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08.06.2016

USA - Congress’s Plan To Rein In Farm Subsidies Is Actually Costing Taxpayers More

The 2014 Farm Bill that was supposed to save $23 billion over 10 years will cost taxpayers much more due to subsidy payments, according to reports compiled by the Environmental Workers Group. The bill was supposed to reduce costs by offering crop insurance that protected farmers when crop yields failed, and eliminated subsidies, according to the Senate Committee on Agriculture. The $956 billion bill replaced a system known as direct payments subsidies with a combination of extensive crop insurance programs which were promised to be cheaper, alternatives. The system is not working as intended. Analysis of corn and soy subsidies in 2014 and 2015 reveal far higher subsides than Congress predicted. The two new subsidy programs, the Agriculture Risk Coverage-County (ARC-CO) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC), actually cost $5.2 billion in subsidies in 2014, more than any year since 2005. “Continued decreases in prices are the main reason for the relatively high ARC-CO payment estimates,” according to a recent report from Farmdoc Daily. In a 2014 study, Farmdoc Daily found more than 90 percent of corn and soybean farms received some form of payment. Source -  http://dailycaller.com

08.06.2016

China - Cold weather causes drop in early peaches

"The big peaches from Weishi county, Henan province, will be going on sale in about 2 weeks, and they will be available until September. Compared to the previous production season, the market price of this season's peaches is predicted to be higher." According to Mr. Yuan Pengfei of the Jinfengyuan Professional Cultivation Cooperative. "Compared to other fruits, peaches are cultivated pretty easily. The main factor influencing their growth is the weather. This year's cold weather had such an influence. On the scale of the whole country, the early varieties in particular are under produced. In some regions only half of last years quantities were produced. But the Chinese peach production region of Weishi county did not suffer any influences, because the peaches we cultivate blossom starting from March." "The cooperative is located in Henan province, Kaifeng city, Weishi county. In 2010 we started to cultivate peaches. By 2015 there were first results. In the present stage, we have over 40 hectares of outdoor cultivation area. The varieties we cultivate are Xinnonghong, Guohong and Chunmei. Unlike most other cooperatives, we have our own organic fertiliser yard, where suitable organic fertilisers and mixed fertilisers are produced for the peaches. The cooperative also has its own refrigeration and packaging departments. Concerning logistics, we currently work together with an external logistics company." "Since last year was our first harvest, the peaches are mainly distributed locally and in neighbouring regions. Suffering influences from the downturn of the overall market situation, the quantities sold are not ideal. Starting from this production season, we will sell throughout the whole country. We work hard to sell our products to first and second tier cities where a demand exists in the high-end market. Within a few years, we will endeavour to develop organic and ecological products. We will open picking gardens and follow a path that suits our industry." Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

08.06.2016

India - Authorities confident of increasing crop insurance cover

The authorities concerned have notified 16 major crops cultivated in the district for crop insurance scheme and expect the number of farmers availing insurance cover against crop failure to rise significantly. The Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana launched early this year is being implemented from the current kharif season and the authorities concerned are hopeful of a greater insurance penetration. According to the statistics available from the Department of Agriculture, only 12,000 farmers had availed crop insurance cover in the district in 2013-14 and there were 4,000 cases of insurance claims resulting in the settlement of nearly Rs. 64 lakh. Joint Director of Agriculture Mahanteshappa said crop insurance is compulsory for farmers availing agricultural loan from banks and other registered financial institutions. But it was left to the decision of the individual farmers if they had not availed loan and hence the scheme had generated a lukewarm response so far. Besides, many of the crops commonly cultivated in the district did not have insurance cover and hence a majority of the farmers were left out of the crop insurance scheme. Advantages But the new crop insurance scheme has many advantages and the notified area for computing the crop loss has been localised from the hobli level to Gram Panchayat level, Mr. Mahanteshappa said. In addition, the premium was low while there was also insurance cover for post-harvest loss which was not the case earlier, he added. In the earlier scheme, at least 50 per cent of the crop should have failed in a notified area for qualifying for insurance cover. Under the revised norms, it has been reduced to 33 per cent, which is another added attraction besides the low premium, according to the official. Notified crops For Mysuru district paddy, maize, ragi, cotton and pulses are among those listed as notified crops and they cover almost the entire spectrum of crops cultivated in the region. However, sugarcane and tobacco — which together is cultivated on 87,000 hectares of land — has been left out of the insurance cover. But cotton, which is cultivated on nearly 50,000 hectares of land, has been brought under crop insurance scheme this year and it will help in greater penetration of the insurance cover. Besides, there are certain horticultural crops too that have been notified under the new crop insurance scheme. Source - thehindu.com

