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29.12.2016

India - Programme to popularise crop insurance scheme in Ballari, Koppal

A programme to not only persuade farmers to make use of the rabi crop insurance scheme under the Karnataka Raitha Suraksha and the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana but also to help them to avail themselves of its benefits has been launched in a big way in Ballari and Koppal districts. The two districts are reeling under severe drought for the second consecutive year, owing to failure of monsoon and post-monsoon rain. Kharif crops have been damaged in both the districts. To ensure that the farmers would not suffer further loss in the rabi season, the district administration has taken steps to ensure that more farmers use the crop insurance schemes by enrolling before December 31. In Ballari district, Ramprasath Manohar, Deputy Commissioner, has said that the farmers could submit their application forms for crop insurance, along with premium and other relevant documents (photo copies) at their respective gram panchayats. Gram panchayat officials will forward it to banks and get their names enrolled. While appealing to bankers to extend their cooperation to ensure that farmers got crop insurance cover, Mr. Ramprasath also cautioned them of action against bank staff who were non-cooperative. In Koppal, M. Kanagavalli, Deputy Commissioner, has taken a decision to depute officials of the departments of Revenue, Agriculture and Horticulture to bank branches to assist farmers in getting crop insurance cover. She also underlined the need for the bank staff to complete the processes expeditiously. “Officials deputed to bank branches should be present throughout the day to help farmers fill forms and guide them to provide the required documents. They should also ensure that no farmer would return without getting insurance cover. Bankers, on their part should open separate counters for collecting premium. Data entry operators attached to gram panchayats will be deputed to bank to assist the officials,” she said. Ms. Kanagavalli directed village accountants and panchayat development officers to popularise the insurance scheme. She also wanted the officials to submit a day-to-day report on the progress of insurance cover extended. Source - http://www.thehindu.com

29.12.2016

India - HP Government to offer liberal credits to peasantry following Demonetization

Himachal Pradesh Government would provide liberal credits to the farmers as it was keenly observing the adverse impact on them following Demonetization. Addressing the meeting of lead banks and Central Governmental officials, Additional Chief Secretary Narender Chauhan said that the State Government was quite sensitive towards the demonetization move of Government of India and remained vigilant and sensitive every moment towards the situation so that the common man did not suffer. He said the State Government arranged for transportation of cash through helicopter to the difficult areas of Kinnaur and Lahaul-Spiti districts to mitigate the problem of cash shortages to be faced by the residents in these far-flung areas. Mr. Chauhan was presiding over the 142nd meeting of State level Bankers Committee (SLBC) HP convened by UCO Bank to review of Banking Sector performance in the State. He said the demonetization had induced the conducive environment for use of digital mode of transaction through the technology platform. He emphasized all the banks and stakeholders to encourage for the use of the digital payments in the field for building up of a strong cashless society for which he stressed upon the need of organizing public awareness camps and training camps at every corner in the State. He asked the banks to arrange for providing of Point of Sale (POS) terminal in Government Offices, hospitals, public utility services to reduce the dependence on the cash. He expressed that  banks had handled the post demonetization cash shortage situation efficiently and citizens at large have redressed their cash requirements very patiently without disturbing peace. He emphasized for use of Aadhaar platform for making payments through the Aadhaar enabled payments bridge for transferring the benefits under DBT scheme directly to the account of beneficiaries. He added that the State Government was making payments of benefit due under various schemes like MNREGA, pensions under social security scheme, scholarships etc. He informed 72,52,880 residents of the State had their Aadhaar numbers thereby 100 percent achievement and Rs. 506.39 crore had been paid through DBT scheme. He asked the bankers for 100 percent seeding of Aadhaar number in the bank account of beneficiaries in a time bound manner. He however expressed concern that farmers were not fully covered under Crop Insurance Scheme and there was a big gap between the loaned amount and number of beneficiaries. He asked the bankers for liberal loaning in agriculture sector particularly to the small and marginal farmers. He also laid focus on doubling the income of farmers by the year 2022 for which there would be the need of strengthening the rural infrastructure, road infrastructure, micro and minor irrigation schemes etc. He also asked for settling various cases of insurance in a time bound manner. He also asked the bankers for improving Credit-Deposit ratio which was only 55.64 percent. Source - http://www.himvani.com

28.12.2016

USA - Warm, dry fall leaves Weld County, Colorado winter wheat farmers worried about crop

As Marc Arnusch of Keenesburg said, farmers are optimists. They have to be. But the way the winter wheat season has started, it makes staying an optimist hard. It was an unseasonably dry and warm fall. Winter seems to be finally cooperating, at least a little; the snow that fell just before Christmas was equal to the large storms expected in October or November. Yet the need for moisture is still there. Arnusch planted both irrigated and dryland wheat this fall. He prolonged planting as long as possible in hopes of better conditions, but the crop insurance deadline in early October called for it to be finished by then. Arnusch said his irrigated crop is doing well, but the dryland wheat has places where there isn’t even a sprout. The recent snow would help with that. “There isn’t really anything we can do,” Arnusch said. “In spring, we will re-evaluate.” Some farmers around him decided to replant to see if that will help. It won’t be until spring farmers know what they’re dealing with, but for Arnusch, it could mean farmers plant corn, sunflowers and millet to salvage some of the lost winter wheat crop. Not everyone has had bad luck. Dave Anderson farms in Haxtun, which is in Phillips County, in the northeast portion of the state. Anderson said his area has received enough moisture. All of his wheat has emerged and has strong stems. “I think this crop is off to a really dry but good start,” Anderson said in early December. “At least around here.” Brian Brooks, president of the Colorado Association of Wheat Growers, didn’t see any moisture in the fall. Brooks said early August was the last time his fields saw rainfall. Brooks farms in Walsh, which is in the far southeast corner of the state. As of Monday, according to the National Weather Service, there was no snowcover in or near Walsh. Brooks said with a dry start to fall, he and other farmers waited to plant their crops until some moisture set in. It didn’t until much later this year. “These other people, they sat there — like myself included — we sat here and waited for the rains, and it just never did come, so we dusted it in, and we’re still dry,” Brooks said. Farmers also need a good winter start to the crop to offset the low prices farmers got with this summer’s crop. Last year, Colorado had its largest winter wheat crop in history, coming in at 48 bushels per acre. The high yields were bittersweet, though, as the low prices meant most farmers were set up to just break even. Some growers, like Arnusch, Anderson and Brooks, stored some of that wheat in the hope prices would rise. Atop the warm temperatures and dry fall, Australia farmers aren’t doing a lot to help ease some of the worry for Colorado farmers. Like Colorado farmers saw with the 2016 harvest, Australian farmers are riding the wave of high yields. With the wheat market in Colorado highly dependent on international prices, the chance of a decent rebound doesn’t look great at the moment. Unfortunately for some farmers, the lack of moisture during planting and early growing could carry over and beat up the summer harvest, too. “In particular for our area, the entire fall on our dryland acres felt very dire in terms of the kind of planting conditions we had and the moisture prospects we received,” Arnusch said. Source - http://www.greeleytribune.com

