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05.03.2014

USA - Most Kansas winter wheat crop faring well

The latest government snapshot of the Kansas winter wheat crop shows a mixed outlook after a month of cold, snowy weather.The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that wheat fields started to green up and show signs of growth as snow melted in February. But concerns persist about the potential for winterkill because of the season's extremely low temperatures.The report rated the crop's condition as 4 percent very poor and 18 percent poor. About 44 percent was rated fair, with 32 percent rated good and 2 percent rated excellent.Cold weather also challenged Kansas ranchers who had cows calving during February. Cattle and calf conditions were rated as 1 percent very poor, 3 percent poor, 48 percent fair, 46 percent good and 2 excellent.Source - http://www.kake.com/

05.03.2014

USA - Slow Thaw Needed to Preserve Wheat Crop

The USDA says a gradual end to the winter freeze is needed to prevent further damage to the country’s wheat crop.US wheat futures have firmed in recent weeks over the prospect of a diminished crop caused by persistent cold weather.Snow cover has protected crops but short-lived warmer weather could melt snows and could encourage growth that could be damaged by further cold snaps.The condition of the US plains winter wheat crop has dropped due to frigid temperatures throughout February and dry soils, according to government data released on Monday. Kansas’ winter wheat crop was rated 34 percent good to excellent, down 1 percentage point from a month earlier. Nebraska’s winter wheat crop was rated 43 percent good to excellent, a 3 percentage point drop from the start of February.The ratings decline was greater in southern areas of the winter wheat belt, where soils were drier and the crop was more susceptible to the cold.Source - http://www.environmentalleader.com/

05.03.2014

New Zealand - Fruit, vege growers feel the heat

Drought-like conditions in parts of the Waikato are causing a headache for some fruit and vegetable growers who are suffering with bone-dry soils and intense heat.Although not as badly hit as the region's dairy farmers - who are taking the first steps toward asking the Government to declare another drought - growers are starting to feel the pinch from Waikato's dry spell, too.Mike Roach, of Roach's Nursery, has about 1.4 hectares of vegetables planted at his property in Eureka, near Morrinsville."The veges are really suffering, we've only got half the crop we should have."He said the nursery, which grows roses in winter, was restricted by the council as to the amount of water it could use and the area had not had decent rain for months.Mr Roach grew eggplants, tomatoes, cucumbers, gherkins and courgettes, most destined for Waikato farmers' markets."In the morning they're standing up looking good, in the afternoon they're shrivelled up because of the lack of moisture."Latest climate figures from Niwa showed that parts of Waikato received less than a fifth of their normal February rainfall last month.Waikato, Waitomo and Taupo districts were particularly hard hit.In isolated areas soil moisture deficits may be as severe as the 2013 drought, Niwa's February climate summary said.Martin Reid, an apple grower and president of the Waikato Fruit Growers Association, said soil temperatures were drier now than at the same time last year.He said although his royal gala crop - which he finished picking this week - was in superb condition, he was a little nervous about varieties like pink lady and pacific queen that ripened later."If I get no rain for two weeks, then possibly a third of my blocks are really going to be down in fruit size."But some other producers - like those growing onions, or tomatoes in hothouses - have benefited from the fine weather."The dry weather has been ideal for our onion harvest," said Bharat Jivan, of the Pukekohe Vegetable Growers Association.Mr Jivan said the conditions meant some growers in north Waikato were harvesting onions early.The sunny weather has been good for Frank van Rijen's 3.2ha of tomatoes under glass in Ohaupo, too.Mr van Rijen said growers who relied on water drawn from glasshouse roofs were finding it more of a challenge, but he was managing fine.According to Niwa's seasonal climate outlook, soil moisture levels and river flows are most likely to be below normal for the upper North Island, including Waikato, between March and May.Source - http://www.stuff.co.nz/

