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28.05.2014

USA - Rain delays harvest of drought-damaged wheat crop

In an ironic twist, the start of harvesting Oklahoma's drought-damaged wheat crop has been delayed by rain.The harvest, which is expected to be the worst yield in more than 50 years, began Thursday near Frederick in Tillman County, The Oklahoman reported. But Friday storms brought rain that delayed the harvest and was too late to help the area's wheat fields, according to Mike Cassidy, co-owner of the grain elevator company Cassidy Grain in Frederick.The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates this year's wheat crop yield in Oklahoma will be 62.7 million bushels, down 41 percent from last year, with an average yield of 19 bushels per acre.If the prediction is correct, it will be the worst wheat crop in the state since 1957 when 43 million bushels were harvested, said Mike Schulte, executive director of the Oklahoma Wheat Commission."We have been in this drought period for the past five years, and there are concerns that the potential exists for us to repeat this pattern next year," Schulte said.The one field that Cassidy saw had been completely harvested yielded just nine bushels per acre, he said. A late freeze in April and continuing drought conditions have been particularly hard on the crop in the southwestern part of the state, so much of it likely will be used to feed livestock."Most of the acres here will either be grazed out or baled up for hay and insurance," Cassidy said.In northern Oklahoma, the harvest won't begin for about another week.Near Burlington in Alfalfa County, farmer Keith Kisling said he believes this year's crop will be the poorest he's harvested in 45 years of farming."I can't remember the last time we had half an inch of rain at one time," Kisling said, adding that he will have to rely on his federal crop insurance, and hopes for a better harvest in 2015."There won't be any money to be made, but maybe enough to survive and get another crop next year," he said.Source - http://www.theadanews.com/

27.05.2014

USA - Farmers once again rush to begin, finish planting before June

Farmers in Ohio and Pennsylvania are once again finding themselves in a race against time to finish their spring planting, with many spending their Memorial Day weekend in a tractor, hoping to catch up.Only about half of the corn crop in Ohio had been planted before Memorial Day, forcing many farmers to start and finish their planting all in a week’s time. The prevented planting deadline in Ohio is June 5. Corn planted after this date typically yields less and begins to lose its compensation value for crop insurance.Les Bardo, of Bardo Hill Farm dairy just west of Salem, Ohio, spent the afternoon of May 22 turning some ground with a moldboard plow in a field where he still intends to plant oats.Bardo had not yet started any planting on his farm, but said he can remember similar years when planting was just as behind.“We do what we can do and survive,” he said. “It’s a gamble every year.”The last big gamble for farmers came in 2011, when a record amount of rain fell across the region and pushed a majority of the planting into June. Going into the final week of May in 2011, Ohio farmers had only planted 11 percent of their corn, compared to about half this year.Many considered 2011 the worst planting season to date, with new 100-year rainfall records as proof. But an even bigger story, arguably, was how farmers still managed to plant most of their crop in just a few days, and harvested average or better yields in the fall.Spotty and regionalSteve Maurer, executive director for the Ohio Farm Service Agency, said conditions this year are spotty and regional. Moisture has definitely been an issue, but farmers in places like northwest and westcentral Ohio are reporting they are about done planting, Maurer said.Elsewhere, he said some farmers have hardly anything in the ground, and some places where crops have already been planted are suffering from too much moisture.“It’s a concern, but there’s still time,” he said. “We could still get a crop in the ground if we get a break in the weather.”He said farmers should take the prevented planting dates seriously, but at the same time, realize “there’s no magic” to the date.What the prevented planting date signals, he said, is a reduction in crop potential — not necessarily that the crop shouldn’t be planted.In 2011, for example, “a lot of guys planted after that final date and they still ended up with a really good crop.”As always, he encourages farmers to keep good records of any issues they experience, as these will be important when working with local FSA staff and insurance agents. Also, even if a farmer doesn’t participate in crop insurance, Maurer said he should still report results, because this helps in the event of potential disaster assistance programs, and it helps the farmer in the future, if he later decides to become insured.Making progressKenyon Koehn, a dairy and crop farmer from Stark County, said his family planted about 50 acres of corn around May 10. He said conditions are more wet now than they were then, but if the next few days hold out, he hopes to plant an additional 200 acres.“It’s late — it’s time to get going,” he said.And just as he’s getting a serious start on grain crops, his alfalfa hay is starting to mature. That’s been a challenge for farmers across the state, who find themselves balancing planting time with needing to make hay.Hay cropAt a farmers’ breakfast May 20 in Mount Vernon, in Ohio’s Knox County, farmers discussed a hay crop that ranges from good to damaged and delayed, mostly due to cold and wet weather.Rob Clendening, district program administrator for the Knox Soil and Water Conservation District, said his area suffered a freeze when the hay was up about 5 inches, which has set the crop back three weeks or more, he figured, with the potential to lose a whole cutting of hay.In other regions, however, farmers have reported average to good hay growth — they just haven’t had enough dry days to do anything with it.John Barker, OSU Extension educator in Knox County, said his county is most likely behind the state average of 40 or more percent of corn planted. He’s also received some calls from concerned farmers who have planted their corn, and it’s under water.Typically, emerged corn will last about two days if it’s under water, he said, before it dies.“The ground (in Knox County) already is completely saturated,” said Knox County FSA Director Katie Mills.Like Maurer, she said farmers need to keep good records and stay in touch with their crop insurance agent. Although there is time to catch up, she said farmers should also not be afraid to complete a prevented planting claim, if it becomes necessary.Wheat cropAlong with alfalfa, another major crop of concern at this time is wheat. Farmers will know about the quality of their wheat as the crop begins producing heads over the next few weeks.Some wheat is already producing heads, and in an abnormal way, according to Pierce Paul and Glen Arnold, crops experts with OSU Extension. In a recent edition of C.O.R.N. Newsletter, they both discussed “distorted wheat heads” and wheat heads that have become trapped in the leafage of the plant.Normally, it takes just a few days for the wheat head to emerge. Several factors are to blame for the delay, including cool temperatures, they wrote.While unsightly, these “twisted and distorted heads” usually do not have a negative effect on grain yield, they wrote, unless the distortion is severe enough to break the rachis (shaft) and prevent the flow of water and nutrients to the upper-most spikelets.“Most of the affected heads will eventually grow out of the distortion and develop normal healthy grain,” they wrote.Looking aheadThe weather pattern will trend closer to normal into early June, according to Jim Noel, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Ohio.However, he warns that the weather still favors the risk for bursts of cool and damp weather in the eastern corn and soybean belt into summer, as a results of this past winter and early spring.“The weather pattern will be influenced by the colder-than-normal Great Lakes and Hudson Bay waters,” according to Noel.These colder-than-normal waters will increase the chance of cooler air.In addition, he said the cool waters of Lake Erie will likely enhance the chance of rain in northcentral and northeast Ohio into early summer — not what farmers want to hear.Source - http://www.farmanddairy.com/