28.12.2016

India - Farmers urged to apply for crop insurance

The Agriculture Department has been prevailing upon farmers to insure their crops under the Karnataka Raitha Suraksha Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana. The department has deployed officials at Raitha Samparka Kendras (RSKs) to educate farmers about crop insurance for the rabi season. The officials are also assisting many banks and co-operative institutions (lacking manpower) in insuring crops. Thousands of applications have been dispatched to hobli centres for farmers to insure their crops. The officials posted at RSKs will guide farmers in filling the forms and submitting it to banks or co-operative societies with required documents. Somasundra, Joint Director of Agriculture, and Nagendra, Agriculture officer, said on Tuesday that a few crops such as horse gram, ragi, maize, Bengal gram, cowpea and other catch crops are grown across the district making use of residual moisture content in soil. Crops were grown particularly in a few irrigated areas where paddy was harvested some days ago, they said adding that there would be residual moisture in paddy fields after the harvest. Mr. Nagendra said horse gram is grown in over 26,150 hectares, ragi in 4,500 ha, maize in 4,416 ha, Bengal gram in 3,020 ha, and cowpea in 1,980 ha. Farmers need to submit copies of the RTC, Aadhar card, and bank pass book while insuring their crops in banks or co-operative societies. Last date for insuring crops is December 31. Source - http://www.thehindu.com

28.12.2016

Ethiopia - Oromia Insurance Paid 380,000 Birr for Drought Damages

Oromia Insurance Company SC (OIC) disclosed it had paid a total of 380,000 Birr as compensation for farmers. The claims by the farmers were made following the drought Ethiopia experienced last year as a consequence of El Nino phenomenon. The Insurer made the payment to 400 famers residing in 2 kebeles of East Showa Zone; Kemo Gerbi and Desta Ajata. In the same way, OIC paid close to a million Birr to farmers covered by PAA and JICA projects. According to Capital, OIC sold 44,479 policies of Weather Index Crop insurance (WICI) in the current year. These policies will cover staple crops such as Teff, Maize and wheat in both projects. OIC is currently operating in 48 kebeles with regard to WICI. The minimum premium for the policies is 100 Birr and there is no upper limit to it. The farmers decide how many policies they want to purchase depending on the size of their farmland and productivity of the season. Source - http://www.2merkato.com

28.12.2016

India - Builder pays the price for damage to crops caused due to flooding

Ten farmers from Taleigao were surprised after a builder compensated them adequately for inundation of their fields with waste water resulting into crop loss, but the cultivators have urged panchayat to prevent such incidents in future. Water pumped out from a nearby construction site at Agrant, Taleigao (TOI report, December 18, 2016) disrupted their farming activities as the fields were rendered uncultivable due to release of pollutants. Recommended By Colombia Traditional farming families wait till late November or early December for the water to drain out to grow crops of sweet potatoes, chillies and vegetables, organically. But this season, a builder carrying out excavations for underground parking released huge quantities of water in their fields, sources said. "These farmers relying on their crops for their livelihood have received fair compensation," Xavier Almeida of Save Taleigao Front said. But the fields have not dried out as yet and farmers are not sure of growing any crops this season. "We will have to wait and see if fields dry up," a farmer said. The farmers and the Front members have appreciated Taleigao panchayat's intervention on the issue of flooding of Agrant fields. "But the builders should ideally carry out the civil works of underground parking in April-May when the water table recedes," Almeida said. A few projects have been proposed in the area and farmers are worried. They have written to the panchayat to ensure that the fields are not flooded with waste water. Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

