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14.05.2014

USA - Winter wheat crop expected to decline 7%

Virginia agriculture officials say this year’s winter wheat crop is expected to be smaller than last year’s crop.The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said Monday that growers are expected to produce 15.9 million bushels this year. That’s a 7 percent decline from 2013’s crop.The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service says winter wheat production nationwide is expected to drop 9 percent to 1.4 billion bushels.Virginia’s winter wheat average yield also is expected to decline. Yield is projected to be 60 bushels, down 2 bushels from 2013.The predictions are based on conditions on May 1.Hay stocks as of May 1 totaled 470,000 tons, up 15 percent from 2013.Source - http://www.timesdispatch.com/

14.05.2014

USA - Drought has big impact on farmers, food prices

As the extreme drought in Oklahoma continues, many people are concerned about the impact it will have on this year’s wheat crop.State Climatologist Gary McManus tells this drought has been building for quite some time and other weather conditions have also contributed to the crop concerns.“We had sort of a rough time after we planted and then we had a rough winter." McManus said.On top of that, McManus says the late freeze that happened in April made things even worse.“[The late freeze] impacted the drought-stressed wheat pretty badly in some areas.” McManus added.He says tough conditions like this can force farmers to sell off cattle to lower their costs, which also hurts their profits.All of these things tie together in the end when food prices go up for all of us in the grocery store.Source - http://www.krmg.com/

14.05.2014

India - Rs 8,500 Cr as Crop Loans This Fiscal

The government plans to disburse about Rs 8,500 crore as crop loans through cooperatives in 2014-15, Cooperation Minister H S Mahadeva Prasad said on Tuesday.He told reporters that cooperative institutions distributed about `7,559 crore and helped more than 21,9515 farmers in the previous fiscal. “Over 90 per cent of the crop loans distributed last year carried zero per cent interest,” he said.He said for this fiscal, the maximum limit for zero-per cent short-term crop loans has been fixed at Rs 3 lakh and more than 25 lakh farmers are expected to avail this benefit. He also said the government has paid off the arrears of farmers whose loans were waived under a scheme by the previous BJP government and added that the rate of loan recovery by primary cooperative societies stood at an improved 64 per cent in 2013-14.Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com/

14.05.2014

Turkey - Frost hits harvest, farmers demand compensation

The Black Sea region and Eastern Anatolia have suffered heavy losses to their harvests this year due to frost that has recently hit these regions, farmers said over the weekend, calling on the government to help compensate.Kesap Hazelnut Producers' Union President Mustafa Şahin told Today's Zaman that the frost has hit crops starting from an altitude of 250 meters above sea level, and that in areas located 400 meters above sea level all crops in the Black Sea region were destroyed.“Last year 90,000 tons of hazelnuts were produced [in Giresun], [and] the production for this year had been estimated at 100,000 tons. However, two-thirds of the [projected] hazelnut crop has been lost due to frost,” said Şahin.Regarding measures to reduce the damage in the region, Şahin stressed that insurance for farmers and agricultural producers must be strengthened. Meanwhile, the farmers' calls for help arrived on the eve of Farmers' Day on May 14, and payments on producers' agricultural loans in the affected areas have been deferred for a year.According to a Cabinet decision published in the Official Gazette on Wednesday, farmers and producers with damages to at least 30 percent of their crops, animals, plants and greenhouses can defer their debts to Ziraat Bankası and the Turkish Agriculture Credit Cooperative Central Union (TTKKMB).Speaking during a conference in Ordu, Turkish Union of Agricultural Chambers (TZOB) President Şemsi Bayraktar said on Monday that after severe drought and high temperatures in January and February, trees bloomed earlier and therefore become vulnerable to frost. “Because Turkey produces 66.4 percent of the world's hazelnuts, and 80 percent of world hazelnut exports, necessary damage-assessment projects have been initiated with the help of agricultural chambers,” said Bayraktar.The effect of the frost on all agricultural products has led to an estimated TL 150 million in losses.Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges (TOBB) President Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu said in a press statement on Monday that he had conveyed hazelnut producers' concerns over their losses as stated to the Ordu and Giresun provincial chambers of commerce and industry to Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek.Agricultural Insurance Pool (TARSİM) General Manager Bülent Bora said in April that TARSİM experts had been sent out into the field to conduct damage assessments and that after completing their assessments in early May, indemnities would be paid during the harvest period in August.“Frost hit different regions in Turkey on March 30-31. Apricot trees in Malatya were significantly damaged. We received over 55,000 [damage] claims from 51 provinces for various crops within two days [of the frost],” said Bora.Source - http://www.todayszaman.com/

