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18.12.2018

Argentina - Peach production expected to be 10% lower next year

The Rural Development Institute (IDR) has estimated next year's peach harvest. According to the IDR, production is expected to be slightly lower than that the 127,241 tons achieved in the previous year, distributed as follows: According to the data, there will be an important decrease the South oasis, where two thirds of the expected harvest was lost. According to the IDR study, this decrease was probably caused by the spring frosts, though it is important to take into account that the harvest in the South and East have always been smaller than in the Uco Valley, because of the technology used on the crops and the soils. In the Eastern Oasis, the decrease was also significant, while in the Uco Valley the harvest, in terms of volume, is similar to that of the previous year. The yield in the are is 26.4 tons / hectare, against 9 tons / hectare in the South. This shows a total variation of 9.3% for peach. Sizes expected The fruit that has a good size is used by the halved-peaches industry, and has the best price, while the smaller peach is used by the pulp industry. According to this year's crop estimate, only 3% of the fruit will have a size that is smaller than 57.1 mm in diameter. Next year, 34% of the fruit will have that size. Context Mendoza is the only province in the country that produces peaches for industry and positions Argentina as the 4th or 5th world producer. The peaches for industry are the yellow peaches that have a pulp that is suitable for industrialization, but that can also be destined to the fresh market and sold in stores and supermarkets. The industry uses peaches in two products, mainly: to produce halved-peaches and pulps. The big size peaches with no defects are used to produce halved-peaches, while the smaller, slush, or over-ripe peaches (which are paid at a lower price) are used to make pulp. The sector includes almost 1,000 producers throughout the province and about 20 canning or concentrating companies. The harvest takes place between January and the first days of April, and in the lat years the average volumes achieved oscillated around 150,000 tons of fresh fruit. The Uco Valley is the main productive oasis. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

18.12.2018

Turkey - Harvest in the fields after heavy rain

Farmers in Tarsus, a town based in the south Turkish city of Mersin, began harvesting their products in the fields damaged by heavy rains. As fields are flooded, farmers in Tarsus started an early harvest to salvage their products. Not only did the heavy rains flood the greenhouse lands, it also disrupted everyday life in town. Farmers collected cabbage, spinach, aubergines and peppers that were not damaged by the rains. Ali Ergezer, President of Tarsus Chamber of Agriculture said that the area is important for greenhouse cultivation and that it is one of the biggest producers in Turkey. Ergezer said farmers grow vegetables in an area of 5 thousand hectares. "Due to rain, we have damage in a field of 5 to 6 thousand hectares. Heavy rain have affected our vegetables. These greenhouse cultivations are not modern, and some of them are not even insured. They definitely need to be insured." Ergezer added. Aubergines and zucchinis are the ones that have been damaged the most in the flooded fields. Ergezer said that farmers started an early harvest to salvage their products. Stating that farmers are now struggling to harvest in difficult conditions Ergezer said: "We don't know about the quality of the production yet, but this will affect the pricing for sure. We expect to be compensated. We will have a lot of costs when we plant vegetables again. This extra cost will increase the price at which we sell the product." "My fields are flooded" Hüseyin Karabiyik, a farmer in the area said that they have already started to harvest zucchinis a while ago. However, due to rains they had to stop the harvest and now they wait, he added. "Greenhouses are completely filled with water to a depth of 1 meter. I have a field of 2 hectares. All of it is now under water. We lost about 100 thousand Turkish Lira (16.440 Euro). These will be removed and new saplings will be planted. We'll wait for the water to drain away. Last year we had the same problem. In this case, we usually have to wait for about 20 to 25 days. Therefore, we will not be able to plant again at least for a month." said Karabiyik. Ibrahim Esin, another farmer in the area indicated that zucchinis, peppers and aubergines have been damaged to a great extent. Pointing to the difficult harvesting conditions in the mud, Esin said that he'll try to salvage what's left of their devastated crops. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