08.06.2016

India - Meet on PMFBY held in Cachar

In a bid to inspire the farmers of the district to enrol in a specially designed scheme to reap benefits under the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY), the Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK) Cachar in association Assam Agricultural University organised a farmer’s fair cum awareness meeting at the District Library auditorium on Tuesday. It may be mentioned that the scheme marked the official beginning of the crop insurance scheme in Cachar. The crop insurance scheme launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on January 13 this year ensures maximum insurance cover at minimum insurance for the welfare of the farmers. JJ Bhattacharjee, lead district manager informed that the scheme envisages a uniform premium of only two per cent to be paid by farmers for kharif crops, and 1.5 per cent for Rabi crops. Further, the premium for annual commercial and horticultural crops will be five per cent. Expressing concerns on the plight of the farmers, PWD Minister Parimal Suklabaidya said that this scheme has the solution to problems the farmers face. He urged the banks to step up to extend assistance to the farmers. Taking a dig at the corrupt practices in the irrigation and agricultural sectors in the past, Parimal said that efforts must be made to create a corruption-free environment which facilitates farmers to produce more and get better returns. “Farmer suicide in India is a major cause of concern. We must combat the crisis by extending cooperation towards the farmers who toil hard to give us food,” Suklabaidya said. He also gave away the Soil health Cards to ten farmers in the meeting. Sonai MLA Aminul Haque Laskar echoed the PWD minister’s observation saying that the financial institutions must encourage the farmers to be a part of the scheme. Earlier, Silchar MP Susmita Dev said that there are apprehensions about double cropping in the district but she hoped that the new government in the State will lay thrust on the agriculture sector. She also expressed concern over the rise of farmer suicide cases in the country and said, “I shall urge the Finance Minister to facilitate loan waver for the farmers.” Dr Pranab Jyoti Sarma, programme coordinator KVK, Cachar, gave the welcome speech underscoring the agenda of the farmer fair and Jakir Hussain Choudhury, Agriculture Office, Cachar pointed out the damage done to the crops in the recent flash floods in the district. Madhumita Choudhury, DDC Cachar also attended the meeting. Later, the bankers and officials from the insurance companies interacted with the farmers. Source - http://www.assamtribune.com