27.05.2014

India - Odisha Govt asked banks to open more branches in unbanked GPS and boost up loan in argi & allied sectors

Banks have been asked to open more branches in unbanked Gram Panchayats and boost up credit deposit ratio in the State. They have also been asked to achieve targets in sanction and disbursal of loans under agriculture and allied sectors.This has been told to them by Chief Secretary Jugal Kishore Mohapatra and Additional Chief Secretary, Finance Sri Upendranath Behera in the State level Bankers Committee ( SLBC) meeting held today in the premises of the convention hall of Mayfair. Emphasizing on cent percent achievement of credit deposit ratio of banks, ACS Finance Sri Behera said that there has to be an in-depth exercise for removing ground level bottlenecks on the way of boosting up credit deposit ratio. Banks have been asked to report the actual progress and bottlenecks to SLBC in the matter.Chief Secretary Sri Mohapatra has emphasized upon disbursement of crop loans and loans for promotion of diary projects in the State. Sri Mohapatra has said that Govt. has made budget provisions for interest subvention on short term cop loan, long terms crop loan, diary projects, fishery projects and other allied activities. The banks have to reciprocate in the matter and make full utilization of the budgeted amount in these sectors. ACS finance has said that banks coming forward to open branches in unbanked GPs will be provided space in Panchayat buildings and Rajiv Gandhi Seva Kendras free of cost for 5 years. Sri Behera has also said that banks opening their branches in unbanked GPs will be given access to Govt funds meant for that GP. Chief Secretary Sri Mohapatra has asked the Controlling Heads of the Commercial banks to cover all he unbanked GPs by end this Plan period.A Banking Atlas of Odisha prepared by Odisha Space Application Center was presented in the meeting. This atlas has been prepared for achieving regional parity in banking facilities and bringing all the villages of Odisha under banking service. The data base contains the availability of banking and ATM facilities in the State, which GPs and Villages do not have banks/ATMs along with the data relating to the distance of banks form each village.The Director Ministry of Finance, Govt. of India Dr Alok Pande joining the meeting said that in the financial year 2013-14 there has been visible progress in Odisha with regard to opening of new branches . During this year a total number of 458 new branches have been opened which is much higher in comparison to 229 in 2012013 and 260 in 2013-14. However, Dr Pande urged upon the banks to have parity in opening of ATMs as there is a large regional disparity in this matter. He also asked banks to give their suggestions regarding a proposal for credit guarantee scheme for those who do not have access to bank credits.Available data shows as of 31st March, 2014 a total number of 4281 branches of various banks are operating in different parts of Odisha out of which 2335 are in rural area, 1143 are in semi urban area and 803 are in urban area. In the FY 2013-14 the growth rate in opening of braches has been 11.95% over the last year. Deposits in the banks in the State have increased from Rs.146465 cr as of March, 2013 to Rs. 169642 cr as of March,2014. The year on incremental deposit growth is around 15.82%. The incremental growth in total credit advance by March,2014 has been 13.65%.Though the percentage of propriety sector loans has been around 55.72 against national average of 40, still than there are a large pendency in priority sector loan applications. The agricultural loans advanced by banks in the State have increased from Rs.24364 cr as of March,2013 to Rs.27366 cr as of March,2014.The share of agricultural credit in total advance is around 29% against the national average of 18%. Similarly, the loans to MSMEs have increased from Rs.17209cr by 2013 March to Rs20425 cr by March,2014 registering an incremental growth of 18.69%. The Chairman SLBC Sri S. Chandra Sekhar has urged upon all the banks to strive hard for achieving Govt targets for 2014-15 in each sector from the begging of the current financial year.Principal Secretary Agriculture Sri Rajesh Verma, Secretary Co-operation Sri Bishnupada Sethy, Secretary MSME Sri Panchanana Dash, Director Agriculture Sri S.Gopalan, Director Horticulture Sri Sanjeeb Chadha, the Regional Director RBI Sri P.K.Jena, CGM NABARD Sri S.K. Kara, G.M.SBI Dr P.V. Mutri along with secretaries and senior officers of concerned departments, controlling heads and regional managers of all commercial banks, public sector banks, private banks and insurance companies participated in deliberations.Source - http://www.orissadiary.com/

