NEWS
557
of 1157
News
08.05.2019

UK - Temperature fluctuations creating a different nematodirus challenge this year

With risk levels rising sharply in the last seven to 10 days, the SCOPS Nematodirus Forecast is warning that many areas of the UK now at ‘high’ or ‘very high’ risk levels for lambs that are six weeks old. In the cooler regions of the UK, temperatures have yet to reach the threshold so farmers in these areas need to watch the forecast carefully. Lesley Stubbings of SCOPS (Sustainable Control of Parasites in Sheep) explained: “This year has been very different. The warm spell in February put early-born lambs at risk and many farmers had to treat earlier than normal. And then, as predicted, we also saw risk levels rise again after the cold start to April. “Following the free online forecast has provided a valuable guide for sheep farmers and we have had some positive feedback from users.” Kerry Sykes-Marsden, a shepherd with for 900 ewes in Lincolnshire, agreed. She said: “The SCOPS forecast has taken the guesswork out of controlling nematodirus. Based on the advice on the website, we’ve treated lambs earlier this year and this has avoided the ‘wait and see’ approach when we haven’t acted in the past to see clinical signs. “Some years we have just gone in and wormed at six weeks of age, which could be too early or, even worse, too late.” The SCOPS Nematodirus Forecast map is updated daily using data from 140 weather stations (provided by the Met Office and DarkSky), tracking changes in risk throughout the spring and early summer. The interactive map allows farmers and advisers to select the nearest or most representative weather station and then provides advice on how to relate the predicted risk to their particular farm, treatment options and possible management actions. A new feature this year is a table that shows when each location on the map has changed colour. Stubbings added: “The historic data is a really useful tool that I recommend having a look at. “In some areas, the colours have gone straight to black (without turning red) which emphasises the rapid fluctuations in temperatures we have had.” Sheep farmers should consult their vet or adviser with regard to local risks and treat lambs if they are deemed to be at risk. Source - https://www.agriland.co.uk/

08.05.2019

USA - Disaster aid delays leave farmers hanging by a thread

Throughout 2018 and 2019 farmers across the country suffered at the hands of Mother Nature. Wildfires, hurricanes, earthquakes, and most recently massive flooding have wreaked havoc on rural America and farmers’ bottom lines. A $17 billion disaster aid bill, which has met numerous snags along each step of the process, is moving to the House rules committee today, a sign relief for affected producers could be near. “The total economic contribution of agriculture in congressional districts in which major natural disasters occurred in 2018 and 2019 is estimated at $83.8 billion and encompasses 419,000 direct agriculture-related jobs,” says John Newton of the American Farm Bureau Federation. “These economic contributions include all monetary market transactions and jobs directly related to farming in congressional districts that contain a county with a FEMA-declared natural disaster.” With those kinds of statistics, it would seem lawmakers would be eager to get aid pushed through their respective chambers. While these kinds of bills usually pass through Congress with bi-partisan support, this time lawmakers are in gridlock on the aid. And it’s all because they can’t agree how much of this $17 billion disaster aid bill should go to Puerto Rico. Democrats want more food assistance for the island, expanded Medicaid funding and full coverage for the cost of services from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, CNBC reports. Republican lawmakers and President Trump alike say Puerto Ricans have had enough help and it’s time to help farmers. “The Dems don’t want farmers to get any help. Puerto Rico should be very happy and the Dems should stop blocking much needed Disaster Relief!” Trump said on his Twitter feed. One Democratic Senator, Patrick Leahy of Vermont, ranking member of the appropriations committee, fired back on Twitter. “The President is holding disaster aid to ALL American citizens hostage over a petty, political grudge against Puerto Rico,” he tweeted. As is often the case, farmers are caught in the crosshairs of a political gunfight. Of the $17 package, $3 billion is allotted to help farmers throughout the country. Unfortunately, the damage to farms, orchards and fisheries likely exceeds $3 billion. “Private estimates of the costs associated with the flooding alone is in the billions, e.g., Nebraska Faces Over $1.3 Billion In Flood Losses, Farm Losses Drive Iowa's Flood Damage to $2 Billion, and Congress recently received financial assessments related to a portion of the damage from natural disasters at $7 billion,” Newton says. Unfortunately, without disaster aid farmers will not be able to recoup all of their losses. Some livestock producers will qualify for USDA’s Livestock Indemnity Program, but assistance is limited to 75% of the market value of lost or injured livestock. Similarly, crop insurance will fall short of helping farmers in the Midwest who lost grain due to flooded grain bins. “While crop insurance is available for some of the commodities damaged by natural disasters, it is revenue-based insurance and does not cover the financial losses associated with harvested commodities damaged or lost while in storage,” Newton says adding that crop insurance doesn’t cover future financial losses associated with downed orchards. Affected farmers, many of whom are financially hanging on a by thread, will hold their breath today as the current version of the House disaster aid bill makes its way to the House Rules committee to determine which portions will be eligible for amendment on the House floor. Just one more step in the long, drawn out process of getting the help they hope for. Source - https://www.agweb.com/