17.12.2018

Germany - Farmers wait for aid, months after drought

The swelteringly hot summer of 2018 has long since given way to the early chills of winter in Germany but the effects of the damaging drought that gripped the country from May to August are still being felt by the country's farmers. While around 8,000 farmers have applied for emergency aid so far — as promised to them by the government in August — no money has yet been paid out, the German Farmers' Union (DBV) confirmed on Friday. "I can tell you that no money has actually been paid out yet. We've said all along that the procedure involved is far too bureaucratic and time-consuming," said DBV spokesman Axel Finkenwirth. When the extent of the crop losses and damages wrought by the crisis became apparent in August, both national and local government pledged emergency state aid to the tune of €340 million ($384 million) to assist the most severely affected farmers. An exceptionally hot May was followed by three months almost fully devoid of rain, and as a result, the harvest in various German states was drastically hit. The overall reduction in the country's grain harvest was down by around 25 percent while some states, such as Lower Saxony in the northwest, were hit even harder. Meeting the deadline "Based on the data we gathered from our regional associations, some 8,000 drought-stricken farms have so far applied for financial aid," said Finkenwirth. More than 4,000 applications for aid have been made in Lower Saxony alone, a state with a heavy agricultural focus that was severely affected by the drought. Saxony-Anhalt, which borders Lower Saxony, has the second highest number of applications so far. The deadline that affected farmers have to apply for aid by depends on the individual state, but most already fell in November. However with the deadlines for the states of North Rhine-Westphalia, Saxony, Bavaria and Hessen only falling in mid-December, a more accurate national figure will not be known until the volume of those applications are known. The Lower Saxony deadline was on November 30, and the early figures from those applications suggest that the average payout per farm in that state could be in the region of €21,000, according to Barbara Otte-Kinast, the local minister of agriculture. Of the 16 German states, farmers from just two — Saarland and Rhineland-Palatinate — are not eligible to apply for aid, with the drought having had limited effect in those two southwestern states. Harvest moan Back in August, the German government designated the crisis one of "national dimensions", opening up the legal pathway to national aid, which was subsequently complemented by aid at local state level. The threshold affected farms have to reach to be eligible is to have had more than 30 percent of their annual production destroyed. According to the joint national-local aid agreement, a maximum of 50 percent of losses could be replaced by government aid. The drought has been the source of tensions between the German government and the DBV. The farmers' union had called for assistance of €1 billion, three times more than the eventual figure agreed to by the German Minister for Agriculture Julia Klöckner. Even with aid being granted, the DBV remains critical of the way in which the claims for financial assistance are being handled. "That so many applications are made despite the high hurdles, shows that the help is needed," said DBV President Joachim Rukwied in a statement earlier this week. "But in the long term, that's not a solution. We need to strengthen the risk management of companies." However, not all in Germany have shown universal sympathy for the farmers' plight. Several environmental groups such as World Wildlife Fund Germany, criticized the farmers' call for aid at the height of the crisis, suggesting they should diversify their businesses rather than focusing on monocultures which are always at the mercy of extreme weather events. Source - https://www.dw.com

17.12.2018

USA - 'Unusually wet' season spells harvest delays for Marion County farmers

Unusually wet weather this year has kept some Marion County farmers in the fields well into December, trying to harvest the last of their crop. Roger Groll, who farms corn and soybeans outside Waldo, spent much of the day Wednesday in the fields, trying to harvest his remaining soybeans. "This is the latest I've ever harvested soybeans. I've never harvested soybeans in December," he said. "In Marion County, that's highly unusual." The month of November was "unusually wet," Groll said, with hardly any days to harvest soybeans that month. Now, in December, he, like other farmers in Marion County and across Ohio, is rushing to get his crops out of the field and into the storage bin. The National Weather Service does not have an official site in Marion and does not keep official score of rain and snow totals here, but meteorologist Patrick Saunders said that precipitation has been "well above average" in the region. In Cleveland and Youngstown, precipitation totals so far this year are the fifth highest on record, Saunders said. As of Monday, Newark was a little over an inch away from its 1990 record for the most precipitation in a year. "It's been a pretty wet year," Saunders said. "I think the same can be said for most of Ohio, too." Tim Barnes, the agriculture and natural resources educator at Marion County's Ohio State University Extension, said normally, the harvest is completed by Dec. 1, if not before. "The last two weeks, there was probably more (unharvested crops) out there than in previous years," he said. For many farmers, it's been a constant "back-and-forth" with the weather, said Abra Dunn, Marion County's organization director for the Ohio Farm Bureau. "The ground froze earlier this week, so people were able to get some stuff done, but then it thawed again," she said. "Just the ability to get in the fields — it's just been really muddy." On Wednesday, Groll said he probably had about 15 percent of his corn and soybean crops left to harvest. The weather was cold enough Wednesday that Groll was able to get into the field and harvest the rest of his soybeans. But because of the moisture in the air, the soybean crops have not had a chance to dry as they normally do. "The soybeans, after all this rain, their moisture is running 17.5 percent moisture to 22 percent, and you start looking at a dock of over $1 a bushel because of what it takes to get them dried," Groll said. Beans have to be between 13 and 14 percent moisture to receive full price at the grain elevators where they are sold. The wetter the beans, the less money the farmer takes home, he said. Groll said he took a load of soybeans to market Wednesday with about 17 1/2 percent moisture and was docked about $1.08 per bushel. With a load being between 900 and 950 bushels, that means he made about $1,000 less because of the excess moisture. Barnes, the extension educator, said that the wet weather can also cause a drop in quality of soybeans. If a soybean absorbs too much moisture, the pods can pop open, allowing fungi or other foreign material to damage the bean. That can cause farmers to lose money at market when selling their beans. If a load of soybeans is found to have too much damage, farmers may be docked a set number of cents per bushel. On the bright side though, Marion County farmers have experienced "above average yields" this year, Barnes said, which could help offset any losses to their bottom lines from lower quality crops harvested later in the season. Source - https://www.marionstar.com

17.12.2018

Australia - Farmers seek compensation over claims chemical contamination of herbicides wiped out vegetable crops

