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12.05.2014

USA - Rain delaying farmers from planting crops

An old proverb says “April showers bring May flowers,” but the heavy rains that have swept across Northwest Florida for the last two weeks have also delayed local farmers from planting some of their most important crops.Copeland Griswold, an eighth generation farmer in Chumuckla, said his soil has been inundated with excess moisture since April 29’s downpour, preventing tractors from placing cottonseed and peanut seeds. Every farm is different, but 82-year-old Copeland’s ideal deadline for planting cotton is May 25 and June 1 for peanuts.It’s not just personal preference, Griswold said he needs to get those seeds in the ground soon or he could be reaping the consequences this fall.“You’re just really risking frost on cotton and peanuts if you plant after that day,” he said.That frost could put a huge dent in crop yields, according to Travis Kelley, director of the Farm Service Agency in Santa Rosa County.“When the (plant’s) vine itself dies, you have no way of harvesting the peanuts under the ground,” he said. “Same thing with cotton,” the bolls became as hard as rock and can’t be opened.The delays in planting could also become costly for farmers because of crop insurance stipulations, Kelley said.“It’s a crucial time right now. Peanuts — according to crop insurance — have to be planted by the fifth of June. They’ve got till the 15th (of June) for their cotton,” he said. “They give you a yield reduction for every day you plant after the fifth (and 15th). Once you get to 10 days beyond that period, you don’t have insurance.”And here’s the kicker: The brief break in rain last week wasn’t long enough to get the seeds planted. Many local farmers, Griswold included, are still waiting for their soil to dry.“If we could get 10 days of clear, 85 or 90 degree weather without any rain we could start catching up,” Griswold said. “I wouldn’t say we would be caught up, but we could start catching up.”Topsoil erosion from April’s flooding has also been a huge problem, Kelley said, noting gullies that have been cut across farm fields. The erosion damage, which can cost thousands to repair, has been so significant that the Farm Service Agency has requested emergency funding for farmers.“We had a lot of farmers take a big hit last year,” Kelley said, referencing a late-summer rainy season that plagued crops with diseases and reduced yields. “If things don’t change this year we got some that are at risk of not being able to pay their production loans back and not be able to farm again.”It’s a potentially grim outlook, but Griswold had a seemingly stout resolve about the growing season.“The old saying is you’ll certainly make more crop with rain than you will with drought,” he said. “I ain’t shutting her down and running. I’ll tell you that.”Source - http://www.pnj.com/

12.05.2014

US drought could halve wheat harvest

Wheat growers in south-west Oklahoma expect to harvest less than half a normal crop and fodder stocks are running out amid the region’s worst drought on record.It is the third consecutive year of drought in some US states, with the coming wheat harvest expected to be 8% smaller than last year’s and yields forecast at their lowest level since 2007-08.The US Department of Agriculture’s drought monitoring service shows 54% of the national wheat crop, 30% of the national corn area, 22% of soya beans, 32% of hay crops and 48% of cattle in drought.Combining in south-west Oklahoma will begin in a couple of weeks’ time and most fields this year will not reach knee-high. Many will be less than a foot tall, said Sam Knipp of the Oklahoma Farm Bureau.“Some farmers are mowing the wheat now and baling it for cattle feed. This will be the case throughout Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma and Kansas.“Many livestock water ponds have gone dry and pastures have gone dormant or died. Some cities are worried about running out of water,” said Mr Knipp.“Many of these farmers have crop insurance, but that basically just allows them to put in another crop. It does not necessarily put groceries on the table.“Wheat is much better in northern High Plains, where they received good snows all winter.”The 2014 Farm Bill provides compensation to eligible livestock producers who have suffered grazing losses due to drought or fire, which is often a consequence of drought. These payments offer 60% of monthly feed costs for up to five months.The programme received more than 10,000 applications for help within a week of opening on 14 April, about 95% of them for the Livestock Forage Programme (LFP).“The high number of applicants is no surprise considering the widespread, ongoing drought that has plagued livestock producers in the west coast and midwestern portions of the United States for nearly three consecutive years,” said US agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack.Source - http://www.fwi.co.uk/