07.06.2016

South Africa faces similar MPCI issues

ATTEMPTS to get a viable multi-peril crop insurance (MPCI) system working in South Africa are running into similar obstacles as Australia, according to a MPCI specialist in the African nation. Johan van den Berg works with Santam Crop Insurance, South Africa’s leading crop insurer with around 60pc of the total crop protection market,  managing the MPCI portfolio. He said issues such a lack of liquidity in terms of the number of grain producers, a tendency for a succession of drought years and the need for reliable data, all raised as problems in Australia, are also holding back the sector in South Africa. South Africa produces over 12 million tonnes of maize, both white and yellow, in normal years, along with wheat, sunflower and sorghum, but last season its crops were decimated by drought, which has meant it will be a net importer of maize this year. The 2015/16 maize crop is expected to be below 7million tonnes, the lowest in more than a decade. Mr van den Berg said Santam had been running a MPCI program since 2001-02, with what he described as ‘mixed success’. Similar to Australia, he said the South African sector was without government assistance and he said the industry was trying to find the right model for long term viability. “The drought cycles that can be responsible for large claims in consecutive years need to be managed through a long term view and pricing strategy.” He also said, from the insurer point of view, it was important to get the right clients. “Client selection is important. We often end up with the lower end of the scale farmers that use MPCI to cover poor management or poor production potential.” Mr van den Berg said it was also important that there was ongoing participation from the production sector, not only when they were concerned about a drought. “Anti-selection remains one of the major issues with MPCI.” Scale is another factor in getting MPCI to work. “Farming units or farms must be combined rather than to split it up into small entities.  The smaller the area covered, the more risky is it in terms of insurance,” he said. “Limits for minimum hectares insured are very important.  Statistics showed that there is a direct negative correlation between area size and claims loss ratio over the long term.” To counter the various risks that he said his business used several individual pricing models according to the amount of risk managed by the farmer, through initiatives such as precision farming, crop selection and geographic spread, along with solid agronomic practices. In terms of the statistics needed, Mr van den Berg said ideally Santam was looking for reliable yield data for at least five to ten years which also includes the low end of the yield spectrum. “It is very important to offer the correct guarantee yield to farmers.  Highly variable yields are very undesirable, leading often to incorrect yield guarantees and consequently a high frequency and intensity of claims,” he said. But even with this rigorous approach in place he said it was difficult to make MPCI work in South Africa. “The nature of MPCI is that it is for a catastrophic event, it is either a ‘six’, where everyone claims, or a ‘nix’, nothing, over large areas, which means you need a lot of capital to manage claims.” “It can be done, but you really need to take that long-term view.” Source - http://www.stockandland.com.au

07.06.2016

USA - USDA announces streamline crop reporting information

On the last day of May, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced a way of streamlining the process of filing acreage reports with the Farm Service Agency (FSA) and participating insurance providers approved by the Risk Management Agency (RMA). Farmers and ranchers can now provide the common information from their acreage reports at one office and the information will be electronically shared with the other location. The newly announced process is part of the USDA Acreage Crop Reporting Streamlining Initiative (ACRSI). This interagency collaboration also includes participating private crop insurance agents and insurance companies, all working to streamline the information collected from farmers and ranchers who participate in USDA programs. “If you file your report at one location, the data that’s important to both FSA and RMA will be securely and electronically shared with the other location,” said FSA Administrator Val Dolcini. “This will avoid redundant and duplicative reporting, and we expect this to save farmers and ranchers time.” “Accuracy in crop reporting is a key component for crop insurance,” RMA Administrator Brandon Willis added, “because an error in this information can affect premiums or claims. This is going to greatly improve efficiencies and reduce mistakes.” The work to streamline the crop reporting process actually started back in 2009. At that time agricultural producers were expressing concerns with providing the same basic common information for multiple locations. In 2013, USDA consolidated the deadline to 15 dates for submitting these reports, down from the previous 54 dates at RMA and 17 dates for FSA. USDA representatives believe farmers and ranchers will experience a notable improvement in the coming weeks as they approach the peak season for crop reporting later this summer. More than 93 percent of all annual reported acres to FSA and RMA will now be eligible for the common data reporting, and USDA is exploring adding more crops. Producers must still visit both locations to validate and sign acreage reports, complete maps or provide program-specific information. The common data from the first-filed acreage report will now be available to pre-populate and accelerate completion of the second report. Plans are underway at USDA to continue building upon the framework with additional efficiencies at a future date. Dolcini also reminded farmers and ranchers that they can now access their FSA farm information from the convenience of their home computer. “You can see your field boundaries, images of your farm, conservation status, operator and owner information and much more,” Dolcini said. The new customer self-service portal, known as FSAFarm+, gives farmers and ranchers online access to securely view, print or export their personal farm data. To enroll in the online service, producers are encouraged to contact their local FSA office for details. Source - http://www.tristateneighbor.com