Some of Australia's biggest vegetable farmers are fighting for compensation, claiming their food crops were decimated by contaminated herbicides. Multinational chemical companies Syngenta and Nufarm recalled tens of thousands of litres of tainted herbicide in late 2016 and early 2017. The products are commonly used on a range of vegetable crops including spring onions, leeks, carrots, celery and corn to control weeds. They contained impurities from different herbicides, which have been traced back to the manufacturer. But not before many farmers unwittingly sprayed the polluted products on their farms. The national agrochemical regulator says the contaminants don't pose a risk to human health, if used according to instructions. But some growers claim the toxic mix-up wiped out many tonnes of valuable produce. 'Huge financial stress' One farmer, who doesn't want to be named, says his business and his family have been devastated by the contamination. "The crops just weren't performing, they weren't growing as they should, they were just slow or stunted, pale." He says agricultural experts have ruled out other potential causes, and tests suggest chemicals are to blame. "The herbicide is doing the damage. I'm very confident of that," the farmer said. "We lost crops, we've lost income from that, we're under huge financial stress. "It hurt our family and our partnerships and it's hurt relationships with other farmers and other people in the industry. "It's something that I wish had never happened." He is seeking compensation for the losses and says he is afraid to be identified for fear of a consumer backlash and punitive action by the chemical companies. A family struggle The Victorian Farmers Federation (VFF) is concerned for the farmer's welfare. President of the VFF's horticulture group Emma Germano says it's taking a toll on his whole family. "Farming businesses are generally family businesses, and to see an entire family struggle with this has been very difficult," she said. "The amount of stress that he's under and his family is under, and his extended family is under, is incredible. "Watching this farmer go through such an incredible amount of financial and psychological stress has been the thing that we've been most concerned about for him," she said. He's not the only farmer in dispute with the chemical companies over the allegations of crop damage. Contamination in court A major Victorian vegetable grower has taken his claim that contaminated herbicides wiped out his crops to the Supreme Court of Victoria. Court documents show Riviera Farms is claiming contaminated batches of Syngenta's Gesagard and Primextra Gold products spoiled carrot and corn crops. The farm business is suing Syngenta and manufacturing company Accensi. The contamination stemmed from a manufacturing fault at the Accensi factory where the herbicides were made and the company has been fined $100,000. Defence documents show Syngenta and Accensi deny the allegations. They're blaming the crop failures on improper herbicide application and other farm-management failures. Recall process slammed One of the allegations in Riviera Farms' statement of claim is that the farm was never notified of the herbicide recall. A number of farmers and agricultural experts have criticised the recall process as inadequate and secretive. The companies didn't advertise the withdrawal but instead asked their chemical retailers to contact growers The VFF's Ms Germano says attempts to let farmers know did not go far enough. "When this recall happened, it was a very piecemeal approach," she said. "It wasn't reported widely enough. We're concerned about the fact that the recall just essentially didn't have farmers at its core. "The Victorian Farmers Federation was not told about this recall." Ms Germano says some producers may still be unaware of the recall. "We think that there needs to be a very clear recall process. If you want everyone to know about something that's a problem, you make sure that everybody knows about it," she said. 'In severe distress' US-based agricultural consultant and herbicide expert Chuck Kupatt says he's seen crop damage on one of the affected farms. "I saw plants that were in severe distress, were not growing in many instances, that would never form a crop," he said. Mr Kupatt says the testing suggests chemical contaminants are the cause. "What I've seen would support that there's damaging levels of residual compounds in that soil," he said. It's now almost two years since the recall and Mr Kupatt says the issue should have been resolved by now. "Everything is done in good faith, both when the companies develop the products, and when the farmers purchase them and use them," he said. "But if there's a mistake, we have to put our big-boy pants on and say, 'Yeah, OK, we had a problem and we'll take care of the situation'." 'Unpredictable brew' Mr Kupatt says the contaminants are chemicals that can be found in other herbicides for different crops. But he said most of them would not normally be applied to the vegetable crops they were used on. "Some of the contaminants that are on that list would generally not be used in vegetable culture because there is no tolerance to the crop," he said. "Which means if you spray them on the crop, you can get damage." Mr Kupatt says there is little or no independent science on how the contaminants might act in combination with each other, or with the active ingredients in the herbicide. "Now that's probably the biggest questions here … nobody would have ever thought to research those combinations," he said. "There's several different types of chemistry here with many different modes of action. "If you had any combination of these, you're probably going to have a pretty unpredictable brew when you have them all put together into a product. So putting five or six of them together is a really, really difficult situation." 'Cocktail of herbicides' Agricultural consultant David Bell has been employed by a number of farmers concerned about chemical contamination to provide expert advice. He says farmers are afraid to speak out about the problem. "These are very, very large multinational chemical companies, who wield big sticks in the industry," he said. He says the mix of chemicals means there could be a multiplication effect going on. "What we've got is a cocktail of herbicides in the drums," he said. "We've got a poor plant trying to outgrow one herbicide, then being whacked by a second or third or even fourth or fifth herbicide." He too says he's seen the personal toll the dispute is taking. "I see farmers stand in paddocks with tears running down their face, looking at crops that these farmers take pride in growing," he said. "Their crops are literally dying before their eyes … These are very, very good vegetable farmers that are struggling to have people understand that it's the herbicides that have caused the damage to their farms." Call for inquiry Independent agricultural and herbicide expert John Seidel said it would be very difficult to prove the combination of chemical contaminants was totally safe for crops. "When you put it in different soil types … the amount of breakdown depends on microbial action, on amount of rainfall, and a lot of factors come into play," he said. "I think it needs a bit more due diligence, a bit more stewardship from the companies to find out exactly what is going on here." John Seidel says an independent inquiry is needed. "They could get an independent umpire to look into it, and that would satisfy both parties," he said. "If you had someone independent gathering the information, and the company has got nothing to hide, that would be wonderful for them as well." Companies say they acted swiftly In a statement Syngenta defended the way it carried out the recall. It said the company, "does not have access to the contact details of every farmer" in Australia and that it went through herbicide retailers because of their direct access to farmers. Syngenta said this course of action was in accordance with the voluntary recall guidelines of the national agrochemical regulator, the APVMA. The company also said it carried out its own scientific risk assessments, which confirmed the contamination posed an extremely low risk to the environment, crops or animals. And that this information was provided to the APVMA as part of the voluntary recall process. Syngenta said it was dealing with two claims from vegetable growers. The company also said it had appointed an independent research agronomist to help address potential concerns from growers about the withdrawn batches of contaminated herbicide, and that those discussions would be confidential. Nufarm said it was alerted to the problem by a grower's report of crop damage and that it swiftly notified the APVMA and conducted a thorough voluntary recall. Nufarm said in its recall notice that use of the affected herbicides might result in crop damage, and offered free testing of produce and soil. The company said it used a range of methods to reach growers who might have used the contaminated product, including contacting chemical retailers, peak horticultural bodies and, in some cases, farmers directly. Nufarm said it had worked with growers who made claims on a case-by-case basis, and that only one claim remained outstanding. Accensi declined to comment, as did the Federal Agriculture Minister, David Littleproud. Process needs to be 'robust' Since the recall, the APVMA has made changes to recall processes and now publishes voluntary recalls on its website. But critics say it's not enough, and that advertising of all recalls should be compulsory. While this contamination didn't spark human health concerns from authorities, affected farmers say it has raised questions about the adequacy of agrochemical regulation in Australia. Ms Germano says there are rules in place to protect farmers and food safety, but its important to make sure those rules are working. "We saw that there was an improvement in the process, through the APVMA when this incident occurred," she said. "But we just want to make sure that this process is really robust. "Mistakes happen, but we need to be able to deal with that when it happens." It's too late for farmers who say they've suffered as a result of this contamination. One farmer, who wanted to remain anonymous, told the it was not up to growers to take on the chemical giants when things like this go wrong. He said the APVMA should be protecting farmers from damaging incidents like this and the companies involved should be more helpful. "I speak to a number of growers around Victoria and Australia," he said. "It certainly hurt a lot of businesses, and some can't afford to fight it, and some just can't win the battle … They knew there was damage, they should've helped growers a lot more. "It was handled badly and we've got to learn from this … The next time it happens, and it will happen again, it's got to be handled better." Source - https://www.abc.net.au