05.03.2014

Asia Palm-Oil Yields May Suffer From Dry Weather

Asian palm-oil yields may suffer later in 2014 and in the next two seasons after unusual dryness in some Malaysian, Thai and Indonesian growing areas in the last two months.Malaysia’s Johor state, accounting for 16 percent of national production, had less than half of normal rainfall in January. The country is the world’s second-biggest producer of the oil after Indonesia and Thailand ranks third, while India is the leading global importer.Palm-oil futures rose 5.3 percent so far this year on Bursa Malaya Derivatives in Kuala Lumpur, following a 9.1 percent gain in 2013. El Nino weather conditions, which can bring drought to Southeast Asia, may occur in coming months, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said Feb. 25.It is too early to say whether there will be an El Nino event this year. If it remains dry in several palm-oil producing regions, the biggest impact will materialize in the next two seasons and not in Oct.-Sept. 2013-14.The Malaysian peninsula, most of Thailand and Indonesia’s central Sumatra received less than 20 percent of normal rain in the past 30 days, according to data from World Ag Weather.Fruit BunchesAnother two to three weeks of dryness in Malaysia will increase stress on oil palms, potentially reducing the weight of fruit bunches. That would start to show up in reduced production near 2014’s end, according to the researcher.Parts of Thailand were very dry in the November-February period, affecting oil palms and causing young fruit bunches to drop. That will reduce future yields and production.Some areas of Indonesia were also affected by dryness in recent weeks, and further developments “will have to be watched closely.”India’s 2013-14 rapeseed harvest is forecast to rise 11 percent to a record 7.59 million metric tons from 6.85 million tons. The crop benefited from favorable January and February rainfall and suffered little damage from cold weather and disease.If this is confirmed, domestic vegetable-oil supplies will improve significantly in coming months, probably tempering import requirements.Source - http://www.businessweek.com/

05.03.2014

India - Good rain/snow in Himachal and Uttarakhand to boost Wheat and Apple production

Low temperatures coupled with good amounts of rain and snowfall in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand this winter raises hopes off a bumper fruit crop. It is also likely to benefit Rabi crop of wheat and barley. Dehradun in Uttarakhand is one of the top ten wheat producers of India and the city has received over 126.9 mm of rain in the month of February itself, thanks to a multiple (five to six) western disturbances. Good rain in February and a fresh spell of rain in March of about 28 mm is already bringing smiles to the faces of farmers who are now preparing for a good output of wheat this season. Further plenty of snow in places like Mukteshwar, Dhanoulti and Mussoorie during the the winter months has not just made conditions perfect for a good Rabi harvest but has also helped in recharging the water levels in the reservoirs. Meanwhile, good snowfall in Manali of up to 255.8 mm in the month of February (50% above normal) and 27 mm of rain on the first two days of March along with an ideal temperature has brought good news for the farmers in Himachal this year too. Manali received over 100 mm of rain/snow from January till now. The average minimum temperature in apple belts of the state remained close to freezing point in January and February. Kinnaur and Lahaul-Spiti witnessed minimum temperatures as low as -18°C.Fruit cultivation is the main source of income in Himachal Pradesh with 19 lakh metric tonne of fruits (apple, plum, peaches and apricot) being produced annually annually. Source - http://www.moneycontrol.com/

