NEWS
770
of 1173
News
08.12.2016

Philippines - 6 Luzon LGUs awarded for climate change adaptation programs

Ten local government units (LGUs) received a maiden Climate-Adaptive and Disaster-Resilient (CLAD) Awards for cities and municipalities for their exemplary programs to mitigate the impact of climate change. The CLAD Awards is a project of the Climate Change Commission (CCC) as conceptualized with the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR) and Senator Loren Legarda, UNISDR Global Champion for Resilience. The winning LGUs, which were awarded during the Climate Change Consciousness Week concluding program on November 25, were Canaman, Camarines Sur; Carmona, Cavite; Dumangas, Iloilo; Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur; Legazpi City, Albay; Malolos, Bulacan; New Lucena, Iloilo; Palompon, Leyte; Sorsogon City, Sorsogon; and Tublay, Benguet. Each awardee was given a plaque and cash prize of P500,000. Legarda lauded the 10 winners of the inaugural CLAD awards as she urged other LGUs to adopt and replicate their best practices in order to strengthen community resilience to disasters and climate change. She cited Canaman’s Crop Insurance Program, which helps restore the livelihood of farmers affected by disasters by providing crop insurance; and the Farmers Field School, which provides farmers with knowledge on climate change impacts and adaptation such as storm surge and drought, as well as practical hands-on training on seed selection, water management, among others. The town of Tublay, Benguet was awarded for its Carbon Stock and Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Sequestration Enhancement, as well as its coffee-based agroforestation program, which empowers the community to participate in environmental conservation, climate change adaptation and disaster mitigation initiatives while gaining economic benefits from it. Legazpi City, Albay also made it to the top 10 for its efforts in establishing organic gardens and planting of mangrove and fruit-bearing trees. The mangroves serve as buffers or coastal defense from the effects of storm surge and tsunami while providing a rich habitat for marine life and sequestering carbon effectively. Malolos, Bulacan was awarded for its outstanding psychological program which involves the conduct of traumatic and/or psychological debriefing for evacuees and victims of disasters. Sorsogon, Sorsogon has been recognized for its Climate-Resiliency Field School where farmers and fisherfolks undergo actual practice on new farming technologies adaptable to climate change. Another noteworthy project of this municipality is their reforestation (mangrove and upland) project which aims to minimize soil erosion and prevent storm surge in mangrove areas. Carmona, Cavite was awarded for its Solid Waste Management and 3Rs Program (reduce, reuse, recycle) and installation of LED lights in the municipality, an initiative that not only saves electricity but also lessens greenhouse gas emissions. Source - http://news.mb.com.ph

08.12.2016

India - Rabi crop loss survey to be taken up after Dec. 15

Krishna Byre Gowda, Minister for Agriculture, has said that a survey to assess crop loss due to extended severe drought condition during rabi this year would be taken up after December 15. “This year, the State was reeling under severe drought. As many as 139 taluks in the State have been declared drought-hit due to the failure of monsoon causing huge crop loss. The severe drought has also extended to rabi due to failure of post-monsoon rain. We have instructed the officials of the Agriculture Department to submit the crop position. After that, survey would be carried out to assess the extent of loss of crops and submit a detailed report along with a memorandum to the Union government seeking financial assistance,” he said. Mr. Krishna Byre Gowda was here to participate in the demonstration of Drill Sown Rice (DSR) and mechanised bailing of paddy fodder at Charakunta village in Ballari taluk on Tuesday. He said that the State government has submitted a memorandum to the Union government seeking financial assistance of Rs. 4,702 crore to compensate the loss of crop during this year’s kharif season and the Union government was yet to take a decision and release the required funds. “Chief Minister Siddaramaiah will be meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi very soon to prevail upon him to release funds. Once we get the funds, steps would be taken to transfer them directly to farmers,” he added. To a question, the Minister said that the proposal to set up paddy procurement centres and also announce minimum support price would be decided by the Cabinet sub-committee. Admitting that demonetisation of currency had severely affected trading in APMC yard by 40 per cent besides bringing down the price of agricultural produces, he said that the government was committed to establishing procurement centres and make the payment through bank transfers. Source - http://www.thehindu.com