14.05.2014

India - Rain delays cotton sowing in Faridkot

The rain, accompanied by the fast winds on Monday night, has further delayed the sowing of cotton at many places, besides causing a loss to the crop sown one or two days before the rain, as the hard layer formed on the surface of the land would not allow the plants to emerge out of the earth.“As cotton sprouts up with broad leaves, the hard layer on the surface of the earth formed by rain stops the sprout from growing up. It is called the ‘Karand’ of the crop,” said Dr Amandeep Keshav, project director of the Agriculture Technology Management Agency (ATMA), Faridkot.“The heavy rainfall in my village has damaged the latest sown cotton crop of many farmers as the rain would form a hard layer on the earth and the crop will simply not grow now,” said Jagseer Singh, a farmer from Niamiwala village.“If the crop has to be sown again, it would cost a cotton farmer about `2,500 to `3,000 per acre as the BT seeds alone cost `1,800 to 2,000,” he added.“I had sown cotton on four acres on Sunday, but now the crop would grow only after the hardened layer is broken manually with a particular tool,” said Gurlal Singh, a farmer from Kotkapura.According to the recommendations of the Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, the sowing of the cotton crop is supposed to be finished by May 15 to get good yield. But the sowing of cotton has now been delayed for a long time due to the rain.“The sowing of cotton in our village is already rather delayed this year because of the delayed harvesting season due to inclement weather. Only less than 20 per cent crop was sown, which has now been hit by ‘karand’ (hard laywer) due to rain,” said Sukhmander Singh, a farmer from Khara village.“If the sowing of any crop gets too much delayed, the yield also gets affected adversely, because each crop needs its its time for growth from germination to maturity.”He added, “As the yield of a crop depends on weather conditions, sometimes late crop has to face adverse weather conditions leading to loss to the farmer. A much delayed crop further leads to delayed sowing of the next crop,” said Bhupesh Joshi, deputy project director, ATMA.Source - http://www.hindustantimes.com/

14.05.2014

USA - Peach crop in Ohio is the pits this year

In a normal year, the peach trees at Branstool Orchards would be dotted with blossoms by now, bright little signs that summer, sunshine and sweet, juicy fruit are on their way.But this wasn’t a normal year, and at Branstool Orchards in Licking County, the peach trees aren't blooming.Sub-zero winds from the Arctic blew over central Ohio this winter, knocking temperatures from above-freezing to negative digits in a matter of days.Marshall Branstool, who owns Branstool Orchards, said that swing is what got them.One day in January, he said, it was 47 degrees. The next day? Minus 8.Buds on the 5,200 peach trees at Branstool Orchards came in as tiny nubs but turned black instead of green.That means bad news for devotees who buy Branstool peaches at the Clintonville Farmers Market and at Branstool Orchards. With no peaches growing, he has none to sell.“All of Ohio got hit,” he said.So did most of Michigan and parts of Pennsylvania and South Carolina.Peach farmers brought bud samples to an Ohio Fruit Growers Marketing Association meeting in February, and every bud was dead, said Bill Dodd, president of the association.“Whether you want to say it was a polar vortex or whether you just want to say it was really, really cold, the peaches couldn’t survive that, so we’re looking at a difficult peach season here in Ohio,” Dodd said. “Mother Nature can be an evil wench sometimes.”Three weeks ago, temperatures along a ridge near the South Carolina/Georgia border dropped to the low 20s, said Amy London, director of the South Carolina Peach Council. That freeze knocked out about 40 percent of South Carolina’s peach crop — a tough hit for a state that is the second-leading producer of peaches in the country behind California.Branstool might buy peaches from an orchard in Pennsylvania to sell at his orchard on Johnstown-Utica Road, but that purchase depends on whether the Pennsylvania orchard has enough peaches to sell.He has insurance to cover part of the cost of losing a season of peaches, but it will barely cover his employees’ salaries.“Peaches are our bread and butter,” he said. “But you gotta put on your big-boy pants and deal with it. The weather is out of our control.”All of Branstool’s peach trees survived the polar vortex, so he’s optimistic about next spring.“It would have been a whole different ballgame if they died,” he said.One tree — just one — is sprouting tiny pink buds. He’s marked that tree with orange and white flags and is watching it closely. If it bears fruit, he said, he’ll probably keep the peaches for his employees and family.Now, he and his employees are pruning the peach trees to make room for new growth, and new peaches, in 2015.“We’ll be back next year,” he said.Source - http://www.dispatch.com/

