using 13 different climate models.“The results clearly showed that modest amounts of climate change can have a big impact on yields of several crops in Europe,” Moore said.“This is a little surprising because the region is fairly cool, so you might think it would benefit from moderate amounts of warming. Our next step was to measure the potential of European farmers to adapt to these impacts.”Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere should, in theory, be good for crops – fertility should increase – but a procession of recent scientific studies has painted a different picture.Plant protein levelsWith extra heat comes a greater likelihood of drought to slash maize yields. And even when the extra carbon dioxide increases growth, it may reduce the levels of all-important plant protein in the yield.In addition, extremes of heat at the wrong time in the growing season could devastate crops, while the change in average temperatures will open the way for invasions of new kinds of pest.The Stanford researchers argue that what matters most is how quickly farmers in Europe can adapt, and how crop yields will respond.“By adaptation, we mean a range of options based on existing technologies, such as switching varieties of a crop, installing irrigation, or growing a different crop,” Lobell said.“These things have been talked about for a long time, but the novelty of this study was using past data to quantify the actual potential of adaptation to reduce climate change impacts.”Source - http://www.truthdig.com/

03.06.2014

USA - Ohio Honey Bee Industry Struggles After Long Winter

This past winter’s polar vortex did a number on agriculture. Crops and trees suffered damage. Hit hard were bees, which were already struggling with other problems. Some Ohio beekeepers lost nearly all of their stock, and the loss reaches far beyond the bee hive.The United States has seen a shrinking bee population for years. And their keepers have a lot of theories as to why.“It’s a different environment for bees. A lot more stress: the pesticides; the diets they have; the foraging areas; the mites. It’s all adding up.”This past year was really bad. A soggy spring and summer did not allow bees to make the honey they needed for what turned out to be an extremely cold winter.The Ohio State Beekeepers Association said most bee farmers lost about 40 percent of their hives…some lost 90 percent.Bee farming strugglesDavid Crawford lost a lot of bees during the winter. He’s been a beekeeper for about 30 years. He has 40 hives in several bee yards south of Circleville in Pickaway County.“We’re getting ready to go into a yard here that had 16 hives last year in the fall,” Crawford said. “It came through with two living.”Crawford estimates he’s out a couple thousand dollars. That doesn’t include a poor honey crop and all the money he spent on food supplements and parasite medications for bees that died.But Crawford isn’t deterred.He removes a concrete block from the top of a buzzing hive and pops open the lid. A couple hundred bees crawl around on a honeycomb.“This is a ‘honey super’ here,” he noted.That’s a beehive used to collect honey.“The bees are going to need that full of honey to get it through the winter,” Crawford said. “The bees need about 80 pounds of honey to make it through the winter. So, of course, they didn’t have that last winter so we’re trying to make sure they get it this time.”To rebuild stock or buy new bees?Tim Arheit is president of the State Beekeepers Association. He said beekeepers have a few options to rebuild their stock. They can buy new bees, but that gets expensive. Keepers can also split up their bees; move them to hives that didn’t make it. That has a downside, too.“If you split your hives, you reduce the number of bees in each of the hives,” Arheit said. “And honey production depends on a very high population of bees in the hives. So you’re going to reduce the amount of honey each hive collects.”The honey bee losses affect more than beekeepers.Bees and farmingFor years, farmers have shipped in honey bees to help with pollination. Small fruit farmers usually turn to local sources for bee rentals.“I feel bad for anyone who has orchards this spring. A lot of the beekeepers they had contracted with to bring in hives for pollination didn’t have those hives because of the winter,” David Crawford said. “Instead of maybe bringing in 20 hives all they could bring in were 10. And those 10 hives may not have been a full strength.”Columbus Blueberry owner Daniel Huggett has a 20-acre farm just north of Circleville. Huggett was scrambling for honey bees this spring.“I had 12 hives last year, and by the spring I only had three. And then the beekeeper I normally rent my hives from, he lost about 80 percent of his hives,” Huggett said. “And he’s getting up there in age where he’s going to retire, so he decided he had to cut back. And so, on short notice, I had to find more bee hives from different beekeepers.”Bee prices on the riseHuggett said he was able to get the hives he needed. But he had to pay for them. The bee shortage drove up prices.“A package of bees has gone up from about $40 to $100 because the bees, if they’re dying at a higher rate you have to replenish them. When they’re in demand, the price goes up.”So what does all of this mean? Well, a couple of things. There may be less fruit and honey.Even if fruit farmers were able to get all the honey bees they needed for pollination, and production is average, prices may still go up as the farmers pass on the extra costs they incurred getting their bees.Honey prices likely will go up, as well. State Beekeeper Association president Tim Arheit predicts honey yields to be cut in half this year, and that’s if the summer weather is favorable.Source - http://wosu.org/