08.12.2016

India - C'Garh implements PM crop insurance scheme

The Prime Minister Crop Insurance Scheme has been implemented for the Rabi season 2016-17 in the entire State, officials informed. The crops covered are wheat, (irrigated) wheat (unirrigated), Alsi, potato and 'Tiwda' and several other crops. Agriculture Minister Brijmohan Agrawal directed the Department officials to spread awareness among the farmers regarding the Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Crop Insurance Scheme during the current Rabi season. Notably, the Chhattisgarh government has set a target of distributing six lakh metric tonnes of fertilizers during the current Rabi season. Agriculture Minister Brijmohan Agrawal stated that last year four metric tonnes of fertilizers were distributed during the Rabi season. The Minister said that a sowing target in 18 lakh hectares had been set for the ongoing Rabi season. He said that farmers in the State are taking interest in using bio fertilizers and the Government had also been promoting use of bio fertilizers. The Chhattisgarh Government has also launched schemes to develop Dantewada, Bijapur, Sukma and Gariaband as ‘complete organic farming districts’, officials informed. This apart, one development block from each of the other districts will be included under ‘Organic Farming Mission Scheme’. The State Government operates several social welfare schemes through the medium of Co-Operatives. The institutions provide short-term and long-term loans, fertilizers, high-breed seeds and farm equipment, Public Distribution System, housing, fisheries, dairy, forest produce, weavers, mining and horticulture activities are operated, they informed. The socio-economic condition of weaker sections of the society, Dalits, socially and economically oppressed citizens had improved dramatically during the past 16 years. There is visible prosperity  in the lives of poor, rural citizens and farmers, officials stated. Earlier, the farmers had been provided with loans at huge rates of interest. The State Government provides loans at Zero per cent interest rate which brought happiness and transformation in the lives of farmers and artisans. Primary Agriculture Credit Co-Operative Societies had been computerized to make payment as soon as possible. All the 1986 kendras had been computerized. About 59. 28 lakh metric tonnes of paddy had been procured from the 11.10 lakh farmers during the current Kharif season. The State Government had been sanctioning large-scale loans to farmers through these District Co-Operative Central Banks, District Co-operative Agriculture and Rural Development Banks. The capital of the banks had been increased. Long-term credits are provided for the farmers and others for horticulture, fish rearing, silk industry, agriculture forestry, biogas plant and other non-agriculture activities. Source - http://www.dailypioneer.com