08.05.2019

India - Cyclone Fani aftermath: Insurance claims may cross Rs 2,000 crore

The after-effects of Cyclone Fani is still being felt in Odisha four-days after it made landfall on May 3 with several areas reporting severe damage to land and property. Insurers said losses have already touched Rs 2,000 crore with majority of claims coming in from crop and property insurance holders. “We are still assessing the damage. However, initial reports peg the losses around Rs 2,000 crore. This could well be revised upwards since several claims of property destruction are coming up,” said the claims head at a mid-sized private life insurer. A single-point helpline will soon be set up by individual insurance companies to ensure that claims are filed on one single platform. Nodal officials will also be deployed to Odisha for this process. More than 500 building structures and over 300 factories including those of core manufacturing companies are said to have been destroyed by the impact of Cyclone Fani. The Odisha Airport also saw structural damage due to wind speeds of over 200 km per hour. Insurance companies are in the process of deploying surveyors to Odisha to assess damage to the properties insured. Crop damage will be assessed using satellites and drones. This will be cross-checked with the information provided by farmers. There will also be a process of simplification of the claims settlement process. Till date, 35 people have died from the impact of Cyclone Fani. Last year, insurance companies received claims of about Rs 3,200 crore from the Kerala floods. Here, a majority of claims were from the motor insurance segment since several cars/bikes were submerged in water for days on end after incessant rains lashed the state in July and August 2018. Insurance claims from natural catastrophes have seen a big jump. In the past five years, cyclones including Hudhud and Phailin as well as flash floods in Uttarakhand have led to almost Rs 17,000 crore in insurance claims. Claims from global natural catastrophes in 2018 were pegged at $76 billion, according to the Swiss Re sigma report. The combined insurance losses from natural disasters in 2017 and 2018 were $219 billion, the highest-ever for a two-year period. Source - http://www.forbesindia.com/

07.05.2019

India - Rain, gale destroy banana crops

Unexpected rain accompanied by gale destroyed nearly two lakh banana crops at Sirumugai near Mettupalayam in Coimbatore on Monday. The crops destroyed included those that were nearing the harvest stage. The rain hit the agrarian area of the district around 3 p.m. and went on till 4.30 p.m. Sources from Sirumugai said banana crops cultivated in plantations at Annadasampalayam, Koothamandi, Lingapura, Pethukuttai and other areas were completely damaged. Since the monsoon showers were expected only in June, majority of the farmers had not provided support to the crops. This led to widespread damage as the crop could not withstand the wind. Lying on the eastern slope of the Nilgiris, Sirumugai often gets a shares of rain from the upper Bhavani region. On Monday noon, the Nilgiris had received heavy rain for about an hour. Apart from crops, several trees were also destroyed in the rain, sources added. Source - https://www.thehindu.com/

07.05.2019

Spain - Hail storms cause damage in the region of Valencia

The hail storms recorded on April 29 and 30 in the Valencian counties of Ribera Alta and Utiel-Requena have hit between 10,000 and 15,000 hectares devoted to the production of kakis and citrus fruits, causing losses estimated at 2.2 million Euro, according to La Unió de Llauradors. The most affected municipalities have been Alzira, Benimuslem, Carcaixent, l'Alcúdia and Rafelguaraf, as well as Benimodo and Guadassuar to a much smaller extent. The most affected citrus crop is Valencia oranges, with losses totaling 1.5 million Euro, since the harvest hadn't yet been carried out and the sizes were large. As for the kaki production, the losses amount to 800,000 Euro, since the hail could cause the fruit to fall. The storms have also slightly damaged the appearance of stone fruits, as well as of vegetables and avocados grown in specific regions. Last Wednesday's storm hit mainly the Utiel-Requena region, damaging the production to different extents in the municipalities of Utiel and surroundings, Venta del Moro and surroundings, Requena and surroundings, Sinarcas and, to a lesser extent, Caudete. La Unió said that the total value of the losses is still an estimation and that the real figure will be reported in the coming days. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com/

07.05.2019

Mexico - Climate change affects citrus fruits

According to producers from the state of Tamaulipas, there will be a drop in citrus production, especially of oranges, in the next harvest due to climate change and the lack of rainfall in the region. Javier Ibarra Echartea, a spokesman for the Union of Citrus growers, said that global warming was affecting the region causing a severe drought that threatens to become longer. However, he added, he was confident that there might be some rains in May. He also said they expected to harvest approximately 280 thousand tons of orange, which would affect producers. He also said that they would investigated why the small fruits have fallen from the trees, but that it could be due to the lack of rainfall, which results in the oranges not growing well and the plants becoming weaker. He said he hoped that the forecast of rain for May would favor the agricultural and livestock sectors and thereby increase the spirits among producers of these activities. However, he acknowledged that the drought had already caused havoc in Tamaulipas' countryside. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com/