03.06.2014

Western Canadian farmers struggle to plant wet fields

Farmers on the Canadian prairies, like their U.S. counterparts, are behind on planting this spring.“Certainly there is some concern,” Bruce Burnett, weather and crop specialist with CWB Market Research Services, says in a weekly planting update. CWB was formerly known as the Canadian Wheat Board.Some Canadian fields won’t be planted until the middle of June, and some might not get planted at all, he saysThis already is one of the latest years on record. Fifty-nine percent of western Canada’s overall crop was in the ground by late May. Normally, planting is about 75 percent complete by then.Rains in late May will further slow planting in some areas, he says.Planting progress is better in some areas than others:• Alberta farmers had about three-quarters of their crop in the ground by late May and were expected to be finished by the end of the month.• In Saskatchewan, the biggest prairie producer, conditions are mixed. Planting in the western part of the province was nearly wrapped up by the end of May. Farmers in much of the eastern part of the province, however, will need to continue planting until mid-June.• Manitoba farmers have the most serious and widespread planting delays. Only 39 percent of their overall crop was planted by late May. Heavy late-May rains in parts of the province are expected to stop planting until the middle of the first week of June.Western Manitoba and eastern Saskatchewan are particularly worrisome.“Those regions have very wet soil moisture conditions, and certainly the crops are not going to be seeded close to the normal times,” Burnett says. “And, with any additional rain we could see significant delays in those areas, as well.”Weather during the next two weeks will be crucial, he says.If the weather cooperates, “We should be able to get most of the crops planted in those areas,” he says.But even if the weather is favorable, excess moisture in sloughs, potholes and close to drainage areas will prevent some land from being planted, he says.The planting pace on the Canadian prairies was slow in 2013, too, but this year is even tardier, Burnett says.He notes that moisture conditions in some areas are very good and crops will emerge rapidly after planting, despite cooler temperatures earlier in the spring.Both sides of the borderFarmers in the Upper Midwest and on the Canadian prairies grow many of the same crops, so what happens in one country affects farmers on the other side of the border, as well.Canola, spring wheat, flax and durum are among the crops grown in both countries.Going into the spring, Canadian farmers were expected to plant more oilseeds and pulse crops.The deadline for planting soybeans for crop insurance purposes is nearing in Manitoba and Saskatchewan, and some acres originally slated for soybeans could go to another crop — “perhaps canola first, and then into maybe some of the shorter cycle oilseed crops or cereal crops,” Burnett says.Environment Canada had predicted that a cool, wet spring was likely on the Canadian prairies.Likewise, the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center predicted, accurately, that the Upper Midwest probably would see a cool, wet spring.Updated forecasts for both countries are expected to be available later in June.Source - http://www.agweek.com/

03.06.2014

USA - Rain leaves ponds in area fields

Storms that dumped as much as 3½ inches of rain in some parts of the Coulee Region left water standing in many fields, although farmers had covered a lot of ground last week in planting, agriculture officials said.Corn planting in Wisconsin stands at 73 percent, far short of the 2009-13 average of 90 percent, according to the weekly crop report released Monday.Rainfall of more than2 inches in some parts of Trempealeau County “slowed planting down, but there was good progress last week,” said county extension agent Steve Okonek, estimating that planting in Trempealeau mirrors the state figure.“There is water standing in some fields,” he said, so farmers planting corn for use as dry grain will have to switch to an earlier maturing seed or switch to soybeans, he said.Corn emergence statewide is 42 percent, double the same time last year, although trailing the five-year average of 65 percent, according to the crop report. Seventy percent of the corn was in good condition as of Friday, the report said.Joe Lauer, a UW-Extension corn agronomist, issued a report saying many farmers are concerned about flooded fields, which he said can kill corn within a few days.“Many crop fields were completely destroyed, while others were left with varying degrees of damage,” Lauer wrote, advising farmers to document damage to report to their insurers.Soybean planting stands at 41 percent, slightly above last year but far short of the five-year average of 71 percent.The 24-hour rainfalls ranging from 2¾ inches in La Crosse to 3½ inches in Vernon County Sunday through Monday, along with heavy downpours in the river basins to the north created another yo-yo effect for the Mississippi River and its tributaries, with isolated reports of road washouts and flooding.The rain created a sinkhole on the edge of Hwy. 33 near Hagen Road in La Crosse about 6 p.m. Sunday, but highway crews repaired the washout by midnight, according to the Wisconsin Department of Transportation.The National Weather Service issued flood warnings and watches for parts of the Mississippi and Kickapoo rivers until further notice, although rain expected to develop tonight is predicted to scoot south of the Coulee Region.“The copious rain we got continues to irritate the rivers,” said NWS meteorologist Dave Schmidt. “All of the tributaries up north are starting to dump.”The Mississippi, which had dipped to nearly 9 feet at La Crosse during the weekend, has begun a slow rise toward nearly 11 feet in the next week, which would be a foot below flood stage. The level is expected to reach 10 feet Friday, again invoking the no-wake zone along the riverfront.Flood watches were issued for Wabasha and Winona counties in Minnesota, with the river surging toward 12 feet at both sites, according to the NWS. The Winona watch also affects Buffalo and Trempealeau counties.Minor flooding is expected through Wednesday on the Kickapoo at Readstown and Viola, the NWS predicts.Today is expected to be sunny, with a high of 78.Thunderstorms are possible tonight into Wednesday, although the main rainfalls are expected to be to the south, Schmidt said.“The prognosis for a big thunderstorm complex developing in the Nebraska panhandle are that it probably will nail much of Iowa before taking a dive to the southeast,” largely sparing the Coulee Region, he said.Thursday and Friday are expected to be mostly sunny, with chances of storms returning for the weekend, according to the NWS.Source - http://lacrossetribune.com/