07.12.2016

USA - Silicon Valley’s Next Disruption Is on the Farm

Technology doesn’t make farming easier, according to Jay Hill, a New Mexico grower whose 1,000 acres near Las Cruces are planted with vegetables and commodity crops. “It makes farming possible.” Self-driving tractors, flying drones, and smartphone-controlled drip irrigation systems have kept him competitive, he says. Robotic lettuce harvesters are next. Thanks to technology, “I’m 20 times larger than when I started 15 years ago,” he says, and only one of four survivors out of what had been dozens of neighboring farms. So far, the higher costs haven’t led to higher profits. Technology has improved productivity for many farmers, but resulting bumper crops undercut prices. U.S. farm incomes in 2015 were down 36 percent from the prior year, the lowest since 2006. Hill’s profits are stuck where he started when he was in high school. The next wave of farm technology—big data—is supposed to fix that by cutting costs and minimizing environmental stress from farming. At least that’s the hype. “Interpreting farm data is the key to the agricultural revolution,” says Paul Noglows, executive producer of the Forbes AgTech Summit, Silicon Valley’s foremost agriculture conference. “This is a shift to increased efficiency, rather than just jamming out more crops.” Parts of the big data play are simple. Powerful cloud-based computer programs are fed decades of weather and soil data. Terabytes of imagery are collected by satellites, airplanes, and drones and layered into the computer analysis. Combined with field-level data gathered by sensors attached to tractors, dropped down water wells, and embedded in smartphones—yes, the lauded “internet of things”—software will deliver the personalized farming prescriptions directly to smartphones in the hands of individual farmers. This is the dawn of the digital age in farming, says Josette Lewis, who tracks agriculture industry progress as director of the World Food Center at the University of California, Davis. In every other industry, however, it is more like high noon. “Agriculture is one of the last major economic sectors to integrate data technology into operations.” So expect a rapid rollout. Silicon Valley saw this coming and has pumped tens of millions of dollars into Farm Link, Farm Business Network, Granular, Farmers Edge, and Conservis. These data services help growers make better economic decisions, says Lewis, which include reducing applications of fertilizer, pesticides, and herbicides. “We could see substantial reductions in farming’s environmental footprint.” More efficient farms will also reduce demand for land and thus reduce global deforestation, a major contributor to climate warming. Grower investments in technology will have doubled during the five years ending in 2019, with data analysis topping the shopping list, according to a recent report by Robert Hill of Caledonia Solutions. Big data is being used to reduce food insecurity. Launched in 2012, Global Open Data for Agriculture & Nutrition, an international group of more than 380 governments, agriculture companies, universities, and research organizations, is using cloud-based data services to give subsistence farmers around the world access to weather forecasts, market information, and crop insurance through their cell phones. “Agriculture is playing catch-up,” says Tim Shaw, who advises food company clients at Teradata. But while big data services have been overhyped in other industries, they could genuinely transform agriculture. Better use of weather data is critical for an industry susceptible to drought, floods, and the ravages of climate change. At this early point, The Climate Corporation has the most refined and complete platform, although it is focused on commodity crops such as corn and soy. Google data scientist David Friedberg launched the company in 2006 on a hunch that weather prediction might be useful to many businesses; he identified the agriculture industry as his target market and raised $100 million in venture funding for a weather-sensitive crop insurance company. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="568"] The Climate Corporation's Climate Fieldview monitoring app uses satellite mapping technology to track and show field health. (Photo: Courtesy Climate.com)[/caption] In a billion-dollar deal that dwarfs every ag-tech transaction before or since, St. Louis–based agrochemical giant Monsanto bought The Climate Corporation in 2013. It sold off the insurance service and pivoted to a digital platform that it hopes every farmer in the world will use. German company Bayer’s recent purchase of Monsanto for $56 billion guarantees that The Climate Corporation’s services will serve farmers around the world. “There are 90 million acres of corn planted in the U.S.,” says Mike Stern, CEO of The Climate Corporation. (Friedberg has since left the company.) “Some farmers get 170 bushels an acre. Others harvest 520 bushels. We bridge that gap so more farmers have higher yields. Our tools allow farmers to monitor their fields meter by meter and alter their farming accordingly. We make it easy for data to go from tractor to cloud.” [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="569"] The Climate Corporation's Nitrogen monitoring app can determine the smartest amount of Nitrogen to apply and the best time to do it. (Photo: Courtesy Climate.com)[/caption] Farmers have uploaded 100 million acres of crop data to The Climate Corporation’s platform through a free weather and soil information service. Paying customers represent 15 million acres of crop data on The Climate Corporation, an average of 2,000 acres per farmer, and receive Monsanto’s customized analytics. The world’s largest seed company, Monsanto has a global customer base, giving The Climate Corporation an edge over its competition, says Stern. A recent announcement by Monsanto that it has opened The Climate Corporation’s platform to outside app developers—in much the same way that Facebook hosts Zynga games or Snapchat hosts a Vice channel—could further broaden its appeal and accelerate innovation. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="634"] Satellite mapping technology allows the tractor driver to plot growing and harvesting pathways in The Climate Corporation's CabView field monitoring app. (Photo: Courtesy Climate.com)[/caption] “We are bringing outside innovators in to expand our services,” says Mark Young, The Climate Corporation’s chief technology officer. Getting new ideas in front of farmers on the platform will support fledgling services that otherwise might not make it to market. “A lot of smart people are working on the new data platforms,” says Jonathan Mi of Brightpath Capital Partners, a technology venture fund. “It is too early to say if there will be one or many” farm data platforms and how they will function. So far, farmers are hanging back, nervous about disclosing their data, even though it will be anonymous when crunched into a giant database. “This sector has been driven by Silicon Valley. They don’t necessarily have experience in farming,” says UC Davis’ Lewis. These programmers don’t understand how sensitive farmers are about sharing data. Ken Dalenberg signed up with The Climate Corporation six years ago to try to control costs on his 3,300-acre corn and soy farm, and he now uses it every day—just as he uses several of the other ag-data platforms. In his combine while he harvested corn recently, “I looked at yields trying to determine what hybrids we should plant where next year. It helps with new decisions, verifies decisions we made a year ago,” says the Champaign, Illinois, grower. All the platforms crunch the same data, he says, but no one platform is the best at everything, and they can’t talk to one another. “Too much money is backing too many platforms. Consolidation will take the best of each and put them into a new model,” he predicts. If you own an iPhone, Dalenberg says you can handle the technology, and he isn’t worried about sharing data. He says everyone with a smartphone already puts personal data on a central server, so what’s the big deal? Google sends more ads to him than Monsanto ever has, he says. “As the farm economy improves, which it always does, the people who use the data platforms are the ones who will be in business for the long term.” In New Mexico, ag-tech enthusiast Jay Hill gets it. But he is staying on the sidelines for now. Sharing operating data with other farmers still feels to him like sharing trade secrets. “Agriculture is a competitive business,” he says. Source - http://www.takepart.com