09.05.2014

Canada - Bee farmers report heavy hive losses over winter

Some Nova Scotia bee farmers are reporting losses in their hives as high as 50 per cent over the past winter.That means more hives must be imported to keep up with the demand for pollinators in the growing blueberry industry.“It wasn’t the best year, that’s for sure,” Joe Goetz, president of the Nova Scotia Beekeepers Association, said in an interview Thursday.Goetz went into last winter with 380 hives. Fewer than 200 survived the long, cold season.He said the association will get a better idea of the health of the bee industry once the province’s beekeepers get their winter survival reports in this month.“Then we’ll have a better sense of the losses,” said Goetz, who owns Scotian Bee Honey and Gifts in Windsor Forks, near Martock in Hants County.There are about 200 bee farmers in the province. Most are hobbyists. About 25 run large commercial operations, with a total of about 11,000 hives.Bees are hugely important to many crops for pollination, particularly fruit and berries. It’s estimated that they pollinate about 30 per cent of the food people consume.Expansion in the lowbush blueberry industry in Nova Scotia, where there are about 18,000 hectares in production, is driving demand for more bees. Natural pollinators like honey bees, wasps and flies cannot meet the demand, and farmers are turning to managed bee populations.Blueberry growers have found that more bees means better pollination of their crop and a larger harvest. Some say a sufficient supply of pollinators can increase the blueberry crop as much as tenfold.That has led some farmers to call on the province to drop restrictions on importing bees from other provinces, particularly Ontario. The Bee Industry Act says the importation of honey bees is prohibited without a special permit from the government.It’s expected about 4,400 hives will be approved for importation this year.“It would be great if Nova Scotia beekeepers could provide those 4,000-plus hives to growers who need them,” said Goetz, who underwent an expansion in hives from 30 to 380 last year.He has managed to meet his rental contracts to apple and blueberry growers by dividing hives, buying some from local beekeepers and importing some from Australia.“Every hive I have is rented out to apple and blueberry growers. They are in the apple orchards right now waiting for the apples to bloom and then they’ll go to blueberries.”Other beekeepers are reporting their best winter survival rates in years.“I’ve heard some bad stories,” said Tom Cosman, owner of Whidden and Cosman Honey in Greenwich, Kings County.“But we actually did better than we have in years.”The mortality rate in his 1,500 hives dropped to about 20 per cent from 30 per cent in recent years.“We’ve had some years with 50 per cent losses, as well.”He said it’s difficult to know what caused the improvement on his farm. It could have been a combination of more constant winter conditions, good weather in the fall, the state of the bees going into the winter and better management of mites.“There are so many little factors all added together.”Cosman said it has been a struggle in recent years to replace lost hives.“All the blueberry growers are dependent on you.“The demand is just endless.”Paul Dickie of Maitland said he was surprised to discover only about a 30 per cent loss in his hives after the winter, compared to as much as 45 per cent in previous years.“There seemed to be fewer mites in the fall,” Dickie said.“If the bees are good and healthy and not bothered too much by mites in the fall, that seems to set them up pretty good for the spring.”Source - http://thechronicleherald.ca/

09.05.2014

Philippines - DA offers personal accident coverage to Kalinga farmers

Seeing the need to protect agricultural workers, the Department of Agriculture (DA), through Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (PCIC), offers Personal Accident Insurance to farmers in the province.Joe Casibang from the Office of Provincial Agriculturist (OPAG) explained the accident protection is an optional component offered to farmers who availed of crop insurance.PCIC has earmarked P15 million to crop insurance of farmers in the province for 2014 that also included the fund for personal accident insurance.Under the program, PCIC charges discounted premium rate of P100, instead of the regular P200 per farmer for a P50,000 personal accident coverage that includes dismemberment and medical expenses, Casibang informed.For expanded protection, the accident insurance also covers accidents that are not work-related, giving full protection to beneficiaries.As a term insurance, the accident coverage takes effect only for a period of one year but good enough to protect small farmers, who scamper for financial help when need arises, Casibang noted.“While we provide insurance to the crop, why not also to the farmer”, Casibang said about the rationale of the program. The benefit is offered to individual farmer or organizations who apply through the municipal agriculture offices.Source - http://news.pia.gov.ph/

