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23.02.2018

Canada - Farmers face tough choice as clubroot invades canola fields

In Canada, rapeseed, better known in North America as canola, is a $26 billion industry. Grown mostly in the western prairie provinces, it's one of the nation's top moneymaking crops. But there's major problem looming over Canada's canola farmers. In 2003, a fungus that produces a disorder known as clubroot was discovered in Alberta. Clubroot has been around for centuries, especially in Europe; it is a swiftly-spreading fungus that causes large swells on the plants roots, and it’s most common among the brassica family of plants, which includes cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, kale, and canola. Clubroot, as a disease, sucks all the water and nutrients from the plant’s normal operations and redirects it to those big protuberances, which means the plant has fewer resources to grow strong and produce seeds. Today, the clubroot fungus is widespread throughout Alberta’s and Manitoba’s canola fields. This is potentially disastrous for two main reasons. First, clubroot fungus produces hundreds of millions of spores, which can spread very quickly. It’s estimated that yield loss is roughly half of the percentage of infected plants. In other words, if a farmer has an infection rate of 50 percent, that farmer will lose roughly 25 percent in yield. That’s a massive problem. Even worse, clubroot is incredibly adaptable and hard to eradicate. Changing the pH of the soil with lime can have some beneficial effects, but actual eradication is expensive and uncertain. Fungicide-resistant varieties of canola produced by big-Ag companies like Monsanto tend to be effective only briefly as the fungus quickly develops resistance. According to scientists, the best strategy is unfortunately not ideal—or even tenable—for many current canola farmers. Developing a crop rotation where canola is only planted every third or fourth year can effectively quarantine the fungus, preventing it from spreading. But that means farmers have to switch from the very lucrative canola crop to something like wheat or barley, which brings in far less money. And even worse, the fungus problem has driven up canola prices, so a farmer may be inclined to take a short-term view, plant a ton of canola, and sell whatever survives at a large profit—while allowing the fungus to spread. Source - https://modernfarmer.com

23.02.2018

New Zealand - Stink bug invasion could cost billions

An invasion of the brown marmorated stink bug - the pest discovered recently in three Japanese car shipments - would devastate New Zealand's fruit, vegetable and wine industries, destroying more than $4 billion of export value and costing thousands of jobs, according to a new report from the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research (NZIER). Over 100 of the stink bugs, which originate in Asia but have spread to the US and Europe, were found last week by Ministry of Primary Industries biosecurity staff in three car carriers that arrived at the dock in Auckland. But this is just the latest disturbing infestation. Border biosecurity patrols have discovered previously unheard of quantities of the imported beetles over the last two years. Of course, stink bugs are nothing new in New Zealand. Most gardeners will have come across our native bright green, shield-shaped stink bugs, which suck sap from your veges and give out a nasty smell when squashed. These insects, often called shield bugs are pretty harmless. Not so their mottled brown Asian cousins. A soon-to-be released report commissioned by Horticulture New Zealand from NZIER suggests that if the brown marmorated stink bug becomes established in New Zealand, real GDP could fall by a minimum of $3.6 billion over the next 20 years, and horticultural exports could fall by $4.2 billion a year. Chief executive of Horticulture New Zealand Mike Chapman is unequivocal - the insect must be kept out of New Zealand. "If this stink bug arrives in New Zealand, it's going to devastate our horticulture, it's going to devastate our food production, it's going to devastate our rural communities, it's going to infest our homes across the country, and not just rural homes, urban homes. "It's going to take out people's vegetable gardens, it's going to attack their flower gardens. This is one really nasty bug." Some farmers have compared the potential impact of the stink bug to that of foot and mouth disease outbreaks in animals; Mr Chapman likens it to the impact of the bacteria PSA, which devastated kiwifruit growers and workers. Only this infestation would be worse, he says, because it wouldn't be restricted to one industry, but would hit fruit and vegetable producers across the board. "It just eats everything. It is a very hungry little bug. It has been sweeping across the United States; it's swept through Europe. We are talking about long term effects here. We are talking about billions of dollars. We are talking about rural communities." NZ Winegrowers biosecurity and emergency response manager Dr Edwin Massey says it isn't clear why marmorated stink bug numbers have skyrocketed in countries like Japan, the US and Italy. But the more bugs multiply overseas, the more they hitchhike to New Zealand. Between 2014 and 2016, MPI staff found stink bugs 55 times at the borders. Now it's far more. "In terms of interceptions, we are well into the hundreds now, with that accounting for thousands of bugs. Most of those are dead, but this year there has also been an increase in the number of finds of a mixture of both dead and alive bugs, which is concerning." In the US, some farmers have reported crop losses of up to 90 percent when stink bugs move in. Source - https://www.radionz.co.nz