13.05.2014

USA - Kansas winter wheat crop looking worse, could be smallest harvest since 1996

The Kansas wheat farmer is in his third year of drought and things are not looking good this time around for his 3,500 acres of wheat. The question is not if but how much his harvest is going to get slammed. By one estimate, his harvest will be about half of his best ones.“Our fields are burning up,” he said.His concerns were confirmed Friday when the federal government said it expects the Kansas winter wheat crop will be the worst since 1996.The National Agricultural Statistics Service estimated a state harvest of 260 million acres, an 18 percent decline from last year. Average yields are estimated at 31 bushels per acre, down seven bushels from last year. Some parts of southwest Kansas are being hit much harder than the average.Daniel O’Brien, extension agricultural economist for Kansas State University, calculates this year’s winter wheat crop could bring in $900 million less compared with good years. That figure doesn’t include any proceeds from crop insurance.There’s still time for rain to improve the yield, but continued lack of moisture would make the harvest even worse than in the forecast. There’s already a growing number of acres that are being abandoned because the crop is too damaged to be worth harvesting.Wheat prices have risen by about a third this year, helping reduce somewhat the economic impact on farmers. That also could put some pressure on food prices, but not significantly if only the higher price of wheat is passed along. A bushel of wheat provides enough flour for 70 to 90 one-pound loaves of bread. The rise in wheat prices so far would contribute an increase of about 2 cents per loaf.Prices might also be restrained somewhat by an ample world wheat crop, despite the rough outlook in the U.S.More than half of Kansas is currently classified as being in a drought. A majority of that is “extreme drought,” and a small southern fringe of the state is in “absolute drought, the worst category. Oklahoma has been harder hit, with a large swath of the state in absolute drought.South central Kansas has just 14 percent of its top soil and 20 percent of the subsoil rated as having adequate moisture. The rest of central and western Kansas was also very dry.The wheat crop statewide is rated 18 percent very poor, 29 percent poor, 36 perent fair, 16 percent good, and 1 percent excellent.Alarms were already sounding after a recently completed tour by the Wheat Quality Council, based in Brighton, Colo. The annual tour brought in 75 analysts, farmers and grain traders. They made 587 stops at wheat fields in Kansas and also parts of Oklahoma and NebraskaTour participants also estimated, before the federal report, that Kansas was headed for its worst wheat harvest since 1996.Members of the tour estimated the statewide yield at 33 bushels per acre. Actual wheat production in 2013 was 328 million bushels with a yield of 40 bushels per acre, both of which were down from 2012.But what makes the wheat particularly worrisome, several said, is that yields could quickly go to zero in some fields if the weather heats up and more rain doesn’t fall.Drought had stunted the height of the plants and substantially reduced potential yields. There’s a great deal of variation with some fields at 15 bushels per acre and some at 50. But clearly, they said, the southwest corner of Kansas and down into the Oklahoma panhandle are consistently the worst. The lack of moisture can be seen in the deep cracks in the ground running through some fieldsJustin Gilpin, executive director of the Kansas Wheat Commission and a tour participant, said that while last year was also a disaster in much of western Kansas, the difference this year is that the drought damage has spread to central Kansas, lowering yields there.In a stop at a wheat field just east of Newton, Gilpin noted how short the wheat stalks were.Millershaski’s wheat farm is in a hard hit part of the state, 40 miles from Colorado and 80 miles from Oklahoma. An estimate in early May on part of his crop put the yield at 24 bushels per acres, half of what he got in his best years. The lack of moisture since then has probably knocked the yield down to 18 or 19 bushels.He’s been in “conservation mode,” reducing expenses and not upgrading equipment. Crop insurance helps, but because of the premium cost he’s covered for about 70 percent of his losses.“It’s enough to keep the carrot dangling in front of the donkey,” he said.But the 10-day weather forecast for Lakin, Kan., the nearest town to his farm, has just one day when the probability of rain is 20 percent, the best chance in the period“Sometimes you need to get paid for what you’re doing,” said Millershaski. This drought “is getting to be a killer.”The Wichita Eagle and Associated Press contributed to this report.Source - http://www.kansascity.com/