07.05.2019

Ivory Coast - Farmers informed that rains boost cocoa crop after dry spell

Rainfall increased over most of Ivory Coast’s cocoa-growing regions last week, farmers said on Monday, raising hopes for a recovery in growth after the mid-crop suffered from atypically dry weather last month. The rainy season in the world’s top cocoa producer runs from mid-March to late October, but the season has been slow to start. Farmers feared the April-to-September mid-crop would be cut short due to a lack of rain last month. Farmers on Monday said they were happy as rainfall levels, while still below seasonal averages, were higher than in previous weeks. They expect rains to be more abundant in May and June, boosting the end of the mid-crop. They said plenty of beans were now leaving the bush, although many of those delivered remained small in size. “The rain is improving, it’s good for the trees and for the rest of the mid-crop,” said Herve Konan, who farms near the center-western region of Daloa, source of a quarter of national output. “The trees need abundant rains until June,” said Konan. Data collected by Reuters showed that rainfall in Daloa, including the region of Bouafle, was at 18.3 millimeters last week, 5.7 mm below the five-year average. Similar conditions were reported in the central regions of Bongouanou and Yamoussoukro. In the western region of Soubre, at the heart of the cocoa belt, farmers said the mid-crop was likely to be as healthy as last year. “There are good harvests and there are still many small pods on trees, and even flowers,” said Kouassi Kouame, who farms near Soubre. Data showed that rainfall in Soubre, which includes the regions of Sassandra and San Pedro, was at 27.4 mm last week, 1.4 mm below the five-year average. Farmers in the southern regions of Agboville and Divo also said the mid-crop would improve if enough rain fell in May and June. In the eastern region of Abengourou, known for the quality of its beans, farmers said the mid-crop was now developing well. “Everything is going well. We have a lot of cocoa but harvests will slow after June,” said Djue Amani, who farms near Abengourou. Data collected showed that rainfall in Abengourou, which includes the region of Aboisso, was at 26.5 mm last week, 2.8 mm below average. Average temperatures ranged between 26.6 and 29.7 degrees Celsius. Source - https://www.reuters.com/

07.05.2019

UK - Oilseed rape risk proves why farmers must adapt quickly in a volatile world

The vulnerability of the region’s oilseed rape crops is one example of why farmers must adapt quickly to change and constantly manage risk in their business says SIMON EVANS, agricultural partner at Arnolds Keys-Irelands Agricultural. In the current political climate it is easy to forget that it is not only Brexit that has the potential for both an immediate and longer term effect on the profitability of farming. While Brexit has dominated the headlines, particularly in the last few months, arable farmers across the UK have been quietly gearing up for a “business as usual” summer. Crops, after all, still need to be harvested, and plans have been forming around seasonal staffing, grain storage and water supplies. And it is not just this year that has to be discussed at the kitchen table. Plans are already under way for next year, with decisions being made around what to include, and what not to include, in the crop rotations. Of particular concern is this year's oilseed rape crop and the impact of the larvae of last autumn's cabbage stem flea beetle. Farmers Weekly reported earlier this year that more than half of oilseed rape crops are infested; the largest invasion since the loss of neonicotinoid seed treatments. The suspension of neonicotinoid seed treatments across the EU was intended as a measure to protect Europe's bee population which was said to contribute over 22bn euros annually to European agriculture. The result has been catastrophic, with many oilseed rape growers expecting a significantly reduced yield this year. As a direct result many are now reconsidering the inclusion of the crop in next year's rotations. Sadly, it looks likely that the measure introduced to protect the bee population will have limited effect, with farmers instead choosing to remove the crop from their rotation altogether. Being involved in discussions such as these, particularly with farmers and those farming with contractors, focuses the mind on the “real-life” world of agriculture, the year-to-year volatility and the decisions that have to be made to manage risk and secure business profitability. It also highlights the advantage of contract or share farming arrangements, as opposed to traditional tenancy agreements. They are inherently transparent; both the landowner and the contractor are “in it together”. Decisions can be made quickly to adapt to a given scenario and ensure that the holding is farmed to its productive best. By comparison, unless otherwise agreed between the parties, legislation governing tenancy agreements limits a review of the profitability of a holding to once in three years. The ability of farming businesses to monitor and adapt quickly and adeptly to changes in commodity prices, the cost of inputs, and restrictions on the management of disease and pests remains vital to their success, and will continue to do so whilst the Brexit saga unfolds. The good news is that it is an industry well practiced at it. Source - https://www.edp24.co.uk/