22.02.2018

Kenya - Equity Bank to loan farmers Sh20b in new drive

Equity Bank has committed to lend Sh20 billion to 2,000 farmers in the next five years. This follows the completion of a pilot training programme that saw the bank train and finance 2,400 farmers to the tune of Sh600 million. Chief Executive James Mwangi said the bank would use its Equity Foundation as well as 32 partners to upscale the Agricultural Entrepreneurship Acceleration Project that is aimed at helping transform medium-scale farmers into commercial farmers to lower their risk of defaulting on loans. Mwangi spoke at the end of the project’s three-year piloting that was implemented in conjunction with the Dutch Embassy in Nairobi. He said the pilot programme had set the stage to bring on board more farmers by helping them gain financial literacy. “The pilot phase has been able to demonstrate what needs to be done to transform subsistence farming into commercial agriculture,” he said. Farmers under this programme were trained on, among other things, bookkeeping, farm management, soil testing, taming post-harvest losses, crop timing and marketing of their produce. “We picked on medium-scale farmers since the Government has concentrated on high-scale farmers while the private sector is keen on small-scale,” said Mwangi. Source - https://www.standardmedia.co.ke

22.02.2018

New Zealand - Apple orchard near Nelson left absolutely ruined by Gita floodwaters

A large part of a Riwaka apple orchard has been ruined by floodwaters from Cyclone Gita on Tuesday and Golden Bay Fruit manager Evan Heywood says the really upsetting part is they won't have another crop for up to seven years. Mr Heywood said in the whole rain event there was about 230mm to fall and he thinks probably 100 of that fell in three hours at the end of the day after it had been raining all day. "And that's what has caused this torrent of water that over flowed and debris that came with it," he said. "It was the rivers and creeks that were blocked and then the water spilled out. It wasn't the Riwaka River itself but some of the creeks going into it. And the water came over and made a new path straight through here." Mr Heywood said the block he was standing in is the worst affected "and it's probably one of our better blocks and there's a full crop there". "It had hail net on which I don't think helped. And that's been pretty much completely flattened, probably 80 per cent flattened. So we can't get any value or salvage out of that, so we have to push it into a big heap and get rid of it some other way," he said. He said another block is partially collapsed, "but the rest of the block out here have got debris and silt down pretty much every row that we need to try and get out before we start harvesting, which is only a couple of weeks away". "The really upsetting part is we won't have another crop here for another five, six or seven years, or back to where it was," Mr Heywood said. "So it's not just the losses this year. We have to replant and wait for those trees to start producing to the same level as these ones that we've lost." Mr Heywood said they're still assessing the total loss. Source - https://www.tvnz.co.nz

22.02.2018

USA - Wyoming reports sheep and lamb losses

Wyoming sheep and lamb producers lost 34,000 animals to weather, predators, disease and other causes during 2017, representing a total value of $6.31 million, according to a survey conducted by USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, Mountain Regional Field Office. This study was undertaken at the request of the Wyoming Business Council, Agribusiness Division who also provided funding. The total number of sheep and lambs lost was 3,500 head less than last year and the total value of inventory lost was 7 percent less than a year ago. The January 1, 2017, inventory was 360,000 head. The lamb crop for 2017 was 235,000 head. Lambs lost before docking during 2017 was 15,000 head. Sheep and lamb deaths for 2017 amounted to 5.6 percent of the 2017 sheep and lamb supply (inventory plus lamb crop plus lambs lost before docking, 610,000 head). The number of sheep and lambs lost to all predators totaled 17,800 head, up 1,300 head from last year. Lamb losses by all predators amounted to 14,100 head, up 5 percent from last year. The number of sheep lost to all predators totaled 3,700 head, up 600 head from a year ago. Predators caused an estimated $3.26 million in losses in 2017, up 11 percent from the previous year. Losses due to predators amounted to 2.9 percent of the 2017 sheep and lamb supply and 52 percent of all sheep and lamb deaths. Coyotes remained the largest predator for both sheep and lambs. Coyotes accounted for 70 percent of the predator-caused losses and 36 percent of all death losses in the state. The value of losses attributed to coyotes was $2.28 million. The total value of non-predatory losses was $3.05 million in 2017, compared with $3.85 million in 2016. Non-predatory losses accounted for 48 percent of all losses. The largest non-predatory cause of losses was due to weather conditions at 6,200 head. Sheep lost to non-predatory factors totaled 5,300 head, down 17 percent from 2016. Non-predatory lamb losses came in at 10,900 head, 3,700 head less than a year ago. Lambs lost to all unknown causes totaled 2,600 head, compared with 4,200 head last year. Unknown causes claimed 900 sheep, compared with 1,300 head last year. The sheep and lamb survey utilized multi-frame sampling procedures. The survey involved drawing a random sample from a list of livestock producers maintained by the USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service, Wyoming Field Office. In addition, sheep producers living in a selected sample of area segments were interviewed. This procedure assures complete coverage of sheep producers by accounting for ranchers/farmers who may not be on the list. Sheep and lamb loss estimates published by the USDA include sheep losses for the entire year, but include only those lamb losses that occur after docking. This special report also includes an estimate of lambs lost before docking. Source - http://www.hpj.com

