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27.12.2018

India - Farmers try liquor sprays to boost potato crop yield

Driven by popular belief that it is a practice that works, farmers in Uttar Pradesh state in India are reportedly spraying their crops with liquor – mainly potatoes and sugarcane. They pour liquor in their spraying machines, mix it with water and spray it on the crop – which they believe increases the size of the potato considerably and matures the crop in a shorter period of time. According to farmers, liquor works as an insecticide on the cane crop. While the agriculture department authorities have dismissed the notion that alcohol can help in potato production in any way, farmers are gung-ho about it. Lokesh Sharma, a farmer in Bohich village of Bulandshahr, said, “One quarter of a country-made bottle of liquor is sprayed on potato crop spread in 6 bighas. A quarter costs me Rs 50, and I have 10-acre land – so the cost comes to some Rs 500. This helps in increasing the size of the potato and the crop takes less time to mature.” Farmers in Uttar Pradesh’s Bulandshahr area have been facing a crisis due to the low prices they get for their produce in the market.  The condition of farmers is not exactly desirable and they keep coming up with new experiments and techniques to improve their produce and get a better price in the market. Source - https://potatonewstoday.com

27.12.2018

USA - National farm bill passed

It has been a little more than a week since President Trump signed the 2018 Farm Bill into law after passing in the House of Representatives earlier this month. Key points in the bill include certainty and stability to farm families for the next five years, upholding fiscal responsibility by being budget neutral and protecting crop insurance. It will fund needed trade development as well as investing in ag research and beginning farmer programs. It also continues nutrition assistance programs for lower income families. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Mike Conaway applauded the passage, indicating it to be “a big deal for rural America.”  “With President Trump signing the farm bill today, America keeps faith with those hard-working farm and ranch families who put food on our tables and clothes on our backs,” remarked Conaway on the day of Trump’s signing on Dec. 20. “Because of the support of the president, Sec. Perdue and a Republican Congress, we were able to deliver a new farm bill in the same year that the legislation was first introduced, which marks a first in nearly 30 years. I’m proud of this bill and I’m honored to have served as chairman throughout this process. I’m thankful to all those who worked to help make today’s enactment of the farm bill possible.” Illinois Farm Bureau President Richard Guebert Jr. applauded President Trump’s signing on the “historic and overwhelmingly bipartisan” farm bill. “The 2018 farm bill is a complete package that serves all Americans. It helps to ensure the food security and economic security of our nation,” Guebert Jr. said. “Directly or indirectly, it benefits everyone in towns large and small.”  Closer to home, Ogle County Farm Bureau manager Ron Kern talked about how the new bill will affect farmers. “The passage of the new Farm Bill is welcomed relief for farmers across the country who are facing yet another year of depressed commodity prices and shrinking balance sheets,” Kern said. “The new bill will add stability to farmers by retaining crop insurance as a key risk management tool, developing foreign markets to expand trade and continue valuable environmental stewardship programs.” Adding, “This bill was passed with strong bipartisan support in Washington. That support proves how valuable this piece of legislation is to all Americans.” Farm Bill facts The House Agriculture Committee assembled a short summary of the 2018 Farm Bill; it highlights each of the sections — commodities, conservation, trade, nutrition, credit, rural development, research, forestry, horticulture and crop insurance.  There are also several facts listed:  Just 8.6 cents of every dollar spent on food goes to the farmer. The remaining share goes to processors, wholesalers, retailers and food service; the 2014 Farm bill was expected to save $23 billion over 10 years. Most recent projections show it will save $100 billion, which is more than four times what was anticipated; and U.S. Ag exports to Canada and Mexico are up over 400 percent since NAFTA took effect in 1994. Source - https://rochellenews-leader.com

27.12.2018

Ukraine - Weather conditions remain favorable for winter crops

For most of the period of December 11-20, Ukraine was exposed to variable air temperatures and insignificant precipitation in the form of snow. So, the average daily air temperature was 1.1-2.40С above normal on December 11-13, but then fell to 2.8-4.50С below normal towards December 20, varying from +10С to -5.40С. Precipitation in the form of snow occurred on December 11-12 and December 18-20. Its amount varied from 1.8 to 3.6 mm (17% of normal for December 11-20) in the south and from 14.4 to 20.3 mm (127% of normal) in the west. The snow cover height in winter crop fields increased to 1.5-2.3 cm in the central, western and northern regions, though it ranged from 2 to 5 cm in the rest of Ukraine. As of December 20, the lowest soil temperature at the tillering-node depth was 10С below zero. Thick snow cover (up to 18 cm) protects winter crops from the penetration of low temperatures deep into the soil. However, combined with the absence of low air temperatures, this reduced the soil freezing depth from 2-4 cm to 0-1 cm and increased the minimum soil temperature at the tillering node depth to 00С. When such quite thick snow cover stays for long with shallowly frozen or thawed soil, winter crops may get rotten. The risk of this adverse event will manifest itself if thick snow cover persists within 20-30 days. Measurement of the content of carbohydrates accumulated in the tillering nodes of plants indicated that their amount early in the winter season was quite high. It equaled 37-42% in winter wheat sown after black fallow and 36-38% in that sown after non-fallow predecessors. According to the Land Farming Institute, winter wheat plants entered winter in the tillering stage. Their height equals 16-21 cm. The crop condition is good. Overall, the December 11-20 weather conditions were fair for winter crops. Their condition did not change compared with the previous week. Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net