28.12.2016

India - General insurance sector sees 29% growth after note ban

Despite demonetisation, the general insurance industry saw 29% growth with premium collection of Rs 9162.81 crore for the month of November. Health was the most robust portfolio, ahead of motor and commercial lines with standalone insurers seeing 40% increase at Rs 401 crore. The general insurance sector, however, did not witness the stellar growth witnessed by life for the month of November. Post-demonetisation with more people wanting to shift to safer havens of investment, life insurers saw a six-fold increase year-over-year in premium collection to Rs 6,700 crore in November 2016-17. While general insurance saw brisk sales in health and motor, the notes ban seems to have left a dent in insuring crops and export products. Indian exports fell for 18 straight months till May 2016. However, between September and November there has been a slight growth. Exports in November grew 2.29% to $20 billion, but this did not reflect in higher sales for the Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India (ECGC). Premiums fell 5% to Rs 103.24 crore on November 2016-17 from Rs 98.02 last fiscal. Sale of crop insurance also fell, with Agriculture Insurance Company of India Limited (AIC) seeing a 16% dip in premiums to Rs 193.55 crore from Rs 230.75 crore in the month of November. Recommended By Colombia On the back of increased business in motor and health, public-sector insurers saw premiums go up 19% to Rs 4,192.92 crore, while private insurers saw 45% year-over-year growth to Rs 4,277.26 crore last month. When it came to marketshare, November saw public-sector companies improve their overall marketshare to 47.63% from 46.56% the previous month. New India Assurance and United India Insurance in particular were aggressive and improved both their market share and premium collections. All the PSUs -- New India (14.90% from 14.68%), National Insurance (11.16% from 10.53%), United India (13% from 12.69%) increased their share -- except for Oriental Insurance, which saw its chunk of the pie go down to 8.57% from 8.67%. This November, premium growth improved at New India by 15% to Rs 1,234.02 crore, United India 41% to 1,217.91 crore and Oriental by 17% to Rs 683.42 crore. Only National Insurance reported nearly flat premium growth of Rs 1,057.57 crore this November, compared to Rs 1,002.34 crore last November. Leading private insurer ICICI Lombard saw its share in the pie go down to 8.88% in November from 9.23% in September. Bajaj Allianz also saw its share go down to 5.71% from 6.10%. Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

28.12.2016

Australia - Fire insurance: Companies could review ag policies following harvester blazes

GROWERS and contractor harvesters face insurance companies hiking up premiums or refusing to cover harvesters after a spate of header fires. That’s according to peak harvest contractor body Australian Custom Harvesters. Insurance Council of Australia spokesman Campbell Fuller said while “headers have a high risk of fire” damage, several insurers were still offering cover for harvest equipment. However, he said “a single insurer has signalled to brokers that it will no longer operate in the Australian agricultural market after April (next year)”. There have been at least four serious fires started by headers in Victoria this year, with increased harvesting of legumes such as lentils and chick peas, which are more flammable than cereal crops. In NSW, fire authorities have reported an increase in fire damage from header fires, including a fire at West Wyalong, which burnt 7000ha and caused $500,000 in crop losses. Research by the Grains Research and Development Corporation and Kondinin Group released last month found about 7 per cent of harvesters a year catch fire. In these cases, one in 10 will cause major damage to the machine or surrounding crop. Australian Custom Harvesters executive officer Trevor Verlin said his association has been working to reduce header fires, but he was worried by the insurance industry’s concern about the risks. “We do know fewer and fewer of the underwriters have been interested in taking on the risk of harvesters, as they do sometimes catch on fire,” he said. He was told by an insurance agent recently “there would not be an underwriter that would cover harvesters”. “This has the potential to have a significant impact on the ability to harvest the crop,” Mr Verlin said. “The grains industry is increasingly relying on professionals to come in and take off the crop quickly.” Grain Producers Australia chairman Andrew Weidemann, who was out fighting a fire started by a header last week, was working with industry to resolve the issue. Source - http://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au

27.12.2016

USA - Wheat farmers fret over failing market hedges as incomes slump

Kansas wheat farmer Michael Jordan is breaking with a century-old tradition grain producers have trusted to protect their businesses: He has stopped using futures to hedge risks to his crops. The CME Group’s Kansas City wheat contract sets grain prices for millers, exporters and other grain buyers both today and in the future. Traditionally, prices converge with the price of wheat sold in local cash markets. But Jordan and other U.S. farmers say they no longer trust this hedging tool, amid growing complaints among producers and grain elevators that the hard red winter (HRW) wheat contract is broken. The last three expiring contracts have gone off the board with wider-than-normal basis at their registered delivery locations, with cash prices 25 percent or more lower, according to exchange and cash market data. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is “very aware of the problem” but has not made any promises about if or how the problem may be addressed, said Kansas Wheat Commission Chief Executive Justin Gilpin, who met with CFTC Chairman Timothy Massad in Kansas City in August. The exchange, too, knows there is an issue, but has been reticent to make any promises, said David Schemm, president of the National Association of Wheat Growers. The CFTC declined to comment on the matter to Reuters. CME spokesman Michael Shore told Reuters, “We continue to have discussions with a broad cross-section of customers in this market regarding their concerns,” but he declined to comment directly on the matter. SOWING UNCERTAINTY Futures contract problems have happened before. CME’s soft red winter wheat contract failed to converge for nine straight contract expirations beginning in 2008, before CME implemented a scheme known as variable storage rates (VSR) to force convergence. Among possible solutions being discussed for the HRW contract are a doubling of current storage rates or enacting a VSR scheme, Schemm said. The issue is sowing financial uncertainty throughout the agricultural economy, from grain elevators and wheat millers to crop insurers and farm banks. “This is turning a lot of storage hedges and new-crop forward contracts on their heads,” said Dan O’Brien, an agricultural economist with Kansas State University. Growers hedge risk via forward cash contracts with elevators, which take market positions to cover their own risk. They, in turn, are able to offer farmers competitive prices for future deliveries of grain. Crop insurance calculations are also askew as prices that set premiums and determine payouts, set by futures prices, are far different than actual cash prices. Schemm said that hurt his own farm. He missed out on a crop insurance payout of about $10,000 because the futures prices used to calculate his policy benefits did not reflect how far the cash market value of his grain had fallen. STORAGE WOES One key factor behind the contract problem, said Kansas State University agricultural economist Art Barnaby, is storage. The HRW contract sets monthly wheat storage costs at 6 and 9 cents per bushel. But elevators storing HRW wheat for these contracts – including ADM, Cargill, Marubeni Group’s Gavilon Grain – say the price tag for this storage should actually be valued much higher, Barnaby said. That’s because they do not want their storage capacity filled with grain they cannot sell. Meanwhile, massive global supplies of wheat are keeping cash prices low, especially in Kansas, where farmers harvested record-large yields this year. The lack of coming-together of futures and cash prices has left many farmers fearful this season. The loss of market protections, they say, threatens to heap further pain on farmers struggling with decade-low grain prices and net farm incomes at a seven-year low. Farmers have used futures for decades to hedge the financial risk of planting a crop by locking in prices for future grain sales. “The whole point of hedging is to protect yourself against price moves,” said Jordan, who planted 1,000 acres of hard red winter wheat this fall in north-central Kansas. “But instead, all this has done is increased the risk.” Source - http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com