22.02.2018

South Africa - Cape fruit crops under threat by invasive fruit fly

The oriental fruit fly (OFF) detected in fruits in Grabouw could have dire consequences for food security, yield reduction and even job losses, if not properly controlled. The Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries announced that the OFF, an exotic insect native to Asia and previously described from Africa as the invader fruit fly, was recently detected in Grabouw in a protein-baited trap. The department said commercial fruit at threat included mangoes, guavas, citrus, papayas, apples, pears, apricots, peaches, cherries, grapes, passion fruit, peppers and tomatoes. It said the pest could result in food insecurity, yield reduction, market restrictions and high production and post-harvest costs, if not effectively controlled. The trap was serviced by FruitFly Africa (FFA), who immediately reported it to the department. The department said a quarantine area of a 5km radius from the detection point was established after the first detection. A delimiting survey was initiated this month and growers, packing and processing facilities of host material had been placed under quarantine, and eradication initiated in a 25km square area surrounding the detection point. Hugh Campbell, Hortgro Science’s general manager, said Hortgro had been proactively preparing for the possibility of the occurrence of Bactrocera dorsalis or oriental fruit fly over the past decade in the Western Cape. Hortgro Science’s Crop Programme had been conducting research since 2005 in an effort to prepare for such a possibility. He said there were 1400 monitoring traps in the Elgin, Grabouw, Vyeboom and Villiersdorp region alone. and the traps were part of an area-wide monitoring and control initiative for fruit fly, and were managed by FFA. “Immediately after the first OFF was caught, the national action plan was implemented “A removal permit based on control and containment actions is now required to move the host material to a pest-free area.” Campbell added that a delimiting survey was implemented by FFA to identify the potential spread of the fruit fly and weekly control measures had been implemented by the growers and FFA. He said if no further flies were caught in any of the delimiting traps for a period of 12 weeks - which translates to three generations - the area would be considered as eradicated and the quarantine measures lifted. According to Campbell, OFF, which was first discovered in Kenya in 2003, had established itself in Limpopo, Mpumalanga, North West and parts of KwaZulu-Natal. “It is an evasive fruit fly that can cause considerable damage.” Source - https://www.iol.co.za

22.02.2018

USA - Farmers voice concerns about crop insurance

The President is considering cutting crop insurance funding by $22.4 billion, or about 33 percent, between 2019 and 2028, according to the budget document. In an industry dictated by weather and shaped by other uncontrollable factors, crop insurance is a very important tool, according to producers. “Without crop insurance, there’d be no way I’d put my family at risk with the devastation that can happen with a crop failure,” Mike Shane, a farmer and ag lender from Peoria, Ill., said during a Peoria County Farm Bureau meeting with U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth yesterday. Crop insurance also helps farmers access the capital they need to continue producing crops, Shane said. “There’s no way farmers could borrow money from (lenders) without any backing. With that crop insurance backing, if something happens, they’ll be able to pay the bank back.” Net farm income is projected to fall by 6.7 percent to $59.5 billion in 2018, according to the USDA. And farmers look to crop insurance to help offset the costs of producing a crop. “The dollars at risk of putting out one acre of corn is three to four times what it was 10 years ago,” Randy Kron, president of the Indiana Farm Bureau, told on Friday while U.S. Senator Todd Young visited his farm. Crop insurance also helps the next generation of farmers start their careers, especially as today’s farmers age and think about retirement. “Crop insurance is going to be big, especially as the average age of the farmer keeps going up, and we have a lot of younger folks to bring back in (to farming),” Carson Klosterman, president of the North Dakota Corn Growers Association, said. Source - http://www.farms.com/

22.02.2018

India - State govts to blame for issues in crop insurance scheme: Agriculture ministry