07.12.2016

USA - Drone technology hitting new heights

UAVs, unmanned aerial vehicles, aren’t new technology by any means. Now, however, thanks to robust investments and a somewhat more relaxed regulatory environment, it appears their time has arrived — especially in agriculture. Prior to the use of so-called drones, crop adjusters could have walked fields for hours and sometimes not discover problem areas at all. Drones can locate hot spots faster, so the crop insurance company can better assess how much damage a farmer really has. A scout now can determine if a field has been damaged within a matter of minutes, said Eric Vanasdale, COUNTRY Financial senior loss control representative. “Drone technology is advancing rapidly. Some would argue that the technology is outpacing regulations,” he said in an interview at the Illinois Farm Bureau annual meeting in Chicago. But commercial drone regulations released by the Federal Aviation Administration at end of August provide clarity about what farmers can and can’t do — clearing the sky for agricultural drones to take flight. “I think it’s a great first step from the FAA. They’ll continue to improve them and make it easier for our farmers to use,” Vanasdale said. “There’s been a lot of great advancements on things we can do on our farms, whether it’s NDVI technology for plant health, using it to detect livestock out on the pastures. We’re using them a lot to check crop damage with our claims area.” In simple terms, he explained, if farmers get their drone pilot’s license, they can fly up to 400 feet high, they have to keep the drone in their line-of-sight and they must fly in uncontrolled airspace. “The regulations did clarify a lot of those perceived gray areas. It provided a pathway for farmers to use these with reasonable regulations,” Vanasdale said. “Over the winter is a great time to figure out what technology best suits your operation. It’s a great time to study for the exam, to take the test, to get your remote pilot certificate and go ahead and figure that out over the winter so come spring, you’ve got the equipment, you’ve got the license, you meet the regulations and you’re ready to go.” He expects the FAA will continue to refine its regulations. The biggest issue remaining for farmers is they have to be able to see their drone the entire time they are flying it. “That works in a 60- or 80-acre field, but once you get in larger fields, it’s more difficult to do that,” Vanasdale said. “But the FAA will continue to improve that regulation — as technology improves and makes these safer, they’ll fly them out of your line-of-sight.” So is the sky the proverbial limit for drones in agriculture? “It’s a great scouting tool. I think it’ll get to the point where a majority of farmers have them. Not everybody is going to get one. There’s some farmers that just don’t embrace technology as much as others do, so not everyone will have one,” Vanasdale said. “But those that are wanting to do more of their own agronomy work, that are doing more of their own crop and field scoutings, those people, if they don’t already have one, certainly will here soon.” “The technology is out there. It’s been proven by the early adopters,” he added. “Now that you don’t have those regulatory concerns that we used to have, there’s really nothing holding farmers back from embracing this and adding it to their operations.” Want to fly a drone on your farm? Here’s what you need to know before takeoff: Farmers using unmanned aircraft in their own farming operations are classified as commercial users and must adhere to Federal Aviation Administration Part 107 Regulations for small commercial unmanned aircraft systems. The regulations create a new class of pilot’s license called a Remote Pilot Certificate. The Pilot in Command, or PIC, must hold this document, which requires them to be at least 16 years old and pass an initial aeronautical knowledge exam — which costs about $150 and consists of 60 multiple-choice questions — and Transportation Security Administration background check. Individual aircraft must be registered with the FAA for commercial use. Registration — done at registermyuas.faa.gov — is $5 per aircraft and lasts three years. Operations must adhere to specific airspace and operational limitations. In particular, unmanned aircraft and attachments must not exceed 55 pounds, and the PIC must keep the aircraft in their visual line-of-sight. Do not fly over people or from a moving vehicle. Only fly during the day. Yield right of way to manned aircraft, such as crop dusters. And fly under 400 feet unless operating above structures such as wind turbines.  Source - http://www.agrinews-pubs.com

07.12.2016

Australia - Total crop losses on some Mary Valley farms as growers count cost of massive storms

Farmers in Queensland's Mary Valley are reporting total crop losses after the region was battered by a series of violent storms since Wednesday that brought hail stones the size of tennis balls. Imbil passionfruit and avocado growers Rob and Cecily Price said they had lost $500,000 in fruit after being hit by three hail storms in three days. "Any passionfruit and avocados left on the tree are too bruised to be able to sell commercially, so it is a 100 per cent wipe out," Mr Price said. The couples grow passionfruit and avocados to ensure they have an income in the summer and winter months, but now will have no money for the next 18 months and might need to look for other jobs. "We have been through hard times before, although never quite as disastrous as this, but we were younger then and could get other jobs, but right now that's a little difficult," Ms Price said. "Robert and I are a bit too old for anyone to want to employ, so I don't really know what will happen." [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="700"] PHOTO: Imbil farmers Cecily and Rob Price are optimistic, despite losing 100 per cent of their avocado and passionfruit crop. (ABC Rural: Marty McCarthy)[/caption] Mr Price said without an income, he was now having to spend money he did not have to protect his trees from diseases and infections. "There is so much work we have got to do now. At the moment we are spraying copper on the trees to stop diseases getting in," he said. "When the bark is bruised it opens the tree up, and if you don't try and protect it, then disease can get in under the bark and do more damage to the trees." Mr Price expected it would take six to eight years to make up the lost income, but accepted storms as a reality of farming. "Any farmer worth his salt just weathers these disasters when they come. You don't go around crying about how hard you've been done by," he said. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="700"] PHOTO: Small avocados have been damaged by hail. (ABC Rural: Marty McCarthy)[/caption] Hail nets help weather storm Kandanga fig and citrus farmer Jim Olsen said a long-term investment in netting had helped him to protect his figs from tennis ball-sized hail on Friday. Mr Olsen installed the nets two decades ago to protect his crop from bats and birds, but said they had recently proved a formidable barrier against hail. "I have never seen hail that big before, and if [the net] wasn't there we wouldn't be picking this season, that's for sure," he said. "It has done a really good job." [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="340"] PHOTO: The hail took 48 hours to melt. (Supplied: Suzette Olsen)[/caption] Despite having the nets, Mr Olsen said he had still received up to 50 per cent damage to his crops because not all of his trees were covered. Mr Olsen said netting an orchard was expensive, and farmers needed to weigh up if netting to protect against the occasional storm was worth it. "These nets cost around $25,00 to $30,000 just to do this one patch, but today a farmer told me it would cost up to $40,000 an acre to put that type of netting in," he said. "The value of the crop under this paddock is $15,000 per year, so over four or five years it will cover it. "In a situation like this one it was good, but over 20 years maybe you are better off without it and putting up with losing crop once in a while." Small crop farmers' produce 'shredded' Elaine Bradley, from the Mary Valley Country Co-op, said the weather had been challenging for growers in the region, especially small crop farmers. "On some of the farms I've seen the lettuces have just been totally shredded, and plants like capsicums and eggplants have had the flowers wiped totally off them," she said. "We were getting hail about tennis ball to baseball size and it just shredded everything — trees, fruits, the whole lot. It's just caused so much damage." Ms Bradley said hail nets were fairly common, but more to do with orchards rather than small crops. "It is very expensive to put up the hail nets on that, so we haven't really seen it with the small crops happening in any of these areas," she said. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="700"] PHOTO: Nets protected some crops at an orchard at Kandanga in Queensland's Mary Valley. (Supplied: Suzette Olson)[/caption] Ms Bradley said as well as netting to protect against hail, farmers in the area were also considering shading to protect crops against heatwaves. "I think that's something that we are going to be looking at, the double benefit of heat protection as well," she said. "We've got temperatures of 60 to 70 degrees at ground level with some of those vegies, so it will stop them growing and flower and pollination. "I think we are moving in to a situation where we have to look at protected cover in a lot of our crops to enable things to grow through over these months." Source - http://www.abc.net.au