04.03.2014

Bolivia - Erratic weather endangers harvests

For centuries, farmers in the fragile ecosystems of the high Andes have looked to the behaviour of plants and animals to figure out what crops to grow and when.If reeds dried up in the late summer, rainless weather lay ahead, they believed. If the Andean fox made a howling appearance, abundant rains were thought sure to come.But increasingly erratic weather that scientists attribute to global warming is rendering their age-old methods less reliable, endangering harvests in a region where life is hard in the best of times.Experts may scoff at such folk science, but the men and women who till the high mountain soil continue to swear by the traditional indicators, and Bolivia's government has even incorporated them into climate reports provided to farmers when it lacked modern data from meteorological stations.Ancestral knowledge"They work for me," assures Francisco Condori, 45, after checking the previous night's precipitation on a homemade rain gauge on Lake Titicaca's southern shore, the hills around him shining purple with flowering potato plants.Condori is a well-heeded font of ancestral knowledge for fellow farmers in these treeless climes frequently punished by frosts, hailstorms and drought.In the reeds on Titicaca's shore, he points out the height of the nests built by birds known as quilli quilli, a diminutive species similar to hummingbirds. Farmers have long used the locations of those nests as measures of how much the lake will rise and the amount of rainfall to come."This year they initially built their nests about 40 centimeters (1.3 feet) above the water level. Then they dismantled them," Condori says. Twice, in fact, did the birds dismantle nests before finally reweaving them at nearly twice their original height."We knew it was going to rain a lot," he says.And so it did, so much so that rivers in the Amazon basin have flooded their banks, submerging thousands of homes. That rain augured well, by contrast, for this Aymara community's potato crop.Reporting systemsLandlocked and poor, Bolivia relies on a weak meteorological reporting system – with just 50 weather stations nationwide. Farming is also decidedly low tech in the mountainous part of the country. Ox-driven plows overwhelmingly outnumber tractors, a far cry from the eastern lowlands, where highly mechanised rice and soy farming yields the bulk of Bolivian agricultural exports.Condori says the "bio-indicators" he follows most closely have helped reduce agricultural losses by 40% in Cutusuma and surrounding communities. Scientists, however, stress there are no empirical data to support the beliefs.The indicators are catalogued in what are known as Pachagrama, registries whose name derives from "Pachamama", the native Andean word for "Mother Earth". Communities compile and share the registry information, which is especially crucial from September to November when the dry season ends and farmers need to know how soon to plant, when the rains will begin and how long they will last.It's in that season they look for guidance to the southern lapwing, a long-legged plover that likes grasslands. If the female drops her eggs on the crest of a furrow, a lot of rain is expected and farmers will plant potatoes rather than quinoa, which requires less water. But if she deposits them inside the furrow, it supposedly will be a dry year.The size of the spots on the eggs is another indicator of whether to plant potatoes or quinoa."If the spots are big, it's potatoes. If they are small, it's quinoa," Condori says. Lately, however, the birds have been erratic in where they lay their eggs.No scientific studies yetOther indicators Condori follows such as wind direction and cloud movement traditionally have told farmers whether frosts are imminent. A strong easterly breeze on March 13 indicates as much, he says.Reading those signs has become more difficult as climate change alters everything from animal behaviour to the weather. There are no scientific studies as yet on how climate change may modify animal behaviour used as indicators."Yet it is also certain that these meteorological phenomena are occurring in an atmosphere that has warmed by 0.8 degrees (Celsius)," since pre-industrial times, said Dirk Hoffmann, a German who heads the nonprofit Bolivian Mountain Institute.Indeed, the observations of local indigenous coincide with scientific data that show the rainy season is both less predictable and begins later, Hoffman said. "Previously, the rainy period lasted four months. Now it's shorter but the amount of rain has not decreased," he said.In Bolivia's drier southern high plains, farmers who follow one popular traditional indicator say they were misled this year when the Andean fox did not appear and howl full-throated from the hilltops in August or September. That's a typical indicator of abundant rain, said Jose Luis Quiruchi, a Quechua community leader in the Potosi region, Bolivia's poorest.Reeds also dried up at that time of year, another traditional indicator of drier weather ahead.Strategy against climate change"We expected little rain, but instead the opposite happened," Quiruchi said. Anticipating drier conditions, farmers planted potatoes in low-lying areas. Now, they fear the tubers will become water-logged and rot.Agronomist Nelson Tapia of the Universidad Mayor de San Simon in Cochabamba says climate change offers some benefits for high-altitude farmers.They can grow certain fruits and vegetables at higher altitudes, with apricots and corn as well as citrus fruits now growing as high up as 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) in the Cochabamba valley.However, the negative effects are greater, he said, with highland farmers losing crop variety and planting in shorter cycles.The director of the government's risk management agency, Lucio Tito, insists the traditional indicators still have their value despite the changing climate."They should not be dismissed," he said. "They should be combined with scientific knowledge to form a strategy against climate change. That's what we're doing."Source - http://www.health24.com/

04.03.2014

USA - Seed treatment fungicides can help manage root rots

Last year, there were very few disease issues in the eastern Montana/western North Dakota region, according to Andrew Friskop, the new NDSU Extension plant pathologist.“Tan spot was the most common disease in cereal fields, and there were some reports of ergot,” Friskop said.The early use of fungicides can help protect cereals from leaf diseases like tan spot before heavy precipitation hits, he added.Ergot is a historical fungal disease of wheat and grasses recorded as far back as the middle ages, Friskop said. Cool, wet weather can be a instigator for ergot.“In the Salem witchcraft trials, some of the people on trial had eaten bread with ergot,” he said. “Today, in livestock, ergot can cause gangrene on the tissues of ears and tails and they can slough off.”Some of the grains and grasses that can be infected with ergot include: rye, wheat, bromegrass and barley.To manage ergot, Friskop suggests using crop rotations; ergot-free seed; mow and control grassy weeds; tillage where appropriate and use a gravity table to remove dense seed.“A copper deficiency in plants can be one cause of ergot so check for copper deficiency,” Friskop said.Gearing up for spring 2014, the wet conditions that have persisted this winter may mean a wetter spring, which could bring in cereal diseases. For instance, precipitation plus humidity plus temperature can spell a high chance for getting tan spot on wheat, he said.“Root rots and wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) are other diseases to watch out for this year,” Friskop said.He added there were several causes for root rot. Root rots that often develop in this region include common root rot, fusarium root rot and crown root rot, with yield losses being as high as 40 percent.“Severity varies from year to year and can be affected by timing of planting and moisture level in the soil at planting,” he said.“Signs such as a bare spot in a field, white heads or premature ripening of the plants could be root rot.”To check if it is a root rot, look at the base of the stem and see if there is a lesion. Common root rot will have a dark, black lesion, he said, adding the common root rot fungus is widespread in this region’s soils.In dry soils that get low annual rainfall such as in eastern Montana/western North Dakota, fusarium root rot can be a problem, especially on hillsides, according to Friskop.“Fusarium root rots have a red lesion on the root at the soil line,” he said. “If you rub the lesion with your finger and it doesn’t come off, it is root rot.”Root rot management includes using a good crop rotation; use seed treatment fungicides where indicated; and use less susceptible varieties, Friskop said.A number of broad-spectrum registered seed treatment fungicides can help fight against the common root rot fungus in wheat and barley.WSMV may also become an issue in 2014 especially in winter wheat, Friskop said. Corn acres have increased, and if it was planted late, it could still be green later in the year.“North Dakota planted nearly four million acres of corn, but while signs are that corn is increasing, crop prices could mean some will cut back on corn this year,” he said.The WSMV disease is carried from plant to plant by wheat curl mites, and symptoms include yellow streaking of leaves, stunting of the plant, and reduced yields. The mite needs a green bridge for survival, and it frequently overwinters on winter wheat or perennial grassy weeds.“It appears first on the edges of fields or in patches next to volunteers. Multiple grass species are a host,” he said.Seeing yellow in the field could be an indication of WSMV.“This is a management disease. Break the green bridge before planting, and you won’t have WSMV,” Friskop said.Source - http://www.farmandranchguide.com/