27.05.2014

Global and China Agricultural Insurance Industry Report, 2013-2014

In H1 2013, China’s crop farming agricultural insurance premium income reached RMB15.458 billion, accounting for 79.89% of the total agricultural insurance premium income.Global and China Agricultural Insurance Industry Report, 2013-2014 is a new market research publication announced by Reportstack. In 2007-2013, the risk guarantee offered by China’s agricultural insurance rose from RMB112.6 billion to RMB1.4 trillion; a total of RMB76 billion was paid to 143 million peasant households as compensation. In 2013, China recorded agricultural insurance premium income of RMB30.66 billion and paid RMB20.86 billion to 31.77 million affected farmers; 1.1 billion mu of main crops were covered (mu, Chinese unit of area, 1 mu = 1/15 of a hectare), accounting for 45% of the country’s main crops sowing area.Since the implementation of the trial agricultural insurance (mainly crop farming insurance) premium subsidy policy in 2007, central and local governments have subsidized agricultural insurance more and more. In 2013, the central and local financial subsidies were equivalent to nearly 80% of China's agricultural insurance premium.In H1 2013, China’s crop farming agricultural insurance premium income reached RMB15.458 billion, accounting for 79.89% of the total agricultural insurance premium income. Among it, the premium income from rice, wheat, corn and cotton amounted to RMB12.63 billion; a total area of 600 million mu was covered.In 2013, 25 ones of 64 Chinese property and casualty insurance companies offered agricultural insurance services, contributing 4.73% (up 0.38 percentage point from 2012) to the total premium income. During the first three quarters of 2013, China Life Property & Casualty Insurance, Ping An, and Sunshine Property and Casualty Insurance witnessed the strongest growth momentum with the respective growth rate of more than 500%. The People's Insurance Company (Group) of China (PICC) was still a main agricultural insurance operator and enjoyed 54.01% market share.China's first specialized agricultural insurance company – Anxin Agricultural Insurance is engaged in traditional crop farming and aquaculture insurance. In 2013, it earned agricultural insurance premium income of RMB276 million, accounting for 33.2% of the total premium income with a loss ratio of 52.9%.As the only mutual agricultural insurance company in China, Sunlight Agriculture Mutual Insurance mainly offers crop farming insurance, aquaculture insurance and other agriculture-related insurance. In 2013, the company’s agricultural insurance premium income hit RMB2.354 billion, occupying 91.5% of the total premium income.As the first foreign property insurance company that provides agricultural insurance services in China, Groupama set up a joint venture – Groupama AVIC Insurance with Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) in 2012. During the first three quarters of 2013, the company achieved agricultural insurance premium income of RMB613 million, up 87.8% year on year. At the end of September 2013, the establishment of Groupama AVIC Insurance Heilongjiang Branch was approved.Global and China Agricultural Insurance Industry Report, 2013-2014 focuses on the followings:-Overview of global agricultural insurance development as well as agricultural insurance development status in major countries; -Development environment for China’s agricultural insurance, including main policies, the amount of subsidies, etc.; -Overview of China’s agricultural insurance development and market segments (embracing crop farming, livestock husbandry, aquaculture and agriculture-related insurance); -Overview of agricultural insurance market in major Chinese provinces and cities; -Operation, agricultural insurance services, etc. of seven Chinese agricultural insurance companies (involving Anxin Agricultural Insurance, AnHua Agricultural Insurance, Sunlight Agriculture Mutual Insurance, China United Insurance).Companies MentionedAnHua Agricultural Insurance, Anxin Agricultural Insurance, Sunlight Agriculture Mutual Insurance, China Huanong Property & Casualty Insurance, GUOYUAN Agricultural Insurance, China United Insurance, Groupama AVIC.Source - http://www.whatech.com/