07.12.2016

India - Crop insurance should be made hassle-free for farmers

Minister of state (MoS) for cooperatives (independent charge) Vishwas Sarang has said that the receipts of crop insurance given to the farmers, must have all necessary information related to insurance. Physical verification after reaping of crop should be done so that there is no problem faced in taking insurance claim by farmers. Sarang was addressing the meeting of departmental advisory committee here on Tuesday. Sarang said recruitment process to keep trained staff in all district banks will begin soon. The recruitment will be made by Indian Banking Personnel Selection Board (IBPSB). He said around 2300 employees will be recruited. Source - http://www.freepressjournal.in

07.12.2016

India - Disappointed cotton, soybean and paddy farmers of Vidarbha expect govt. to fulfill their 10 months’ old promise

In February this year, the Maharashtra government, and specifically C.M. Devendra Fadnavis had announced aid of Rs. 1,012 crores to Vidarbha farmers who had suffered huge crop damage due to insufficient rains. Cotton, Soyabean and Paddy, the three major crops of the area, had not yielded expected results when rains suddenly stopped. We are all aware that there is very little irrigation facility for farmers when rains fail – Vidarbha is still largely monsoon-dependent agriculturally. Government had aknowledged the crisis and granted aid. Or made the announcement granting it. Now 10 months have passed – there have been two sessions of Maharashtra Assembly in Mumbai, the budget session and Monsoon session. No provision was made for implementation of the aid in both these sessions. Farmers were hopeful that the Winter session would at least yield some result as it is held in Vidarbha. But they have been disappointed again. On the first day of the Vidhan Sabha itself supplementary allocations of 9500 crores was announced but there was nothing for the hapless farmers. Demonitization has already taken a toll on farming income this year as it was announced just as cotton and soyabean came into the market for sale. Paddy harvest will also soon be finished and that too will be hit it seems clear. In such a scenario if aid announced at the beginning of the year had come through there would have been some relief for farmers. Not just Vidarbha, about 22 districts of the state had deficient rain fall last monsoons. As a result 15 thousand and 747 villages had suffered 50% over crop loss in the Kharif season. Almost 54 lakh hectares of agricultural land is under these crops in the affected areas. Last December some damage compensation had been announced and handed over to the farmers growing fruits but cotton, soyabean and paddy farmers had been omitted. This led to wide spread condemnation and criticism of this partiality which prompted the government to declare that aid would be given to these farmers also. That announcement was made in February but it has remained an empty promise. Farmers have not received crop protection insurance either. This inaction coming on the heels of Rabi market for vegetables being completely sabotaged and destroyed as a result of the sudden demonitization decision on 8th November has already put farmers under great financial hardship. If the neglect continues the specter of farmer suicides will again loom large. How long are we going to be moot spectators? Source - http://www.nagpurtoday.in