27.12.2016

India - Notice to Centre, Haryana over crop insurance scheme

The much-publicized Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) has come under the scanner of the Punjab and Haryana high court, which on Friday issued notice to the Centre, Haryana and private insurance companies on a plea that the scheme was launched to benefit certain industrial houses. Directions have been sought to quash the PMFBY and the notifications issued by the Haryana government regarding its implementation in the state. According to petitioner, the private insurance companies have collected total amount of Rs 252.35 crore from farmers, state and central government, while their liability to pay farmers is limited to around Rs 20 crore only. They have alleged that the amount forcibly transferred from the accounts of farmers for insurance to companies was illegal and liable to be refunded along with interest to the farmers.A division bench headed by Justice S S Saron has taken cognizance of the matter after hearing a public interest petition filed by Gurnam Singh Chaduni , president of Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU), Haryana, and a large number of farmers from the state.Those who have been asked to file reply on the issue includes Union agriculture secretary, Haryana agriculture secretary, managing directors of ICICI LOMBARD, GIC Ltd, Reliance General Insurance Company Ltd and Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company Limited, and State Level Bankers Committee. They have been asked to file their reply by January 31, 2017.Petitioners told the court that on June 17, 2016, the state government had issued a notification regarding implementation of PMFBY in the state. As per the notification, kharif crops such as cotton, paddy, bajra and maize were considered while wheat, mustard, barley and gram were being considered among rabi crops to be covered under the scheme.The premium for each crop in each season has to be 2% for the kharif and 1.5% for rabi crop to be paid by the farmers and premium above this percentage is to be paid by the state and the central government.It was stated by the petitioners that without calling for the proposals from the farmers and the land record from the revenue department, and without following the instructions of the Reserve Bank of India , the banks have been deducting the amount of premium from the respective accounts of the farmers."Neither any consent for deduction of the amount of premium was taken from the farmers nor any proposal as mandated by the RBI was obtained nor land records were obtained or inspected. Even the farmers were not contacted or consulted. Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com

27.12.2016

India - Crop loans to get 3% interest subsidy for 2 months

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has given an additional 60 days for prompt repayment incentive of 3 per cent interest subsidy to farmers who repay their crop loans due in November-December. Centre has been implementing the Interest Subvention Scheme since 2006-07. As per the scheme for the year 2016-17 besides subvention of 2 per cent per annum, an additional interest subvention of 3 per cent is also provided to prompt payee farmers from the date of disbursement of the crop loan. This subvention benefit does not accrue to those farmers who repay after one year of availing such loans. In view of the constraints faced by farmers for timely repayment of loan dues on account of withdrawal of legal tender status of old Rs 500/1,000, the RBI said the Government of India (GoI) has decided to provide the grace period. “It has been decided by the GoI to provide an additional grace period of 60 days for prompt repayment incentive of 3 per cent to those farmers whose crop loan dues are falling due between November 1 and December 31, 2016 if such farmers repay the same within 60 days from the above period,” the RBI said in a notification. Rural areas are still facing acute cash crunch following demonetisation of old high denomination notes from November 9 and subsequent limits on withdrawals. Queues have been witnessed at banks and ATMs all across the country. In a notification on November 21, the RBI had said loan accounts which will come under 60 days grace period will include running working capital accounts — OD/CC)/crop loans — with any bank with a sanctioned limit of Rs 1 crore or less and term loans, whether business or personal, secured or otherwise, the original sanctioned amount is Rs 1 crore or less, on the books of any bank or any NBFC, including NBFC Source - http://indianexpress.com

27.12.2016

Cambodia - Harvests destroyed in fire

Seventeen hectares of rice fields were consumed by a blaze in Banteay Meanchey province’s O’Chrou district early on Sunday morning, leaving four families without their harvest, officials said. Changha commune deputy chief Hoeung Yok said local residents initially spotted smoke coming from a rice field that had been harvested in Sisophon town’s M’kak commune at about 8am. Two hours later, they noticed that the flames had spread to another rice field that had not yet been harvested in Changha, which borders M’kak, he said. “Luckily, there was a huge canal [near] the fire, so the fire did not spread. Otherwise, thousands of hectares of rice plantations that had not been harvested could have been burnt into ash,” Yok said. Banteay Meanchy provincial police chief Ath Khem said fire engines were not able to enter the area because it was too muddy, but that firefighters had extinguished the blaze within two hours of it starting. Khem said authorities will now investigate the cause of the fire. The 17 hectares that burned had belonged to four separate families. Yorn Yet, a 38-year-old whose family lost 10 of the 17 hectares, said he was renting six of those and now was left with nothing. “Last year, we had a drought and I had much hope for this year, but now it’s another loss,” Yet said. “At the moment, I want to cry, but I have no tears. What I can do is call for support from authorities and donors.” Seang Vanseth, the director of the provincial department of agriculture, said officials would visit the affected families to deliver food today. Source - http://www.phnompenhpost.com