27.12.2018

India - Farmers await compensation of crop loss by wildlife

Farmers are eagerly awaiting their crop compensation in villages falling in and around Palamu tiger reserve. Standing crop and harvested crop both are destroyed and damaged by herd of elephants. Standing crop is raided by herd of pachyderms in the fields while harvested crop stored in barns which are always open and vulnerable is also destroyed by elephants. Sources said July to December every year is the vulnerable months of crop destruction by elephants. Betla and Garu ranges of Palamu tiger reserve are the most vulnerable ranges from the point of view of the elephant raiding and destroying crop. Bareysarn, Chhipadohar, Kutku and Mahuadarn ranges too are not free of the elephant menace. Sources said the destruction of crop is done by two kinds of elephants.  In Betla range it is PTR’s elephants that destroy the crop mostly. It is true of Garu, Bareysarn ranges as well but there are instances where herd of Chhatisgarh elephants also has caused destruction of crop and houses in villages falling in and around PTR. Sources said crop destruction and damages of houses/ huts by elephants go together in villages here in PTR. Dr Mohan Lal field director PTR said, “PTR has received Rs 14 lakh this outgoing financial year for compensation purposes. Compensation comes for crop loss, hut loss and life loss. Even where wild life like elephant, bear, wild boar etc has maimed any one compensation is to be paid for it by way of providing the victim adequate treatment and for his upkeep till he is back to normality.” A hectare loss of crop by wild life has 20,000 rupees as compensation.  Similarly loss of cattle by wild life gets Rs 15,000 as compensatory amount. The Field Director said, “I have asked our rangers to see that compensation is not made to linger. This causes resentment. This we have to dilute by all means.” Sources said PTR officials have paid compensation for crop loss episodes of the last financial year 2017 -18 in this financial year 2018 -19. Asked that payment of compensation comes too late say by 6 to 9 months after the commission of destruction/ damage etc Lal said this year PTR has disbursed around Rs 6 lakhs as compensation. 38 farmers in Betla range have filed their petitions for compensation this year. Similarly Garu range which is split in two East range and West range has a total of 70 to 80 similar petitions of farmers for compensation.  Bareysarn, Chhipadohar, Kutku and Mahuadarn ranges have in all less than two dozen petitions of farmers for compensation said sources. Sources said compensation was paid in cash till now in PTR which from this year is to be credited into bank accounts of the victim farmers of PTR.  Here there is one more twist. Compensation is given to those only in whose name the ‘ Lagan’ is paid and its payment receipt is up to date that is no back log of Lagan. But if the crop is of the share cropper read Bataidaar and not of the land owner then in that event compensation for crop loss or damage is not due to the share cropper. It is upto the land owner to give the compensation to the share cropper. Source - https://www.dailypioneer.com