17.12.2018

Spain - 50% drop in kaki production

Due to the persistent rainfall during the current season, kaki producers have been forced to start the harvest at least a week earlier. The harvest of Rojo Brillante kakis in Spain's main producing areas will consequently be finished in ten or twelve days. According to Pascual Prats, president of the Spanish Kaki Association, this has generally not taken a toll on the quality of the fruit. But since so much water has fallen, the trees have lost their leaves faster and the trees suffer root asphyxia. The campaign has been marked by climatic adversities, especially by frost and hail, which have caused the production volume to fall by approximately 50% compared to what was initially expected. As a result of this, the prices are good and the supply is easily absorbed by the market. "Sales are going smoothly and prices are good, but we believe that they do not really reflect this year's great shortage," says Pascual Prats. According to the representative of this association, around 80% of the Spanish kaki production is exported. The fall in the production has also caused exporters to focus more on the largest markets for this fruit, which are currently in Europe. "There have been fewer shipments per container to overseas destinations, as we first want to meet the demand from European supermarkets, which are the ones importing the largest volumes. In the new markets outside the EU, orders are more limited," he says. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

17.12.2018

Spain - Potato production down by 15-20%

The FEPEX Potato Committee, which met this week in Madrid, confirmed that this year's production will be between 15% and 20% smaller than last year. It also analyzed the prospects for the next season, in which the price of the seed will be decisive, and prepared the sector's participation in the next international meetings. With regard to the 2018 campaign, which has just come to an end, it was confirmed that the 15% to 20% fall in the production compared to 2017 was mainly due to the adverse weather conditions. The fall has been recorded in the main producing regions: Castile-Leon, Andalusia and Murcia. Regarding the 2019 campaign, the Committee said that it is not yet possible to predict the acreage or the production volume, since Andalusia, which is the earliest region, is only starting with the planting, and Castile-Leon won't start until March. However, it was pointed out that the high price of seeds will be decisive, especially for the potatoes intended for processing. It is worth noting that the seed accounts for a high share of the production cost. According to the president of this committee, Jose Ramón Aguado, the price of seeds has risen by 15-30%, and this will be one of the key factors to be taken into account for 2019. The FEPEX Potato Committee also looked into the sector's participation in the next international meetings, especially that of Europatat, the European Potato Trade Association, which defends the interests of its partners in the potato market at a European level. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