The prime minister’s flagship crop insurance scheme, which has seen an impressive rise in coverage and sum assured since its launch in 2016, is facing a number of challenges that are delaying claim settlements for farmers, a senior agriculture ministry official said on Wednesday. The Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) has seen a substantial rise in coverage and sum assured despite 2016-17 being a normal monsoon year but after nearly four seasons of implementation, several challenges have cropped up, Ashish Bhutani, joint secretary at the agriculture ministry, told a national conference on agriculture insurance. “The biggest challenge we face is the conduct of crop cutting experiments which many states are unable to do in a short window of time,” Bhutani said. Companies have also objected to possible fudging in crop cutting experiments (used to estimate losses), “so we have put in the provision of companies co-observing these experiments,” he added. “There are gaps in many states in implementing the guidelines of the scheme in letter and spirit... and those have led to payment delays (to farmers) in certain states,” Bhutani said. He said a lack of historical data has hiked up premiums in some areas, and states are not doing enough to provide data to companies. “Another issue which is a challenge for us is the delay in release of subsidies (towards premium) by state governments which is delaying payment of claims to farmers,” Bhutani said. Bhutani, who is steering the flagship scheme at the centre, also said the ministry is ready with a new portal which will ensure transparency and end-to-end implementation of the scheme from communication between states and companies to claim settlement. “The government is soon going to issue a revised set of guidelines to address current challenges and we are also thinking of setting up a dispute resolution mechanism to resolve conflicts between state governments and companies,” he said. While the top official from the agriculture ministry blamed states for the glitches in the PMFBY, Dharmendra Sharma, a consultant to the state of Haryana on crop insurance, told the conference that despite collecting large premiums, insurance companies are not putting in place any ground infrastructure (required for grievance redressal and assessing crop losses in individual plots). “Before pointing out flaws of state governments, companies should also invest but they are acting as run-away businesses,” Sharma said. An evaluation of the PMFBY by the Delhi-based Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, released at the conference, said that even two years after the scheme was launched, use of technology such as mobile devices or remote sensing to estimate crop losses has been limited. The study also said that a scheme like PMFBY, which gets nearly a third of the resources of the department of agriculture and cooperation, is run by just two senior officers and deserves a dedicated team of professionals. Since its launch in 2016 kharif, the PMFBY spruced up coverage from 26% of gross cropped area in 2015-16 to 30% in 2016-17. The government’s goal is to bring 50% of the crop area under insurance by 2018-19. The budget presented earlier this month raised the allocation under the crop insurance scheme from Rs10,698 crore in 2017-18 (revised estimate) to Rs13,000 crore in 2018-19 (budget estimate). Source - http://www.livemint.com

21.02.2018

Ethiopia - Roles of insurance in reducing uncertainties

The economy of Ethiopia is dominated by small-scale farming that is a source of food, raw materials for agribusinesses and employment opportunities for 85 percent of the population. The small-scale farming has also a lion's share for export earnings though it has been characterized by rainfed and subsistence. And when it faces extreme weather, farmers incur considerable losses that result in negative economic impact. Hence, to overcome the problem, providing insurance services for the farmers has been taken as a way out and some positive out comes are evident as a result. Nyala Insurance Company General Manager Solomon Zegeye said that since 2009 the Company in collaboration with the Ethiopian Meteorology Agency, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development and the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change has been providing insurance services to farmers in different states. Currently, the farmers in Tigray, Oromia, Amhara, Benishangul Gumuz, Gambella and Southern Nation, Nationalities and Peoples' State are benefiting from the weather index insurance project. According to Solomon, before getting the insurance service, farmers must be a member of farmers cooperative association and the association must buy the premium from the insurance company. In connection to this, Nyala Insurance Company before providing the service, it purchases the weather index data regarding the amount of rainfall which rained for many years in the farmers' plots from the Ethiopian Meteorology Agency; and after referring the data with the situation on the ground by the agronomists, it pays the insurance money to the farmers. According to Tsegaye Tekle, the Director of Agro Meteorology at the Ethiopian Meteorology Agency, in accordance with the proclamation number 202/1980 that operates at national network, metro stations designed to represent various climatic regions to support various national development plan and activities. It also gives warning on adverse weather conditions and disseminates information. And since 2009, based on the agreement with the Nyala Insurance Company, his agency has been providing weather data that was received from the satellite. He further said that the agency has data document which indicates the recent past, the present and the future weather index which could be interpreted by several professionals such as agronomists, soil specialists and economists. According to Solomon, the interpretation work of the data in relation to the ground involves various professionals and at this phase, donors play considerable roles in providing support for the research work. For instance, the World Bank and the World Food Program provide the necessary finance, advice and technical support. As to him, based on the out come of the research, if the rain failed to rain or rained below the predicted amount, the damage is calculated based on the amount of farm yield and his company then pay the money in the form of insurance.  On the other hand, the World Food Programme web site indicates that since 2009 the organization has been providing technical and financial support to the researchers for weather index insurance with the cooperation of non-governmental organizations including Nyala Insurance Company. Farmers in Southern Nations and Nationalities and Peoples State, Gambella and Beneshangul Gumuz have benefited from the program. Currently, the organization reaches 40 thousand farmers in Ethiopia, Senegal, Malawi and Zambia through the combination of risk management strategies in asset creation, risk reduction and livelihood diversification. As to solomon, as agriculture is the backbone of the economy, providing insurance service for both crop and livestock farming is essential. Study is also undergoing to provide insurance service to pastoral communities in Somali and Afar States. The weather index insurance will be implemented with the support of satellite information provided by the Meteorology Agency. The data from the satellite indicate the place where fodder and water for livestock is available. But farmers primarily must be a member of cooperatives in their areas and should buy premium beforehand and the payment of insurance money will be carried out when the rain fails and the fodder and water dried up. The micro insurance service, in addition to providing insurance money to farmers, has an objective of creating inclusive financial system. As it is known insurance is regarded as the business for the well to do class who have a capacity to purchase a premium for their properties and lives. This attitude is deep rooted even in the urban centers; as the result, the poor and the marginalized do not want even to think about insurance business and never get insurance services. When uncertainty occurs they will be forced to beg others and find themselves in helplessness situation. Hence, expanding micro insurance service all over the country is vital for poverty reduction and achieving sustainable development. According to Solomon, when his company began providing micro insurance service to farmers in 2009, there were only 200 farmers who benefited from the scheme; but by now the number rose to 10084. This indicates the progress of the provision of insurance service in rural part of the country. Generally, in order to enhance further development through increasing insurance service provision, all stakeholders should carry out their responsibilities. Source - http://allafrica.com