04.03.2014

Canada - Bee mortality insurance program to provide stability for beekeepers

It may be the dead of winter, but a recently announced pilot program that would provide insurance for honey bee loss has Saskatchewan beekeepers abuzz.The bee mortality project, announced alongside other measures for farmers in the province in the 2014 Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation (SCIC) program, will cover loss of honey bees over the winter as a result of naturally occurring causes that are beyond the control of the producers.The program is available to producers who run at least 100 colonies."Bees have always been kind of a small agricultural industry, and has kind of been left by the wayside a little bit," Jake Berg, president of the Saskatchewan Beekeepers Association, said."It's going to be nice insurance to have for the worst case scenario loss."While there have been programs for honey insurance, bear fences, and wildlife damage, this will be the first time that a bee mortality insurance program is offered."The overwintering losses on bees have been a concern across Canada, probably a little bit less in Saskatchewan, but have been a concern for a number of years for our industry," Jeff Morrow, vice president of operations for SCIC said.The pilot program, which will run for three years before being evaluated to decide if it will continue, will bring Saskatchewan in line with similar programs available in Manitoba and Alberta.Producers have until March 31 to apply for an SCIC contract and can select coverage up until June 25. SCIC adjusters will visit the bee yards in the autumn to ensure that the colonies are ready for winter, and producers could see the first benefits of the program in spring 2015.Most producers can expect to lose around 10 per cent of their colonies over the winter, but devastating losses up to 80 or 90 per cent can cripple a honey operation.Last year's long, cold winter was especially hard on many producers, yet there is still growth in the industry."We are seeing slight increases year over year with the number of colonies in the province, the exception being last year because of a higher than normal winter loss," Geoff Wilson, the provincial specialist in apiculture, said. Despite the beekeepers' best efforts at preparing their hives for winter, dealing with disease, including parasitic Varroa mites, is getting more difficult all the time, Wilson added. Adding that to a winter like last year's, and even the bees that went into the winter months healthy struggled to make it to springtime.Replacing a lost colony rings in at around $180, he added. When a producer loses more than 80 per cent of a 1,000 colony operation, the numbers can add up quickly.Morrow noted that the premium to insure each hive is about $2.85.Berg, who runs a 1,500 colony operation near Melfort, has in the past dealt with high overwintering losses."Luckily enough, we had ordered quite a few extra packaged bees in the fall, not expecting the loss. We were planning on expanding that year," he said. "Needless to say, we didn't expand at all that year; we actually went down in hive numbers instead of up."Like many crop insurance programs, the pilot project will only benefit commercial producers, of which Wilson said there are about 110 in the province."Most of the colonies in Saskatchewan are commercially run, unlike some places like Ontario or further east where there are a lot of smaller beekeepers," Wilson said. "So we really have an agricultural bee-keeping system."Hobbyist beekeepers - numbering around 650 in the province - tend to run only one or two colonies, he added.But Andrew Hamilton, who has 60 colonies on his snow swept farm just north of Regina, would take the insurance program if it was offered to him."It would depend on the benefits and the expense, really," Hamilton said. "It would have to be comparable to make it worth it to the hobbyist."Hobbyists face many of the same conditions when it comes to disease and winter temperatures as commercial beekeepers."Myself, last year I lost 75 per cent," Hamilton said. "This winter shouldn't be as bad. I attribute that to the harsh winter we had last year."Crunching through thighdeep snow that acts as an insulator for the hives, Hamilton added he really won't know until April or May if all of his colonies survived.A scattering of dead bees on the fresh snow around the hives is a good sign, though. That means the bees are alive inside and making brief sojourns outside to collect water and defecate.Although frustrating, last year's loss didn't put Hamilton out of business - mostly because he works as an electrician and keeps bees on the side.Hamilton's great-grandfather immigrated to Saskatchewan from Scotland and set up the family's first bee-keeping operation in the Qu'Appelle Valley. A few generations on, Hamilton said he wants to keep the tradition alive and introduce his young children to the practice."In this generation in my family, I'm the only one doing it," he said."It's not for the money," he added with a laugh.But Berg, who at 1,500 colonies is eligible for the insurance program, said he hopes that the program means more newcomers can make a go of bee-keeping."It's like a lot of farming, there's not a huge number of younger people that are getting into it," he said. "Having something like this might make it a little more feasible for younger beekeepers to get into the industry." Source - http://www.leaderpost.com/