03.06.2014

India - Farmers draw attention of government towards damage caused by hailstorms

Drawing attention of state and center government towards damage caused by the wind and hailstorms which hit several parts of this hill state, Himachal Pradesh Kissan Sabha demanded advocate compensation to affected apple and other vegetable crops on Monday.Press statement issued by state president of Himahcal Pradesh Kissan Sabha Dr. Kuldeep Tanwar and General Secretary Dr. Onkar Shad said that a central team should visit the hailstorm infested areas.They also urged the state government to come forward to help the affected farmers and stop more loss to apple crops after supplying them hail net on subsidized rate.Kissan Sabha also appealed the Union Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh to send a central team to take account of loss caused by the hailstorms and provide them relief.The torrent rain showers, winds and hailstorms had caused a massive loss in the field of apple and other crops in many parts of the state including Shimla, Solan and Sirmaur district.The impact of hailstorms was so strong that it badly ruined the ripping crop of apple and vegetables, rendering heavy financial loss to the victim families.They claimed that number of households who only thrive on its produce had been affected as their vegetable crop dashed to ground within few seconds by hailstorm, the affected crops includes apple, french bean, pea, tomato etc.Seeking immediate evaluation of revenue loss caused to farmers by the hailstorms, he said that Kissan Sabha demand compensations to the affected farmers.Report said that impact of hailstorm on fruit was so immense that it grounded the leaves of the entire trees and fruit buds were hit into pieces.The weather experts avers that over rain and under raining reflect the climate change as it indicated highly erratic weather conditions prevailing in the state.Source - http://www.himvani.com/

03.06.2014

USA - Spring freeze destroys Nebraska strawberry crop

A late spring freeze in May damaged more than Nebraska's mainstay corn crops — growers say it wiped out many of the state's strawberries and some vineyard grapes.The May 16 freeze dropped temperatures as low as the upper 20s in some parts of southeast Nebraska, damaging most of the area's strawberry crop, the Lincoln Journal Star reported.Beverly Schaefer, who owns Roca Berry Farm with her husband, said their two-acre patch was destroyed."A lot of people have been driving in and checking and asking us on Facebook," Schaefer said. "Right now we would be picking. We would have a parking lot full of people."Not only did the freeze take away her strawberry revenue, it also axed berry-picking jobs for about 30 local teens, Schaefer said.Martin's Hillside Orchard near Ceresco also reported a near total loss of its strawberries."I would say it took 95 percent of the strawberries," said Barbara Martin, who owns the orchard with her husband, Alex. "They were in full bloom when the cold weather hit. The rows look fine, but there's no fruit."Area vineyards have reported 30 to 50 percent losses to their grape crops from the freeze.James Arthur Vineyards near Raymond lost about half its grapes, owner Jim Ballard said, although some of that damage was caused by hail and winds a few days before the freeze."I don't know what else Mother Nature can throw at us," he said. "We've been hit with just about everything these last few months."Thanks to a bumper crop last year, the vineyard's inventory is in good shape, Ballard said, meaning there will be plenty of wine for sale.Other area fruit crops are expected to fare better. Martin says her apple, peach and raspberry crops should do well, and Schaefer says her farm's main crop — pumpkins — had not yet been planted when the late freeze hit.Source - http://www.starherald.com/