13.05.2014

India - Nearly 50 Percent Crops Damaged

The heavy rains in the last few days have damaged more than 50 per cent of the agricultural and horticultural crops in Ranga Reddy district. Nearly 784 hectares of paddy crop and 1,236 hectares of horticultural crops were damaged in the last few days.District collector B Sridhar sent a preliminary report to the commissioner of disaster management C Parthasarathy on the damage caused to the crops in the district.Of the 784 hectares of paddy crop was damaged, 498 hectares are in Yacharam, 190 in Ibrahimpatnam, 60 in Doma, 30 hectares in Medchal and six hectares in Kandukur constituting 50 per cent of the total damaged paddy crop. The district also saw 50 per cent damage to horticultural crops in 1,236 hectares, 215 hectares of vegetables in Shabad mandal, 60 hectares of mango in Kandukur, and 120 hectares of mango and 200 hectares of vegetables in Ibrahimpatnam.Yacharam (220 hectares of vegetables and 120 hectares of mango), Manchal (50 hectares of mango and 50 hectares of vegetables), Shameerpet (28 hectares of mango), Medchal (32 hectares of mango), Quthbullapur (16 hectares of mango) and Shankerpally (15 hectares of papaya) were the other areas badly hit.Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com/

13.05.2014

Mexico - Earthquake leaves agricultural sector largely unscathed

Mexican growers report that their fields have been spared damage from the recent earthquake in Mexico's state of Guerrero. Though damage to roads and bridges could delay the transport of some fresh produce, growers are much more worried about the effect rains are having on their crops than about earthquake damage.“The orchards have not been affected directly by the earthquake in Guerrero,” said Celso Castillo, sales manager for Promega. “The only thing I've heard of affecting our industry is that an important bridge that connects Guerrero to Michoacan was damaged.” That will affect the ability of Guerrero's citrus growers to transport their products out of the state, but Castillo predicted the effects of that will be short-lived.“The earthquake has not affected us,” said Alvaro Preciado, general director for Grupo Berries de Mexico y Jalisco. “What has affected us has been the rainfall that's come about in the last few days.” Likewise, Castillo also said that the bigger concern for growers has been the amount of rain they've had, which could speed up the maturation process for Promega's avocados and, in general, accelerate the season.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

13.05.2014

USA - Last chance for farmers to get aid for 2012 crop losses

Farmers can now sign up for aid for 2012 crop losses.The U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency’s Supplemental Revenue Assistance Program allows farmers a final eligibility period in which to get assistance for crop losses caused by national disasters through Sept. 20, 2011, for crops intended for the 2012 harvest.“Most producers who suffered losses before Sept. 30, 2011, have already been compensated if they applied for SURE benefits for the 2011 crop year,” said FSA administrator Juan Garcia in a release. “This sign-up period is only for those producers who suffered crop losses for 2012 crops before Sept. 30, 2011.”The program allots a limit of $100,000 per producer; those wishing to get aid from both livestock and crop losses have a combined limit of $100,000.Since the implementation of both the livestock and crop reimbursement plans, local officials have seen few signups, although they have fielded many inquiries.“We do not have anyone that has come in to submit an application,” said Christeen Crudup, county executive director for the Farm Service Agency. “We have answered questions over the phone.”Crudup said many crop producers are in the planting stages of the year, sowing tobacco, corn and soybeans. She expects to see more inquiries and sign-ups in June, closer to crop reporting time.“I think that most of our producers are out in the field now, so they are not coming into the office,” she said. “They have a time period when they have to report their crop, and they will probably inquire about it then.”The crop program was established by the 2008 Farm Bill and has these requirements:• 10 percent production loss on a crop of economic significance that provides at least 5 percent of the producer’s expected farm revenue.• The crop was intended for harvest in 2012.• Coverage on insured crops or coverage through the Non-Insured Crop Assistance Program must have started prior to Sept. 30, 2011.• Planting dates must be prior to Sept. 30, 2011.• Have an average non-farm income lower than $500,000.• Must be physically located in a county declared a primary disaster county or share a border with one. Without such a declaration by the secretary of agriculture, a farm must have had less than half its normal production due to a natural disaster.Socially disadvantaged or beginner farmers or those with limited resource may be eligible for reimbursement even without insurance.The sign-up deadline is Aug. 29 for crops.Livestock assistance, which started in April, is still ongoing offering funds for grazing losses, cattle deaths or hay shortages related to natural disasters.Source - http://www.hendersondispatch.com/