04.03.2014

India - Extensive damage to Agra’s potato and mustard crop

Farmers in Agra and its neighbouring districts are on the warpath demanding compensation for the heavy loss to standing potato and mustard crops by untimely rain and hailstorms.The wet weather has caused extensive damage to the potato crop, in some areas up to 60 percent. The estimate of loss of mustard varies from 20 to 30 percent.Fields are water-logged and the potato crop has begun to rot, said farmer Ravi Singh of Barauli Aheer.Farmers in Etmadpur, Achnera and other blocks have come out in the open to demand immediate compensation.Agra district is a major producer of potatoes at roughly 2.5 million quintals annually. The Khandauli area on the Agra-Aligarh road is known for its excellent quality product that is in demand by potato-chip making units.“In February, the Agra region had 12 wet days. In January too, we received showers. The fields are still under water. In some areas the hail completely bulldozed the standing crop,” said farmer Atar Singh of Bichpuri.Farmers in Bah tehsil have organised several meetings and demanded urgent relief. A memorandum has also been sent to the local minister Aridaman Singh. In the Fatehpur Sikri and Kiraoli areas, the damage has been extensive and the farmers are alarmed.The weather office forcast of more rains and wet conditions for another week has sent the jitters among farmers. Against the average February rainfall of 11.5 mm, Agra received more than 50 mm.Source - http://odishasuntimes.com/

04.03.2014

Australia - SE trials new summer crops

A trial in the South East is looking at a range of alternative summer crops as a means of value-adding to the region's irrigation industry, and studying moisture monitoring systems to get a better handle on water use efficiency.Thanks to funding from the South East Natural Resources Management Board, the MacKillop Farm Management Group has established a four-hectare demonstration site on Bruce McLean's Bool Lagoon property.The trial is examining a number of varieties of corn, sorghum, peas, beans, quinoa, millet, sunflower and lab lab to find out what is sustainable and profitable in the South East.Cox Rural Naracoorte agronomist James Heffernan, who has been overseeing the site, said the trial is creating conversation and interest in new and emerging crop types."It is also trying to reinvigorate some ideas around what to do with irrigation," he said."Irrigation is a major industry in the SE and over the years it has been riding on the back of fodder production and small seed crops."In any business it's always a good thing to have more options."Another element to the trial is examining automated soil moisture probes in irrigated cropping systems, which involves putting a telemetric probe with a rain gauge under an irrigated broadacre centre pivot.Before sowing the plots on November 26 and 27, the site was fertilised with a single broadcast application of a compound nitrogen, phosphorous and sulphur product. Most of the crops were sown using a six-row precision corn planter on 762-millimetre spacings. Some crops were then double-sown at 381mm spacings to see if there was any difference.The quinoa varieties were sown by the SARDI new variety agronomy team using a trial plot cone air seeder.Throughout the growing season, the crops have been irrigated with 50mm of water a week, equating to about 2.5-3 megalitres so far.James said most of the short-season corn varieties had been great to assess, and performed well.Source - http://www.farmweekly.com.au/