21.02.2018

Mauritius - Sustainable agriculture focused on fishing resources

Located east of Madagascar, the small island nation of Mauritius has experienced economic success. However, creating sustainable agriculture in Mauritius is a goal the nation is currently striving toward. Mauritius uses about 40 percent of its land for agriculture, consisting mostly of sugar cane, which makes up 90 percent of the country’s entire crop yield. Home to more than 1.2 million people, Mauritius produces roughly 100 percent of its demand for fresh vegetables and just under 50 percent of its demand for fruit. While these statistics may look appealing, the country still imports more than 70 percent of its food requirements. Producing only 5 percent of the meat requirements and 2 percent of the dairy requirements, Mauritius relies heavily on international trade. Struggles in Agriculture Mauritius’ dependence on imported food caused the nation economic stress in 2008 when global food prices drastically increased. To wean Mauritius off imported food dependence, its government began to stress sustainable and self-sufficient agriculture. By improving the meat and dairy sectors, Mauritius aims to achieve self-sufficiency and dodge rising global food prices. However, food prices are not the only thing preventing a sustainable agriculture sector in Mauritius. Issues like deforestation and sand mining have caused drastic erosion in the nation, leading to less arable land on the small island. The island contains only 2 percent of its original forests. Being a small island, Mauritius is heavily impacted by climate change along with natural disasters like cyclones that can have devastating effects on local agriculture. To mitigate the effects of natural disasters, the Africa Adaptation Programme has been adopted by the government. The program uses mangroves and beach agriculture to protect the coast. It also includes the training of specialists to develop water storage techniques for irrigation purposes. According to a Mauritius government press release, about 11 percent of its coasts have eroded since 1967 and live coral has decreased from 50 percent to 27 percent in the past 10 years. Erosion of the coasts along with extreme overfishing harms sustainable agriculture in Mauritius. Mauritius Fisheries In 2014, a deal was struck between Mauritius and the European Union. The Fishery Partnership Agreement allowed countries like Spain, Italy, Portugal and France to fish in Mauritius’ waters in return for $275,129 in aid for Mauritius’ aquaculture technology advancements and development. The deal will last six years and is primarily targeting tuna fishing. However, the deal has increased competition, making things more difficult for local anglers. Striving Toward Sustainable Agriculture in Mauritius The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations developed the Country Programming Framework for Mauritius. The project’s overall goals are to: Support the agriculture business. Assist small-scale farmers in producing crops at a more efficient rate through coaching. Achieve sustainable agriculture in Mauritius. Create early warning systems for plant and animal diseases to prevent extreme crop loss and improve livestock farming. Support sustainable fisheries in Mauritius. Improve the sustainability of fisheries through the development and strengthening of fishery management by using more efficient techniques. Sustainable agriculture in Mauritius is currently being tested by climate change, food imports, erosion and inefficient agriculture and aquaculture techniques. Through coaching and development of aquaculture strategies and gaining food independence by increasing local farming, Mauritius continues to move closer to achieving sustainable agriculture. Source - http://www.borgenmagazine.com

21.02.2018

USA - Stone fruit crops across the valley threatened by early bloom

With temperatures dropping below freezing tonight, Jonathan Thompson is most likely going to be up all night with wind machines to protect his crop. “Once they start you don't go to sleep until you shut them off. So, if I start them at 10, I’ll be with them until the sun comes up,” he said. He works over at Thompson Farms in Naches and is one of many farmers in Yakima County who's crops are experiencing stages of early bloom. People with the Washington State Tree Fruit Association said this year’s bloom is the earliest they have seen in years. “About three weeks ahead of schedule. The earliest we've seen bloom since 2005,” he said. The recent warm weather has tricked trees into thinking it's spring and that's caused early blooms across the valley. Which makes the fruit more vulnerable to the cold and could have farmers losing most of their crop. Some examples of fruits that may be in danger include peaches and the valley's famous cherries. Thompson said if temperatures drop to around 17 degrees tonight, 10 percent of his harvest could be killed. Anything below that and farmers all over the county could be looking at massive losses. He said at five degrees, they could be looking at a 90 percent crop kill. Which wouldn't even be worth harvesting. “Five degrees could cause serious damage,” Thompson said. “We're looking at an eleven degree night tonight which is not a fatal temperature for our crop, but it will be potentially damaging to a degree.” Another problem that comes with an early bloom is that there is no water to help keep everything warm. Thompson said they would usually use the wind machines and water in combination, but the water hasn't started flowing with it being so early in the year “We just have the wind machines. That takes another tool out of our little tool box to help fight the cold,” he said. If the cold nights don't warm up soon, finding fresh cherries at the store may be a little harder when harvest season rolls around. Source - http://kimatv.com