26.12.2018

USA - Georgia pecan farmers face more than one hurricane’s worth of pain

Pecans and pecan pie should be as tasty as usual for Georgians this holiday season. But behind the scenes, Georgia’s pecan farming business has been clobbered, and the beatdown isn’t over for one of the state’s biggest crops. Pecan prices have plummeted by at least a third for local farmers. Much of the state’s crop, once the largest in the nation, is in the mud, or worse. And some of the trouble will last years for a branch of farming that already demanded extra patience. It can take 15 years for a pecan tree to turn a real profit for growers. The hardships are a result of a triple whammy: awful weather, Chinese retaliatory tariffs and a spike in competition from Mexico. Consumers, though, are expected to remain mostly immune from the pain. Thanks to the globally connected nut market and an array of middlemen, prices and supplies at area grocery stores haven’t shown a blip, according to the Georgia Pecan Growers Association. It’s the organization’s farmer members — and potentially their suppliers, workers and lenders — who are suffering. Some growers are scrounging on the ground to salvage every nut they can. Others don’t bother, given how low prices are. “It makes you want to cry,” said Richard Grebel, who lives near Albany and farms and manages 2,000 acres in south Georgia. The October storm wiped out half or more of the state’s pecan harvest, which had been on pace for an extra big haul, said Lenny Wells, a pecan specialist and University of Georgia horticulture professor. Direct losses for pecans are expected to reach $560 million. That includes likely losses for next year’s crop and damage to trees. Pecan farms are primarily in the southern half of the state with harvests valued at nearly $400 million last year. Grebel said he’s down 2.5 million pounds of pecans. That loss alone was probably worth $4 million at the market’s current low prices, he said. In addition, many of his trees were twisted and mangled, ruining growth needed to produce nuts next year and beyond. Michael’s winds also ripped the roof off his cold storage building and cut into other business. Instead of putting five million pounds of nuts through his cleaning plant, including nuts from others’ farms, he got only 100,000 pounds. “One of the things that scares me is that we are not going to come back next year at all,” he said. “ I know next year we are not going to make any money to speak of.” Grebel said crop insurance will help. And various state and federal assistance is expected to soften the blow. But farmers say it won’t make up for all the losses. Part of the problem is that farmers faced more than a hurricane, said Chad Walker, a small pecan farmer from Ashburn, Ga. “The hurricane put everything we had on the ground,” he said. Then weeks of rain made it hard to quickly salvage the fallen nuts. Pecan quality suffered, which further eroded prices. Georgia pecan farmers had braced for a low pay back this year after China slapped tariffs on U.S. pecans and other products in response to a trade crackdown by President Trump. That alone was tough for Georgia growers, who typically send 60 percent of their crop to China, which offers extra high prices per pound just in time for the Chinese new year. (Christmas and Thanksgiving are other big draws for local pecan farmers.) The tariffs have virtually eliminated that trade with China, at least for now. Then came an unexpected surge of lower-priced pecan production out of Mexico during the heart of Georgia’s harvest season. The cumulative result: Georgia pecan farmers were left with the double hit of low supplies and low prices. Actually, make that a triple hit, since the damage to pecan trees will cut into future crops and finances for years to come. That’s on top of lingering troubles from 2017 when remnants of Hurricane Irma cut into harvests and damaged many of Georgia’s pecan trees. “Its very stressful,” said Danny Levie, who estimated he lost 40 percent of his crop this year alone. A fifth-generation pecan farmer in Montezuma, Ga., his trees include some planted by ancestors in 1918. He usually sells online as well as to grocers, bakeries and caterers. But the bulk of his harvests went to China until the tariffs hit. “I haven’t sold a single nut to China this year,” he said. He predicted it will take up to eight years to get his damaged trees back to full production. A lot can change in agriculture markets in that time. A reduced U.S. walnut crop a decade ago helped spur Chinese buyers to turn to Georgia pecans and boost the industry, according to UGA’s Wells. Now, with Chinese tariffs and competition from Mexico, the prices available to Georgia pecan farmers “are not really sustainable long term,” Wells said. “They can’t grow the way they have been growing it for the prices they are getting now.” Other options may help. In recent years, U.S. farmers have built up markets for their pecans in Vietnam, South Korea and Turkey. Source - https://www.ajc.com