09.05.2014

Philippines - Tornado destroys P4.6-M worth of corn in Apayao

Some P4 million worth of corn in was destroyed by a tornado, the four Apayao towns, the Agriculture Department reported.“This is the first time we experienced a baby tornado… bringing strong winds that flattened corn plants which were due for harvest in June,” said Robert Domoguen, public information officer of the Cordillera office of the Agriculture Department.Regional corn coordinator Pansy Piludin said 1,045.25 hectares of a hybrid corn plantation in the towns of Luna, Pudtol, Sta. Marcela and Flora were damaged by the tornado that hit the province in April 8. Some 22.5 hectares of the crop can no longer be salvaged, she added.In Pudtol, 631 corn farmers lost their livelihood due to the Tornado, which damaged 330 hectares in the town.Luna town reported damage of 343 hectares; Sta. Marcela, 314 hectares; and Flora, 58.25 hectares.Piludin’s report put total damage at P4.65 million worth of hybrid yellow corn, resulting in the loss of liveliood for 976 farmers.Domoguen said the department is looking at seed subsidy assistance and crop insurance intervention for the affected farmers.Source - http://www.mb.com.ph/

09.05.2014

Philippines - PCIC 2 offers insurance subsidy to Cordillera provinces

To help farmers recover from losses during calamities, the Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (PCIC) region 2 has crossed regional boundaries just to offer insurance subsidy to farmer-beneficiaries in eastern towns of the Cordillera Administrative Region.Rodelia Pagaddu, head-marketing and sales division, said there are 8,370 farmers in Kalinga, Apayao and Ifugao towns who availed of the PCIC's Subsidized Agricultural Insurance Program for Priority Provinces (SAIP-PP). "The three provinces were among the top 20 priority provinces nationwide to be given crop insurance subsidy," she added.The SAIP-PP, she explained provides subsidy for poor farmers whose crops were damaged by natural calamities like flood, drought and typhoon.Pagaddu said the Department of Agriculture (DA) has allotted P25 million to subsidize the payment of the insurance of the indentified beneficiaries.“This is an effort of the government to help poor farmers insure their agricultural crops which are very vulnerable to natural calamities and pest infestations,” Pagaddu said.She added that there are farmers who could not afford to sustain the payment of the insurance program. "The subsidy program solves their problem to secure their livelihood," Pagaddu told.Since Region 2 is not covered by the program, the PCIC Cagayan Valley took the initiative to serve the farmer-beneficiaries in the three provinces due to its proximity to the regional office.Source - http://news.pia.gov.ph/

09.05.2014

India - Hailstorms and rain leave onion growers jittery

The failure to recover production cost with the yield and quality declining because of intermittent hailstorms and unseasonal rain across the district in February and March has left onion growers a worried lot.On an average, a farmer has to spend up to Rs 50,000 per acre to grow onions. But most farmers are unable to recover their production cost, as half of their yield has been lost because of the hailstorms. And the onion that is being harvested is of poor quality and getting lower rates — a maximum of Rs 200 a quintal.Shankar Pachpute, a farmer from Patoda village near Lasalgaon in Niphad taluka, who sold his produce at Lasalgaon APMC on Thursday, said, "Up to 50 per cent crops were damaged in the recent hailstorms and unseasonal rain. I could cultivate 19 quintals of onions, but the quality was low because of bad weather conditions. I got the rate of Rs 300 a quintal and earned Rs 5,700. I had spent around 25,000 for growing onions. Moreover, vehicle cost for brining the produce to the APMC was Rs 1,400. I could not even recover my production cost."Khandu Nagarre, a farmer from Lasalgaon tehsil, said, "I had 50 acres under rabi onion cultivation and expected around 60 quintals a acre as crop in good condition. My expenses per acre were Rs 45,000. But the recent hailstorms damaged the crops and I could harvest only 300 quintals of onions. As the quality of onions was not good, I received rates in the range of Rs 300 to Rs 400 a quintal. I suffered huge losses due to damage of the crop in the hailstorm."Lasalgaon APMC officials said the average wholesale onion prices increased marginally by Rs 30 a quintal to Rs 940 a quintal on Thursday, as against Rs 910 a quintal on Wednesday. The arrival declined to 9,500 quintals on Thrusday, as against 14,000 quintals on Wednesday. Of the total arrival, the quantum of good quality onions was around 20 per cent, while the rest were of poor quality that are getting low rates between Rs 200 and Rs 700 a quintal. Good quality onions are getting rates up to Rs 1,500 a quintal.In Lasalgoan APMC, the average wholesale price was recorded at Rs 940 a quintal on Thursday. The minimum and maximum prices were recorded at Rs 250 and Rs 1,336 a quintal, respectively. Around 9,500 quintals of onions were auctioned at Lasalgaon on Thursday.The average wholesale onion price at Pimpalgaon was recorded at Rs 900 a quintal on Thursday. The minimum and maximum prices were recorded at Rs 300 and Rs 1,819 a quintal, respectively. Around 11,500 quintals of onions were auctioned at Pimpalgaon on Thursday.In Yeola, the average wholesale onion price was recorded at Rs 700 a quintal on Thursday. The minimum and maximum prices were recorded at Rs 100 and Rs 1,553 a quintal, respectively. Around 3,000 quintals of onions were auctioned at Yeola on Thursday.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