27.12.2016

USA - Open crop insurance to more competition

The growth of the crop insurance program, while slow in the initial years after passage of the 1980 [Federal Crop Insurance] Act, began to grow geometrically in the mid-1990s, aided by increased subsidies which encouraged producers to insure at higher coverage levels and by an expansion of crop coverage and a widening of product choice including revenue insurance. By 2015, area insured under the program totaled almost 300 million acres accounting for over 85 percent of potentially insurable area and total liability (coverage in force) topped $100 billion. Crop insurance is viewed by many farmers and members of Congress as a key piece of the federal farm safety net. Unlike many other farm programs, crop insurance largely escaped cuts in the 2014 farm bill. Indeed, the 2014 legislation augmented coverage options available to farmers, adding revenue insurance for peanuts and supplementary coverage options for most row crops, resulting in a projected $5.7 billion increase in program costs. Crop insurance has not been without its critics however. The annual costs of the federal crop insurance program have grown significantly since 2000. Estimated annual costs are projected at $8.9 billion over FY 2016-25, making it the largest single farm program in the farm safety net. Delivery costs for the crop insurance program, including expense reimbursements and net underwriting gains paid to the private company for delivery, are projected to exceed $2.6 billion annually. That means that for every $1 in total government outlays, about 71 cents goes to producers, with the rest going to the companies. Historically, that number has been even higher. Over the period 2000-15, companies received almost 45 cents out of every dollar spent on federal crop insurance. Critics point out that delivery costs have increased significantly over the past 15 years, particularly agent commissions. The crop insurance industry has defended those costs, arguing that expenses have outstripped reimbursements and that profitability measures in the crop insurance industry lag comparable measures faced by other Property & Casualty (P&C) lines of insurance. The regulatory structure outlining the economic relationship between the federal government and private insurance companies is laid out in the Standard Reinsurance Agreement (SRA), an annual contract that spells out the responsibilities of both parties. The SRA determines compensation for the companies through expense reimbursement and risk-sharing provisions for crop insurance liabilities. Provisions of the SRA have not changed since the 2011 SRA was negotiated in 2010. Congress included provisions in the 2014 farm bill that specified that any changes in the SRA were to be budget neutral with respect to underwriting gains and administrative and operating costs. … Delivery costs have been a visible target for reduction in the past because of what has been viewed as an inefficient and oftentimes obscure system of expense reimbursements and gain sharing through the SRA. An opposing view by crop insurance companies and insurance agents argues that the delivery system has taken large cuts in the past and cannot afford to continue to absorb large cuts in the future. This paper offers the view that the correct answer can be best determined by opening up the delivery system to more competition and to allow “fair” compensation to be set by the market rather than federal regulators. Allowing companies to compete on price will ensure that companies have incentives to deliver insurance at costs reflecting their true marginal costs. The beneficiaries will be producers and taxpayers rather than other entities who may currently benefit from wasteful economic rents. Source - http://www.illinoisfarmertoday.com