07.12.2016

Africa - Insurance for climate protection

People still doubt whether the private sector still has a role to play in insuring their property. The private sector has a role to play and can venture into the unknown territory of climate protection. Investors and the cross-section of the business sector need to communicate the vital information on the need to protect the assets they are investing in, as well as those projects that that have a strong bearing on the people’s livelihoods. The majority of Africans, Zimbabweans included, are reeling under the effects of energy poverty in the presence of very vital, but scarce resources. They are also faced with uncertainties of the grim effects of climate change and destruction. Therefore, how do those insurance companies communicate the provision of risk management and guidance to a number of energy-producing companies and their subsidiaries? People need to be convinced that insurance can still play a vital role, as it used to do, with the provision of financial protection after a disaster. Local farmers still need to be assisted in recovering some of the crops or costs they would have incurred due to climate-induced drought. After disasters strike, the private sector, through its insurance arms, needs to help businesses recover from the aftermath of extreme weather events. In Zimbabwe, at national level, the government needs to invest in insurance schemes that enable people to respond sustainably to floods or droughts, the major scourges that are synonymous with the African continent. Climate change is going to pose the greatest risks to businesses due to its unpredictable impact. Issues of businesses’ risk and resilience should be communicated appropriately to all stakeholders. The insurance gaps that were created in the past by insurance companies in this country, should be communicated in such a way that the beneficiaries no longer associate the insurance sector with the monster they once imagined it was. Insurance companies need to lead the way and play a pivotal role in helping people to recover, as well as reducing the impact of global warming. There is need for insurance companies to invest in risk communication and awareness in terms of climate protection so that prospective beneficiaries are sufficiently conscientised in terms of climate protection. Insurance companies should also explore sustainable land uses in order to prevent land degradation and carbon emissions that are contributing enormously to global warming. A new wave of climate insurable awareness, which can assist present and prospective clients in proficiently articulating risk management skills should dominate the insurance industry’s discourse. This would empower people with risk management skills that will sufficiently prevent unsustainable practices and environmental damage. Some insurance companies should also lead the way in demonstrating that they are serious about reducing their own carbon footprints. Without insurance, properties and businesses cannot function, and insurance policies that are aimed at protecting those engaged in green energy technologies need to be revitalised. With green commercial buildings the way to go, insurance companies are also expected to move in that direction of offering green commercial building insurance policies. Source - https://www.newsday.co.zw

06.12.2016

Australia - Mary Valley farmers suffer losses after massive storms

Farmers in Mary Valley, Queensland have suffered huge losses of their crops after a storms passed through their area since Wednesday. The storms brought with them hail the size of tennis balls which decimated crops. Imbil passionfruit and avocado growers, Rob and Cecily Price, said they had lost $500,000 in fruit after being hit by three hail storms in three days. "Any passionfruit and avocados left on the tree are too bruised to be able to sell commercially, so it is a 100 per cent wipe out," Mr Price said. "I think we are moving into a situation where we have to look at protected cover for a lot of our crops to enable things to grow through over these months," one farmer said, noting ways they could prevent this type of loss in the future. Source - abc.net.au

06.12.2016

Australia - Ag Robots tested for field and horticulture crops (photo)[:ru]Австралия - Роботы для полевых и садовых работ (фото)

06.12.2016

Australia - Wild weather destroys Southern Downs crops

FREAK hailstorms that ripped through the region over the past week have wreaked havoc on producers, with one farmer losing $30,000 worth of barley. Emu Vale's Les Kable was left devastated by the unusual weather event. "It was Sunday, November 27 and it was the storm that went through Killarney,” he said. "It got to us about 4pm and I think it was a bit worse here. "I've never seen anything like it in my time, and I've been here all my life. "The mountains up from me were covered in a blanket of white and the hail was inches thick on the ground here. "A couple of farmers out here were saying the same thing as well. It was unbelievable.” When the hail had settled, Mr Kable estimated he had lost about 200 tonnes of barley. "It was just annihilated,” he said. "Completely ruined, in parts it was chopped right back to the ground, nothing left. "My rain gauge was even smashed as well, and the same thing happened to a lady up the road.” The amount of time and money lost due to a freak hailstorm is staggering. Mr Kable estimated the loss of barley alone to be about $30,000. "The wheat copped it as well, but I'm not sure of the extent of the damage,” he said. "I'm about to take the header down there now, so I'll find out pretty shortly how bad it is. "The wheat is a bit tougher than the barley but I can see parts where it's been affected pretty badly. "It's definitely bad at the top end of the paddock, more than half is gone.” Mr Kable said he usually had his crop insured. "I generally do, but not this year, the premiums are pretty high,” he said. "It was all ready to go to, it happened right on harvest time. "I'd already started the harvest and had to go away to help a bloke with a paddock of oats and got back late on Saturday. "On Sunday I started harvesting and the bloody storm came through and I had to get the header into the shed quick smart.” As well as his winter crops of barley and winter, Mr Kable also had some summer sunflowers in. "They're at about a foot high, so they saved them a bit, being so small,” he said. "We've had a few good drops of rain since the storm as well, and that's helped to spark them back up a bit.” Mr Kable said there was little he could have done. "There's really nothing you can do,” he said. "It's a lot of time and money down the drain. "We would have started preparing the ground for this crop in January and then planted in June/July, there's all the spraying and it gets taken out right when it's ready to go. "You're at the mercy of the storms, it's the way of God isn't it? We'll just have to try it all again next year and hope for the best. "You've just got to soldier on...or make your overdraft bigger.” Source - https://m.warwickdailynews.com.au