09.05.2014

India - Timely rain comes as relief to banana, sugarcane growers

Widespread rainfall continued for the fourth consecutive day in Tiruchi and Karur districts on Thursday. The rain has come as a huge relief to farmers, especially banana and sugarcane growers in the two districts.Farmers’ representatives say that the rainfall has been very timely. Standing banana and sugarcane crops could have withered if the searing summer heat had continued for another week or 10 days, they said.“The rainfall will help all standing crops including banana, sugarcane, betelvine and kora grass crops in Tiruchi and Karur. The crop will survive over the next 20-30 days,” said Mahadhanapuram V.Rajaram, Working president, Cauvery Delta Farmers Welfare Association.The rain is also expected to ease the drinking water scarcity. “More than anything else, there will be an improvement on the drinking water front. The rain has also helped avert the withering of banana and sugarcane crops,” said P.Ayyakkannu, State vice president, Bharathiya Kisan Sangam.Apart from the banana and sugarcane crops, farmers say that the rain was much needed for coconut and mango trees as a large number of the trees had withered last year owing to the drought like conditions. “Many banana growers did not raise the crop this year, following the losses suffered last year. The rain would also help floriculture crops such as jasmine and rose raised in a few places in Tiruchi district,” said Puliyur A.Nagarajan, president, Tamil Nadu Horticulture Crop Producers Association.Mr.Nagarajan said the government should build check dams close to every major drinking water scheme on the Cauvery River on the lines of the one built near Kambarasampettai in Tiruchi close to the sources feeding the Ramanathapuram and Tiruchi drinking water schemes. This would help shore up some water during the Mettur closure period and help check the fall in water table in the region, he said.The rainfall has been widespread in Tiruchi district and even dry belts such as Manapparai, Marungapuri and Thathaiyengarpet have received moderate showers. During the 24-hour period ending at 8.30 a.m. on Thursday, Golden Rock in the city received the maximum rainfall 62 mm. The following is the chief amount of rainfall recorded in other parts of the district during the same period (in mm): Tiruchi Town 56.40; Thuraiyur 56; Tiruchi Junction 55.60; Tiruchi Airport 48.80; Lalgudi 47; Kuppampatti 45; Manapparai 41.20; Samayapuram 38; Navalurkottapattu 36; Devimangalam 32; Thuvakudi 29; Pullampadi 27.40; Marungapuri 27.20; Upper Anicut and Vathalai Anicut 26 each; Pulivalam and Musiri 23 each; Thenparanadu 20; Nandiyar Head 15; Sirukudi 12 and Thathaiyengarpet 10.Source - http://www.thehindu.com/