26.12.2016

USA - Radical Change Urged For California’s Flood Risk Insurance

States and worldwide, flooding is the deadliest and most costly natural disaster. The U.S. National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) is an imperfect framework for reducing flood losses, but currently the best we’ve got. The NFIP is scheduled for Congressional reauthorization in 2017, and this debate promises to be lively. The Natural Hazards Research and Mitigation Group at University of California, Davis has been analyzing NFIPdatabases, examining patterns over the history of the program and focusing on flood losses and insurance, particularly in California. Over the history of the NFIP, the state is one of a few that have – through dry years and wet – received only a fraction of payments from the program compared with the premiums it has paid in. Since 1994, NFIP damage payouts in California have totaled just 14 percent of premiums collected (compared with 560 percent for the biggest recipient state, Mississippi). For California, this imbalance exceeds $3 billion over 21 years – funds that could have been invested in risk reduction, floodplain management and reduced premiums. California has unparalleled expertise and a culture of progressive solutions for managing its flood risk; the state also has unique needs and intense pressures looking forward. With the NFIP facing an uncertain future – more than $20 billion in debt, and with a challenging Congressional reauthorization discussion looming in 2017 – we recommend a careful look at California’s place in the NFIP. In particular, the state should now explore its own flood insurance program, with savings invested in long-term risk reduction. Properly implemented, a state-based insurance program and proactive flood mitigation strategies could through synergy benefit the environment, agriculture, recreation and water resources. This approach has major challenges, with implications for California and nationwide that should be explored. Background The NFIP was established in 1968 to curtail development on U.S.floodplains and along our coasts. Previously, homes and businesses were being built on flood-prone land almost without restraint. Flood damages were multiplying out of control, and private insurers had stopped offering flood coverage to homeowners and all but the largest businesses. As disastrous floods struck through the 1950s and 1960s, victims had nowhere to turn but the federal government, and U.S. taxpayers saw spiraling payouts for disaster relief. The NFIP established a grand compromise: if communities passed ordinances to limit new construction on floodplains and coastlines (and other activities worsening flood damage), then the federal government would help provide flood insurance in those communities. Today the NFIP underwrites more than 5 million policies, providing more than $1.25 trillion in coverage, taking in more than $3.5billion a year in premiums. The program has limited but not halted floodplain development. Yet flood losses have continued to climb, and the NFIP is now more than $20 billion in debt. We examined nationwide databases of NFIP flood-damage claims dating back to 1972, annual policies since 1994 and records of properties with multiple payouts (what the Federal Emergency Management Agency terms “severe repetitive loss.” These data include property characteristics, insurance claims and the nature of flood losses. Some attributes were stripped from the databases to maintain policyholder anonymity. We combined NFIP data with other GIS (Geographic Information Systems) data, such as income and social vulnerability, to examine affordability and equity of NFIP coverage. California, Flood Risk and the NFIP Despite more than a century of investment in controlling flood threats – including $11 billion in flood management projects over the past decade – California still has massive flood-risk exposure, according to the Department of Water Resources. Statewide, roughly 7 million people are at risk from flooding with a threat to $580 billion of buildings, public infrastructure and crops. Of 81 major disaster declarations in the state since 1954, 45 involved flooding. The Central Valley is the most flood-prone area of the state, a threat addressed during the past 100 years by the construction of levees, bypass channels and upstream dams. In recent decades, developers and local officials have engaged in a tug-of-war with floodplain managers and flood-risk researchers, with local interests promoting new development on California’s floodplains behind levees, some of them strengthened and providing high levels of protection (others less). However, no levee provides complete protection – “There are two kinds of levees … [t]hose that have failed and those that will fail” (Martindale and Osman, 2010). Levee projects accompanied by additional floodplain development often increase total risk and flood liability. To counterbalance this threat, California has 290,000 NFIP policies in force, covering nearly $82.6 billion of insured assets, and generating $212.8million in annual premiums (data to Oct. 31, 2016). These totals include residential, commercial and some government properties on river floodplains and along coastlines. The NFIP also insures properties outside mapped flood-hazard zones, roughly one-third of all policies nationwide. The U.C. Davis analysis of the NFIP data is ongoing, and interesting patterns are emerging in the California data and the full U.S. dataset. Two conclusions have jumped out of the analyses completed to date that seem timely and pertinent to state and federal policy discussions. Ratios of claim payments to policy premiums in 1994–2014, by state (in 2015 dollars). (California Water Blog) Repetitive Losses Thirty years after the establishment of the NFIP, the Higher Ground report (National Wildlife Federation, 1998) singled out a problem – a small number of “repetitive loss” properties were receiving repeated insurance payouts, accounting for a disproportionate share of all NFIP outlays. At that time, just 2 percent of all insured properties drew 40 percent of all disaster payments. One property in Houston received 16 payouts totaling $806,591 – more than seven times the structure’s value. Our U.C. Davis research group, working with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), also looked at repetitive flood-loss properties. New FEMAdata show that 30,369 properties (0.58 percent of NFIP policies) – designated “Severe Repetitive Loss” (SRL) properties – are responsible for 10.56 percent of all claims. (Our request to FEMA for its broader “Repetitive Loss” [RL] database is currently pending.) Current SRL properties include structures that have each been the subject of up to 40 flood-damage claims. One house in Alabama, valued at $153,000, has received $2.25million in NFIP payouts – more than double the highest ratio in 1998 (the Houston property discussed above). The NRDC has proposed incentives to remove repetitive-loss properties from the NFIP insurance and the nation’s floodplains. Hayat and Moore (2015) propose that “property owners should agree in advance not to rebuild following floods that