06.05.2019

New Zeland - Northland feijoa crops devastated by fungal disease

A fungal disease has devastated commercial feijoa crops in Northland but a scientist says backyard growers shouldn't panic. The anthracnose fungal disease causes the fruit to fall off trees while still small and has wiped out entire crops this season. While a warm summer meant many feijoa growers around the country had been expecting a high quality crop, none of the fruit grown on Peter Jack's Kerikeri property had made it to sale. "Mostly with these newer varieties [of feijoa] you get early fruit drop way back in the beginning of January where the fruit is only 25mm long and it falls off," he told Radio New Zealand. Jack said he knew of three other orchards in his area in a similar situation and said growers further south should be worried. "If they're not, they certainly should be. With an insect you can kill it but with a fungus it's way more difficult." Plant and Food Research scientist Pia Rheinlander said if it spread south, the fungus could have a massive impact on the feijoa industry. However, it was not carried by wind like myrtle rust, another fungal disease which affected trees including pōhutukawa, mānuka and rātā. "This is spread by rain splash, not the wind," she said. "When affected fruit is left on the ground, the spores multiply and when rain hits it, they spread." The current fungicide spray programme had no effect on the anthracnose fungus so growers needed to remove any affected fruit from their orchards and prune back affected branches. Rheinlander is involved in a three-year project to develop a control programme to protect the industry from the disease. She said it had not yet been seen outside Kerikeri or in backyard trees and its slow spread meant scientists had time to find feijoa varieties with higher resistance. "There are a lot of different cultivars and some of them are more resistant than others," she said. "Finding them takes time but the research is being done to ensure there are resistant varieties for the backyard." The fungus started with a small purple-black spot which spread quickly to cover the fruit within a few days.  Although affected fruit was safe to eat, it had a rotten taste. The NZ Feijoa Growers Association has about 140 members, producing about 1200 tonnes of fruit from 240 hectares. Most of the estimated $4 million crop is sold locally, with about $500,000 worth exported to Australia. Earlier this year, the Ministry for Primary Industries announced it would put $356,000 towards the control programme project. It is the second feijoa-focused project to receive funding through MPI's Sustainable Farming Fund in recent years with another focusing on the guava moth. First reported in Northland 20 years ago and now found in Auckland, Waikato and the Coromandel, the moth lays its eggs on a feijoa and larvae then burrow into the flesh, spoiling the fruit. Source -https://www.stuff.co.nz/