21.02.2018

USA - Current freeze conditions impacting California almond growers

California almond growers are facing a challenging week ahead as temperatures are expected to drop below freezing, threatening damage to blooming orchards and developing crops. All almond varieties are at significant risk for loss when overnight temperatures reach 28 degrees and below. While the conditions can vary from the North to South Central Valley, actual losses are dependent on the minimum temperatures experienced, the length of time at minimum temperatures, the crop's stage of development, and availability of frost control measures. "With almonds being the first flowering crop and extremely susceptible to frost, we are deeply concerned for our grower-owners and all California farmers who are affected by these freeze conditions," said Mark Jansen, President and CEO of Blue Diamond Growers. "Farmers assume tremendous risk with each season depending on weather, markets, and changes in government policy. This freeze reminds us how important it is for farmers to be able to save during the good years in order to survive the tough years." The current weather conditions could have an impact on all segments of the almond industry and Blue Diamond is continuing its work to ensure family farms are sustainable during these challenging weather events. The recent Tax Cut and Jobs Act and the 2018 Farm Bill are critical components in helping farmers prepare for uncertain times. "Blue Diamond's efforts on the Tax Cut and Jobs Act was so important as it provided tax relief to the family farmers who own this co-op," said Mr. Jansen. "As big agricultural companies keep their tax break and negotiate the elimination of the new section 199A, we must remember that farmers bare all the risk. We suggest extending the 199A tax relief to all farmers." Source - https://www.prnewswire.com

21.02.2018

India - PM said 50% crop area to get insurance cover

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday said 50% of the country’s crop area would be covered under the crop insurance scheme by 2018-19. Currently, 32% of the country’s crop area is covered. He also said strengthening irrigation was a priority with focus on expanding micro-irrigation and completing 99 pending projects. He said 50 projects would be completed this year. Under the agri insurance scheme, the government has reduced premiums and expanded the reach, the Prime Minister said. In 2017-18, claims of Rs 11,000 crore was disbursed to farmers which is double than earlier, the PM told farmers, agri-scientists, agro companies and economists on the concluding day of the twoday national conference ‘Agriculture 2022 — Doubling Farmers’ Income’. “We want to link more farmers to insurance schemes. We’re working with a target that in 2018-19, at least we’ll cover 50% of crops by insurance,” he said, adding that the amount sanctioned for agriculture credit has been enhanced. He said 20 lakh hectares of farmland has so far been brought under micro-irrigation through the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchai Yojana. “We’ll complete 50 project (out of the 99 project) this year and the rest next year. This was pending for 25-30 years which we are making efforts to finish in 25-30 months,” said the PM while adding that with each completed irrigation project, the input cost of farmers would come down. He said the government was taking coordinated steps to improve the income of farmers. In this regard, he mentioned four aspects: reducing input costs; ensuring a fair price for the produce; reducing wastage; and creating alternate sources of income. Source - https://economictimes.indiatimes.com

21.02.2018

India - Hailstorm in Maharashtra second most severe after 2014

The hailstorm in the second week of February, affecting standing crops across 1.85 lakh hectares in Maharashtra, was the severest, most widespread and potentially the most damaging to crops since a similar event in 2014. According to J R Kulkarni, former scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) and an expert in hail and cloud seeding, such consecutive events of hail experienced since 2014 in the state calls for a detailed and serious study by meteorologists, solely aimed at attempting to minimize the loss of farm produces. “Every year since 2014, Maharashtra has been experiencing hailstorms of varying intensities between February and March. This needs to be seen with utmost seriousness as it can adversely affect the agriculture sector of the state,” said Kulkarni, who was speaking on ‘Recent hailstorm in Marathwada and Vidarbha — Causes, Forecast, Hail Suppression and Impact on coming Monsoon’ organised by the India Meteorology Society (Pune chapter) on Tuesday. The senior scientist also highlighted how in the last five years, whenever there were instances of hail reported in central India regions, particularly in Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh, the countryside monsoon has been below normal. “Though there is no direct link between hail and the Indian monsoon known so far, we cannot rule out such frequent occurrences of hail over the region, which may be an indicator of a large-scale atmospheric phenomenon that may be changing rapidly,” he said. Studies in the past, mainly undertaken after the severe hail incident in 2014 in Maharashtra when hailstorm was reported for 20 days between mid-February and mid-March, have revealed Maharashtra was becoming prone to hail. Dhule, Nandurbar, Washim, Beed, Jalna, Buldhana and many neighbouring districts in Vidarbha and Marathwada were severely hit, where standing crops, nearing their harvest stage, of orange, wheat, gram and some vegetables were lost. “The easterly winds blowing from the Bay of Bengal appear to be more moist and when they interact with cold northerly winds, this confluence is observed to be occurring mostly in central India, especially in east Madhya Pradesh, Vidarbha, Marathwada and some parts of Madhya Maharashtra. Though such hailstorms, triggered due to air mass interactions, can be predicted in advance by three to four days, the area they cover can run into hundreds of kilometres, thereby increasing the scope of damage,” he said. Yet another peculiarity of hail triggered by air-mass difference can occur during any time of the day and the ice particles take longer time to dissolve, thereby doubling the damage to crops, pointed out Kulkarni. In the February 11 and 14 incident this year, hailstorm struck at 7.30 am and lasted for close to 20 minutes. Source - http://indianexpress.com