09.05.2014

USA - Drought devastates Oklahoma’s wheat crop

Much of the state continues to battle drought conditions.Many people have noticed the very dry outer banks of Lake Hefner.In the western half of our state, they’re facing an even bigger crisis, with many parts in either an “exceptional” or “extreme” drought.The Oklahoma Wheat Commission says this year’s crop will go down in history as one of the worst in decades.The crop is down 38% from the previous five-year average.With a month to go before Oklahoma’s wheat harvest, Tom Glazier does not like the sound of crunching beneath his feet.This farmer of 50 years says his wheat crop is supposed to be waiving up to his waist, but instead it is below his knees.Glazier says this is the worst drought he has ever seen.“Oh yes. By far,” he said. “It’s never looked this bad.”The drought has made Tom feel lucky to harvest half of last year’s crop.Soon, the lackluster wheat harvest could have consumers feeling the heat as well.However, the Department of Agriculture says any price increase to wheat foods wouldn’t happen overnight.The price of bread on shelves today is a product of last year’s harvest.NewsChannel 4′s Mike Morgan says a combination of factors are to blame for the drought.“A combination of a very cold winter, basically dry, then we had a hard April freeze. Now the spring rains have not come through,” said Morgan. “Oklahoma City is over seven inches behind for the year to date, but keep in mind it was also dry late last fall. Western Oklahoma never got out of an exceptional drought that’s pushing rapidly toward central Oklahoma.”Glazier remains hopeful the drought will end soon.“That’s just part of your way of life, farming,” Glazier said. “But it’ll rain one of these days.”He says crop insurance will help him survive for a while.Morgan says we may start to climb out of this drought Sunday night or Monday morning, but a few thunderstorms here and there won’t be enough.Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net/

08.05.2014

Thunderstorms, tornadoes, hail, floods take their toll on insurers in April

The insurance industry faces a rising bill for damage from severe weather which occurred in April, according to the latest report from Impact Forecasting. Thunderstorms, tornadoes, hail and floods in April are set to cause in excess of $1 billion insured losses.Impact Forecasting, the catastrophe modelling unit of reinsurance broker Aon Benfield, identified a number of events which have caused a significant economic and insurance industry loss during the month of April.The monthly catastrophe report from Impact Forecasting discusses a number of periods of severe weather across the U.S. which have resulted in a significant insured loss.A severe weather outbreak affected the central and eastern United States between the 2nd and 4th, injuring several people. The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) registered reports of tornadoes, hail and damaging winds in the Plains, Midwest and the Mississippi Valley during the stretch. The most significant damage was attributed to hail, as hailstones the size of softballs struck the Denton, Texas region. Other states affected included Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Illinois. Total economic losses were estimated at USD950 million, with insured losses in excess of USD650 million. The Insurance Council of Texas listed insured losses in Denton alone at beyond USD500 million.Severe thunderstorms swept across central and eastern sections of the United States between the 12th and 14th, injuring more than a dozen people. Most of the damage was attributed to large hail, damaging straight-line winds and flooding rains, though multiple tornadoes did touch down. The most severe impacts were registered in parts of Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Kansas, and Texas as up to tennis ball-sized hail and winds in excess of 80 mph (130 kph) were reported. Total economic losses were estimated at USD625 million, with insured losses at USD400 million.Multiple days of prolific severe weather affected much of the central and eastern United States between April 27 and May 1, killing at least 39 people and injuring more than 250 others. Widespread damage was noted in more than 20 states following at least 69 confirmed tornado touchdowns (including 11 rated EF-3 or higher), up to softball-sized hail, and damaging straight-line winds in the Plains, Mississippi Valley, Southeast, and the Midwest. Torrential rains also caused significant flash flooding in parts of Florida, Alabama, and the Mid-Atlantic. Given the scope of recorded damage, preliminary assessments indicate that this has the potential to be a multi-billion dollar economic loss event. Insured losses will be minimally in the hundreds of millions (USD), and possibly higher.Added to these three periods of severe weather in April, which are set to result in a combined insurance industry loss well in excess of $1 billion, Impact Forecasting also reports a significant economic impact from drought to the agricultural sector in April.Exceptional drought conditions continued to worsen across portions of the western U.S. during the month of April. The worst impacts were in California, where more than 96% of the state was minimally in a severe drought. Severe crop damage was reported, and the California Farm Water Coalition cited losses nearing USD3.6 billion. Additional agricultural impacts elsewhere in the West will cause the overall drought cost to top USD4.0 billion.These drought conditions show no sign of letting up currently which means that the agricultural sector and as a result agricultural insurers and reinsurers should expect the financial impact to continue.Adam Podlaha, Head of Impact Forecasting, commented; “The recent outbreaks of tornadoes, large hail and damaging straight-line winds in the United States have emphasized the importance of historical data analysis for insurers and reinsurers when trying to forecast future losses. Impact Forecasting has expanded and implemented the past 10 years of observed data from the U.S. Storm Prediction Center into its ELEMENTS platform, which is now being utilized by our insurer and reinsurer clients to better gauge their losses across events with lower return periods.”Added to the insurance industry losses from severe winter weather in the U.S. at the start of the year, some insurers will begin to feel the pinch as the aggregated losses from catastrophes start to erode their profits a little this year. The drought losses are an issue that agricultural insurers and reinsurers are going to face over the course of this year and have the potential to worsen, with April and May both key growing months.These April severe thunderstorm outbreaks are unlikely to pose any threat to any in-force catastrophe bonds which cover tornado type risks, but the losses may be severe enough to touch on some reinsurance programs.Globally, insurers are already facing over $7 billion of catastrophe and severe weather losses from the first-quarter of 2014. April’s billion-plus from severe U.S. thunderstorms and tornadoes alone will be an unwelcome addition.Source - http://www.artemis.bm/