06.05.2019

Canada - Prairie crop insurance rundown 2019

There’s good news on crop insurance for Prairie farmers this year — most premiums are down for 2019. Details were announced by Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba officials earlier this year. Here’s the rundown: Alberta On March 11, Alberta Agriculture and Fores­try Minister Oneil Carlier and Steve Blakely, CEO of Alberta’s Agriculture Financial Services Corporation (AFSC), announced that most of the province’s producers will benefit from lower crop insurance premiums for 2019. “We strive to provide our clients comprehensive risk management products and an enhanced client experience,” Blakely said. “Declining premium rates for AgriInsurance… allow us to provide our clients with more value, allowing them to choose the right coverage to manage their risk for less.” AFSC notes that although 2018 was challenging for growers in parts of Alberta, growing conditions have generally been good for the past several years. This has resulted in year-over-year premium reductions, and it’s also why yield coverages for many producers are up in 2019. On average, 2019 crop insurance premium rates in Alberta are nine per cent lower than last year. This follows an eight per cent reduction in average rates in 2018. AFSC’s 2019 spring price endorsement will include a 10 per cent deductible that was introduced in 2018. The incorporation of the deductible led to a 25 per cent decline in premium rates for protection on within-year commodity price declines of more than 10 per cent. Alberta’s 2019 crop insurance program includes a couple of changes that have been introduced this year. AFSC insurance product co-ordinator Jackie Sanden says cranberry dry beans are now insurable under production insurance, which will provide growers a yield guarantee based on their elected coverage level. Sanden adds that organic producers are now eligible for insurance at the start of the year in the event that organic certification will be completed in the same crop year. “They will need to provide a letter of transmittal or suitable pre-certification documents to AFSC by April 30 and also would need to provide their organic certification in the fall,” she says. “This provides producers coverage that reflects the production capability of the specialized organic management, as well as an insurance price indicative of the market value of their organic crop grown that year.” Sanden says AFSC had paid out more than $428 million under its annual crop insurance programs for 2018 by the end of February. She says AFSC is projecting just under 15 million acres of farmland in Alberta will be insured in 2019, bringing total crop insurance coverage to an estimated $4.6 billion. Saskatchewan In late February, federal Agriculture and Agri-Food Minister Lawrence MacAulay and Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister David Marit announced several enhancements to Saskatchewan’s crop insurance program and said coverage levels in the province have hit a record high in 2019. The Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corporation (SCIC) says average insurance coverage levels are increasing to $230 per acre this year, up from $216 in 2018. The SCIC cites improvements in crop production and higher-than-expected yields in 2017 as principal drivers for the coverage increase this year. SCIC CEO Shawn Jaques says insured prices set for crops in Saskatchewan rose by just under one per cent on average in 2019 compared to last year, while the average premium rate for producers is down by an average of three per cent this year. Jaques says due to coverage increases in 2019, the average premium per acre is up slightly this year. The average premium per acre has increased to $8.61 per acre, up from $8.41 in 2018. The enhancements to Saskatchewan’s 2019 crop insurance program include: Higher coverage levels for tame and native grazing, which will better reflect the losses during a shortfall in forage production. The introduction of a new Corn Rainfall Program and changes in SCIC’s Corn Heat Unit Program, which will allow insured producers to cover their corn crops for as much as $300 an acre under either program or a combination of both. Extending the seeding window for fall-seeded cereal crops to the end of September. The addition of 55 new weather stations throughout the province, which will bring the total to 186. Jaques says the additional stations will enhance the corporation’s data-collection system, adding that once the new stations are in place, all Saskatchewan farmers should be within 30 kilometres of a SCIC weather station. “That’s quite significant,” he says. “It will mean (the weather network) should more accurately reflect what is happening on a producer’s farm.” Jaques notes that many Saskatchewan producers faced weather challenges in 2018. There was too much precipitation in some areas and too little in others. Early snowfall also affected harvest operations in many parts of the province. Jaques says total producer payouts under Saskatchewan’s 2018 crop insurance program are expected to reach $300 million, compared to $228 million in 2017. He adds that both figures are actually below average in terms of the amount of compensation SCIC typically pays to producers each year. Manitoba Federal Agriculture and Agri-Food Minister Lawrence MacAulay and Manitoba Agriculture Minister Ralph Eichler announced in January that AgriInsurance is expected to reach $2.8 billion on 9.5 million acres in Manitoba in 2019, the highest level of coverage on record. According to the Manitoba Agricultural Services Corporation (MASC), which administers the AgriInsurance program in that province, insured dollar values or prices set for crops in Manitoba are up by an average of 1.7 per cent in 2019. That, combined with an average increase of 2.3 per cent in probable yields this year, means there’s a four per cent increase in coverage for insured producers in 2019. MASC’s premium rates are down by an average of 7.1 per cent in 2019 compared to last year, due to low 2017 losses being added to the premium rate calculation as well as the growth of the AgriInsurance reserve funds. David Van Deynze, vice-president, innovation and product support for MASC, points out there’s been a drop in average premium rates in each of the last three years. “When that sort of thing happens, it means generally speaking that producers had some good years,” he says. The ministers also announced several enhancements to Manitoba’s AgriInsurance program for 2019. These include: The introduction of separate yield coverage for hybrid and open-pollinated fall rye, which will ensure coverage that better reflects the crop’s productive capacity. A higher dollar value for seed potatoes to account for their higher cost of production and higher market value. Expanding the list of crops eligible for organic insurance to include barley, field peas and hemp grain. Higher dollar values for organic crops as a result of an update in how the values are determined. Livestock and forage producers will benefit from a change in the way poor-quality forages are adjusted for claim purposes, which will result in payments that better reflect actual losses due to low quality. More online services offered by myMASC, the corporation’s digital gateway for producers. Van Deynze notes the AgriInsurance enhancements were largely based on farmer feedback. “We take quite a bit of pride in trying to meet with almost all the producer groups that are working in Manitoba,” he says, adding farmers are asked what improvements they’d like to see in the crop insurance program. “We don’t necessarily get all the improvements in any given year because there’s some budget restraints and those kinds of things that sometimes prevent that, but we certainly work towards making the improvements where it makes sense to do that.” Van Deynze says it was a difficult harvest season for many Manitoba farmers due to challenging weather conditions last fall, “but at the end of the day, producers were able to successfully harvest almost all of their acres.” Van Deynze says as of February, payouts under Manitoba’s 2018 crop insurance program had reached $70 million. Source - https://www.country-guide.ca/

06.05.2019

China - Xinfadi Market opens new climate-controlled banana warehouse

Adding gas to speed up the ripening process of bananas is gaining popularity as a green, safe food practice all over the world. The Beijing Xinfadi Market recently built a climate-controlled banana warehouse that is already in operation. The warehouse has 10 storerooms lined up and is designed to process 3,000 boxes of bananas every day. Zhang Zhongyi, the "King of Bananas" in the Market, explained that the processing volume in this warehouse is still low because the warehouse only processes imported bananas at the moment. Domestic bananas are first delivered to the Gaobeidian Branch Market to undergo a process that encourages fruit ripening. Zhang Zhongyi further stated that bananas are harvested when they are green because they spend much time in long-distance transport. However, green bananas do not easily ripen without encouragement. The bananas are therefore treated before they enter the market. The new, climate-controlled warehouse helps to supply the market with bananas when they are just at the right point in the ripening process. The old-fashioned method takes too long and is difficult to control. The risk of large volumes of bananas entering the market around the same time is therefore higher and the price therefore lower. However, ripe bananas are difficult to store and need to be sold before they turn brown. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