20.02.2018

USA - Critical time for wheat as drought threatens

Farmers in Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas are hoping for relief this week from persistent drought conditions that threaten yields in many of the United States’ most productive winter wheat growing areas. Sources at the U.S. Department of Agriculture say lack of rainfall since late October along with extremely low topsoil moisture conditions are heightening concerns about lost yield potential and abandonment of winter wheat acres in key states. Depending on temperatures and location, the U.S. winter wheat crop normally breaks from dormancy in late February or early- to mid-March. Rainfall is needed either before the dormancy period ends or shortly after to avoid significant yield losses, said Brad Rippey, a meteorologist with the USDA. Rippey said southern production areas will need rain in the next two to four weeks to avoid significant losses. In general, more northerly growing areas are in better shape and may not require rain for four to six weeks. “We do have grave concerns for the (winter wheat) crop across the southern half of the Great Plains and that area encompasses a significant portion of the U.S. winter wheat crop,” Rippey said last week. “At this moment, we have approximately 45 percent of the winter wheat production area considered to be in drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.” Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas typically account for almost 40 percent of the red winter wheat produced in the United States each year. The U.S. Drought Monitor provides weekly updates on drought conditions affecting major crops and key production areas. In its most recent weekly report, it said 100 percent of the winter wheat crop in Oklahoma is facing moderate, severe or extreme drought conditions, along with 99 percent in Texas, 72 percent in Kansas and 42 percent in Colorado. Rippey said production concerns related to lack of moisture have been compounded in some areas by late establishment last fall and extreme temperature fluctuations over the past few months. “We’ve had some very harsh temperature swings, ranging from sub-zero degrees Fahrenheit (-20 C or lower) and we’ve also seen temperatures up (to 20 C or higher).” Although parts of the southern United States received moderate to heavy rainfall in the seven-day period ending Feb. 13, extreme drought conditions expanded across northern Texas, the USDA said in its latest summary released Feb. 15. Severe drought conditions also expanded across central Texas and the drought situation remained largely unchanged in Oklahoma “with rain sorely needed as warmer weather begins to stimulate the growth of crops and vegetation.” In northern Texas and much of western Oklahoma, little if any precipitation has fallen over the past 90 to 120 days. At Amarillo, Texas, growers have gone without rain for more than 125 days, shattering the previous mark of 75 days in records dating back to 1892. “The lack of rainfall is affecting winter wheat, pastures, pond levels, and stream flows,” the USDA summary said. “Impacts will rapidly escalate if rain does not materialize soon.” Romulo Lollato, a wheat and forage crop extension specialist at Kansas State University, said the next few weeks are critical. Kansas typically accounts for more than 20 percent of U.S. winter wheat production. “For now, while the crop is still dormant, I think we’re not really losing too much yield … yet,” Lollato said. “But the next two to three weeks will be really crucial. Once it starts warming up in late February or early March, if we don’t get rain, I think we’ll see the crop go backwards really, really quickly because we really have no moisture in the root zone.” Lollato said the Kansas wheat crop got off to a slow start last fall, as planting efforts were delayed by rain in late September and early October. Since then, however, much of the state has received little or no rainfall. Delayed seeding last fall affected establishment, giving crops less time than normal to develop root systems and tillers before the onset of winter. Lollato said many Kansas wheat producers are delaying fertilizer applications until they receive rainfall. Source - https://www.producer.com