08.05.2014

No alternative to agricultural insurance in Armenia

There is no alternative to the introduction of the agricultural insurance system in Armenia, Armenian Deputy Agriculture Minister Garnik Petrosyan told reporters on Wednesday.“This is a very important and serious issue. But this system cannot be introduced within one or two years,” Petrosyan said, noting that actions are being taken and serious studies are being conducted at the current stage.According to the Deputy Minister, the first pilot project will be implemented in the livestock farming sector, then in the crop sector, which faces more risks. “Our first action should be to mitigate these risks,” he noted.Source - http://www.panorama.am/

08.05.2014

USA - Drought intensifies across southwest

As if the relentless drought weren’t bad enough, large sections of the Southwest saw temperatures soar into the high 90-degree range this week with several locations topping 100.The combination of high temperatures, high wind and continued drought has wreaked havoc on much of the Southwest wheat crop and puts summer crops in jeopardy as farmers hope for planting moisture. And it’s early May.The latest Texas Drought Monitor map shows 74 percent of the state in moderate to exceptional drought status and more than half the state is suffering severe “or worse” drought status.That level is 5 percentage points above last week’s report and significantly greater than the 49 percent of the state in drought status three months ago. But last year at this time, 92 percent of the state was in drought.The situation is no better in Oklahoma where Randy Boman told participants at a recent Tipton Valley Research Center field day that southwest Oklahoma had recorded just 4.81 inches of rain since Oct, 2013. “And that precipitation came in 39 separate events,” he said.Most of those rain events brought little more than traces of rain. “One rain in December brought almost an inch,” Boman said. Since January, 2013, the area has received 20 inches from 89 separate events. “The last time we were not in drought was November, 2010,” he said. Much of the region has been in exceptional drought for most of that time.Texas crop and weatherRobert burns, Texas AgriLife Extension media specialist, reports in his weekly Texas crop and weather update that most of the grain production areas of the state are experiencing drought.He wrote that grain crops in the upper Gulf Coast, Central Texas and North Texas started off the year with much better moisture conditions than those in the High Plains, but it’s the “same old song and dance” there when it comes to moisture, according to a Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service expert.“We need help from Mother Nature pretty soon to maintain yield potentials,” said Ronnie Schnell, AgriLife Extension state cropping systems specialist, College Station.The upper Gulf Coast, the Blacklands and North Texas had good moisture at planting times, but most of the grain crop needs a good rain, he said. Planting was in early March in the Central and North regions and mid- to late-February in the Gulf Coast area.Areas in the northern Blacklands have received a little more rain than the Central and Gulf Coast region, Schnell said. Crops in all three areas are still OK, but won’t stay that way long without rain in the next week or so.Freezes delayed planting in some areas, and late freezes damaged corn in the northern Blacklands and resulted in replanting of other crops, but the real issue remains moisture.“Over the past three months, the area of the state under at least moderate drought has increased from about 50 percent to almost 75 percent,” Schnell said.Source - http://southwestfarmpress.com/