cause substantial damage and, instead, to accept a government buyout of their property and relocate. In exchange, they would receive a discount on their federal flood insurance coverage.” We are now working to identify communities with repeated flood damages, high densities of designated SRL properties and high socioeconomic need. Implemented carefully, such proposals could reduce the most burdensome flood-loss properties, while improving insurance affordability and transitioning low-income residents off the floodplain. Of the more than 30,000 SRL properties nationwide, 393 are in California. At the top of the list, Louisiana has 7,223 such properties and Texas 4,889. Nonetheless, the California SRL properties amount to $56.7 million in cumulative payments. More detailed examination suggests there are local issues in California – Sonoma County ranks 20th among communities nationally for the largest number of SRL claims (977) and 25th for total SRLpayments ($27 million). California leads the nation in many metrics of flood protection and resilience, but local problem areas may require additional guidance, resources and/or oversight. NFIP Net Payers and Net Recipients Flood insurance requires that many participants pay into the program in any given year so a few may draw funds in times of extreme need. Health, auto and home insurance, too, may include low-risk participants who persistently pay into the program pooled with higher-risk participants. These variations are sometimes addressed by setting premiums proportionate to estimated risk, but sometimes the risk factors are too difficult to quantify or are simply accepted as a subsidy to some in the insurance pool. The NFIP is rife with subsidies, such as low “grandfathered” premiums for homes built in floodplain and coastal flood zones before the start of the program or repetitive-loss structures that resist attempts to mitigate or relocate off the floodplain. Our analyses of NFIP historical policy and claims data suggest that such imbalances and subsidies also exist at a state-to-state scale, and should be examined carefully. The U.C. Davis analysis examined NFIP claims and premiums data between 1994 and 2014. Calculated as ratios of total premiums paid to total claims, some U.S. states emerged as long-term recipients of NFIP funds and other states as long-term payers into the program. Over these 21 years, Mississippi policyholders paid 18 cents per dollar of flood insurance payouts, whereas Wyoming policyholders paid $32 in premiums for every $1 in claims. Implications A major policy question is whether “net payer” states have just been lucky (having avoided major floods in the last 21 years). Or has flood risk in these areas been overestimated or successfully managed or reduced, so that these states subsidize the larger insurance pool? Several mechanisms could explain why some U.S. states may have better managed flood risk. These are the subject of ongoing research. If verified, these states may want to look to remedies that credit their investments, attention, enforcement and/or more diligent stewardship of their floodplains and coastlines. However, the penalty for getting the above question wrong may be severe. Preliminary analyses suggest that California consistently pays more into the NFIP than is justified by historical damage claims. Since 1994, the program’s damage payouts in California total just 14 percent of premiums collected. The three most damaging flood years in NFIP history have all occurred since 1994, and yet only the worst year of California flooding (1995) has cumulative NFIP payouts exceeding premiums collected statewide, and then only slightly ($1.35 in claims per $1 of premiums). Furthermore, a community-scale analysis of payout/premium patterns shows that only 18 of California’s 538 jurisdictions had cumulative NFIPpayouts exceeding premiums collected in that area. And 119 jurisdictions, or 22 percent of California’s total, paid NFIP premiums over the full duration of study, but had zero payouts. One region – the Central Valley – has been particularly outspoken about perceived unfairness in costs and restrictions imposed by the NFIP (for example, Government Accountability Office, 2014). Although we do not accept all claims of “floodplain exceptionalism” suggested by some Central Valley residents and growers, initial analyses suggest high NFIP premiums relative to historical claims – payouts are just 9 percent of cumulative Central Valley premiums. More detailed analyses of agricultural structures and flood losses are needed. Policy Recommendation California should explore a state flood insurance program, with potential savings invested in long-term risk reduction. Current federal law requires that home and business owners with federally backed mortgages must carry flood insurance. However, this mandatory insurance need not be through the NFIP. In the past two to three years, more private insurers have selectively offered flood coverage. There is broad interest in privatization of flood insurance, including pending federal legislation (H.R. 2901 and S. 1679), but concern exists from floodplain and flood-risk experts that privatization will reduce FEMAfunding for floodplain mapping and mitigation activities. Perhaps more concerning is that private insurers will “cherry-pick” flood policies now overpriced by the NFIP and leave the program as the insurer-of-last-resort, holding only grandfathered, repetitive-loss and other “actuarial dogs” imposed by legislative mandate. This outcome would overwhelm the NFIPwith unsustainable debt. Rather than relying on privatization to solve its flood insurance inequities, California should move quickly to stake its place in this arena. This recommendation was earlier made by California’s Department of Water Resources in 2005: “Examine existing flood insurance requirements and consider the creation of a ‘California Flood Insurance Fund,’ … to compensate property owners for flood damage.” California should consider acting before private interests make state action untenable. Interesting public-private solutions are possible, such as partnering with private reinsurers to hedge the risk from low-probability, high-magnitude catastrophic floods. Many services funded by the NFIP, such as flood-hazard modeling and mapping, are being done across California using tools half-a-century ahead of FEMA-funded contractors. California also leads the country in implementing flood mitigation measures, such as bypass channels and levee setbacks, that simultaneously reduce flood risk for surrounding areas, enhance riparian and wetland habitats, promote agriculture, provide recreation and support groundwater recharge. In implementing its own flood insurance program, California would be in a position to address many of the shortcomings of the NFIP, remedying important issues like repetitive-loss properties, residual risk behind levees and sovereign liability for flood damages. California is in a position to do what it does best – not follow the nation, but lead. The state has the expertise, and the need, to set new precedents in sustainable flood-risk management. Source - https://www.newsdeeply.com