06.12.2016

Canada - Area farmers battle wettest year since the 1990s

Rick Kantz with the BC Grain Producers Association says he hasn’t seen a year like this since the 1990s. With crops still on the field, he says producers are in a lurch. “We are still dealing with the fall. About 20 per cent of yields are still on fields and this isn’t going to be positive,” he says. “Cereals will likely be flattened and not sellable. Canola that would normally have been pulled in has been snowed under.”   He said this season was not what the agriculture sector needed. “We are all used to uncertainty to a point, but we’re still trying to salvage this year,” he said. Dawson Creek rancher Larry Fossum, past president of the B.C. Cattlemen’s Association, said earlier this fall that the situation has him having to do more with less. “Ranchers with full-time income coming off the ranch would be (earning) roughly 40 per cent less right now if they sold their cows,” he said.  According to a Country Life in B.C. report, Anne Wasko told the B.C. Association of Cattle Feeders the U.S. was solely to blame for the over correction in price. Wasko said the cow inventory in that country has come on so strong that the market hasn’t had time to catch up.   Shaun Grant, general manager of the South Peace Grain Cleaning Co-op, said he knows of one mid-size producer who’s pegged his losses at $1 million. “There wasn’t time to complete the harvest,” he said. “The ground conditions have been very wet and soft, and then it started to rain and that delayed harvest. Then the snow came right behind it.” Kantz agrees. “If it hasn’t been cold, it has been raining,” he said. “There has been nothing like this since the 90s crops on the field rolling past mid November is certainly an odd year.” B.C.’s Peace Region accounts for about 80 per cent of the province’s field crop production, with main crops being wheat, barley and canola. Kantz says the 20 per cent of crops left on the fields is many producers’ margin.  “And then when the crop on the field is of less quality, more of a feed level, then income goes down. Cattle were down this year too. We need an early spring to get this year’s work done—to get the crops off before new planting.” He admits it doesn’t look promising and that early spring chances are slim. “Right now it doesn’t look like an early spring is in the cards.” Source - http://www.alaskahighwaynews.ca

06.12.2016

India - Massive crop failure stares at state

The State Government is expecting crop failure on a massive scale this year on account of the acute drought situation, Agriculture Minister V S Sunil Kumar said on Monday. “As we enter December, 1000 hectares of farm land in Palakkad and Thrissur have already dried up. Many panchayats in Wayanad are faced with severe drought and crop loss,” the minister said, inaugurating the World Soil Day celebrations organised by the State Soil Survey and Soil Conservation Department. The Kerala Agricultural University and the Soil Survey and Soil Conservation Department are examining the mass appearance of earthworms and large-scale fleeing of frogs in three panchayats in Wayanad, both apparent indicators of drought, he said. The study in Wayanad has also revealed the appearance of flora and fauna common to desert regions, he said. In October, the State Government had declared all 14 districts of the state as drought-hit. The announcement was made by Revenue Minister E Chandrasekharan in the Assembly.The Agriculture Department intends to equip all farmers in the state with soil health cards within five years, the Agriculture Minister said. The challenge before good agriculture management is ensuring profitability in farming with minimal impact on the environment, Planning Board Vice- Chairman V K Ramachandran said. Additionally, good management of soil health, Ramachandran said, was imperative to sustainable crop production. A UN Food and Agriculture Organisation campaign, the World Soil Day is observed every year on December 5 to highlight the importance of soil in people’s daily lives. This year the theme is ‘Soils and Pulses, a Symbiosis for Life.’ Sunil Kumar released a postage stamp on the importance of soil issued by India Post. K Muraleedharan MLA presided over the function. Mayor V K Prasanth, Soil Survey and Soil Conservation director J Justin Mohan, Agriculture Production Commissioner Raju Narayana Swami, Environment Department director Padma Mohanty and Agriculture director Biju Prabhakar spoke. Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com