26.12.2018

USA - Tennessee implements emergency rules to stop deer disease

Tennessee agriculture officials have implemented new emergency rules for captive and wild deer herds after ten wild deer recently were found to have chronic wasting disease, a deadly neurological disorder. State Agriculture Commissioner Jai Templeton announced the rules on Monday, saying they come after hunters recently shot the deer in Fayette and Hardeman counties in West Tennessee. Targeted sampling conducted by the Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency (TWRA) indicated the presence of CWD. While CWD has no known risk to humans or livestock, the contagious disease is dangerous to cervids, which are animals that include deer, elk, moose, caribou and reindeer. With the infectious disease having been found in at least 26 states, now including Tennessee, as well as Candada, officials nationwide have been scrambling to prevent further spread. Fears are the disease, which is has no known cure and is 100 percent fatal, could decimate deer populations. While CWD has no known risk to people and livestock, testing is recommended prior to consuming deer or elk meat harvested within the CWD Management Zone, which includes Fayette, Hardeman, and McNairy counties. "We have been working hard to prepare for this potential threat," Templeton said in a news release. He said his department worked in collaboration with TWRA, U.S. Department of Agriculture, hunters and captive her owners to develop a response plan, calling the plan "critical in protecting the wild and captive deer and elk in our state." Now it's being implemented. Rules include: » Owners of captive deer and elk will be required to report their herd inventory, location, and any sick animals to the State Veterinarian. They will also be required to report deaths among their fenced captive cervids within 24 hours and make the carcass available to TDA for further testing. » Importation of captive cervids into the state and the movement of captive deer or elk within the state will require prior approval and a permit from the State Veterinarian, as well as USDA-approved identification. Requirements don't apply to white-tailed deer and wild elk, which are prohibited from being retained in captive facilities. State Veterinarian Dr. Charlie Hatcher noted that just weeks before the detection of CWD in West Tennessee, the department joined with other partners for a "tabletop exercise" to discuss and finalize their response plan. "Now, we're following through," Hatcher said. "We encourage captive herd owners to keep a close eye on the animals in their care and report any signs of illness immediately." In 2013, a voluntary program administered by state agriculture officials, the Tennessee CWD Herd Certification Program, was put in place to provide uniform herd certification standards and to support the domestic and international marketability of cervid herds. Facilities can be certified as disease-free after five years of program enrollment with no evidence of disease, and the program is required for the interstate movement of CWD-susceptible cervids. Earlier this month, the Times Free Press reported TWRA, which regulates hunting, adopted it own new rules to combat the spread of the disease. Any deer, elk or moose harvested outside the state must have its meat removed from the bone before being brought into Tennessee. Previous rules applied only to states where the disease had been found. Another regulation which goes into effect for the 2019 hunting season bans use of natural deer urine in Tennessee. "It's going to be an inconvenience to hunters, but Tennessee isn't the only state doing this," TWRA big game biologist Ben Layton said. "Regulations have been put in place in other states to slow down the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease." The disease causes drastic weight loss, stumbling, listlessness and other neurological symptoms before eventual death for the animals. There is no treatment or vaccine to cure it. Scientists believe the disease is still contagious long after an infected animal is dead. Some states, such as Wisconsin, have seen entire herds wiped out due to the highly infectious disease. Source - https://www.timesfreepress.com

26.12.2018

USA - Early winter weather puts U.S. safe-haven corn planting in doubt

Illinois farmer Brent Johnson had planned to bump up his corn acreage by 10 percent in 2019 and plant fewer soybeans as a way to shelter himself from the lower soy prices caused by U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff war with China. But some early winter storms caused him to abandon the late autumn fieldwork necessary to seed the yellow grain in the spring. That will force him and other farmers to devote more of his acreage to soybeans than expected next year. As soybeans are far more affected by the U.S. trade war with China than corn, the trend adds to economic risk across a U.S. farm belt the Trump administration recently said would get up to $12 billion in aid to make up for trade related losses. China resumed buying U.S. soybeans in December as part of a trade war truce following a meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump, but the amount of purchases remains well behind the pace of previous years. It is unclear how much U.S. soy China will actually buy with a record Brazilian harvest just weeks away. Even with China back in the market for the first time in six months, the record soybean supplies littering the countryside have weighed on prices — soy futures were down 8.2 percent so far this year — and made corn a more attractive option to growers. Corn futures have risen 7.9 percent during 2018 and are on track for their biggest yearly gain since 2012. China historically has imported very little corn. “With some of these corn prices and the corn yields we’ve had, I wanted to plant some continuous corn (but) the window (to prepare the ground) closed on us too tightly,” Johnson said. The severe weather across the U.S. Midwest in October and early November meant farmers left nearly 11 million acres of corn and soybeans from Kentucky to North Dakota standing in their fields as of the end of November — the fourth highest amount ever. Crops left in the ground during winter can still be harvested once the snow melts but face severe yield loss as soybean pods split and corn stalks are often knocked down. Mold is another risk. That will further squeeze farm profits after a bleak year of low prices and few buyers. Analysts are now casting doubt on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s early November forecast that 2019 corn plantings will rise about 3 million acres to 92.0 million acres. At that time, soybean acres were seen falling 7.5 percent to 82.5 million. “Because of what happened during fall tillage ... maybe you do not plant as much corn,” said Don Roose, president of U.S. Commodities in West Des Moines, Iowa. The weather problems also could cut into the bottom lines of seed and fertilizer companies. Corn requires more tilling and fertilizer applications that cannot be completed with unharvested crops or frozen ground. Seed companies like DowDuPont that earn more money from corn seeds could see their businesses affected by the changes. Two-thirds of DowDuPont’s net seed sales are corn and only 20 percent are soybeans. The company said in October it would take a $4.6 billion charge to write down the value of its agriculture business, which has been hurt as Brazilian farmers increased soy planting to meet China’s demand for South American soybeans and reduced corn output. Bayer, the German drugmaker that bought U.S. seed company Monsanto, has a much bigger market share in corn seeds and related crop protection products than in the soy market, and would also would benefit from rising corn acreage. DowDuPont and Bayer did not respond to requests for comment. Back on his 4,000-acre farm in central Illinois, Johnson had planned to boost corn seeding by 400 acres in 2019 before adverse weather sidelined him in November. After some heavy rain, early snow and hail, he parked his tractor and other equipment in the shed for the winter as there was little benefit to plowing through a sloppy field. “We’ve learned that turning over mud does not do much good,” Johnson said. Source - https://www.stltoday.com