17.12.2018

India - Rains hit tur harvest in Karnataka[:ru]Au

Heavy unseasonal rains in Kalaburgi, north eastern Karnataka, which is a key producing region for tur (red gram) has hit the standing pulses crop, inflicting losses to growers, who were already reeling under the impact of a weak monsoon. “Tur is currently being harvested in the region. The heavy rains have spoilt the harvest and also the standing crop. The government should immediately take up the assessment of crop losses and compensate the farmers,” said Basavaraj Ingin, President, Karnataka Red Gram Growers Association. The tur crop-loss is expected to hit supply, and is likely to result in an uptrend in prices of the pulses crop, as the demand is expected to pick up ahead of Pongal. The new crop arrivals have begun, with rates in the range of ₹4,800-5,100 per quintal, still lower than the MSP of ₹5,600, said Santosh Langar, a dal miller in Kalaburgi. Arrivals are expected to gain pace by the end of December. Prices of the old crop are traded around ₹4,500-4,600 per quintal. Maruti Manpade, a farmer leader, said the Centre should increase the compensation provided to farmers due to natural calamity from the current ₹6,800 per hectare to at least ₹25,000. The rains may help the standing rabi jowar crop, but could impact the gram crop in the region. A low pressure in the Bay of Bengal could also bring more rains. Source - https://www.thehindubusinessline.com

14.12.2018

Africa - Agricultural insurance often falls on stony ground

Jackson Lewangu looks up at the clouds scudding above the dry plains of northern Kenya. And, somewhere higher still, a satellite looks down on him. Since 2012 Mr Lewangu, who keeps goats and cattle, has bought insurance designed by the International Livestock Research Institute, based in Nairobi. The satellite monitors vegetation; when it is unusually scarce, he gets a payout. He can then buy food for his animals or pay a rancher for access to grazing land, without which his cows would die. Insurance could bring peace of mind to Africa’s pastoralists. It could also help the continent’s crop farmers, whose fields are almost entirely rain-fed. But Mr Lewangu’s neighbours are unconvinced. The satellite gives false information, says one woman; there is no payout in good years, complains another. Such scepticism is typical. Although schemes have proliferated in the past decade, almost all are subsidised by governments or foreign donors. Insurers and farmers are “not speaking the same language”, says Rahab Kariuki of acre Africa, a Kenyan firm that works with both. Lack of demand has muted the hype around index insurance, an innovative way to cover smallholders. Data on rainfall or sample yields are crunched; a payout is triggered when an index falls below a threshold. That is cheaper than assessing farmers’ losses, or checking if nomads’ cows have died. And since farmers cannot control the rain, there is less “moral hazard”: changes in their behaviour cannot make a payout more likely. But the models make assumptions, for example about when farmers plant or how rainfall affects yields. And no model can capture all risks. Buyers may lose their crops and still get nothing, ending up worse off than if they had been uninsured. Such flaws may be sufficiently serious to mean that the most risk-averse farmers will buy less insurance, argues a 2016 paper by Daniel Clarke, then of the World Bank. Demand is lower from pastoralists in Kenya whose losses have been underestimated by the index in the past. Insurance is an unfamiliar concept in rural Africa. It is also an unsettling one, asking buyers to pay in advance for a return they hope not to need. That is a problem where trust is low, fraud common and the law remote. Another barrier to take-up is that premiums are typically paid before planting, when farmers are poorest. One trial offered insurance to sugar-cane growers in Kenya. Only 5% signed up when they had to pay the premium upfront. More than 70% did when payment was deducted from their sales at harvest, even though they had to sign up at planting time, before knowing whether they would need it. Some firms are finding clients. Pula, a startup, bundles insurance with other products. In Zambia and Malawi it is in partnership with Bayer, which sells seed. Farmers register by phone, using a unique number attached to each bag of seed; some 130,000 are expected to do so this season. For now Bayer absorbs the cost. But trials by Pula in Nigeria, this time with fertiliser, suggest that farmers will pay more for insured bags. The extra cost seems small to those already forking out for inputs, says Thomas Njeru, one of Pula’s founders. Meanwhile governments and donors must decide when to subsidise, and how much. Some insurance is so badly designed that it is less useful than cash, says Michael Carter of the University of California, Davis. Well-designed insurance prods farmers to invest more in seed and fertiliser, because they are less worried about being wiped out by drought. Mr Carter and his colleagues are designing a certification system to sort the wheat from the chaff. Good experiences may ultimately sway farmers. Women near Kitui in eastern Kenya used to survive droughts by walking 5km to the river with a donkey, bringing back water to sell at 1 shilling ($0.01) a litre. In the past two years they have received payouts from an insurance scheme run by the World Food Programme, Pula and the government. This too is subsidised. But when asked if they would pay the full premium, almost all say yes. Source - https://www.economist.com