27.05.2014

USA - Statewide drought decimates wheat crops

Wheat farms continue to struggle as Oklahoma battles desperately dry conditions.Wheat crops are down 38% from the previous five-year average.The Oklahoma Wheat Commission says this year’s crop will go down in history as one of the worst in decades.NewsChannel Four’s Aaron Bracket says Oklahoma has not seen a drought like this in decades.Bracket said, “You know this drought really is exceptional. We’re talking something we haven’t seen, in not just years, but decades in parts of Southwestern Oklahoma, and it’s actually comparable to the Dust Bowl and in some places even worse.”It is the worst possible conditions for Oklahoma’s crops.Some of the people hit hardest by this drought are Oklahoma’s wheat farmers.Wheat farmer Karen Krehbiel says she has been praying for rain.Krehbiel says “We’re only going to have probably, something less than fifty percent of our crop this year will be harvested. In a normal or an average year, it would be eighty-five percent.”Although her crop is struggling, Krehbiel says she is in good shape compared to many.Some farmers are at risk of losing their farms.Krehbiel said, “You just almost cry with them because they’re friends, they`re neighbors. You know their kids, their families and you know it’s a financial struggle to not have that crop.”With more rain in the forecast, our 4 Warn Storm Team’s Aaron Bracket says many farmers could get a little help.Bracket said, “The good thing about the rain that we’ve been seeing, is that it’s hitting the hardest drought hit areas in Oklahoma. Some locations in Southwest Oklahoma have recorded about four to five inches in the past few days, and there’s still this potential to see another inch or two as we go into tomorrow and Wednesday.”Krehbiel says the rain is an answer to her prayers.Krehbiel said, “The last few days of rain, they are certainly an answer to the prayers that we’ve sent state wide.”Source - http://kfor.com/

27.05.2014

Russia - Grain crop seen suffering if expected rains fail this week

Russia's grain crop will suffer if rains do not come this week as expected to several growing regions of the country, one of the world's main wheat exporters via the Black Sea, analysts said on Monday. The agriculture ministry forecast the 2014 crop at 100 million tonnes on Thursday, its most optimistic estimate so far and up from 95 million tonnes, but gave no reason for the move."If there is no rain this week, some optimistic forecasts would have to be downgraded," Dmitry Rylko, the head of the Institute for Agricultural Market Studies (IKAR), said. IKAR, the Moscow-based agricultural consultancy, had kept its 2014 forecast at 94.5 million tonnes, Rylko said. Another leading Russian consultancy, SovEcon, said it was also keeping its 2014 grain crop estimate unchanged at 90 million tonnes.Rain is needed in the Central and Volga Federal districts, analysts said, but one trader said those districts had enough moisture in the soil for this week and next thanks to rain in early May. "Conditions are not critical yet and if rains come to the Centre (the Central district) this week as expected the situation can be fixed quickly," SovEcon head Andrey Sizov said.However, conditions remained favourable overall in the main wheat growing and exporting region - the Southern Federal district, analysts and the trader said, noting that thanks to the futures prices for the new wheat crop continue to fall. Russian futures prices for the new wheat crop with 12.5 percent protein content were quoted at $263 per tonne at the end of last week, down from $265 per tonne a week earlier on a free-on-board (FOB) basis in the Black Sea, IKAR said.As to the old crop, prices have fallen $5 to $281 per tonne in the Black Sea, IKAR said. Wheat harvesting in Russia's South is expected to start around June 25. New crop barley is quoted at $228 per tonne. Farmers had sown 24.4 million hectares as of May 23, or 76.5 percent of the whole planned area for spring grains, which was 3.7 million hectares more than on the same day a year ago, according to data from the Agriculture Ministry.Spring wheat was sown on 9.3 million hectares, or 70.6 percent of the whole planned area, and 2.7 million hectares more than a year ago. SovEcon estimated that Russian sunflower seed prices rose by 125 roubles to 13,375 roubles ($390) a tonne at the end of last week. IKAR pegged it at 13,600 roubles a tonne, down 100 roubles. Export prices for sunflower oil were flat at $870-$880 a tonne on a FOB basis in the Black Sea, according to SovEcon. IKAR's crude sunflower oil price index was quoted at $841 per tonne, down $3.Source - http://www.brecorder.com/

27.05.2014

Africa - Heavy rains cause damage on Ivory Coast cocoa plantations

Abundant rains continued last week across most of Ivory Coast's main cocoa growing regions, strengthening the outlook for the April-to-September cocoa mid-crop in some areas but bad weather also caused damage in others, farmers said on Monday.The mid-crop marketing season in the world's top grower officially opened on April 1 and farmers in most regions said the weather conditions should allow robust output into July.Cocoa arrivals at Ivorian ports reached around 1,435,000 tonnes by May 25 since the start of the season, exporters estimated on Monday, up from 1,216,000 tonnes in the same period of the previous season.In the western region of Issia farmers said heavy rains had damaged several cocoa plantations."The rains were so heavy with winds that there are some cocoa trees that have been ripped up. Other trees have also fallen on the cocoa trees on some plantations," said Ali Fofana, who farms in the outskirts of Issia."In June there is generally even more rain. We're afraid that this could get worse and reduce the harvest," he said.In the western region of Gagnoa, an analyst reported 102 millimetres of rainfall, up from 79 mm the previous week."The rains are heavy. The flowers and some cherelles (small pods) have fallen off the trees," said Gagnoa farmer Eugene Sery.In the western region of Bouafle, farmers said the rains had begun to damage nearly ripe pods."There are some pods that are starting to turn black on the trees because of the rains. It's not good. We're going to need lots of sunshine in the next weeks," said farmer and cooperative manager Amadou Sawadogo.Similar concerns were reported in the western region of Duekoue and the southern region of Aboisso.But farmers were optimistic in the western region of Soubre, in the heart of the cocoa belt, where an analyst reported 82 mm of rains, compared with 87 mm the previous week."For now everything is going well. The rains are followed with lots of sun," said Lazare Ake, who farms near Soubre. "The mid-crop will be long. There is a wave of cherelles developing well that we'll harvest in July."In the central region of Divo, farmers reported three abundant rain showers."With these good rains there will be plenty of cocoa this year," said Amadou Diallo, who farms near Divo.Good growing conditions were also reported in the southern regions of Agboville and Tiassale, in the coastal region of San Pedro and in the centre-western region of Daloa, responsible for a quarter of Ivory Coast's national output.Source - http://af.reuters.com/