26.12.2018

Kenya - Farmers benefitting from Irish Aid support to potato farming in Nyandarua County

In March 2018, the Embassy of Ireland in Kenya launched a Potato Capacity Building Project in Nyandarua County; one of the leading potato growing regions in Kenya. The launch was addressed by Minister Kevin ‘Boxer’ Moran who highlighted Ireland’s expertise and experience in potato production, and how we are keen to share this with key partner countries such as Kenya. The project, which is funded by Irish Aid to the tune of €1 million over three years, is a public-private partnership implemented by International Fertiliser Development Centre (IFDC); a highly experienced NGO in the sector in coordination with the Nyandarua County Government and working in partnership with two private sector companies: Kevian Kenya Ltd, a major Kenyan food processing company, and IPM; an Irish company with expertise in certified potato seed production. Other stakeholders include Teagasc, Sustainable Food Systems Ireland and their Kenyan counterparts. The project aims to help 3,000 smallholder farmers to increase their household revenue and food security through training on good agricultural practices, facilitating access to affordable certified potato seed and creating linkages with formal and non-formal markets for their produce. Since March, the PCB project has trained more than 80 smallholder farmers through a farmer field business school model in the villages. Farmers undergo step by step practical field lessons and demonstrations under the guidance of a field extension service agent. This includes training on soil testing, low-cost mechanisation, potato varieties identification, good potato agronomic practices, proper use of herbicides, and the importance of low-cost potato storage facilities to reduce post-harvest losses. A number of trained farmers are then selected from the village groups to undertake further training as Trainer of Trainers in order to cascade further trianing to farmers in their villages. It is from this initial group, that Ambassador Dr Vincent O’Neill, accompanied by the Nyandarua County Governor and representatives from the project partners visited Priscilla Wambui’s farm in Kirimangai Village. Priscilla is one of the farmers who took part in the four-month PCB training from March this year and emerged as one of the best and most active of the training group. As a result, she was selected to undergo a 1-week Training of Trainers course so that she could establish her own farmer field business school and train other smallholder farmers in her village. Priscilla is a mother of two children, aged six and one and a half years old. She has been a potato farmer for the last five years in Nyandarua County where she leases four acres and plants potatoes which she normally sells in the local market or to traders who later sell the potatoes in Nairobi City for a profit. Priscilla knows that potatoes are highly nutritious and can contribute significantly to food security in Nyandarua and Kenya more broadly, where food inseucity is a major development challenge. However, Priscilla and other farmers in the County have been experiencing a decline in potato yields over recent years due to disease, pests, unavailability of good quality seed, adverse weather, high cost of inputs and poor soil fertility. Within her four leased acres, Priscilla has been harvesting 20 bags of 110 kg per acre due to these challenges. When the Irish Ambassador and team met with Priscilla, she proudly showed them her potato crop which she has been cultivating with her new training on good agricultural practices. She explained how the potato capacity building project has been helpful to her and the other farmers in this area through teaching them about quality of seeds and how to select the right types of fertiliser. Previously, they had used any available fertiliser in the local market which was not a good and cost-effective practice. She also noted that she had learned how to plant on the ridges so that the potatoes can have a better root network and yield more tubers, spacing potato crops and proper use of fungicides and pesticides to protect from early and late blight disease. In the eight months since the launch of the project, Priscilla is expecting to harvest 80 bags of 110 kg per acre, which is four times what she had produced in the previous harvest. She is very happy with this result and further pleased that the project has linked the farmers to buyers which will guarantee her more security. The increased yield will also result in increased income to her family and food security for the community where the majority of smallholder farmers are women and youth. As a result of the project and this initial success, the County Government has also promised the farmers that together with the National Government, they plan to build low-cost potato storage facilities which will be an important further support so that farmers can avoid over-supplying markets at the same time, and therefore attracting lower prices. The model for the storage facilities will build on a project funded by Irish Aid in 2017. Source - https://www.britsinkenya.com