13.05.2014

Turkey - Leaf-mining' moth threatens tomatoes

A harmful leaf-eating moth is threatening tomato production in the southern province of Antalya, raising concerns over the product's price during the summer.Sector representatives say the "Tuta absoluta," also known as a tomato leafminer, has reappeared in the region, four years after causing damage to tomato fields. If authorities and farmers fail to establish an efficient plan to tackle the problem, the price of field-grown tomatoes, which are normally cheaper in the summer season, will not drop due to a lack in supply, according to officials.The Antalya Commodity Exchange (ATB) has already organized a meeting to decide on a tactic to combat the insect in order to avoid further losses. Speaking at the meeting, a prominent agricultural health official in Antalya said that around one-third of the 2.3 million tomatoes produced in the province where under threat.Mehmet Sen, an official at the Plant and Quarantine Department at the Antalya Provincial Directorate of Agriculture, warned that 100% of the crops were at risk if the necessary steps were not taken. He said the tomato prices in the market, which normally fall in the summer season, would remain at winter levels.Meanwhile, Ekrem Cetin, also of the Antalya Provincial Directorate of Agriculture, said the tuta absoluta would also hamper Turkey's export market. He said countries, including Russia and Ukraine, have intensified their examination of Turkish tomatoes as they are aware of the risk involving moths. He added that domestic consumers, particularly in Istanbul, also do not want to consume affected products. Sen said the moth that came to Turkey from Southern Europe first arrived in the country back in 2009.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

13.05.2014

India - Banana farmers seek relief after crop damage

Banana farmers are demanding compensation after heavy winds swept across the Tamil Nadu region and damaged crops in the past few days. Standing plantain trees were damaged in Vayalur, Somarasampettai, Malliyampathu and parts of Lalgudi.K Easwaran, a farmer at Kulumani said it is estimated only 20% of the plantations in the region have been affected as most crops were already harvested.The affected farmers are seeking at least 100,000 per acre for lost crops. Farmers incur an expenditure of more than 50,000 to raise the crop in one acre. A major part of the produce from the region is sold in Kerala. A Nagarajan, the president of Tamil Nadu Horticulture Crop Producers Association, said a mature banana crop fetches at least 300-400 in the market.Banana is raised in at least 25,000 acres in the district every year. Farmers complain that land under banana cultivation has decreased in recent years due to prolonged dry weather and poor irrigation. Such natural calamities will only discourage farmers further to raise the crop, farmers said.Records show that banana production has doubled in Tamil Nadu over the past four years. Tamil Nadu grows more bananas than any other state. India produced 30.8 million tonnes of bananas in 2012-2013, and Tamil Nadu contributed nearly a third of the total crop. The state produced over 4.9 million tonnes of bananas in 2009-2010 and more than 8 million tonnes in 2012-2013. Maharashtra, the second largest banana producer, recorded a crop of 4.1 million tonnes and Gujarat, 4.04 million tonnes during the same period.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