20.02.2018

Philippines - Reinventing crop insurance

Filipino farmers need not fear a total loss of their resources after every calamity once the proposal of Rep. Arthur C. Yap of the Third District of Bohol becomes a law. House Bill (HB) 6923, which calls for an overhaul of the crop-insurance system of the Philippines by allowing it to provide index-based direct insurance and reinsurance policies, has been approved on third and final reading by the House of Representatives. Yap noted that the Philippines needs a law strengthening the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. (PCIC), because the country’s farm sector is constantly under threat of climate change. The PCIC’s coverage, he said, should be expanded to allow it to engage in index-based insurance and reinsurance. “There’s a lot of effort on infrastructure spending, on technology, on farm-to-market roads, but without agricultural financing, it would be very difficult to sustain the growth of Philippine agriculture,” Yap stressed. Index-based insurance is an innovative and technically sound approach to manage risks, especially for poor and highly vulnerable farmers in the Philippine rural countryside, Yap said. “Unlike traditional crop insurance, in which indemnity payments are linked to individual farmer yields and losses, index insurance links payments to independently established data, such as local rainfall, wind speed, temperature, typhoons, cyclones and historical yield data as trigger events to release payments and compensation to affected farmers and fisherfolk.” But while the bill has hurdled the House, it has no counterpart measure yet in the Senate. According to Yap, HB 6923 will set up weather index-based parameters on winds, water and sunlight. “The ability to pay out cash early, at different stages of an unfolding calamity, without having to wait for a wipeout, is what will give our farmers and our vulnerable poor the chance to save what they can and prevent more losses and damages,” Yap said, adding, “millions of farmers are just exposed to the ravages of climate change.” “With no real and expansive agricultural, property or life-insurance protection, farmers just watch helplessly, as the weather comes to take away the sweat and tears of investments that farmers have planted,” he added. The lawmaker said many global companies “want to do this in the Philippines. In fact, in Africa, in Mexico, in India and in Vietnam—they are implementing it.” Yap explained that the measure is aimed at mandating the PCIC and encouraging private insurance companies to offer index-based insurance as one of their products. He cited the practice in Africa, where “payouts are what prevents farmers from selling their livestock and moving to cities.” “By purchasing risk-insurance, nations can now shift disaster risk and associated economic, social and medical costs away from LGUs [local government units] and governments to the global capital market. In a case like this, the government can instead focus on disaster preparedness and a system for saving lives and distributing aid and payouts in times of calamities and disasters,” Yap noted. The former secretary of the Department of Agriculture also said the move is a clear signal to the private sector and capital markets that the Philippines is serious in helping Filipino farmers, as well as secure food production in the country. “This move will clearly signal to the private sector and capital markets that the Philippines is serious about this program to help our farmers, and secure food production in our country. We must also do a good job to promote a buy-in into this project with the government, primarily the DA, the DAR [Department of Agrarian Reform], DENR [Department of Environment and Natural Resources] and DOST-Pagasa [Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration], legislators, LGU heads, farm stakeholders, cooperatives and mainstream finance entities,” he said. Yap added that in India, millions of farmers are insured, not only for crop wipeouts, but also for crop damages throughout the planting season. “This happens when changes in the weather and water tables are beached. It triggers payments to farmers so they have enough time to act right away to save their farm investments,” he said. He added that farmers need not wait for the wipeout of their crops to get paid. In Mexico LGUs are taking out index-based insurance for their constituents. In Africa the African Risk Capacity, which has for its members African countries, is using sovereign funds to insure 160 million African farmers against weather-borne and related diseases, as well as damage due to drought, flooding and cyclones, Yap added. “Last March 2017 the African Risk Capacity and the African Development Bank partnered exactly for this purpose: To help strengthen African countries in planning and implementing timely and targeted responses to natural disasters, thereby reducing the risk of loss and damage caused by extreme weather disturbances. What was once a program for just five countries will now be ramped up to include the whole of Africa. This is indeed stunning and a welcome news,” Yap said. The bill also seeks to expand the types of agricultural crops that can be insured by the PCIC, and to include life and accident insurance to farmers and fishermen and their dependents. It also aims to strengthen the financial and organizational capacity of the PCIC, while encouraging private insurance companies to offer crop insurance. The measure said the type of crops that can be insured aside from rice include corn, high-value commercial crops, livestock, aquaculture and fishery, agro forestry and forest plantations. It also requires farmers obtaining production loans for rice and other crops essential to food security to insure their crops with the PCIC. The bill also authorizes the PCIC to extend life and accident insurance coverage for farmers and fishermen. It mandates the PCIC to insure properties and facilities of the government used in agri-fishery projects, including reinsurance coverage to agri-fishery-forestry properties underwritten by private and government insurance companies. Under the bill, the PCIC shall offer weather index-based insurance, specifically for excessive or insufficient rainfall. The measure also authorizes the PCIC to offer crop reinsurance to encourage private commercial banks to sell crop insurance. Meanwhile, the measure also increases the authorized capital stock of PCIC from P2 billion to P10 billion. It also increases the penalties against persons who institute spurious crop-insurance claims or allow others to do so. Yap said for the few farmers who actually understand and take out insurance coverage for their crops, the mode and indemnity-based system of agricultural crop insurance is dismally outdated. He added the indemnity-based insurance system that may work for other accidents is woefully wanting when applied to the agricultural setting, and that the amount of payouts, which is less than 15 percent of total damages in the sector, speaks volumes of the inadequacy of agri-based insurance system in the Philippines today. Commitment  In 2000 Yap said the Philippines signed its commitment to join the United Nations efforts at achieving the UN Millennium Development Goals. Among its 17 avowed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is to meet head-on and reduce significantly hunger and poverty, and ensure healthy lives and promote the well-being of its citizens, he said. “In a sector gravely reeling from the impact of underinvestment in rural infrastructure, it is heartening to note that the government is set on spending significantly more on domestic infrastructure in the urban and rural settings,” Yap said. Source - https://businessmirror.com.ph

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