26.12.2018

India - Crop insurance fails to come to aid of Kappatralla farmers

Most houses in this once infamous village are locked with inhabitants missing, as crop failure in parts of Andhra Pradesh has triggered flight of farm labourers to greener pastures. Kappatralla, which has seen at least 50 faction murders over the past two decades, is witnessing appalling scenes of human misery with farmers getting paltry insurance amount after huge crop losses. Kappatralla, has now been adopted by former Kurnool superintendent of police AK Ravi Krishna, resulting in the opening of Andhra Pragati Grameena bank in the village to help farmers get loans. “The factionism has gone. The drinking water problem is under control after Ravi Krishna helped us to build a water purification plant and sourced water from a borewell,” said K Harischandra, a villager. “But all our hopes have been dealt a blow by this year’s drought,” he added. Farmers raise fingers at the apathy of agri officials While the sum assured is Rs 40,000 per hectare, each farmer gets only Rs 2,990 per acre, despite losing his entire crop. Many of the farmers do not have any information about the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana, a crop insurance scheme. “I invested around Rs 15,000 per acre by taking loans, but the yield was only one sack of groundnut per acre. None of the agricultural officers visited us and we don’t have any knowledge about the insurance scheme,” said B Muniswamy, a farmer who lost his groundnut crop due to the drought in the kharif season. When TOI visited Kapatralla, some farmers who have not migrated seemed curious about the visitors. They wondered whether help had arrived. “Onion crop in 10 acres has dried up. I suffered Rs 20,000 loss per acre,” said Golla Rangamamma, a woman farmer of the village. A Hariprasad, manager of Andhra Pragati Grameena Bank at Kappatralla, told TOI how they have disbursed ?8.38 crore loan to around 971 people this year for kharif and rabi crops, to farmers from four villages, including Kappatralla, Jilledubudakala, Madhapuram and Obulapuram. “Each loan is renewed for most farmers. We fix the premium, when farmers take crop loans for weather-based insurance scheme. For groundnut crop, the rate is Rs 900 per hectare. We have processed around 675 claims under the scheme. The insurance company has settled claims for 2017-18 where Rs 2,990 was given per acre. Under PM Fasal Bima Yojana, for crops like cotton and onion, around 29 farmers got registered,” Hariprasad said. But farmers alleged that insurance companies and agricultural officers have failed to do proper assessment, leading to less insurance amount. Kurnool district collector S Satyanarayana added that the insurance amount was paid to the consumer as per the assessed damage of the crop by assessors of the insurance company. Source - https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

26.12.2018

India - Titli affected farmers yet to paid crop insurance

Coconut farmers affected by Titli cyclone are yet to pay amount under crop insurance scheme by its companies so far. Coconut farmers in Uddanam area paid crop insurance premium for one tree as Rs 10 for three years term in 2016 and it is in force till March 2019. With the motivation of horticulture officials farmers paid the amount to national insurance company under national crop insurance scheme (NCIC) which is applicable for horticulture crops. The NCIC is applied for both natural calamities and pesticide attack on crops. There are two categories under the NCIC one is for payment of premium for trees aged from 4 to 15 years and other is for trees aged from 16 to 60 years. Due to titli cyclone coconut trees damaged in seven Udddanam mandalas and insurance amount need to pay for total loss of tree, damage of tree and loss of yield also. As per guidelines for each tree loss insurance company need to pay Rs 1750. After payment of premium in 2016 no bonds issued to farmers and accounts also not opened in the name of farmers in banks. Now the insurance company and horticulture officials are trying to shift burden on each other to avoid liability. ‘We have yet to receive any compensation amount from insurance companies so far for loss of our crop’ coconut farmers of Sompeta mandal, Ramachandra Panigrahi, Dunna Gurumurthyand others explained. ‘We have paid Rs 5.50 crore under crop insurance for loss but we have not received premium for coconut’ National insurance company officials, Sivaji and Malathi explained. Source - https://www.thehansindia.com

24.12.2018

Ukraine - Probability of loss of corn, soybean and rapeseed harvest makes 20%

In 2019, the yield figures of corn, soybeans and rapeseed in Ukrainian agricultural households may become lower by 20%, due to the deficit of the necessary volumes of fertilizers, including ammonium sulfate, declared the Head of the "Ukrainian Agrarian Council” Public Union (UAC), Andrii Dykun. According to him, in the current year Ukraine received had the record harvest of corn, while next year the country may lose nearly 20% of the harvest. The expert noted that Ukrainian agrarians and chemists need to find the solution to import the required volumes of fertilizers to the country for the successful planting campaign in the spring, because in the terms of the absence of fertilizers, there will be no exports. A.Dykun reminded that the funds received from the sales of agricultural products on foreign markets form nearly 40% of foreign currency earnings of Ukraine. Source - https://www.apk-inform.com