14.12.2018

China - Egg-sized hailstones in Jinghexiang, Yunnan

An innocent rain shower in Jinghaxiang, Yunnan, suddenly turned into a hailstorm at around six in the afternoon of December 9th. Local agricultural production areas suffered severe damage, and local farmers suffered severe losses. Local news reports damage to 50 houses and more than 26 hectares of crops. The overall economic damage is estimated at 2.6 million yuan [380 thousand USD]. Crops damaged by hailstones Qiu Runhua, a spokesperson for Xishuangbanna Jinsuisheng Agricultural Investment Co., Ltd. explained that the people in Jinghaxiang mainly plant peppers and beans. Banana plantation occurs on a small scale. The hailstorm therefore had little effect on the banana industry. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

14.12.2018

Australia - Farmers claim forecast rain will not break the drought

Central Victoria is forecast to receive up to 50 millimetres of rain on Thursday. Colin and Suzanne Pickering are facing a disaster if the forecast wet weather hits. Their premium cherries at their Harcourt North orchard, due to ripen in the next few days, are vulnerable to wet weather. If heavy rain hits overnight on Thursday it could cause the cherries skin to swell and split, and ruin over half of their crop. Once the cherry is split, there’s almost nothing you can do with it, Mrs Pickering said. They’re so worthless she just throws them on the ground when picking. The premium black star cherries are one of the 12 varieties the orchard grows which ripen progressively from mid-November to January. The Pickerings were fortunate to come out of Sunday’s rain with most of their previous crops intact. Mrs Pickering attributes this lucky escape to the fact that the cherries were not quite ripe, meaning the cherries did not swell beyond the capacity of their skins. Humid dry condition which could follow storms also makes cherries vulnerable to brown rot. Mrs Pickering said she hopes the Bureau of Meteorology’s forecasts are mistaken, but that after 20 years of cherry farming she knows there’s no point worrying: “At the end of the day, there’s nothing you can do about it. I’m just really hoping that they’ve got it wrong.” Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

14.12.2018

Comparison between open field and greenhouse tomatoes

A Spanish study on the adaptation of long shelf-life Mediterranean tomatoes grown in greenhouses and open fields was issued on 4th December 2018. Long shelf-life tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) landraces, characterized by carrying the alc allele in the NOR.NAC locus, have been traditionally cultivated in the Mediterranean region. These materials are adapted to open field conditions under low input conditions. However, cultivation under greenhouse is expanding fueled by increasing demand of these traditional tomatoes. "We hypothesized that the large diversity in the long shelf-life landraces and derived materials can be exploited for adaptation to these new cultivation conditions. We have evaluated 12 varieties (seven landraces, three selections and two hybrids) carrying the alcmutation under open field (OF) and greenhouse (GH) cultivation, and evaluated them for 52 morphological, agronomic, chemical properties, and chemical composition descriptors," explained researchers from Universitat Politècnica de València. "All descriptors, except six morphological ones, were variable. The variety effect was the greatest contributor to variation for most morphological traits, as well as for fruit weight, fruit shape, dry matter, and soluble solids content. However, significant environmental and genotype × environment interaction were found for 36 and 42 descriptors, respectively." Fruits from GH plants had lower weight and firmness and were less red than those from OF. On average, in GH yield was 35% lower and daily fruit weight loss in post-harvest 41% higher than in OF. However, fruits from GH had on average higher dry matter and soluble solids contents, antioxidant activity, glucose, fructose, and ascorbic acid concentrations, but lower contents in lycopene and β-carotene than those from OF. A principal components analysis clearly separated varieties according to the cultivation environment. However, the distribution pattern of varieties within each of the two clusters (GH and OF) was similar, despite the strong G × E interaction for many descriptors. "The results reveal a high impact of the cultivation environment on morphological, agronomic, chemical properties, and chemical composition of Mediterranean long shelf-life traditional tomato varieties. This suggests that breeding programs specifically focused to adaptation to greenhouse conditions should be developed." Source - https://www.freshplaza.com