02.06.2014

Coffee rust reaches new heights in Central America

Last year, Guatemala declared a national emergency, with officials estimating rust had affected 70% of the nation’s crop.For years, Hernan Argueta’s small plot of coffee plants seemed immune to the fungus spreading elsewhere in Central America. The airborne disease that strikes coffee plants, flecking their leaves with spots and causing them to wither and fall off, failed to do much damage in the cooler elevations of Guatemala’s mountains.Then, the weather changed.Temperatures warmed in the highlands and the yellow-orange spots spread to Argueta’s plants. Since the warming trend was noted in 2012, the 46-year-old farmer said his family went from gathering a dozen 45-kilogram sacks of coffee beans each month to just five.Now, Argueta is among the region’s thousands of coffee farmers fighting the fungus called “coffee rust” in hopes they’ll continue to supply the smooth-flavoured, aromatic Arabica beans enjoyed by coffee lovers around the world. But with no cure for the fungus, and climate conditions expected to encourage its spread, they are bracing for a long, hard battle to survive.Argueta, like many farmers, is replacing his old trees with new coffee plants that better resist the rust, and cutting back existing trees in the hope they’ll spring new foliage. It will be two to three years, however before the new plants produce the bright red cherries that hold the valuable beans. Argueta has had to seek out construction jobs to get by.“Now we have had to find other lines of work,” he said.Coffee rust first hit Central America in the 1970s. For decades, coffee growers simply coped with the blight and lower yields. But as rust spread to the highlands, the problem demanded action. Last year, Guatemala declared a national emergency, with officials estimating rust had affected 70 per cent of the nation’s crop.In neighbouring El Salvador, the rate of infection is 74 per cent, according to the London-based International Coffee Organisation. In Costa Rica, it’s 64 per cent” in Nicaragua, 37 per cent” and in Honduras, 25 per cent.In its April report, the ICO said the average price for coffee hit a two-year high — more than US$1.70 per pound — as market watchers worried about production in Brazil, where severe drought is affecting the world’s largest coffee crop, and an El Nino weather pattern is expected to further hurt supply across the region.The spread of rust has prompted growers to adopt new measures, such as “stumping,” the practice of pruning trees of all infected vegetation in hopes of encouraging them to regrow with greater vibrancy. They are also using fungicides and installing shade covers, which appear to help keep the fungus at bay.Rust also has hit farms in Southern Mexico, which produces much of the region’s shade-grown coffee, and where the government is leading a sweeping replanting project.“We have old, unproductive coffee plantations that haven’t been pruned. In some case they’re 40 years old,” said Belisario Dominguez Mendez, who heads up coffee issues for Mexico’s Agriculture Department. “Coffee rust is a good pretext to transform the coffee industry in Mexico,” he said, noting the government intends to replace about 20 per cent of coffee plants each year, hoping to have them all replaced within five years.None of that will make rust go away, however.“It’s an issue of managing it, controlling it,” Dominguez Mendez said. “We have lived with rust for 30 years, and we will continue living with it for as long as we are around.”In El Salvador, Claudia Herrera de Calderon worries over her family inheritance, two large coffee farms high in the mountains near the Guatemalan border. She has been stumping plants on the two parcels, which total about 500 hectares and spraying fungicides. But it’s not enough.“Even if you cut them back, the problem is that with the climate changes we are seeing — the rains, the droughts, the rust — basically, we are looking at the need to replant everything,” Herrera de Calderon said.With little government help, and her farms falling below the break-even point, she has had to lay off workers and lacks the funds needed to replant. And because the fungus spreads so easily, the cautionary steps have to be taken all together, or one farm will simply infect the next.“Now, all the fincas are infected, and those of us who have made the effort to spray fungicides are left with problems by neighbouring farms that haven’t done anything,” she said.With many rural towns dependent on coffee production, observers fear widespread job losses. Producers in the Guatemalan highlands have lost, on average, between a third and 60 per cent of their income in the last year, according to the United Nations. The National Coffee Association of Guatemala, known as Anacafe, says some 100,000 direct coffee jobs have dried up.The United Nations is providing emergency food aid to 14,000 Guatemalan households that have lost income due to rust. Still, that’s less than 10 per cent of the 160,000 homes estimated by the government nutrition agency to need such help.Argueta, however, is not giving up. Just as he has “stumped” his existing trees, hoping to coax them to start all over, he is ready to begin anew.On a recent day in Fraijanes, a town southeast of Guatemala City, he and other growers lined up for new, rust-resistant seedlings that the government is handing out.“This variety is going to better,” Argueta said. “That, in itself, is a blessing.”Source - http://gulfnews.com/