06.12.2016

Pakistan - Crop loss management

THE country’s apex agricultural research body is evolving strategies to enhance adoption of harvest and post-harvest management technologies through public-private community partnerships. The Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (Parc) has before it two strategies: making agri-food systems more knowledge-intensive and strengthening strategic partnerships and networking. These strategies are focused on devising innovative, best practices applied and integrated for reduced harvest and post-harvest losses and wastage and developing technical competency expertise in different aspects of post-harvest management. Currently, the magnitude and nature of geographical spread of research activities in post-harvest loss management is quite meagre as compared to the challenges and efforts needed. The success of strategies will largely depend on effective partnerships and cooperation among research and development organisations, and other stakeholders engaged in harvesting, post-harvesting and marketing of agricultural commodities and products. Parc’s aim should be to help stakeholders and partners not only to engage in collaborative efforts but also to mobilise partnership support from its sister organisations To forge such an effective partnership, Parc needs to rigorously launch a series of awareness campaigns about the importance and scope of networking among stakeholders. The aim should be to help stakeholders and partners not only to engage in collaborative efforts but also to mobilise partnership support from Parc’s sister organisations. Losses of fresh fruits and vegetables in developed countries range from 2pc for potatoes to 23pc for strawberries, with an average of 12pc losses between production and consumption in general. On an average, the losses at the retail, food service and consumer levels are about 10pc in developed countries and 20pc in developing countries. Pakistan’s post-harvest losses are estimated at Rs134bn annually. Data collected for fiscal year 2014-15 showed that 7.25m tonnes of vegetables and 6.80m tonnes of fruits were produced having a total value of Rs537bn. At least 25pc losses of horticultural crops means 3.5m tonnes are lost. If post-harvest losses are cut by 1pc, horticultural products worth more than Rs5bn could be saved. Adequate post-harvest treatments not only minimise post-harvest losses, but also maximise the producer’s profits, and result in better-appearing, more nutritious fruits and vegetables on consumer’s plates. In post-harvest management, technical competency needs to be developed in areas like preserving quality (especially for the exportable commodities), pre-storage treatments, crop storage, pest management, packaging, primary and secondary crop processing, qualitative and quantitative loss assessments, and adoption of best international practices. Currently, four federal and six provincial institutions are engaged in conducting post-harvest management-related research activities. Their focus on research includes variety screening, packaging, storage, grading, fruit processing, fruit handling and preservation through dehydration. The commodities focused are mango, citrus, apple, peach, apricot, dates, plum, pomegranate, persimmon, guava, grapes, lemon, potato and onion. Source - https://www.dawn.com

05.12.2016

USA - What is crop insurance, really?

A lot of you want to see more family farms and ranches and more businesses in our rural communities. You also care about healthy food and clean water. But if you’re not a farmer, and I say the words “crop insurance,” those words might just go in one ear and out the other. Well, guess what — crop insurance has everything to do with the viability of family farms, the health of rural communities, production of healthy food and stewardship of clean water. But how? What is crop insurance and how is it connected to the kinds of decisions farmers make, with the kinds of farms we have on the landscape? First, we have to understand why we have crop insurance. We know farming is risky for many reasons: weather and markets can be unpredictable and they have huge impacts on annual profits. With crop insurance, farmers can manage this risk by filing a claim and getting a payment at the end of a bad season. This risk is generally regional. If one farmer in an area battles drought, probably all the neighbors do too. When everyone brings in a claim at the same time, the insurance company faces steep payouts. The federal government decided it was important to help farmers and insurance companies manage some of this risk, so it subsidizes crop insurance by supporting insurance companies and paying a portion of farmers’ crop insurance premium. Cap benefits to make things even Still with me? Unfortunately, there’s a major problem with this setup: the nation’s largest and wealthiest farms can insure against a greater level of production risk than smaller farmers can, giving the largest producers a financial advantage. Even though other federal programs have payment limits, there aren’t any limits to what the government will pay on crop insurance premiums. Right now, if one operation farmed the entire state of Iowa and wanted to buy crop insurance to cover all of it, the federal government would cover 62 percent of their crop insurance premiums for every single acre. This undermines the financial health of our nation’s small and mid-size farmers. We believe a change in policy is needed to level the playing field for small and large farmers. There are a variety of ways to tackle this, such as capping subsidies, or reducing the amount of subsidy for higher levels of coverage. These measures could make crop insurance accessible to all farmers while removing the advantage that unlimited subsidies offer to some. Incentivize conservation Another issue with crop insurance: it represents a huge missed opportunity to encourage farming practices that are good for our soil, water and other natural resources. We know that practices such as planting alternative crops or implementing diverse crop rotations can build soil health, which improves crop outcomes, like increasing drought tolerance and reducing nutrient loss. It would be fiscally and environmentally responsible to structure crop insurance to encourage conservation practices. At present, most crop insurance policies discourage common-sense conservation practices like crop rotation or crop diversity. We believe this should be reversed. Crop insurance that works for all Finally, there are a lot of producers who would like to be able to use crop insurance but aren’t able to access policies that work for them. Crop insurance is very well set up for certain commodity crops — 70 percent of acres protected under crop insurance are planted in corn, cotton, soybeans and wheat. But producers who grow unique crops, who raise organic crops or who are highly diversified often have a hard time finding crop insurance. USDA’s Risk Management Agency has been expanding its offerings in these areas. There are more organic policies, and a program called Whole Farm Revenue Protection is designed for diversified operations. But we believe there’s opportunity to improve and expand these programs so they work better and for more farmers. Small producers and historically under-served producers are more likely to raise crops for which there aren’t robust crop insurance offerings. Ensuring that these producers have access to robust crop insurance will help them establish and grow their businesses. Their financial health and presence in rural areas contribute to the strength of rural communities. We believe that making crop insurance available to all producers will be an important step in our work of supporting small and mid-size farms and fighting for vibrant rural communities. So that’s how you fix crop insurance: cap benefits to the largest farms, incentivize conservation and expand access to all producers and all crops. Source - http://magicvalley.com/

770
of 1173