26.05.2014

USA - Wet weather presents gardening challenges

Summer is usually rainy season here in West Hawaii. This spring has been a very wet prelude to our summer. Even Alii Drive is experiencing storms dropping measurable inches of rain in a single day. Start planning your garden now for what is likely to be a wet summer.If you’d like to grow vegetables for cool summer salads or to put on the grill, plan carefully. Most vegetables take about three months to start producing. If you plant now, you’ll likely be harvesting in August. By then the rains may have slowed a bit, but the plants will be growing during wet weather.Many vegetables prefer drier conditions. Tomatoes, for instance, don’t mind some rain as they start to grow, but once they start flowering and fruiting dry weather is essential to prevent disease from ruining your crop. Kombucha squash vines also grow better in drier winter weather. Planting in August should produce nice winter squashes. Earlier planting risks rotting fruit.Years of experience show that lettuce is not a good crop to grow in our soggy summers. The lower leaves rot easily in muddy soil. If you want to grow greens, try chard, mizuna or mustard. Hearty greens are best for Kona summer production. Okinawan spinach tolerates dry and wet weather fairly well. If it gets really wet, it may develop a disease that causes black spotting on the leaves. This can be remedied by removing diseased leaves and thinning the plant for better air circulation. Once the weather dries a bit, the disease will die. Most brassicas, including broccoli, collards, and kale, are good choices for spring planting. Even cabbage and cauliflower can produce well in damp weather.You’ll have a better harvest with peas and beans if you select varieties that adapt well to wet weather. Choose ones that have edible pods. Snow peas and snap beans are good candidates. Lima beans and others that dry on the plant will do better if you plant them in the fall.Root vegetables seem to do well year-round and you can get some nice results even in rainy weather as long as you have soil that drains well.If you plant them in the sun, you can get corn, peppers and eggplants to thrive even if we get a lot of rain. These plants will produce better tasting fruit, even in the rain, if subjected to hot, sunny growing conditions.It might be time to try some edibles that take several seasons to produce. Asparagus planted now should give you some nice spears by next spring. The plants will get off to a good start with our summer rains. Pineapple tops planted now should give you some fruit next summer.Some herbs do better than others in the rain. Tender new basil plants tend to get diseased in rainy weather. Low growing thyme can drown, lemongrass rust spreads rapidly when it’s wet. Try getting shrubbing herbs going in drier weather and by next summer they’ll have woody stems to better handle summer moisture.Avoid spring planting of low-growing vegetables and fruit. Strawberries often produce fruit that sits on the ground. The increased insect population we experience in summer will get most of your fruit if rotting diseases don’t. Select other plants for the rainy season.Though raised beds or large containers can keep plants drier, if they are outside and get similar rains, they may not do much better than they would in your garden. Mounding your planting beds can also help the soil drain, but when it rains hard for hours, as it has been doing lately, variety selection is going to be the best solution.Now is a great time to plant trees and fruiting and flowering shrubs. Acquiring plants to install that have been growing for at least a season means they will be higher and drier during the summer rains. Citrus, avocado or macadamia nut as well as shrubs such as blueberry or raspberry will grow quickly in the rainy season. Try something exotic like acerola, mulberry, loquat or a tropical cherry — Surinam or Brazilian.Source - http://westhawaiitoday.com/

26.05.2014

Philippines - Insured farmers receive windfall

More than 1,000 rice and corn farmers in two towns of Isabela have received indemnity checks totaling almost P14 million to cover their losses from a drought that hit the province early this year, the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR) announced.The 1,198 agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARBs), who till a total of 2,044.31 hectares of farmlands in San Pablo and Cabagan towns, received P13.8 million for losses incurred during the second cropping season, the DAR said.In a news release, DAR Region II Director Marjorie P. Ayson said that early in 2013, the DAR and the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. launched the Agrarian Reform Beneficiary Agricultural Insurance Program to provide comprehensive insurance against crop losses caused by natural disasters, pest infestation and plant diseases for the ARBs.She said the department paid 100 percent of the insurance premiums for the ARBs’ rice, corn, high-value crops and livestock. This included insurance against accidents and death of ARBs and members of their household.Ayson said the crop insurance coverage began on the date of issuance of the Certificate of Insurance Cover, which meant that coverage started at planting up to harvesting and covered the cost of production inputs plus an additional 20 percent to cover the value of the expected yield.Source - http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/