04.03.2014

USA - Slow winter thaw needed to avoid more wheat damage

A gradual end to the U.S. big freeze is needed to prevent further damage to the country's wheat crop, the chief economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) said on Tuesday.U.S. wheat futures have firmed in recent weeks amid concerns over potential curbs to yields as a result of cold weather across the U.S. plains."The persistence of winter has been a problem...," said the USDA's Joseph Glauber at a commodities conference in the Australian capital Canberra."We have had snow cover over a lot of the regions and to a degree that has protected things, but the concern is that when you have a bit of warm weather and wheat popping out of dormancy," he said, referring to the risk that short-lived warmer weather could melt snows and could encourage growth that could be damaged by further cold snaps.Cold weather again returned to U.S. this week, with a deadly winter storm hitting the U.S. east coast on Monday, cancelling about 2,900 flights, shutting down Washington and closing schools and local governments.The condition of the U.S. plains winter wheat crop has dropped due to frigid temperatures throughout February and dry soils, U.S. government data released on Monday.In Kansas, the largest production state for winter wheat, the crop was rated 34 percent good to excellent, down 1 percentage point from a month earlier.Nebraska's winter wheat crop was rated 43 percent good to excellent, a 3 percentage point drop from the start of February.The ratings decline was greater in southern areas of the winter wheat belt, where soils were drier and the crop was more susceptible to the cold."We still have a lot of dryness in the southern plains, that is the other main concern," Glauber told Reuters.Texas winter wheat was rated 15 percent good to excellent compared with 19 percent a week ago.U.S. March wheat futures surged nearly 5 percent on Monday as tensions in Ukraine raised fears over potential disruptions from the Black Sea, one of the world's key grain exporting regions.Glauber said he understood the market fears, but said it was too early to speculate on the impact on global trade."I'm sure there is a lot of concern because it is such an important producer in the world market," said Glauber. "Stocks are surprisingly tight, we've had global record production but we've had record consumption," said Glauber.Source - http://www.reuters.com/

03.03.2014

USA - Farm bill holds crop insurance coverage steady for 2014

US farmers and bankers have almost a year to get ready for major changes in 2015 as crop insurance rather than direct cash payments to producers becomes the centerpiece of farm policy under the five-year farm bill signed by President Barack Obama earlier this month. For 2014 plantings, analysts said there will be no major changes to crop insurance except sharply lower grain prices than in 2013, which will lower potential payments and premiums. Then in 2015, farmers will have a new insurance option for supplemental coverage based on local county yields. "Other than commodity prices there is not a lot of difference between 2014 and 2013," said Michael Barrett, senior vice president for crop insurance at Farm Credit Services of America, one of the biggest lenders to farmers in the Plains states. "The structure of the policies is pretty much the same. The cost sharing for the premium didn't change." But this year will be a major transition for bankers, insurers and farmers, he said. "The message is crop insurance does become the foundation of the farm bill and the primary safety net for producers because they have lost all those direct payments," Barrett said. The farm bill was delayed for nearly two years by wrangling over proposed cuts in food stamps and other aid for the poor, which will still account for 75 percent of the estimated $956 billion budget over 10 years. But for farmers, the key debate was crop insurance. Among the burning issues were what is covered, who pays and how much, especially after five years of record farm earnings and two years after the worst drought in half a century. The US Agriculture Department has traditionally subsidised farmers' insurance costs for planting crops from grains and oilseeds to cotton, peanuts, fruits and vegetables. But it also bolstered farm finances through complicated systems of direct cash payments for farmers who signed up for programs like conservation policies. "That has changed," said Chris Hurt, extension economist at Purdue University, who said that previous farm bills' automatic payments, regardless of good times or bad times, had been doomed politically. "This program does shift us back to counter-cyclical. It will be some kind of need, whether low yield or low revenue, to get payments. "That keeps urban legislators feeling more positive about a program for both social and farm safety nets," said Hurt. Dale Moore, executive director for public policy at the American Farm Bureau Federation, said: "What we've seen over the past couple of decades regarding the trend in farm policy is a highlight of this bill: moving farther away from the income transfer programs toward an insurance model." Bankers and analysts said the key element of crop insurance - how much the government will subsidise farmers' insurance premiums - had not been weakened in the long budget wrangle. USDA will still pay up to two-thirds of the price for crop insurance premiums, with the subsidy going directly to the insurers. "Generally the cost sharing is about 60 percent by USDA," said Barrett, using a premium example for farmers in Nebraska of $60 an acre "where they are paying $22-24 an acre out of their pocket." Farm bankers and farm industry groups argue that the weather risk in farming, aside from any crop pests or disease, requires substantial insurance aid for farmers. "Without government backing, it is unlikely that any insurance company would offer the coverage because the risk is too high," the National Corn Growers Association said in a statement. "Most farmers in the Midwest have paid far more in crop insurance premiums than they have received in claims." Gary Schnitkey, extension economist at the University of Illinois, said that since the farm bill does not change any crop insurance programs for 2014 from 2013, most grain farmers in Illinois, the No 2 corn and soybean state behind Iowa, will use a standard revenue protection (RP) policy covering 80 to 85 percent of projected earnings, based on historical yields and prices. Asked if bankers, with the recent drought, would demand that grain farmers buy crop insurance before obtaining loans for planting, Farm Credit's Barrett said: "Each loan request is looked at on its own merit. There are some loans that we would require crop insurance. But we cannot require that they purchase crop insurance from us." For the 2012 crop, a drought year, insurance payments totalled $17.4 billion, or 12 percent of USDA's annual budget of about $150 billion. In 2013, with a bumper harvest, payments were $10.7 billion. Source - http://www.brecorder.com/