02.06.2014

Investors in farming look past climate risk

Over the past few years, asset managers have been encouraging investors to put money into global agriculture and farmland, and although it is virgin territory for most pension funds, a few have made investments or plan to do so.The idea behind investing is well understood: a growing global population, eating more meat, and a declining supply of arable land thanks to climate change should all add up to steadily increasing prices for food and farmland.But anyone investing now has chosen an interesting moment. This year may prove a particularly dramatic illustration of one of the principal short-term risks of such investments – the weather.Meteorologists are warning that this year may see the return of a global climatic phenomenon known as “El Niño”, a periodic warming of water in the Equatorial Pacific that can disrupt weather patterns worldwide, significantly affecting crop yields and commodity prices.Its effects are complex and variable but, in general, it leads to drier-than-normal conditions in Southeast Asia and eastern Australia, and the possible weakening of the Indian monsoon. In North America, meanwhile, summer conditions are cooler with more rainfall, and there can also be more rain in South America.Changeable conditionsThis can mean misery for millions, especially in poorer countries. In the financial markets, meanwhile, agricultural commodity traders are trying to work out which crops will be most affected.Societe Generale analysts have even put together an “El Niño Commodity Index”, observing that prices of coffee, cocoa and cotton among others tend to spike during such events, while wheat and sugar tend to drop. Chris Gadd, a grains analyst at Macquarie, said El Niño conditions should be “massively bearish” for grain prices in the US, as better pollination conditions increase yields.If longer-term investors are buying into the agricultural markets, then they will increasingly have to understand these dynamics – or make sure their fund managers do.Funds are investing in this area, albeit to a limited extent. Farmland purchases have so far been largely limited to a few large investors, such as Canada’s C$219 billion Canada Pension Plan or the UK’s £15 billion Pension Protection Fund.One factor holding pension funds back is a lack of funds that meet their requirements, according to Mercer. In a recent report on the sector, the consultancy said it had undertaken due diligence on a “broad range of managers” and “in practice, the majority of managers researched have not attained a high Mercer rating”. This was due to a lack of track records, a lack of proven skill in agriculture and “poor alignment of fee structures”.But asset managers think there is appetite. Aquila Capital, which manages a series of farmland funds and club deals for institutional investors amounting to about $500 million, is one of those that detects elevated interest.The fund manager surveyed 71 institutional investors in Europe last October – pension funds, private banks, family offices and the like – who had about 1.3% of their portfolios on average invested in agriculture. It said 23% of them were interested in increasing their holdings, and almost none wanted to sell.Detlef Schoen, group head of farm investments at Aquila Capital, said that climate events such as El Niño could be positive for investors in agricultural funds – as they can provide buying opportunities when farmers go out of business. Aquila is currently in the final stages of fundraising for a $400 million fund investing in Australian dairy farms.He said: “El Niño won’t have a huge effect on us, because it primarily affects the upper part of Australia, but it can affect the reservoir levels in the Murray-Darling river system [in south-east Australia] and so I would hope it might give us a couple of buying opportunities. But a dairy fund is more uncorrelated with this; if you are running a crops fund, it will have a big effect.”Eva Greger, managing director of GMO Renewable Resources, which invests about $200 million in farmland worldwide on investors’ behalf, agreed that volatility in crop and food prices, caused for example by weather events, can lead to buying opportunities for institutions if more speculative buyers are turned into forced sellers.She said: “This is something we do bring to the table [as institutions]. We are often partnering with local farmers who want to increase the land they have under productive management, and we are in a better position to ride out any price volatility.”But like most managers in the sector, Greger said that this kind of weather risk is exactly why GMO diversifies its investments – by crop type and by geography worldwide.Martin Davies, head of farmland investments at Insight Investment, said the same, pointing out that his fund invests in Australia, New Zealand, Romania and Chile, and is looking at Poland.Longer-term themesDavies said that weather and climate considerations can drive specific investment decisions – his fund is investing in New Zealand dairy, as opposed to Australian dairy, partly because of climate and water-scarcity concerns – but in general, “you are always going to be at the perils of the weather”.Fund managers investing in agriculture say they are trying to add value, rather than trade or speculate on rising commodity prices. One of Davies’s preferred methods is the development of underused agricultural land.He said: “We are investing in beef production in Australia’s Northern Territory. A lot of the properties there are underdeveloped in terms of water delivery and fencing, and by developing those we can significantly add to the carrying capacity.”Schoen, of Aquila Capital, said one reason the demand for private capital in agriculture is “mind-boggling” is that farmers are getting older. The average age is rising in most developed markets – it is now 56 in the US and 59 in the UK.Schoen said: “All over the world, farmers are getting older and older. In Australia, two-thirds of farmers don’t have identified successors. What this means is that it’s possible to identify good young operators and come in as a ‘silent partner’, providing capital. It’s like a private equity structure, with them as the General Partner and us as the Limited Partner.”This is a more active, and hence risky, approach to farmland investing than the traditional “real-estate-like” model, which is to buy up land and rent it out to tenants. But such landlord investors are indirectly exposed to the same risks – commodity prices, climate effects – as owner-operators, Schoen argued, without being able to participate in a share of the profits from a well-run business.Source - http://www.efinancialnews.com/