26.12.2016

India - Note ban adds to cotton farmers' misery in AP and Telangana

Crop losses, mounting debts and a spate of pest attacks apart, the cotton farmers of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh now have to deal with the demon of demonetisation as well. "The note ban has been a worse epidemic than the white fly or pink bollworm for cotton farmers," says Konda Surekha, a former minister from Warangal, one of the most prominent cotton-growing areas in Telangana. These farmers are sour that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had picked a wrong time for banning big currency notes — the harvest period of the Kharif season for cash crops like tobacco, tomato, groundnut, sugarcane and cotton. Now prices have fallen by 20 to 30 percent and they are unable to clear loans due to the ushering-in of the cashless regime in agricultural markets. "My cotton stock withered at the market yard as traders said they had no cash to pay and offered cheques," said Jagarlamudi Anil Babu, a cotton farmer of Prakasam district. Farmers say that banks would rather adjust cheques towards loans and interest than disburse cash. A variety of issues abound for the cotton and textile industry like the non-implementation of the promised loan waiver, the delay in institutional credit and fall in global demand. Cotton farmers in five districts of Telangana and six districts of AP are wringing hands in distress as cotton prices crashed to Rs 4,100 per quintal from Rs 5,600 per quintal in the pre-demonetisation period. “Adding to our woes, the traders are asking us to accept payments in cheques or scrapped notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000,” says a cotton grower from Inkollur in coastal Andhra who deferred cotton-plucking for a week due to demonetisation. Representational image of a cotton farmer in Warangal. AFP The RBI decision to allow scrapped notes circulation among farmers in marketing their produce and also purchase of seeds and fertilisers has given them temporary relief, but Telangana’s farmers say that Modi should have chosen mid-January to February for demonetisation. A cascading impact is evident from the distress on cotton farmers — weddings, house warming functions and thread ceremonies are either low-key affairs or deferred. Besides cotton, the tobacco industry is dominated by 70 percent cash transactions in the vicious circle of growers, lenders, commission agents and exporters. Andhra Pradesh and Telangana contribute to one-third of the country’s cotton trade. Chirala in Guntur and Siricilla in Karimangar are popular for their handloom and lungi markets and concentration of looms – they are considered the biggest in Asia for exports to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. According to the US-based International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) the currency crunch in India has created shortages in domestic textile market and also hit exports to global markets. Cotton exports from Australia, Mali, Burkina Faso and the US could fill up the gap caused by Indian cotton in 2016-17. The ICAC report also blamed the note ban as an ‘untimely move’ detrimental to the Indian cotton market, which could have a domino effect for the next two years. Officially 21 cotton farmers had committed suicide in 2016 from June to December. Unofficially though, 61 farmers have committed suicide since June and 12 more in the months of November and December. Since its birth as a new state in June 2014, Telangana has recorded 1,269 suicides. The Hyderabad-based Centre for Sustainable Agriculture (CSA), estimates farmer suicides in Andhra Pradesh in the past 20 years (1995-2014) at 38,000. Lack of access to institutional credit and low crop insurance add to farmers' woes. “Besides, in anticipation of loan waivers, a large number of farmers did not repay loans last year, and banks have refused loans this year,” points out GV Ramanjeyulu, executive director of CSA. “They take up crops in Kharif with high interest loans and high expectations to wipe off old dues but often end up adding to their debts and consequent suicides,” says K Changal Reddy, a farmers’ representative.  Local common sense In many parts of Telangana and Andhra the crisis has been tackled with local common sense. “Farmers are deferring payments to daily wagers but pay partly in the form of rice and also stood guarantee to small loans taken by them in the local grocery shops,” says Palaparthi Srinivasa Rao, a cotton farmer of Srikakulam. Traders linked payments to fertilisers and seed suppliers for the benefit of farmers. “We also tied up with lorry operators and hotels to pay their dues from the amounts due to them,” says Gopalakrishnaiah, a cotton exporter in Guntur market. Kuvulu Rythu Sangam (Andhra Pradesh Tenant Farmers’ Association) state secretary N Ranga Rao says that for the Kharif crop season, farmers needed Rs 3,200 crores to take up harvesting in about 40 lakh acres. Another Rs 2,400 crores is needed for the Rabi season. “Since private money lenders also do not have valid currencies now, we depend on government to release crop loans early,” he said. The monthly report of the Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) said the cotton market in Andhra Pradesh, one of the major producers in the country, has plunged into a deep crisis in the aftermath of demonetisation, as trade and export transactions have almost come to a halt and cotton prices have slumped by Rs 1,000 per quintal from Rs 5,000 to Rs 4,100 in just 40 days. Though the CCI has opened over 40 purchasing centres and offered cash payments in Rs 2,000 notes, the farmers are unwilling to sell and choose to suffer rather than sell at the current prices. Arrears in loan waiver payments Although both Andhra and Telangana government announced farm loans waiver as a poll promise, they have been paying dues to banks in installments. Telangana government had pegged arrears at around Rs 18,000 crores and Andhra had reduced the burden to Rs 36,000 crores. Banks were advised to issue new crop loans with the promise that loans as of June 2013 would be borne by the government. However, the RBI had opposed the bulk farm loan waiver initiative of both the states and advised banks to release only crop loans in a guarded manner and ensure that until clearance of arrears, farmers’ slates would not be cleaned. As a result, banks refuse to give fresh loans until old loans are either paid by the farmer or by the state government. As a result, farmers had to take up farming with savings and loans from private money lenders. “My money lender wants cash and not cheque,” says Bharatakka, a cotton farmer of Ibrahimpatnam in Nalgonda district. Cotton crop grown in Andhra is sent to the ginning mills of Guntur district which supply cotton to textile mills in Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Karnataka. According to market sources, almost 70-80 percent of transactions have come to a halt and the market has been hit hard. This has meant the denial of wages to over two lakh people engaged in cotton trading, spinning, ginning and harvesting activities in the state. In Telangana too, the situation is similar. Traders are offering farmers sops now to get them to sell their cotton and accept cheques — trips to Mumbai, Shirdi and Tirupati are being offered. “If we deposit the cheques in the banks, the bankers will adjust it against loans and interest and the government will not reimburse it,” said Muthyala Reddy of Warangal. “Cotton trade is always cash and carry activity and bank operations are hardly 10-15 percent. If we offer to pay online or through cards, our suppliers of seeds and fertilises will just reject,” says a cotton farmer, K Samaiah at Enumamula market yard in Warangal. “The ceiling on withdrawals had also made us delay payments. The government cap on withdrawal at Rs 24,000 per week has sandwiched the farmers,” says Phani Raj, a cotton trader at Chilakaluripeta. Continuing trouble for cotton The cotton crisis since 2014 in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh had led farmers to shift to other crops due to delay in institutional credit and an unending wait for farm loan waivers. The total area under cotton declined by 12 percent to 10.5 million hectares this year against 11.88 million hectares in 2015-16. In 2015 and in early 2016 the crop was hit by the white fly and pink bollworm leading to 30 percent drop in yields. “We are asking the farmers not to use non-Bt cotton seed as refuge crop and reduce area under cotton,” says K Dhananjaya Reddy, commissioner for agriculture (Andhra Pradesh). Source - http://www.firstpost.com

26.12.2016

India - Dry delta stares at 79K acre crop loss

With hopes of Cauvery water drying up and northeast monsoon playing truant, samba crops in around 79,000 acres in the district are in various stages of wilting, official sources said. The samba and thalady crops were cultivated in only 2,60,000 acres in the district — a marked difference from the usual crop coverage of 3,30,000 acres — due to the non-release of Cauvery water from Karnataka as per the final award of the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal (CWDT). The Mettur dam was opened only on September 20, 100 days behind its June 12 schedule. Hence the farmers did not show interest in raising the samba crops, which led to a fall in the  area under crop coverage. Besides the precarious storage level, the northeast monsoon also failed them. Instead of the normal rainfall of 535 mm during the North East monsoon season, which commences on October 1, the district received only 183 mm rainfall till December 25. In effect, the district received only 34 per cent of the normal rainfall during this monsoon, while the deficit was a whopping 66 per cent. All these factors had a bearing on the standing samba crop, which was dependent only on canal water and monsoon bounty. The farmers with no sources of ground water irrigation are struggling to save the crop by spraying potassium chloride solution (KCl), which would deter evapotranspiration of moisture from the crop. The Tamil Nadu Agriculture University is also expected to supply Pink-Pigmented Facultative Methylobacterium (PPFM), which could be sprayed on the stressed crops to mitigate the drought, the officials said. “So far, around 1,500 acres of the 79,000 acres have been covered with the spraying of these solutions,”  an official of the Agriculture Department said. Despite these efforts, the farmers and officials voiced concerns that the yield would go down drastically. Senior Agro Technologists Forum’s Thanjavur chapter president P Kalaivanan said in the present condition, the samba crop cultivated using ground water from borewells in the Cauvery and Grand Anaicut irrigated area could survive. In Vennaru irrigated area, except Ammapettai, Valangaiman and Needamangalam blocks, even the samba crop raised using ground water are in a stressed condition. Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com

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