12.05.2014

India - New rice variety developed in Assam for flood-affected farmers

Climate change not only pushes farmers in Brahmaputra basin to adopt new varieties of crops that can resist vageries of weather but also compels agro-scientists to merge into research works to invent modified better varieties, espicially rice. Recently the Regional Agricultural Research Station (RARS) of Assam Agricultural University at Titabor has developed a submergence resistent gene in rice variety of Ranjit which will bring good harvest to flood-hit farmers offering great relief to them. RARS is a research institute of Assam Agriculture University in Jorhat and has been devoting for better scientific cultivation and production for years.Since flooding is one of the major hazards of rice cultivation in Brahmaputra basin areas, tolerant varieties are urgently needed to help protect the farmers from submergence. So as a result of this urgency, the research works to develop new better varieties became a compulsion for the scientists from Assam, a highly climate change effected state of India. Ultimately they have developed the new variety of the rice last year after a three years research. Though the variety has not been released to farmers yet, it will come out of experimental complex soon, said Dr. Tomijuddin Ahmed , the Chief Scientist of the RARS. Scientists of RARS had started their work during 2010 for the introgression of submergence tolerance gene in the rice variety Ranjit and finally the project was completed last year.RARS April-May experimentally. The variety will be drown into water in different stages to test its tolerance, said Dr. Ahmed.According to Dr. Sanjay Kumar Chetia who is involed with the project said submergence was a constraint to rice production in the areas of high rainfall. Intermittent flooding is common in 10-15 million hectares of rain fed lowland rice in south and southeast Asia.Dr. Chetia said, “Biotechnology has been instrumental in the development of new and improved crop varieties at a faster pace than conventional breeding. Conventional breeding requires 10-12 years for the development of a new variety.” Chetia said that the recognition of the specific genes responsible for desirable crop qualities has led to the development of varities in a time framer of as little as 3-5 years, using a biotechnology called ‘Marker Assisted Selection’.Early, breeding programmes for further improvement of submergence tolerence in rice was going on for over three decades. ‘The breakthrough came in the form of Swarn Sub1, a submergence tolerant variety in the background of a mega variety Swarna at International Rice Research Institute, Philippines, with the help of Marker Assisted Backcrossing. At this institute the submergence gene, the ‘SUB1′, already been introduced in several mega varieties, including Swarna, Samba Mahsuri, IR64, BR11, CR1009, TDK1 through Marker Assisted Backcrossing during 2007, Dr. T Ahmed said. Ahmed said- “The submergence tolerant varieties survive by inhibiting elongation growth during submergence, thereby conserving carbohydrate reserves. This allows them to survive for a longer period of time under water and resume growth when de-submerged. We are hopeful that another year or two, seeds will be available to the farmers for commercial cultivation.”It is to be noted that Assam have already completed a new variety rice production circulation experimentally. Flood-hit farmers have successfully harvested from the submergence-resistant Swarna Sub-1 variety paddy in last December (2013). In 2009 for the first time farmers of the state had harvested from the water-resistant variety SS-1 in the flood prone areas. Impressed with the experimentation with Swarna Sub-1, the Agriculture Department promoting it on a wider scale since that year. It produces upto 3-3.5 tonnes per hectare when submerged, which can go upto 6 tonnes in normal conditions. “SS-1 is very shorter than other rice varities cultivated in India. Farmers get difficulties during harvesting this variety. But Ranjit is a taller one and suitable for manual harvesting. So we are optimistic with this taller variety and will be prefered by farmers”, Dr. Ahmed said.The first variety developed in India through marker aided selection is the improved Pusa Basmati during 2008, a bacterial leaf bright resistant introgressed variety developed from Pusa Basmati. It is to be noted that Assam have already completed a new variety rice production circulation experimentally. Scientists from RARS completed the research work of the four flood-fighter varities. The new variety will be a higher version of existing ‘Suvarna Sub-1′ with more aided features.Flood-hit farmers have successfully harvested from the submergence-resistant Suvarna Sub-1(SS-1) variety paddy in last December (2013). In 2009 for the first time farmers of the state had harvested from the water-resistant variety SS-1 in the flood prone areas. Impressed with the experimentation with SS-1, the Agriculture Department promoting it on a wider scale since that year. Scientists are working with drought and water submergence resistant properties will also be instilled in other popular rice varities in India like Sambha masuri, IR-64 etc. The Indian Agricultural Research (ICAR) along with Manila-based International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) is planning to come out with upgraded version of SS-1 which will have droughts damage standing paddy crops. IRRI had released India-developed seed ‘Suvarna Sub-1′ seed in six countries which include Bangladesh, Nepal, Cambodia and Myanmar.‘Suvarna Sub-1′ named after gold was released in 2009 in India and has become one of the most sought after seed varieties in the region over a period of three years. Around 1 million hectares of land these seeds till 2012 and mostly in eastern Indian states of West Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar and Assam, making it perhaps one of the fastest growing rice seeds. In total, rice is cultivated in around 44 million hectares of land every year, of which almost 40% is in the five eastern Indian states.Mubina Akhtar, an environment journalist said “Governments, civil societies and NGOs should work to popularise submergence tolerence rice variety among flood-affected farmers in India and other flood prone areas”. Environmentalists warns that this new varieties should not be cultivated in non flood-affected areas. Because these type of hybrid varieties are marginalising and wiping out our traditional as well as local varieties.Source - http://www.eurasiareview.com/