02.06.2014

UK - Early action vital to beat potential blight epidemic

Potato crops are at very high risk from a serious blight epidemic this season and growers will need to begin control programmes early to keep the disease at bay, leading agronomy firm Hutchinsons warns.The mild, wet winter and spring has created ideal conditions for the development of blight inoculum across the UK, says the firm’s Darryl Shailes, who says that some blight cases have already been confirmed by the Potato Council’s Fight Against Blight monitoring service.“We haven’t had a harsh winter to knock back the inoculum or reduce the number of volunteers and with the current mild temperatures and frequent rain we are on for a pretty serious blight epidemic in all crops this year.”Blight has already been confirmed in a potato dump in East Anglia and there has been blight recorded in glasshouse crops in Lincolnshire as early as anyone can recall, he says.The situation is equally concerning further north in Scotland where Ayrshire-based Hutchinsons agronomist Cameron Ferguson says exceptionally wet weather and temperatures well into the high-teens recently have increased blight pressure.“There have already been two blight warnings by the end of May and growers will have to be extremely vigilant for blight. The pressure has been eased slightly by the fact that maincrop planting was delayed due to the wet weather, but nearly everything is now in the ground and is getting away well in the warm, wet soils.“We’re certainly going to be starting weekly blight control sprays from late May/ early June in many cases, which will be a lot earlier than many growers are used to. Blight sprays normally start when the crop’s at the rosette stage.”Robust action neededPotato crops grown under plastic are at particular risk from early blight and may also act as a source of infection for neighbouring crops when the plastic is removed and blight spores are released, says Mr Shailes.The huge number of potato volunteers in crops elsewhere, along with outgrade piles are also key sources of infection that growers should remove at the earliest opportunity, he adds. “There’s really no excuse for allowing blight in through potato dumps.”In terms of blight fungicides, Mr Shailes advises growers to begin blight spraying as soon as crops emerge where the disease is an imminent threat.“Don’t think that just because the plant’s not very big then blight won’t be a problem. Blight that is allowed to infect young plants can be extremely damaging and means that you’ll be left chasing it all season.“Going in with a robust fungicide strategy from day one avoids getting into this situation and means there may be the opportunity to cut back later in the season if conditions aren’t as conducive to blight development.”He advises growers to choose products that offer good contact/ residual control as well as anti-sporulant activity, such as those based on fluopicolid + propamocarb or dimethomorph. Growers using products based on mandipropamid or cyazofamid alone should look to include an additional active with anti-sporulant activity, he says.Rates for all blight fungicides should be kept at the full label recommendation, he notes. “Never reduce rates of blight fungicides, especially when pressure is high.”Hutchinsons area business manager for the north east, Geoff Mason, suggests that growers may need to consider securing fungicide supplies early, as the high disease pressure will put significant demand on supplies of key products.“After the industry suffering huge problems with the lack of products for use in arable crops, it may be prudent for growers to get their choice of products ordered quickly to guarantee supply this season.”Watch slug risk tooAlongside blight, Mr Ferguson also warns growers to be extra vigilant for slugs this season, as the mild, wet weather has resulted in unprecedented numbers.“Slug damage to tubers could be a major issue later in the year unless the weather turns exceptionally dry this summer. Slugs have continued breeding throughout the winter and vigilance will be paramount.”Source - http://www.farminguk.com/

02.06.2014

India - Agri Minister reviews farm insurance schemes

Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh on Monday reviewed schemes relating to farm insurance with senior Ministry officials.The Minister’s focus on farm insurance is in line with Bharatiya Janata party’s manifesto, which has promised to implement a farm insurance scheme to take care of crop loss due to unforeseen circumstances.Among the issues discussed were the infirmities of the present agricultural insurance schemes and ways to put in place a more farmer-friendly farm insurance scheme, according to an Agriculture Ministry release.Singh will also meet Home Minister Rajnath Singh to discuss the features of Krishi Amdani Bima Yojana, which was launched when the latter was Agriculture Minister in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee Government.The Minister also held discussions with Secretary, Department of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries and other officers on initiating a programme for development of livestock.Source - http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/