26.05.2014

India - 25% fall likely in mango yield this year

The king of fruits has arrived in the city this season with its king-size price tag. Buffeted by either unseasonal or deficient rain in the fruit-growing regions, mangoes are beyond the reach of aam aadmi. In some instances, the price has almost doubled and the yield, too, has declined, including its size.The entire mango belt of the state, including Darbhanga, Bhagalpur, Vaishali, Samastipur, Purnia and Saharsa, are hit hard by the lack of mango showers or northwesterlies and prolonged extreme summer conditions right from the month of April to May.A kilogram of Bombay and Gulab Khas varieties of mangoes, said to be the first available variety in the market, is selling at Rs75-80 at Boring Road, Income-Tax roundabout and Kadamkuan. The income-tax outlets are selling the same at Rs 90 to 100. Sources at Bazaar Samiti said the price of Bombay and Gulab Khas varieties have almost doubled in a year.Bihar gets exotic varieties from Patna, Bhagalpur, Darbhanga, West Champaran, Vaishali and Samastipur. "In 2013, some 15 lakh metric tonnes of mangoes flew off the shelf. This time, we've just about 12 lakh metric tonnes produce," said horticulture deputy director Nitesh Kumar Rai.State horticulture department sources said the volume of mango crop has dropped by 25% this year. Patna's expectation of a good yield of 'Dudhia Malda' this year was badly hit by dry heat and nil rainfall. "Some 40% of the yield is damaged in intense heat," said Prabhakar, a farmer who looks after the sprawling Digha mango groove.'Jardaloo' and 'Chausa', as they are called in Bhagalpur, are normally once-in-two-years unique yield. That, perhaps, explains why the bigger variety is sold at Rs 80-100/kg and the medium ones at Rs 50-Rs70 a dozen. The fruit is produced in 12,000 hectares of the district which is home to at least 5 more varieties, including Mallika, Gulab Khas, Prabha Shankar, Kishanbhog and Himsagar.A Hajipur-based farmer Dhananjay Sah, who owns a huge orchard near Lalganj, said, "Last year, we had 85% of the total expected yield, but this time we are expecting only 60% of the expected yield. Nevertheless, the fruit size has also been reduced due to lack of summer or pre-monsoon showers in April-May. Even the fruit quality has been hit due to deficient rain in the crucial months. One or two showers can ensure a quality crop yield."In a near-arid Darbhanga and West Champaran, the mango crop largely depends on rain. The horticulture deputy director said over 2.6 lakh tonnes of crop are expected from 10,000 hectare land. This year, it's going to be a lot less. The shortfall is so acute that fruit-sellers are looking to procure mangoes from neighbouring states like UP and Maharashtra.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

26.05.2014

Serious mice problems found in South Australia, Victoria and Northern NSW

Parts of South Australia have mice at plague proportions, while hot spots have also been reported in Victoria and Northern NSW.Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre program leader for land pests, Simon Humphrys, said recent monitoring found serious mice problems in the Yorke Pen­insula and North of Adelaide.“On Yorke Peninsula (the mouse problem) is at plague conditions of over 1000 mice a hectare,” Dr Humphrys said.He said mouse numbers between Mallala and Balaklava were just as bad.Grain Producers South Australia chief executive Darren Arney said growers in the worst-affected areas had experienced crop losses despite baiting and some will have to resow.Mr Arney said six regional registered mouse bait stations had been established since late April.Dr Humphrys said he had anecdotal reports of high mice numbers in Western Victoria, and in Northern NSW, from Moree to the Darling Downs.“There are areas in Western Victoria where baits will be used ... there are hot spots but nothing to give farmers concern in Victoria at this stage,” he said.NewAg Consulting agronomist Andrew Newall, based at Horsham, said farmers were reporting high mice numbers in the region, which was creating a “very big problem”.He said he had already seen damage in some emerging canola and many growers were baiting crops as they sowed, especially canola and chick peas.“The worst areas are Horsham and East Horsham, near Murtoa and Rupanyup region, that’s a real hot spot, but there are mice everywhere (in the district,)” he said.Mr Newall said mice were normally a problem this time of year, but the issue had really flared since the breaking rain last month.Source - http://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/

26.05.2014

USDA announces changes to fruit and vegetable planting rules

USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) has announced fruit, vegetable and wild rice provisions that affect producers who intend to participate in certain programs authorized by the Agricultural Act of 2014.“Similar to previous programs that we’ve administered, planting fruits, vegetables or wild rice on base acres on a farm can result in a payment reduction for program participants,” said Aaron Johnson, Acting State Executive Director for the Idaho FSA. “I would also encourage beginning farmers, who are unfamiliar with how ‘base’ acres or ‘payment’ acres are determined, to contact one of our 29 offices statewide or stop by and speak with an FSA representative.”Producers who intend to participate in the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) or Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs are subject to an acre-for-acre payment reduction when fruits and nuts, vegetables or wild rice are planted on the payment acres of a farm. Payment reductions do not apply to mung beans, dry peas, lentils or chickpeas. Planting fruits, vegetables or wild rice on acres that are not considered payment acres will not result in a payment reduction. Farms that are eligible to participate in ARC/PLC but are not enrolled for a particular year may plant unlimited fruits, vegetables and wild rice for that year but will not receive ARC/PLC payments for that year. Eligibility for succeeding years is not affected.Planting and harvesting fruits, vegetables and wild rice on ARC/PLC acreage is subject to the acre-for-acre payment reduction when those crops are planted on either more than 15 percent of the base acres of a farm enrolled in ARC using the county coverage or PLC, or more than 35 percent of the base acres of a farm enrolled in ARC using the individual coverage.Fruits, vegetables and wild rice that are planted in a double-cropping practice will not cause a payment reduction if the farm is in a double-cropping region as designated by the USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