12.05.2014

India - Kharif Crop to Cover 3.83 Lakh in Kalahandi

Considering the soil and climatic condition of the district suitable for growing various crops, Kalahandi administration has drawn up the agriculture strategy for kharif season.With Met office forecasting less rainfall during the monsoon this year, the strategy has given a thrust on non-paddy crops and change in the cropping pattern during the season. Though there is no change in paddy coverage area, focus will be given on commercially viable medium and short duration paddy crop.As per the agriculture strategy document released at a meeting here on Wednesday, the net crop coverage area in the district will be 3.83 lakh hectares (ha) with paddy targeted to be raised in 1.9 lakh ha like previous year.With Kalahandi emerging as one of the leading districts of the State in maize and cotton production in the recent years, it is targeted to cultivate maize in 1.97 lakh ha and cotton in 45,850 ha against 1.81 lakh ha and 43,056 ha in the last kharif season respectively.These apart, different types of pulses will be grown in 83,400 ha and oil seeds in 16,000 ha as per the strategy. Due to forecast of rainfall, it is targeted to cover more area with mixed cropping. An awareness drive will be launched to persuade farmers to switch over to other crops from paddy.Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com/

12.05.2014

USA - Service announces special cover crop sign-up

The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has announced a special funding opportunity to help landowners plant cover crops for erosion control, soil improvement or other conservation needs.Cover crops are highly effective in reducing soil erosion, as well as suppressing weeds and building up organic matter and soil health.The cover crop may include rye, oats, millet, wheat, red clover, turnips, canola, radishes, or other species, either alone or in combination.Cover crops reduce wind or water erosion by literally covering the soil.They also use up excess nutrients in the soil reducing risk of runoff, they sequester carbon, and improve soil structure.Farmers with crop insurance will need to check with their crop insurance agent to make sure the cover crop is terminated so as not to impact their insurance payments or coverage.Source - http://www.hngnews.com/

12.05.2014

USA - Extreme Drought Expands North Into Kansas

The extreme drought conditions that have plagued western Oklahoma and much of Texas this year have spread north into southern and western Kansas to put additional stress on struggling wheat that is about a month from harvest, according to Thursday’s update by the U.S. Drought Monitor.“Kansas continues to set the southern edge of the intense drought that seems to be waking up and pushing rapidly north along with warmer temperatures. A large expansion of D3 (extreme drought) now covers nearly the entire southern half of Kansas and D4 (exceptional drought) is slowly pushing north out of Oklahoma,” said Thursday’s summary on U.S. Drought Monitor website.The drought expansion comes at a bad time for Kansas wheat, which needs rain to prevent further deterioration. Last week, crop scouts estimated the state’s drought-damaged crop will produce 260.7 million bushels, the smallest since 1996’s 255.2 million, providing rain arrives soon.“The heat and dryness this week has certainly been poorly timed for heading wheat in the Southern Plains, particularly for south-central Kansas, central/southwest Oklahoma, and west-central Texas,” said Joel Widenor, meteorologist with Commodity Weather Group. “While the driest area may be trimmed slightly by a combination of shower systems today, early next week, and in the 11- to 15- day (outlook) , most of the southwest half of the belt still misses out.”Drought conditions expanded in Nebraska, an important corn and wheat producer, with extreme drought creeping into the southwest corner, according to the Drought Monitor. Much of the western third of the state was in severe drought, with moderate drought elsewhere there.Extreme to exceptional drought expanded in western Oklahoma and much of central Texas including the panhandle.Midwest in better shapeConditions are better in the Midwest where corn and soybean planting is under way, with areas of moderate drought limited to western Missouri and Iowa.“The dryness has been welcomed for planting activities, but moisture will be needed soon in order to help sustain crops through the coming summer. The cooler-than-normal temperatures have also been helping offset the seasonal dryness across most of the western reaches of the region,” said the Drought Monitor summary.Drought conditions were largely unchanged in California, with exceptional drought remaining in southwestern areas and extreme drought from there to the Oregon border.Source - http://beefproducer.com/

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