06.05.2019

India - Agri dept conducts survey to assess damages caused by Fani

State Agriculture department is conducting a survey to ascertain the quantum of damage to paddy cultivation in various districts caused by the cyclone 'Fani' that hit the state late Friday night. State Agriculture department has instructed its officials to carry out a detailed survey, to ascertain the loss which paddy farmers faced in the districts immediately the incident happened. Following the instruction from the department, the officials started visiting various villages and examining the paddy fields. The officials will also examine to ascertain whether the farmers producing other food grains had suffered any such loss. The department may extend financial assistance to the farmers who have incurred loss due to the severe cyclone. The effect of the cyclone in the state was less as it lost the intensity while entering Bengal. The department officials have already started the survey works. They have been visiting all the districts which were hit by the cyclone. After assessing the situation the department officials will submit to the state agriculture minister. The final decision on the financial assistance will be taken after examining the survey report in detail. "The paddy farmers in various districts have lost their crops due to the cyclone. The farmers who are among the worst-hit are from the districts of East Midnapore, East Midnapore, Murshidabad, Birbhum and Nadia. We are considering how they can be compensated after going through the report," a senior official of the department said. The department is also chalking out an elaborate plan on how to extend financial assistance to the farmers in the cyclone affected districts. The district and the block level officers are carrying out the survey not only to ascertain the loss and also identify the beneficiaries who are entitled to get the compensation. State government introduced various schemes to protect the farmers from incurring any loss caused by such incidents. It may be mentioned that Bengal is the first state in the country to introduce crop insurance scheme, where the beneficiaries will not have to pay any amount as insurance premium in case of any natural disaster. Source - http://www.millenniumpost.in/

06.05.2019

Philippines - Iloilo farmers start receiving indemnity for agri damage

Damage to palay production in this province due to El Niño phenomenon’s extreme heat since October 2018 already reached P1.3 billion covering 28,026.57 hectares and adversely affecting 27,245 farmers or 136,295 families, data from the Provincial Agriculture Office (PAO) showed. PAO chief Ildefonso Toledo said damage to corn was way lower – P160,000 covering 4,502.37 hectares. The number of corn farmers affected reached 3,735 or 18,675 families, he added. But so far, only 256 farmers in the province have received indemnity – totaling P1,148,141 – from the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. (PCIC), an attached agency of the Department of Agriculture (DA) whose principal mandate is to provide insurance protection to farmers against losses arising from natural calamities, plant diseases and pest infestations. The 256 farmers received their indemnity on April 25 from DA secretary Emmanuel Piñol at the Western Visayas Integrated Agricultural Research Center in Barangay Hamungaya, Jaro, Iloilo City. According to DA Region 6 executive director Remelyn Recoter, these farmers were from the municipalities of Leon, Badiangan, Cabatuan, Oton, Dueñas, and Banate. The amount of indemnity they received varied, based on the severity of damage each suffered, said Recoter. She also stressed that only farmers listed in the Registry System for Basic Agriculture (RSBA) prepared by municipal agriculture offices and submitted to the DA and PCIC may avail themselves of indemnity. Before the indemnity is released, PCIC validates the “damage report” submitted by farmers, said Recoter. “Either due to typhoon, baha, El Niño or pest, puede gid sila maka-claim indemnity basta registered sila sa RSBA,” she stressed. Another batch of farmers would be getting indemnity from PCIC soon, revealed Recoter. PCIC also provides protection against damage to / loss of non-crop agricultural assets including but not limited to machineries, transport facilities and other related infrastructures due to peril/s insured against. The Philippines is vulnerable to natural disasters which cause devastation to crops and miseries to agricultural producers and lenders of agricultural credit. Because of the marginality of most landholdings, the result of these losses is devastating to the finances of farmers. In 1976, an Interagency Committee for the Development of Crop Insurance during the Marcos administration undertook a nine-month full-blown feasibility study on the creation of a crop insurance program. It was concluded that the agricultural insurance system could address not only the welfare aspect of the after-loss event but also help in achieving the objective of stabilizing farm incomes and reverse the “risk-averse” nature of farmers and push them to invest more in new technologies that would help increase national productivity. Apart from protecting farmers from financial losses, crop insurance was also considered as an instrument that can be offered as “surrogate” collateral to banks and other financial institutions to influence and encourage them to continue participating and supporting government credit programs. The study ushered in the creation of PCIC and the operationalization of the insurance program through the issuance of Presidential Decree No. 1467 promulgated on June 11, 1978./PN Source - https://www.panaynews.net/