02.06.2014

USA - June weather could hurt corn crop

Mid-western farmers are usually afraid of not enough rain hurting their corn harvests. But this year, annual rainfall already averages 150-300% across the nine states referred to as the “Corn Belt” and a big rain system is expected to hit on about June 6th. With most of the crop in the ground and a potential for rain storms and flooding to wash away corn sprouts, America’s expected record of a $90 billion corn crop could be in trouble.After suffering a drought in 2013, farmers were wildly enthusiastic about this year’s cold winter weather and heavy rains being the right formula for a record corn crop. After futures contracts for corn hit a peak in late 2012 at over $8.20 a bushel, the price fell to under $4 a bushel at the start of 2014. But with this year’s risk of too much rain, the price of corn delivery for July has moved back up to $4.65.After a slow start this year, corn planting had been back on track with an estimated 91.7 million acres planted mostly across Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, southern Michigan, western Ohio, eastern Nebraska, eastern Kansas, southern Minnesota and parts of Missouri. As of May 25th, US Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimated that 88% of the U.S. corn crop was in the ground, which matched the five-year average. 0About 60% had emerged as sprouts and the USDA estimated the 2014 national average yield would be 165 bushels per acre. This would be the best in 8 years and potentially a record.A week ago, Jerry Gulke, President of The Gulke Group commented, “I’d say probably 79% of this year’s corn crop was planted into good conditions and is growing pretty well.” He expected that the El Nino weather condition building in the Pacific tropics would result in the summer heat would hitting “at the right time, so odds are we’ll get an above-average yield.” He expects a total crop 1.5 billion to 1.7 billion bushels, which would have been enough to meet all demands for feed, export, food processing.But that expected heat hasn’t appeared and probably will not with the new storms coming in. Satellite images show that the growing season is running behind with the vegetation growth index well below 40% in a stripe from eastern South Dakota, Iowa and central Illinois. With heavy rains expected through June 20th, the Corn Belt weather pattern is starting to look like the waves of showers and thunderstorms that caused floods across the nation's midsection with 1993. If the same pattern happens this year, crop losses could exceed $15 billion.Weather terms like El Nino, the North Atlantic Oscillation and Pacific Decadal Oscillation do not mean much to the average consumer, until crop yields fall and the prices at retail jump. The old saying for the farmer is “If it ain’t something, it’s something else.” This year it looks like too much rain in the month of June.Source - http://www.breitbart.com/

02.06.2014

Australia - Feral pig threat grows

South East Local Land Services (LLS) has recently seen an increase in reports of feral pig activity across the Monaro and Tablelands districts.South East LLS Team Leader Invasive Species, Mark McGaw said these reports have come from areas of known feral pig populations, as well as new areas that are now experiencing the impacts of feral pigs for the first time.“This increase can be attributed to improved seasonal conditions which have enabled feral pigs to breed and, in some instances, feral pigs have been illegally transported and released into new areas,” Mr McGaw said.“This illegal activity can result in fines of up to $22,000.“Feral pigs are a highly adaptable pest animal in Australia.They can cause extensive damage to the environment and cost the agricultural industry an estimated $100 million annually.“Impacts include predation of lambs, reduction in crop and pasture yields, damage to fences, muddying of water sources and competition with livestock through consuming and damaging pasture.Feral pigs prey on and degrade the habitat of small mammals and reptiles.“These animals have the potential to carry and spread exotic diseases and parasites such as foot and mouth disease, swine vesicular disease, African swine fever, trichinosis and classical swine fever.“There are a number of feral pig control methods. Primary control efforts include 1080 baiting and trapping.Where numbers are low, opportunistic ground shooting can be conducted.“A single control method used in isolation may provide limited local control of pig populations.However, as with all vertebrae pests, coordinated and integrated control programs involving all stakeholders using a number of different control methods will have a more successful regional result.The best results are achieved when everyone works together, using best practice control measures.Source - http://www.townandcountrymagazine.com.au/