23.05.2014

USA - Floods swamp Ohio farms and fields

What had started out as a good looking crop for some parts of western Ohio has turned into a sea of flooded fields and inevitable replant situations.Up to six inches of water, combined with some hail in some areas, hit western Ohio yesterday afternoon and evening. Some of the hardest hit areas were in the Miami Valley.Young’s Jersey Dairy, near Yellow Springs, was under water that infiltrated the retail Dairy Store.Despite soggy carpets, the facilities were still open and all the farm animals were accounted for, though crops will have plenty of moisture in the coming days.The rainfall amounts were extremely variable.“We got two inches right here at our shop near Greenville. It came super fast and we have a lot of ponding in our low areas. Just north of here two or three miles at my house I only got a half-inch,” said Doug Longfellow, who sells crop insurance for Rogers Grain Elevator in Covington. “But as you move east and south, it increased by the inch. I have customers in the New Carlisle, Huber Heights, Tipp City areas that got anywhere form four to six inches that totally wiped out some beautiful corn fields. They will have to start over. There are a lot of basements flooded and I had a customer with a 1,000-gallon propane tank that was floating. They have a lot of damage. I would guess most farms in that area were done or close to being done planting corn and were getting started on planting beans.”It was not only the amounts, but also the intensity of the downpours that were so damaging.“The speed of the rain and the water moving washed away the stalks and topsoil and may or may not have taken the seed with it,” Longfellow said. “If corn has already been planted and you can’t get back into plant until after June 5, you still have full coverage on that corn because it is a replant situation. Of course, we have until June 20 on beans. There will definitely be some replant calculations to make.“If it doesn’t dry up in the next couple of weeks we are going to run into prevented plant on corn. We will have to see what happens in the next couple of weeks. I just can’t believe the weather extremes we are seeing that we haven’t seen before.”In areas with ponding on emerging corn plants, the extent of the damage will depend on several factors including plant development stage, duration of ponding, and temperature, said Peter Thomison, Ohio State University Extension corn specialist.“Prior to the six-leaf collar stage (as measured by visible leaf collars) or when the growing point is at or below the soil surface, corn can usually survive only two to four days of flooded conditions. Since most of the corn that’s been planted so far is not beyond the V2-3 stage, it’s especially vulnerable to damage from ponding and saturated soil conditions,” Thomison said. “The oxygen supply in the soil is depleted after about 48 hours in a flooded soil. Without oxygen, the plant cannot perform critical life sustaining functions.”Thomison warns that if temperatures are warm during ponding, plants may not survive 24-hours, but cooler temperatures prolong survival.“Even if ponding doesn’t kill plants outright, it may have a long term negative impact on crop performance. Excess moisture during the early vegetative stages retards corn root development,” Thomison said. “As a result, plants may be subject to greater injury during a dry summer because root systems are not sufficiently developed to access available subsoil water. Ponding can also result in losses of nitrogen through denitrification and leaching. Even if water drains quickly, there is the possibility of surface crusts forming as the soil dries that can impact the emergence of recently planted crops. Growers should be prepared to rotary hoe to break up the crust to promote emergence.”“For corn that’s emerged, check the color of the growing point to assess plant survival after ponding. It should be white to cream colored, while a darkening and/or softening usually precedes plant death. For corn not yet emerged, evaluate the appearance and integrity of seeds or seedlings that have yet to emerge (likely rotting if discolored and softening). Look for new leaf growth three to five days after water drains from the field.”The weather outlook for the week of May 26 calls for near to slightly above normal temperatures with near normal rainfall.Source - http://ocj.com/

23.05.2014

Drought, flooding insurance ‘could aid African farmers’

A new satellite-based insurance against drought and heavy rainfall could enable African farmers increase food production and income by helping them invest in better seeds, fertilisers and pesticides, according to researchers.The researchers from the Netherlands-based EARS Environment Monitoring Limited, a remote sensing and climate service provider, in a statement released last month (30 April), say most countries in Sub-Saharan Africa face major challenges in the development of agricultural insurance, including high costs and lack of data.Andries Rosema, the report’s co-author and senior researcher with EARS Earth Environment Monitoring Ltd, tells SciDev. Net that the cost of drought insurance to the farmer consist of pure risk premium and transaction costs.“Typical catastrophic drought index insurance premiums for small-scale farmers with two acres cover US$200 and quality farming inputs package (seeds and fertiliSer) would be US$10,” says Rosema.The researchers used satellite data that focused on factors that lead to crop losses such as droughts and heavy rainfall. Drought was determined by measuring the amount of water lost through soils as a result of evaporation and through plants leaves — two processes called evapotranspiration.The four-year project, initiated in 2009 has led to trials of the new insurance in Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda for crops such as maize, wheat, rice, beans and cotton. The project’s final report was published in January this year.The study was funded to the tune of 1.6 million euro (just under US$2.2 million) by the Foreign Affairs Ministry of the Netherlands and partners based in Africa and abroad.The researchers hope to reach one million farmers with the insurance during the next three to five years, according to the report.Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers Union president Wonder Chabikwa says: “The technology is a victory for African famers who need insurance protection to restrain them from past excessive droughts and sporadic rainfall impoverishing the continent, causing hunger and nutrition”.Howard Ziko, the regional manager of Navistar Insurance Brokers, Manicaland, Zimbabwe, concurs: “The Meteosat-based index insurance system is an effective mechanism meant to reduce losses to African farmers who continue to suffer due to higher unpredictable costs, uncertain future and lack of information that predicts the nature of the farming seasons, including floods, droughts and outbreaks of pests and diseases”.Basil Nyabadza, the chairperson of Zimbabwe’s Agriculture and Rural Development Authority in the Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development, adds that the country is working towards adopting such technology, but advises that Africa must lead such scientific efforts.Source - http://www.scidev.net/