14.12.2018

India - Gujarat farmers in 401 drought-hit villages suffered over 33% crop loss

There are 401 villages in Gujarat where farmers have suffered crop loss of 33 per cent or more during this year’s Kharif season. The latest State Level Bankers’ Committee (SLBC) report that was unveiled on Thursday show that the farmers incurred crop losses despite the state government’s efforts to provide Narmada water to save the Kharif crops after a poor monsoon. In a total of 269 villages, farmers have suffered crop loss of 50 per cent or more, states the SLBC report. These villages are spread across 11 districts where the state government declared 51 talukas as “drought-affected” in October, 2018. Though the total number of farmers suffering the crop loss has not been shared in the report, the maximum number of villages with 50 per cent or more crop loss are in the district of Kutch. About 90 villages in this  district fall in this category where all the 10 talukas were declared drought-affected  after they received less than 250 mm rainfall this monsoon. The other districts where farmers have suffered more than 50 per cent crop loss are Banaskantha (49 villages), Surendranagar (42), Morbi (30), Patan (27), Rajkot (11), Devbhoomi Dwarka (10), Bhavnagar (6) and Jamnagar (4). Only Ahmedabad and Mehsana districts have no villages in this category. Similarly, there are 132 additional villages where farmers have suffered crop loss between 33 and 50 per cent. Most of these villages fall in the district of Patan (59 villages), Banaskantha (27) and Mehsana (24). The state government has already declared that it will be spending Rs 5,100 crore in these 51 talukas to help the farmers tide over the crop loss. This includes a lump-sum amount of Rs 6,500 per hectare to every farmer in these talukas. The Government of India will also be pitching in aid for this purpose. Even farmers outside the 11 districts have complained of crop loss. Pratap Khistariya whose family owns about 58 bighas of land near Ranavav in Porbandar district told The Indian Express, “We lost most of our groundnut crop that we had sown during the Kharif season. So as we continue to not have enough water for irrigation, we are not taking the Rabi crop this year.” Reducing coverage of PMFBY Interestingly the performance of Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) during the last three Kharif seasons between 2016-18 shows a 7.4 per cent dip in the number of farmers applying for crop insurance, but a phenomenal 67 per cent increase in the quantum of premiums collected from the farmers. The SLBC report shows that the number of PMFBY applications from farmers dipped from 12,98,161 in Kharif 2016 to 12,02,097 applications in Kharif 2018. The farm area covered under PMFBY also dipped by 13 per cent from 25.67 lakh hectares in Kharif 2016 to just 22.42 lakh hectares in Kharif 2018. In comparison, the premiums collected from farmers under PMFBY rose from Rs 224.30 crore in 2016 to Rs 374.91 crore in 2018. When quizzed about the trend, Rohit Patel, the convener of SLBC-Gujarat, claimed that the variations are due to farmers opting for crops, which are not covered under the scheme that was launched in February 2016 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The State Level Bankers’ Committee report also points out that the state government after declaring the drought has also “called for information about crop loan financed during the period from April 1 to September 30, 2018.” Gujarat government is also providing 19,000 cusecs of Narmada water for irrigation for the ongoing Rabi season where the sowing has so far been lacklustre. Source - https://indianexpress.com

14.12.2018

Zimbabwe - Hailstorm destroys $600 000 tobacco

Tobacco with an estimated an estimated value of $600 000 was shredded, just days before harvest, by a hailstorm that lashed Odzi areas recently. The intense storm shattered at least 30 hectares of irrigated crop along its path. The worst affected were Dobropoulos Farm, owned by commercial farmer and tobacco grower Mr Peter Dobropoulos and Retired General Mike Nyambuya’s farm. Both farms are in Odzi belt of Mutasa district and the cumulative damage was preliminarily estimated at $600 000. The growers were agonising under the hail storm effect and insurers were still assessing the full extent of the cumulative losses. As the rainfall lashed the area, farmers initially received it as a blessing, but the joy was short-lived after it suddenly dashed their hopes of a bumper harvest as the ripening crop was decimated completely. The sensitive and flourishing tobacco leaves were shredded, pock-marked, ripped and pruned by hail stones. The crop will not rebound. Mr Dobropoulos told The Manica Post that he lost over $400 000 of first grade tobacco irrigated tobacco. “I lost about $400 000 worth of tobacco. The tobacco was a complete write-off; it was a 100 percent loss. “The crop was destroyed by a massive and intense hailstorm that lashed Odzi last week, and my insurance company is conducting an assessment and hopefully this week they will be done,” he said. The provincial Agritex tobacco specialist Mr Douglas Nzarayebani also confirmed the reports of tobacco destruction. “We have received reports from Mutasa district indicating that two distinctive tobacco growers — Mr Peter Dobropoulos and Rtd Gen Mike Nyambuya lost 20 and 10 hectares of high value ripening tobacco respectively. The crop was completely decimated. “About 10 hectares of irrigated tobacco was destroyed at Rtd Gen Mike Nyambuya’s farm while 20 ha were lost at Mr Dobropoulos’ farm,” he said. Mr Nzarayebani said the losses would certainly affect tobacco projections in the province. “Unfortunately we are not going to get what we had projected, and in this scenario production has already gone down by 80 000kgs,” he said. Tobacco Industry and Marketing Board (TIMB) spokesperson Mr Isheunesu Moyo said the board had received numerous reports of tobacco that had been destroyed by hailstorms nationwide and urged tobacco growers to insure their crop. Mr Moyo said the irri gated crop is the most affected because it matured before the rains. “When the rains come, the irrigated crop is more prone to hailstorms in its final stages. “TIMB is aware of the tobacco destructions by hailstorms and we advise the growers to insure their crop. Fortunately, most of the prominent farmers who lost their tobacco are insured. We are, however, worried that these losses will eventually affect the 2018/19 tobacco harvest projections,” said Mr Moyo. Source - https://www.thezimbabwedaily.com