24.12.2018

Romania - Winter crops in the southeast still exposed to the risk of frost-kill

This past week, air temperatures in Romania were at long-term normal levels. The average daytime air temperature varied within the range of -6..+5°С. Precipitation in the form of snow occurred all over the country. However, its highest rates were registered in the southwest and west, where the ground is covered with 25-50 cm of snow, locally even with 100 cm. Due to the absence of snow cover, winter crops in the southeast are exposed to the risk of frost-kill in case of a further temperature drop. Crop plants are dormant. Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net

24.12.2018

Spain - Disastrous broccoli and cauliflower campaign

The weather has caused considerable losses in the Spanish broccoli sector. There has been abundant rainfall in combination with higher temperatures than usual for autumn. The harvest started almost two weeks late this season. Despite the losses and the high demand, the prices have still hit rock bottom due to oversupply. So far, the season has been disastrous. "The excess moisture and the high temperatures have caused a lot of quality issues due to diseases such as botrytis. A large part of the harvest, up to 70% in some areas of Murcia, had to be discarded," says Nacho Domènech, vice president of Proexport's Broccoli and Cauliflower department. Despite the fact that the production has been reduced and the supply programs have been affected, "the prices remain below the production costs," says Domènech. "Even though we expected product shortages because of the losses caused by the rot and the high demand, there is still an oversupply." Italy is Spain's only competitor in the winter months and it has suffered the effects of the rain even more. Although some deny it, it seems that the broccoli acreage has grown quicker than expected, because it is not logical for prices to be so low while the demand is good, there have been so many losses and there is no competition from Italy." Last year, the situation was different. "We had a difficult start of the season because of product shortages, but the prices remained high," says the exporter. "The transport strikes in France have also caused us damage this year, but that is something that our customers understood, because it was not our fault." Cauliflower Cauliflower prices are also very low. "Unlike broccoli, this crop did not suffer as much from the rainfall, as there were no cases of botrytis, with the exception of alternaria, but since it has not been cold this fall, the cultivation in Spain has skyrocketed. In Europe, some regions where the harvest should already be finished have continued to grow the crop, including the region of Brittany and certain areas in England. We hope that temperatures will drop soon, so that the cauliflower and broccoli productions can be brought under control again," concludes Nacho Domènech. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

24.12.2018

USA - Dry pea revenue insurance now available in South Dakota

USDA’s Risk Management Agency has announced expanded availability for Dry Pea Revenue coverage in South Dakota for the 2019 Crop Year. South Dakota dry pea policy holders will have three insurance plan options for the 2019 Crop Year: Yield Protection Plan 01, Revenue Protection Plan 02 or Revenue Protection with Harvest Price Exclusion Plan 03. These new plan options replace the Actual Production History Plan 90 which provided protection only for yield losses. “This change will give South Dakota producers the same coverage choices as dry pea producers in Montana and North Dakota,” according to Eric Bashore, director of the Billings Regional Office serving Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming. Approved Insurance Providers may automatically transition policyholders who insured dry peas in the 2018 crop year under the APH Plan 90 to the Yield Protection Plan 01 for the 2019 crop year. However, if a carry-over policyholder wishes to select revenue protection, or cancel Yield Protection coverage, the change must be made on a contract change form by the sales closing date of March 15, 2019, or must be canceled by the cancellation date (also March 15, 2019). Policyholders insured under the APH Plan of insurance in the 2018 crop year who remain insured under the new Yield Protection Plan of insurance for the 2019 crop year will be considered carry-over policyholders and will not have a break in continuity for insurance coverage purposes. The South Dakota counties eligible for the new revenue plan options were filed prior to the Nov. 30 contract change date. Interested producers should contact a crop insurance agent for further information. Crop insurance is sold and delivered solely through private crop insurance agents. Source - https://www.hpj.com