03.03.2014

USA - TCEQ cuts off rice farmers, but Central Texas water supply worries persist

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality voted Wednesday to cut off water deliveries to most rice farmers in the Lower Colorado River Basin for the third straight year. But surprising many, the commission refused to tie its decision about whether farmers get water to the water levels in the Highland Lakes, which provide drinking water to more than 1 million Central Texans year-round and irrigation water to the rice farmers on an “interruptible” basis.That means there is a possibility — however remote — that the Lower Colorado River Authority could deliver some irrigation water to rice farmers later this year if a significant amount of rain causes an increase in lake levels. While the LCRA says that is a near impossibility, the agency will once again have to ask the TCEQ for permission to cut off farmers’ water in another four months. Local officials in Central Texas say the lack of clarity raises concerns about the security of their drinking water supply.“It’s just kicking the can down the road,” said state Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin. “It just means that we have to be in the continual, perpetual state of emergency.”No one, not even the rice farmers, disagreed that farmers should not receive interruptible water deliveries this spring from the lakes, which are currently only 38 percent full. On a normal year, the Lower Colorado River Authority could release more than 200,000 acre-feet to irrigation customers downstream starting in March, when the growing season for rice begins. That’s nearly 10 percent of the lakes’ total capacity, and such a release now would cripple drinking water supplies for Central Texas.But Howard said TCEQ needed to provide further guidance to the LCRA, rather than just approving a one-time cut-off. In refusing to allow further cutoffs based on actual lake levels, she said the agency “disregards the LCRA staff, the LCRA board, the administrative law judge, the firm customers. … All these folks who said, we need to have some thoughtful, evidence-based guidance.” She said that local officials will have the same worries about potential water supplies again in four months, when the LCRA would have to seek TCEQ’s approval again to curtail water supplies to farmers for the second rice crop, which begins in July. The decision of Chairman Bryan Shaw and commissioner Toby Baker bucked the recommendations of the LCRA, two administrative law judges, Central Texas officials, and the TCEQ’s executive director, Richard Hyde. (The third TCEQ commissioner, Zak Covar, who was previously the agency’s executive director, recused himself from the decision.)All had proposed that the LCRA only release water supplies for irrigation if the lakes reached levels of at least 53 percent. Administrative law Judges William Newchurch and Travis Vickery said that even that level threatened the security of Central Texas’ drinking water supplies, and they suggested that the lakes should be 70 percent full before water was released to farmers.Rice farmers downstream recommended that the trigger level be scrapped altogether, because they said it sets a dangerous precedent — and because the question of rising levels is moot. The only way for lakes to even reach the lower proposed trigger level of 53 percent in time for rice season would be for rain to add a whopping 110 billion gallons of water by Saturday.Shaw and Baker agreed. “What purpose does it serve for us to set a trigger point today that we know has no impact for the time being?” Shaw said.But Central Texas cities say that lake levels have swung wildly in recent years. For instance, the lakes were close to half full in May 2012. Just 16 months later, they had dropped to less than one-third of their capacity — and that was a year when almost all rice farmers had been cut off from irrigation water. (Farmers in the Garwood Irrigation District still get water deliveries from LCRA during cut-off times, because they have a special contract.)Some also fear that if major floods occur between now and July, when the second rice crop season begins, the lakes may rise enough levels that the LCRA will release irrigation water downstream — and then the lakes would drop precipitously again.But Ronald Gertson, a fourth-generation rice farmer in Wharton County, said that’s impossible.“If you don’t have a first crop, you’re not going to have a second crop,” he said, explaining that the second rice crop regrows from the same root system as the first. So if rice farmers don’t have any water in March, they won’t plant at all.Source - http://smmercury.com/