03.05.2019

USA - Excessive rainfall as damaging to corn yield as extreme heat, drough

Recent flooding in the Midwest has brought attention to the complex agricultural problems associated with too much rain. Data from the past three decades suggest that excessive rainfall can affect crop yield as much as excessive heat and drought. In a new study, an interdisciplinary team from the University of Illinois linked crop insurance, climate, soil and corn yield data from 1981 through 2016. The study found that during some years, excessive rainfall reduced U.S. corn yield by as much as 34% relative to the expected yield. Data suggest that drought and excessive heat caused a yield loss of up to 37% during some years. The findings are published in the journal Global Change Biology. "We linked county-level U.S. Department of Agriculture insurance data for corn loss with historical weather data, letting us quantify the impact of excessive rainfall on yield loss at a continental scale," said Kaiyu Guan, a natural resources and environmental sciences professor and the study's principal investigator. "This was done using crop insurance indemnity data paired with rigorous statistical analysis -- not modeled simulations -- which let the numbers speak for themselves." The study found that the impact of excessive rainfall varies regionally. "Heavy rainfall can decrease corn yield more in cooler areas and the effect is exacerbated even further in areas that have poor drainage," said Yan Li, a former U. of I. postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the study. Excessive rainfall can affect crop productivity in various ways, including direct physical damage, delayed planting and harvesting, restricted root growth, oxygen deficiency and nutrient loss, the researchers said. "It is challenging to simulate the effects of excessive rainfall because of the vast amount of seemingly minor details," Yan said. "It is difficult to create a model based on the processes that occur after heavy rainfall -- poor drainage due to small surface features, water table depth and various soil properties can lead to ponding of water in a crop field. Even though the ponding may take place over a small area, it could have a large effect on crop damage." "This study shows that we have a lot of work to do to improve our models," said Evan DeLucia, the director of the Institute for Sustainability, Energy and Environment, a professor of integrative biology and study co-author. "While drought and heat stress have been well dealt with in the existing models, excessive rainfall impacts on crop system are much less mature." Many climate change models predict that the U.S. Corn Belt region will continue to experience more intense rainfall events in the spring. Because of this, the researchers feel that it is urgent for the government and farmers to design better risk management plans to deal with the predicted climate scenarios. "As rainfall becomes more extreme, crop insurance needs to evolve to better meet planting challenges faced by farmers," said Gary Schnitkey, a professor of agricultural and consumer economics and study co-author. Source - https://www.sciencedaily.com

03.05.2019

Iraq - Rains like no other, the country is tested in era of climate change

After years of meager rains and scorching summers, the wettest winter in a generation has revived Iraq’s famous rivers and filled its lakes, bringing welcome relief to a country facing severe water challenges in the era of climate change. The rains have restored freshwater marshes of southern Iraq — a region some scholars see as the biblical Garden of Eden — and transformed lands once parched for water into fields of grain and cereal. But the deluge has also tested a country more familiar with droughts than downpours and raised questions about whether Iraq’s 20th century infrastructure can adapt to an unpredictable, 21st century climate. Swelled by local rains and snowmelt from Turkey and Iran, both the Tigris and Euphrates and their many tributaries burst their banks and flooded plains and cities in Iraq, despite the country’s considerable networks of dams and canals. And despite a trend toward a hotter and drier climate, an unseasonably chilly April and high humidity damaged crops on the farmlands around Baghdad. Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi called it imperative to revamp infrastructure and water policies to prepare for more extreme weather events, though the rains this year pose a policy dilemma as unpredictable climate stresses may lead to both droughts and floods. “This will be a very important lesson for us in the next year, and the coming years,” Abdul-Mahdi told a press conference in April Outside the town of Buhriz in eastern Diyala province, where Sirwan River flows into Iraq from neighboring Iran, Nouri Kudaier waded through his waterlogged citrus grove to see what he could salvage of this season’s harvest. “We’re asking for compensation from the government for the damage,” Kudaier said. “It’s our only source of livelihood.” Iraq has not seen as much precipitation in a single winter since 1988, according to the Ministry of Water Resources, which reported 47 billion cubic meters of water in the country’s reservoirs. That’s three times what was there at the same time last year, when water levels were so dire that the government banned farmers from growing seasonal crops during the summer months. In Youssifiyah, a farming region just south of Baghdad, canals that were empty last year are flush with water, and wells that were dug 24 meters (79 feet) deep now come up with water at a depth of just 6 meters (20 feet). Salah al-Saidey said he planted twice as much wheat this year but the heavy rains and cold ruined a portion of his cucumber and tomato crop. “We have a fungus growing,” said al-Saidey, pointing to the brittle, yellow leaves on the vines. “We weren’t expecting it. We’re trying to fight it, but we can’t keep pace.” Spring floods used to be common in Iraq. For millennia, farmers relied on the floods to inundate their fields and grow rice, wheat and other grains. But the floods were unpredictable, and every so often the rivers would burst their banks in Baghdad and elsewhere, with calamitous results. Modernization projects in the 20th century saw Iraq build dams along the Tigris and its tributaries, and canals to divert water. Upstream, Turkey, Iran and Syria did the same, and the inundations became a distant memory, especially as rising temperatures brought weaker rains and faster evaporation from lakes and reservoirs. Last year, desperate shortages of clean water led residents to riot in Basra, Iraq’s main oil hub and its largest city in the south. The flow of the Euphrates and Tigris grew so weak that creeping seawater from the Persian Gulf reached the Chibayish freshwater marshes about 180 kilometers (112 miles) upstream, contaminating them with salt. This year, that won’t be a problem, said the head of Basra’s provincial council — the revived rivers flushed the salt away and filled the marshes with fresh water. “We have enough water for this year and one after, God willing” said Sabah al-Bazouni. But securing water for future generations will depend on more than favorable weather, says Iraq’s water resources minister, Jamal al-Adily. It will require a collaborative effort between Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran, he said. Some 70% of Iraq’s water flows from the three upstream countries, though no formal water sharing agreement exists between them. “Iraqis have a right to water,” al-Adily told The Associated Press. “The rivers were here before the borders.” With reservoirs flush with water, there may be no better time to start discussions in earnest. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said his country would soon send a special representative of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Baghdad to discuss water administration. And as Iraq simultaneously plans to expand its own oil production, it has a vital resource to leverage in water negotiations. Turkey is expected to rebalance its oil supplies after the U.S. announced it was ending the waivers that have allowed Turkey to import oil from Iran despite sanctions imposed by Washington. Iraq is one of Turkey’s leading suppliers of crude oil, and the two countries already make approximately $10 billion in bilateral trade. “Water should be a link to open trade between the two countries,” said al-Adily. “Turkey will stand to benefit from cooperating with Iraq.” Source - https://www.washingtonpost.com