23.05.2014

USA - Government can't extend North Dakota corn planting deadline

The federal government says regulations prevent it from even considering a request by U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp to extend a corn planting deadline to ease farmers' insurance concerns in North Dakota.The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Risk Management Agency said in a statement Wednesday that it is prohibited from changing the May 25 deadline set for most counties in the state. Crop insurance policies are agreements struck between approved providers and farmers, and any changes in those contracts would have to have been made by Nov. 30 last year.Corn farmers have been struggling to get their crop seeded because of the wet spring. Crop insurance coverage will be reduced for farmers who plant corn after Sunday in 49 of North Dakota's 53 counties, because the crops will be deemed more susceptible to summer heat or fall frost.The Democratic senator asked the agency for an extension Monday. Heitkamp's spokeswoman, Abigail McDonough, said Thursday that she would continue to push for insurance program improvements."The senator believes that just because it's an uphill battle for this year, that doesn't mean she shouldn't try to make needed improvements to support growers and help raise awareness to the agency about the planting challenges our growers face," McDonough said.Only 17 percent of North Dakota's corn crop was planted by Sunday, according to the National Agricultural Statistics Service, which updates the numbers weekly. At this time last year, 55 percent of the crop was in the ground.McDonough said Heitkamp consulted with corn farmers before making her plea for federal help. But it was met with a lukewarm response by the North Dakota Corn Growers Association, which said it did not ask the senator to make the request. Executive Director Tom Lilja said extending the deadline — and a secondary request by Heitkamp that the government consider adjusting final planting dates for early season crops before the 2015 crop year — could result in higher policy rates for producers."I think the industry would be reluctant" to support later deadlines for the 2015 crop year, Lilja said earlier this week.RMA did not comment on Heitkamp's secondary request.Source - http://www.idahostatesman.com/

23.05.2014

USA - Short crop will present challenges to harvesters

A lot of farmers will be glad to see wheat harvest 2014 in the rear view mirror.Drought, freeze, excessive hot temperatures have all ganged up on the wheat harvest and done extremely severe damage to the wheat crop.Much of the wheat in the county is only about a foot tall. That is going to make it very difficult to harvest, said Mark Ploger, Pratt County Extension agent.Combine drivers will have to go slow because with wheat so close to the ground it will be easy for a header to get into the dirt and sand.Some may have to use a draper header designed for cutting short wheat while others may get the appraised and just have it swathed.While wheat fields may look flat, they have lots of bumps and dips that will make it very difficult to harvest“This is not going to be an easy task. It’s going to be an ordeal to say the least,” Ploger said. “Short wheat is not conducive for fast harvest.”Because the wheat is so short and it will cost so much to harvest, some farmers will opt to dig out older machines from sheds that they normally use for cutting out mud holes.Farmers haven’t had to deal with mud holes for several years so the combines will be getting a workout.“I think we’re going to see a lot of older machines coming out,” Ploger said.It may be a harvest where a farmer sets a truck at the side of a field then goes and cuts for two or three hours then unloads. Combines today are designed to harvest much faster than their predecessors but with the short wheat, not much will be harvested fast.Tractor drivers on grain carts may want to bring something to read because it may be a long time between dumps.Ploger is hoping for 20 bushel an acre but it might be difficult for some fields to get into double digits.“We may have a lot in the teens and low 20s,” Ploger said.Some insurance companies may make the farmer harvest some or all of a field to recover the loss while others may give up on the crop and advise the farmer to swath the field and use if for feed or just graze it off.Farmers may have a ray of hope in all the doom and gloom. Wheat that gets stressed has a strong tendency to produce high protein levels.Higher protein means a higher quality flour and millers covet high quality wheat because it makes an excellent flour for baking and they will pay a premium price to get it, Ploger said.Also on the plus side, all varieties of wheat rust have just not shown up this year because of the lack of moisture. Without moisture, rust just hasn’t been an issue at all.Everything hit at just the wrong time this year. Back in March the wheat looked pretty good, then the area had no precipitation, there was a late freeze and just when the area needed cool, moist air, the weather turned off excessively hot with temperatures into the mid 90s.Freeze damage is visible in some fields while drought damage is visible all over. Some wheat has actually died and won’t produce anything.Even irrigated fields suffered. They had water available but it takes time for those systems to get around the field so those fields also have short crops.Even with all this, Ploger said the extension office was still going to conduct their wheat market show for the fair. Farmers wanting to participate just need to tell the elevator when they take a load into dump.Wheat is a tough crop and will work hard to produce as many bushels as possible. Depending on where and when a crop was planted and if it happened to a little moisture at just the right time, some fields might be a surprise but everyone will just have to wait until the trucks bring the harvest to the elevator.Source - http://www.pratttribune.com/

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