03.03.2014

USA - Another snowstorm possible this month

A snowstorm, followed by a few sunny days and then another snow and ice storm – this is a summary of the weather conditions in Georgia since late January.But a University of Georgia climatologist says don’t be surprised if the polar vortex sends another snowstorm and a late frost before spring officially arrives.The polar vortex is a large pocket of low pressure and cold, strong, upper-level winds that normally sits over the polar region during the winter season.“Usually it sits on top of the globe like a hat, but this year it has slid forward over the U.S.,” said Pam Knox, an agricultural climatologist with the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.Until this week, the atmospheric waves associated with the polar vortex had California “stuck” under high pressure, which kept the state dangerously dry through out the winter “rainy” season. It has also caused Fairbanks, Alaska, to be abnormally warm and Siberia to experience one of the warmest winters in its history, Knox said during an agricultural weather outlook session at the Georgia Organics Conference held last month on Jekyll Island.“This polar vortex is not something new. It’s been in the literature since 1940,” she said. “Some years we have high swings in temperature conditions and this happens to be one (of those years.)”This unpredictability could cause havoc for Georgia farmers and gardeners this spring, she added. For instance, if Georgia fruit trees begin to flower and a late frost hits the state, the fate of peach, blueberry and other fruit crops will be threatened.“That could really decimate the fruit crop this year,” Knox said. “The chances for a late frost are higher this year. In Athens, the flowering plum trees on campus have already come out, and that’s pretty early.”When warm temperatures fill days in March, home gardeners might be tempted to get outside, dig in the dirt and plant seeds or young transplants. Knox warns gardeners not to give in to the temptation.“The chance of a late frost is more likely this year, so hold back a bit,” she said. “If not, you may lose that first crop and have to go back and replant everything.”Source - http://chronicle.augusta.com/

03.03.2014

India - Rains may wash hopes of record foodgrain output

Untimely rains and hailstorms in large swathes of land across Madhya Pradesh (MP), Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Haryana and Bihar in the last few days have caused damage to standing crops of wheat, chickpea and mustard in some parts, which might dash government hopes of reaping bumper foodgrain production in 2013-14.According to senior government officials, the actual impact on wheat output would be known only when harvesting started, but the damage had been widespread as of now. In mustard seed and chickpea, officials said the damage to crops had been more severe than wheat as these were in the pod-filling stage."There have been reports of 'lodging' (a condition when stems either break or become extremely brittle) in the wheat crop of Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, but the extent of damage will be known later," Indu Sharma, director of Karnal-based Directorate of Wheat Research or DWR, told Business Standard.She said the impact of this on final production estimates was unclear as of now, but the output might drop by two to five per cent if rains and hailstorms did not abate in the next few days, or if there was a sudden increase in temperature from March 15 onwards or the winter season did not subside. "In many areas, the wheat crop is in the pollination stage and these widespread rains and hailstorms are not good for it," Sharma said.Madhya Pradesh, along with Rajasthan is among the major wheat producing regions of India, besides Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. The government has estimated a record 96 million tonnes of wheat production in 2013-14 (June-July), up from 93.5 million tonnes in 2012-13. The MP government estimated that rainfall and hailstorms had affected 49 of 61 districts in the state, damaging 60-70 per cent of the standing crop. Around 21 districts, including Kota, Churu, Jhalawar, Karauli and Sri Ganganagar, have been impacted in Rajasthan. In Maharashtra, standing crop in around 54,000 hectares has been damaged in the districts of Nagpur, Wardha, Bhandara, Gondia, Chandrapur and Gadchiroli.Source - http://www.business-standard.com/

03.03.2014

USA - California Governor Inks $687 Million Legislation for Drought Relief

As growing concerns in California mount regarding drought issues that have largely affected the state's agriculture and farming industry, Gov. Jerry Brown signed a $687 million drought-relief Saturday.The legislative bill package, which passed in the state Assembly and Senate almost unanimously, will allocate funds for projects aimed at making the state's irrigation system more efficient, improving conservation, cleaning up contaminated groundwater and capturing rain water efficiently. The funds will also assist the state's workers, such as farmers, whose ability to afford housing and food as diminished in the face of the increasing drought problem.$1 million will go directly to public awareness campaigns urging Californians to conserve water and "do their part," according to a statement from Brown."Legislators across the aisle have now voted to help hard-pressed communities that face water shortages," according to the release. "This legislation marks a crucial step - but Californians must continue to take every action possible to conserve water."Also under the new legislation, penalties against people who avert water illegally would worsen.The bill package passed the state Assembly and Senate with minimal opposition$25.3 million would go toward the food assistance initiative while $21 million would fund the housing assistance portion.While California received some much needed heavy rains this weekend, it will not solve the dramatically dry conditions, as records show 2013 was the driest the state endured.National Weather Service Meteorologist Carol Smith told Reuters, "Obviously this rain helps, but we need a lot more to get caught up.Half of the nations' fruits and vegetables grow in California, while the state also leads in the value of agricultural goods produced. If the drought continues to get worse, the state's crop loses could spike up consumer prices for tree and vine produce.The majority of the $687 million package will come from accelerated spending from two previously voter approved money bonds.Source - http://www.latinpost.com/

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