03.05.2019

Canada - Shrimp farming on the Prairies: New venture near Strathmore to grow local seafood

Thousands of miles from the nearest ocean, Strathmore, Alberta is the last place anyone would expect to find a local source of sustainable seafood. But this corner of cattle country, best-known for its feedlots and livestock auctions, is taking on a decidedly “surf and turf” flavour. Waterford Farms — a 9,000 square-foot facility located in Wheatland County, just east of Strathmore — is the first large-scale commercial shrimp growing operation in Alberta, and proponents say it could be a model for a new type of agricultural business on the Prairies. The inland shrimp farm uses a recirculating aquaculture system to raise the marine animals in vertically stacked saltwater tanks. Waterford Farms buys the “post-larvae,” or shrimp babies, from a supplier in Texas and then houses and feeds them for 20 weeks until they have grown from the size of an eyelash to the size of an open hand and are ready to be sold to a restaurant or supermarket. The facility has had shrimp on site since January 1 and expects to make its first harvest this month. The goal is to produce 2.5 million individual shrimp, or 100,000 pounds, per year, said Waterford Farms owner Keith Driver. Driver, a 43-year-old environmental engineer from Calgary, said most of the shrimp currently consumed in Canada is shipped in from Thailand, India, China and Vietnam. He said he believes there is a growing market for shrimp produced at home, in an ethically and environmentally sustainable way. “The future of food is sustainable production . . . we can’t keep harvesting the oceans the way we have,” Driver said. “And the majority of the shrimp we eat in Canada now does not have a great carbon footprint.” Waterford Farms’ shrimp are raised without any need for antibiotics, hormones or pesticides, all in a controlled, protected environment. Driver, who grew up in Toronto and calls himself “the most unlikely farmer in the world,” said the high-tech water circulation system at Waterford Farms requires careful management and is the most challenging part about raising shrimp inland. “It’s a skill and it’s not the skill people think it is. It’s not an animal rearing skill,” Driver said. “Aquaculture is a water treatment game, it’s not a fish game.” Farming inland shrimp in Canada is still relatively unusual, but there is growing interest in the field. In the last several years, a handful of commercial-scale ventures have popped up across the country — including Planet Shrimp near London, Ontario and Berezan Shrimp Company in Vancouver. Diego Ibarra — an instructor in the Department of Biology at Dalhousie University — said Canada has been slow to catch onto the aquaculture trend, perhaps because we have a strong fisheries industry that has overshadowed more innovative pursuits. “Other countries have been ramping up production long before Canada, but now I think it’s catching on here,” Ibarra said. Farming shrimp inland has its own environmental impacts, Ibarra said, including the large amounts of salt and water required and the sustainability concerns around the volumes of fish feed required for aquaculture. Still, he said these impacts pale in comparison to the environmental price tag that comes with harvesting shrimp in Thailand and shipping it around the world. He added doing aquaculture on the Prairies also minimizes the chance that an unwelcome virus could spread from a fish farm to the ocean. “When you’re doing seawater farming in a place where there’s no sea, it’s a lot safer,” Ibarra said. “I think it’s a great idea.” Ranjan Pradhan, president of Shrimp Canada — an Ontario start-up whose goal is to make inland shrimp production self-sustainable in that province — said there’s no reason why Alberta couldn’t have a strong seafood farming industry. “You have greenhouses, so how is that any different?” Pradhan said. “It will be slow, but it is going to grow. People are getting familiar with the idea of local produce and are concerned about quality. There is very strong potential, that’s for sure.” Waterford Farms held its grand opening on Wednesday. It is the second large-scale fish farm to open in the Calgary area in recent months. In late December, Deepwater Farms became the city’s first commercial aquaponics facility, raising leafy greens and freshwater fish such as sea bass in a warehouse-like facility. Source - https://www.thechronicleherald.ca/

557
of 1157
istanbul escort şişli escort tbilisi escort şişli escort şişli escort maslak escort istanbul escort beşiktaş escort taksim escort izmir escort ümraniye escort mecidiyeköy escort şişli escort taksim escort ümraniye escort kartal escort şirinevler escort maltepe escort istanbul escort ümraniye escort kadıköy escort vip escort mersin escort istanbul escorts ataköy escort avcılar escort beylikdüzü escort okmeydanı escort şişli escort tuzla escort işitme cihazı sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop
istanbul escort