08.05.2014

Philippines braces for worst drought in years

Environmental activists have warned that this year’s El Niño season could be the worst in years and that the government remains unprepared for severe drought conditions that could result from the seasonal weather phenomenon.Peasant leader Fernando Hicap said a current lack of access to water for farmers would be exacerbated by drought conditions that are expected to begin next month.“The effects of El Niño have yet to be felt by farmers, but they are already suffering from a lack of access to irrigation. How much more when the dry spell is here,” he told on Thursday.The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) said El Niño is expected to occur some time in June or July.El Niño is caused by the warming of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific and can affect air and sea currents.The phenomenon is expected to bring below-average rainfall in the last quarter of this year through the first quarter of 2015.The Department of Agriculture, which recently formed a task force on El Niño, has declared 44 of the country's 81 provinces to be highly vulnerable to any resulting dry spell.Fr Peter Walpole SJ, head of the Jesuit research institute Environmental Science for Social Change, warned that the lack of preparedness "is reflected in the stories we hear of irrigation sources drying up, with minimal attention given to water impoundment".Walpole noted in a recent article on El Niño that in the Bengal region, nearly every family has a pond or water source because the region is located in the low lying areas of the Ganges Delta."This is an adaptation the Philippines has not caught on to as a necessary adaptation in many areas," the Jesuit priest wrote.Presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma, however, said in a statement that the government is prepared for the dry spell, adding that food supply is the main priority under the government’s proposed 2015 budget."There are concrete programs to ensure food supply in case of calamities or disasters such as [crop] devastation."The threat of a dry spell has been blamed for causing a spike in the cost of staples such as rice, meat and fruit.Arsenio Balisacan, head of the National Economic and Development Authority, noted a "tightness" in the country’s rice supply, resulting in higher prices."The relatively higher corn prices may be attributed to lower production of corn resulting from dry spells in a number of corn-producing regions," Balisacan said during a media briefing on Thursday.The Philippines experienced the worst El Niño in 1997 and 1998 that caused an estimated $68 million worth of damage to agriculture.In 2010, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs raised food security warnings for the Philippines and said that damage caused by El Niño since 1997 amounted to $239 million.Source - http://www.ucanews.com/

07.05.2014

USDA will wait to release specifics on farm bill commodity title

Department of Agriculture isn't likely to announce the fine points of the farm bill commodity title any time soon, two key congressional staffers said.Because the payment options are decoupled from planting decisions, the programs farmers choose won't have bearing for 2014 planting. Bart Fischer, chief economist for the Republican-led U.S. House Agriculture Committee, and Matt Schertz, senior professional staff member, spoke to about 150 people in a two-hour "farm bill implementation seminar" in Fargo, N.D., on May 2. The seminar was organized by U.S. Rep. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.The two largely discussed the evolution of the farm bill and spent the last 20 minutes of the meeting discussing implementation. Cramer said farmers and their advisers need to know how to make decisions with multi-year consequences under the farm bill, which took four years to create and was signed into law on Feb. 7.Late fall sign-upFischer started his presentation by saying their comments were "on background," and not to be directly quoted by the invited news media.Fischer and Schertz said they've been told farmers can expect a late fall sign-up on commodity titles that could spill into the 2015 calendar year.Dwight Aakre, a North Dakota State University Extension Service agricultural economist, told Agweek some farmers find it hard to believe that payment options and planting are decoupled."Farmers can go ahead and farm the best way they know how," Aakre said. "The farm bill is more about how they generate the federal part of their income, which recently has been smaller than most people think."North Dakota FSA Director Aaron Krauter did not speak at the meeting but confirmed to Agweek that while the Livestock Indemnity Program and other aspects of the farm bill were implemented right away, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has directed FSA employees not to make presentations on the commodity title until details are ironed out, and Fischer and Schertz aren't directly involved in that.Dale Ihry, a North Dakota FSA state program specialist who is among five officials on a national committee to set final rules for the commodity title of the farm bill, attended the meeting but did not speak.The programsFischer and Schertz explained the payments are determined on base acres, not planted acres. The primary decision for farmers is whether to enroll in the farm bill's Agricultural Risk Coverage or Price Loss Coverage -- the two commodity options.Fischer said the bill includes $3 million for land grant universities to develop computerized spread sheets to help farmers choose a program as they attempt to optimize federal payments over the five-year time period. NDSU and other universities have these tools, but Fischer said they'll have to be updated with more information that USDA hasn't yet released."The decision (ARC or PLC) is based, crop-by-crop, on individual FSA farm numbers -- a choice within an individual's crop base," Aakre said. "There are a lot of interactions."Aakre said there are many unknowns. "In general, it looks like ARC might be the preferred option for corn-based acres. PLC looks favorable for barley and most of the minor oilseeds. Other crops -- including soybeans, wheat and pulse crops -- are kind of a toss-up."If farmers choose the ARC option, they must also choose either a county- or a farm-based payment calculation. That isn't a stipulation under the PLC option."Farmers to date have generally favored a price protection program, even though they often say different," Aakre explained.The ARC program is a revenue-based program, similar to the old ACRE program in the 2008 farm bill, except ACRE was more tied to what the farmer planted.Fischer said some of the advisers have been too quick to advise one or the other. Jeff Riedesel, of Central Insurance Agency in Carrington, N.D., said the dizzying array of choices for the programs will make them hard to explain to absentee landowners, who must sign the documents unless farm operators acquire power-of-attorney.Other factorsAnother important decision for farmers will be base reallocations -- an opportunity to change the mix of base acres without changing the total base.Fischer and Schertz also described the Supplemental Coverage Option -- a crop insurance program that for the first time in history can layer over standard crop insurance. Farmers can purchase a policy from an insurance agent for the 2015 crop year, with the standard March 15 deadline. The Risk Management Agency is still working out that program for next year.Aakre said in the past few farm bills, 96 to 98 percent of North Dakota gross farm income came from the marketplace -- not from farm bill programs. If farmers decide on ARC or PLC for a five-year period, Aakre said, it might change their income by 1 or 2 percent.The crop insurance payments have sometimes been substantial. Farmers pay premiums for them, but the premiums are subsidized.Source - http://insurancenewsnet.com/