13.12.2018

Australia - Hail and storms are always on the radar

Hail insurance is a regular factor for Bindi Bindi farmer Toby Ellis, who said he wouldn’t sleep at night if his crop wasn’t covered. After losing up to 50 per cent of his canola to hail in the first week of November, Mr Ellis then lost 350 hectares of wheat and lupins in a storm that passed through early last week. “We seem to be in the line of it at the moment,” Mr Ellis said. “I hate to say it but we usually get hail and we are starting to get used to it. “The number of claims we have had over the past seven or eight years is quite a few. “I would say probably every second year we are having hail events like this and we seem to be on a path that the storms go through.” Mr Ellis said the main damage happened at his block closer to Calingiri with some paddocks completely wiped out. “It looks like a bomb has gone off down there,” he said. “I was up at Bindi Bindi where we had fires and we put all those out. “Then my neighbour at Calingiri called me and said you might want to come down and have a look at the crops – a lot of them are 100pc gone.” Mr Ellis said there may be a little less damage on other parts of the crops but it would still have to be assessed. “We will still get to harvest after we have claimed, but it depends how bad it is,” he said. “Some of the stuff I saw at Calingiri I won’t bother putting a header into because it’s 100pc gone. “I haven’t checked the paddocks completely but we might have to drive the header around and pick up what we can in the wheat and lupins. “But a lot of it’s on the ground and I’m not going to bother.” The thunderstorm didn’t deliver a lot of rain to the Calingiri area with only nine millimetres falling on Mr Ellis’s block. It seems a cockeye bob tore through Mr Ellis's shed last week completely destroying the structure. “It was more hail and wind that did the damage,” he said. “Our home block at Bindi Bindi only received a few millimetres so it was very isolated. “A few farmers less than a kilometres away had nothing at all, so it was just the luck of the draw.” But the main thing Mr Ellis lost was his shed. “It was a weird one because it actually blew down the opposite way to where the wind was coming from,” he said. “So the wind was coming from the north west but it’s almost as if a south east wind has picked it up and just thrown it.” Mr Ellis said they still have a fair way to go with their 3400ha program with about two to three weeks at Bindi Bindi and probably a week at Calingiri, or maybe less now. “When we get down there (Calingiri) we will see how bad it essentially is but the header will be searching a bit for grain,” he said. “We are usually done before Christmas but no way we are going to be this year with a very slow start to the season and it took a while to ripen everything up.” Source - https://www.farmweekly.com.au

13.12.2018

New Zealand - Maize failure after seeds fail to germinate

The next few weeks of weather will be make or break for Waikato maize growers after some crops have failed to germinate properly. A chemical treatment used on maize seeds sold under the Pioneer brand is being blamed for poor germination rates, prompting concerns it may impact crop yield when harvesting begins in early 2019. Genetic Technologies Limited, the company that produces the seeds, has launched an investigation. What effect it has on crop yield depends on how the rest of the season pans out, GTL maize product manager Barry McCarter​ said. Waikato is the largest maize growing region in NZ where it is mainly used as supplementary feed for the dairy industry. A lower yield would mean less feed available for farmers to feed out their stock if it turned into a dry summer. But a decrease in maize plant population did not necessarily mean an decrease in yield when harvested early next year because fewer plants meant the those that had germinated would have more space to grow. This could minimise the impact of crop losses, he said. "If it rains then in some cases you could get a near normal yield. The season from here on in a lot of cases will have the final bearing on yield." McCarter said he has seen some paddocks where the germination rates were down 30-40 per cent, but adding to the complexity was the variability among affected crops. Where a particular hybrid was impacted on one farm, that same hybrid was unaffected on another. "We have situations where there is seed on one paddock and it's fine and another where it has caused issues. It's bizarre as usually when you have a seed that is defective you expect to see a similar pattern of issues. "It's been really difficult to nail down." The chemical seed treatment blamed for the issues acts as a fungicide, insecticide and protection from birds. Such seed treatments are commonly used by commercial growers.​ The company's issue response manager Raewyn Densley​ said the issue was first noticed in early November when they received farmer feedback that some crops were not germinating properly. The affected growers were mostly in Waikato and there were some in the lower North Island and South Island. Waikato Federated Farmers arable chairman John Hodge said he noticed some minor germination issues on his own farm, but not enough to cause serious problems. He said the bout of cold weather in November appeared to have affected the seed by lowering soil temperatures and slowing germination. "The seed took a while to germinate and the chemical in it sat there for quite a while whereas if it was planted in moist soil, it tended to disperse it." This is a sentiment backed by Densley. "If you have a seed that's compromised, then the impact on the emergence will be greater under some growing conditions than others." Densley urged farmers to contact them if they suspected they had a problem. She said it was too early to discuss possible compensation to affected growers while they were still investigating.​ Source - https://www.stuff.co.nz/

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