30.05.2014

Canada - The trouble with bees

The Senate standing committee on agriculture and forestry is studying the importance of bees and bee health across the country with the hope of completing its report by the end of June.“The whole bee health area is the reason we’re doing the study because there have been concerns expressed,” said Senator JoAnne Buth. “The last thing we want to do is lose bees for honey production and also because of pollination. It’s going to take more work and research in determining what are the factors in it.”A colony collapse disorder about 25 years ago began raising concerns across the country about the state of bees in Canada. Buth said the committee began hearing from stakeholders, such as farmers, apiarists, and chemical companies, in January.One of the groups that spoke to the committee was the National Farmers Union, which recommended a five-year moratorium on neonicotinoid seed treatments on field crops in Canada.“The pest management regulatory agency (PMRA) had been looking at those bee mortalities in 2012 and 2013 and in September 2013 the PMRA came to the conclusion that the use of neonicotinoid seed treatments in corn and soy beans, particularly in Ontario and Quebec, is not sustainable,” said NFU vice-president Ann Slater.Neonicotinoid seed treatments are used to kill corn rootworm, bean leaf beetle, black cutworm, and wire worm that attack the seeds during planting. The use of neonicotinoids started about 15 years ago to replace the chemical Lindane because of concerns about persistence and trade. The neonicotinoids were also seen as less toxic. The dust coming off the seeds is what the NFU thinks is effecting the bees.The union’s stance is that these pesticides are only warranted in 10 to 30 per cent of soy and corn acreages. The NFU does recognize that some farmers might need the pesticide, so they have added a one-time use recommendation with their submission.“If it’s only needed for 10 to 30 per cent then why is the use so widespread? So, we’re calling for a moratorium for five years so you can pull it out of the environment and see what happens to the bees and pollinators,” said Slater.For MacGregor grain farmer Curtis Sims, the concerns of the NFU are unwarranted as he claims it’s not standard practice for farmers to continuously spray insecticides.“You don’t spray unless you really need to. There is a cost involved, but at the same time if you let the natural predator take care of the situation, and if you only have modest losses, then you try to let it go. If it starts to explode on you and you’re going to lose some serious crop then you have to do something,” he said.Sims claims he only sprays once every two to three years.Provincial apiarist Rheal Lafreniere said pesticides are one of the components affecting bee health, but so far beekeepers in Manitoba have not made any claims this year regarding losses due to neonicotinoids. He said the province’s lower than average bee numbers for the past couple of years had more to do with weather and drought.“Some of it relates back to the (fall 2011/spring 2012) season, which was a very mild and a short winter and winter survival was really high. That year everything started off early. All the planting got done really early and we also had a really dry summer season, so by September all the crops were finished.“All the wild plants, because of the drought conditions, were shutting down, so the bees didn’t have a lot of food going into winter in terms of pollen and stuff like that so they stopped rearing brood (replacement bees) at the rate they normally would have produced them because they were shutting down. Unfortunately, we had a very long winter the following year so that contributed a lot,” he said, noting the life span of the bees was stretched to the limit last winter.Lafreniere said he won’t have a completed report on the status of Manitoba’s 73,000 colonies until the end of June, but overall he thinks the bee population will hit a mid-point.“If I had to shoot from the hip, what we’re seeing in terms of bee populations … we’re somewhere between two to three weeks behind, but if we get nice weather bees have the ability to catch up very fast,” he said.Back in Ottawa, Buth said she can’t predict what the recommendations the committee will give to the House regarding bee health and sustainability, but she personally feels the NFU’s moratorium recommendation is unnecessary.“Most of the concerns (regarding neonicotinoids) are coming out of Ontario and Quebec. We haven’t seen the same issue on seed treatments used in Western Canada. When the NFU appeared, I think they had some good points in terms of the types of things that need to be looked at, but based on all the evidence that I’ve heard, I don’t think a moratorium is needed at this point,” she said.“One of the things we’ve learned at the committee is that the whole colony health and bee health is really complex.”The agriculture and forestry committee is scheduled to make its recommendations to the House in the fall.Source - http://www.portagedailygraphic.com/

30.05.2014

Australia - Farmers urged to look for signs of mice early

Darling Downs farmers are being urged to monitor their crops for mouse infestations following a season of ideal breeding conditions for the rodents.Grains Research and Development Corporation research predicted the region's farmers would see high mouse numbers among their crops, potentially damaging the maturing sorghum.The Federal Government department has urged farmers to closely monitor their crops and bait early to reduce the damage on the newly sown winter crops.Landmark cotton agronomist Jamie Innes said it was hard to tell the number of mice on the ground in crops, but urged producers to monitor the situation."Mice numbers were high in the late sorghum crop," he said."But because there aren't many crops in at the moment, it is hard to tell what the mice numbers are like."GRDC studies of mouse populations in December found most adult females were pregnant which would create a high population in crops in May.Other research by the department also found infestations occurred, on average, every two years with the last recorded outbreak in the summer of 2010-2011. Plague numbers were predicted for every four years.Source - http://www.sunshinecoastdaily.com.au/

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