07.05.2014

USA - Mid-April freeze damages wheat crop for third year

The Freeze that occurred on April 15 in Young County and extending areas didn’t just represent another clear example of fluctuating Texas weather. According to Young County Extension Agent J. Brad Morrison, it had much more serious implications.“We had temperatures drop down to 26 degrees starting around 3 a.m. on April 15, and that continued until 8 a.m.,” Morrison explained. “This occurred throughout the rolling plains of TX, including cities such as Wichita Falls, Childress, etc.”The average date of the last freeze in Young County is March 13, according to Morrison. The mid-April freeze came over a month after the average, and the county’s wheat had just headed and was blooming, about ready for the process in which seed is pollinated and developed.Because of this, Morrison said that a severe negative impact on the cash flow of agricultural producers resulted, especially since 2014 represents the third year in a row Young County’s wheat yield has been damaged by severe weather conditions.“As for the two preceding years, in 2012 we had severe drought conditions that pretty much devastated the wheat crop, and then in 2013 we had another lake freeze,” Morrison explained.Due to recent conditions, wheat producers have lately been left with two options. They can graze their crop out for livestock, or they can bail it for hay. Morrison said there has been a large demand for hay the last three years due to the drought conditions, but the value of hay is not as large as its value from a grain standpoint.“The average wheat yield in Young County is 25 bushels per acre, making an acre of wheat somewhere in the range of $185 per acre if it is used as grain,” Morrison said. “From a hay standpoint, the income derived per acre of wheat is more like $75 to $100.”Source - http://www.grahamleader.com/

07.05.2014

Canada - Local bee keepers fear colonies will be in danger again this year

The weather conditions are finally ideal for wild flowers to bloom and honey bees to begin pollinating. However, bee keepers have already noticed some of their colonies didn’t survive the severe winter.“Including the four I lost going into the winter, I lost 35 per cent,” says Meaford bee keeper Richard Elzby. “The remaining 65 per cent are robust.”The province recently announced that it would provide financial help for bee keepers who lost more than 40 per cent of the colonies this year with a one-time payment of $105 per colony.Bee keepers across the province have suffered major losses over the past two and the harsh winter is not the biggest threat-pesticides are. There are already signs that crop protection chemicals are going to cause problems for bees again this summer.The planting season hasn't even started and bee keeper David Shuit doesn't like what he sees. These bees were dying after foraging today. He blames neonicotinoids for contaminating the soil, water and now the wild flowers at the edge of fields.“Every year the residue is building up in the soil and when the native flowers are drawing up water they are drawing up neonicotinoids with it and it affects the nervous systems of the bees,” says Shuit.Neonicotinoids are used to protect corn, soy and potatoes from insects. Neonicotinoids are extremely toxic to pollinators even in tiny amounts; the chemicals are water soluble and persist in soils year to year.Health Canada has issued new guidelines for use of neonicotinoids and is currently re-evaluating their use.The provinces one time finically assistance will be available to bee keepers for loses over the summer up until October 31st.Source - http://barrie.ctvnews.ca/

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