24.12.2018

India - Crop damage by disasters

When farm distress and loan waiver has been the burning topic across the nation, the shocker is that Odisha farmers seem to be the worst-hit in country as the State in 2018-19 (till the middle of December) has seen highest crop damages in the country owing to natural disasters. As per data available with the Union Government, with crop damages in an area covering a whopping 3.9lakh hectare till mid December, Odisha virtually tops country in 2018-19. In last half-decade, this was the second highest crop damage owing to natural disasters in Odisha, after 2013-14 (Phailin year). The estimated crop loss in 2018-19 till mid-December stood at over Rs 1,800 crore vis-a-vis of Rs 3,850 crore in full financial year of 2013-14. Significantly, when total pegged value loss was converted to the unit cost of cultivation per hectare, the cost of cultivation per hectare for farmers in Odisha boils down to around Rs 44, 000 in 2018-19. This fact reveals farmers in Odisha accrued a loss of around Rs 44, 000 per hectare owing to natural disaster like Titli. The distress at hand then could well be imagined when Odisha has around 32lakh households with farming as principal income source, and a whopping 72 per cent of them has farm land of around 1 hectare only. Data with State-Level Bankers Committee (SLBC) further reveals that when average amount of crop loans borrowed in 2018-19 were estimated at around Rs 50,000 per farmer household; fact to note in the given context how an assistance of Rs 5,000 each under the scheme ‘Kalia’ per farmer households in Kharif and Rabi looks a pittance, when the cost of cultivation per hectare has been pegged at around Rs 44, 000. “The latest scheme announced by CM Naveen Patnaik shows that farmers in State have been under ‘Kalia’ (Lord Jagannath) mercy. After all, it’s the natural disasters that break the farmers’ spine to repay its debt,” rued farmer leader and NNKS convenor Akshaya Kumar. How the farmers in Odisha are in economic crisis here is evident from the data available with the State Government’s Department of Economic and Statistics (DES). The DES data shows farmers’ real income has dwindled over years in Odisha as the total value of their crop products has dipped by around 5 per cent to around Rs 26,849 crore in 2016-17 from over Rs 28,440 crore in 2012-13 at 2011-12 prices. The inference then is real income of crop-farmers in the State has eroded during last half-decade. Another important fact to take note of is the contribution of net value added by crops to total Net State Domestic Product (NSDP) of Odisha during last half decade has dipped to 10.6 per cent in 2016-17 from nearly 12 per cent in 2011-12. This significant pointer brings to fore that per capita income of crop-farmers in Odisha has actually declined, despite nearly 29 per cent rise in per capita income of the State during the period 2012-17. In the given context, where farmers in State have faced double whammy of natural disaster and declining net income that together having curtailed farmers’ repaying ability on debt owned; demand of loan waiver, at least in affected districts, has then gained momentum on the ground. Source - https://www.dailypioneer.com

24.12.2018

China - Pollutants from wildfires affect crop and vegetation growth

The startling extent to which violent wild fires, similar to those that ravaged large swathes of California recently, affect forests and crops way beyond the boundaries of the blaze has been revealed. A pioneering new study by Professor Nadine Unger of the University of Exeter and Professor Xu Yue of the Institute of Atmospheric Physics in Beijing, has revealed that pollutants released by the devastating wild fires can affect crop and vegetation growth hundreds of kilometres from the fire impact zone. The study examined how ozone and aerosols—two by-product pollutants of wildfires—influences healthy plant growth in areas that are seemingly unaffected by the destructive natural disasters. It found that there was a significant reduction in plant productivity in areas far away from the fire's borders. The study suggests that fire pollution could pose an increasing threat to regional, and even global, productivity in the warming future world. Professor Unger, from the University of Exeter's Mathematics department said: "The impacts of these wildfires on public health has been widely recognized, but the impact they also have on our ecosystems is less known. "What we have found is that the pollutants released by these fires impact plants in areas way beyond the boundaries of the disaster. Globally, over the past decade, fire ozone pollution reduced plant productivity substantially more than estimated drought losses." The impact of fire on the Earth's carbon budget has been well documented. Each year, global fires directly emit large amounts of carbon directly into the atmosphere. This immediate carbon loss is partially compensated by a boost in new ecosystem productivity, driven by changes to canopy composition and soil respiration. Indirect carbon loss caused by fire O3 and aerosols.  For the study, scientists used state-of-the-art computer models, together with a vast array of existing measurement datasets, to assess the separate and combined effects of fire pollutants from 2002-11. It found that the Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) - essentially plant photosynthesis—was significantly reduced when the amount of surface ozone increases. Crucially, this reduction in GPP was not confined to the areas immediately in and surrounding the fires. It found that areas downwind from the fires, hundreds of kilometres away, experienced significantly reduced plant productivity. Crops and vegetation in sub-Saharan Africa were identified as a particularly vulnerable hot spots to fire ozone pollution damage. The study suggests that the ecological impacts of this air pollution is far greater than previously thought—potentially impacting crop production that is crucial to the survival of rural, remote communities. Professor Unger added: "To the extent that we are worried about fire particulate pollution affecting human respiratory health, we need to be concerned about fire ozone pollution damaging forest and agricultural productivity downwind. We are now using the UK Met Office Hadley Centre Earth System Model to predict how increasing fire activity, air pollution, and drought affect the ability of the land surface to grow food and to take up carbon dioxide in the future warmer world." Source - https://phys.org

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