07.06.2016

USA - Cotton planting wraps up as ground dries

Cotton planting is up to 80 percent completed across the South Plains, according to various estimates. And as fields dry and no significant rain chances are forecast this week, remaining acreage could receive seeds fairly quickly. Cotton-planting insurance deadlines vary by county. Swisher County, for instance, saw its final planting-without-late-penalty date on May 31. Of course, farmers in the Tulia area whose fields weren’t dry enough at that time can still plant certain other crops with later deadlines. Integrated pest management agent Blayne Reed said he anticipates seeing more corn and sorghum planted within the next few weeks. A few other county deadlines were Sunday, but some aren’t until Friday. Others are June 20. “If you’re in a June 10 or a June 20 county, I don’t know how it could be much better,” said Steve Verett, executive director of Plains Cotton Growers. But of that 20 percent of cotton acreage still waiting for cotton, at least some could have to keep waiting. In this troubled market, a few farmers could be unable to secure financing to plant as much as they would like, predicted Russ Perkins of Bayer Crop Science. “It won’t be the whole 20 percent ... but it’s still a pretty good chunk of ground where it won’t happen this time,” the technical service representative said Friday at a Plains Cotton Growers meeting. Of the majority of cotton that’s already been planted, most is surviving the disease risks that are increased in its wet environment, agronomist Jason Woodward said. “We’ve picked up a little more seedling disease, but it’s amazing how well these fungicides have held up,” said Woodward, who works for Texas Tech and Texas A&M AgriLife. “Seedling disease is not as big a problem as I would have expected.” Weed trouble this season, on the other hand, is practically inevitable. Pigweeds that evolved a resistance to glyphosate are here to stay, and the last few years have seen a return to residual treatments and old-school hoe crews. “If it warms up next week, the pigweeds are gonna be coming like crazy,” said Wayne Keeling, an AgriLife specialist in cropping systems and weed science. Source - http://lubbockonline.com

07.06.2016

India - Heavy rain brings cheer to farmers in Bidar district

Heavy rain on Saturday and Sunday night has brought cheer to farmers in Bidar district. Farmers, who waited for rain in the last six faming seasons, suffered crop losses and strived to rear cattle with scarce water and green grass, were relieved when most parts of the district received heavy rain for more than three hours on Saturday and Sunday night. As much as 8.6 mm rainfall was received on June 4 and 11.8 mm on June 5. A boon Meanwhile, scientists say that it is a boon for farmers. “It will help them in preparing land,” Ravi Deshmukh, farm scientist from Krishi Vigyan Kendra, has said. “It will reduce soil temperature and soften the soil that will help farmers take up ploughing, bunding and carving out channels,” he said. Farmers are likely to choose soya, green gram, black gram, jowar and red gram this season. Due to the trend in soya prices remaining high in some seasons, area under this crop is likely to increase, he said. Officers elated And, officers are elated. The spell of rain has addressed several issues, said K. Zia Ulla, Joint Director of Agriculture. First, it has helped animals, by filling surface water bodies such as tanks and lakes. And, second, it has rejuvenated springs in the open wells. With one or two more spells of rain, open wells in the district will begin yielding harvestable amounts of water, he said. This rain is a morale booster for farmers who will now plan and prepare for cultivation, he said. Seeds, fertilizer The department is making arrangements for distribution of seeds and fertilizer to farmers through the Raitha Samparka Kendras and other outlets, he said. He said that the district is likely to get between 100 per cent and 120 per cent rainfall this monsoon. Bidar district receives an annual aggregated rainfall of 885 mm. Of the 9.1 lakh acres of cultivable land in the district, around 7.5 lakh acres will be taken up for sowing during the kharif. Foodgrains Foodgrains will be sown in nearly 80 per cent of the area. Sugarcane and other commercial crops will be taken in around 10 per cent of the area. Horticulture and plantation crops will cover the rest of the area.  Source - http://www.thehindu.com

07.06.2016

Rwanda - Farmers need a sustainable solution

Cassava farmers in Ruhango District in Southern Province have appealed to Parliament and the Prime Minister’s office to intervene in their failed negotiations with Rwanda Development Bank (BRD) over a loan gone bad, worth Rwf400million. The bone of contention is a Rwf400 million loan, which the farmers have failed to pay back following losses due to Cassava Brown Streak Disease that struck the crop in 2013/2014 farming season, leaving farmers counting losses. Both the farmers and the bank have genuine concerns for the stand that each party has taken. The farmers want a waiver instead of postponing the repayment period because they don’t have a source of income to repay the loan, while, on the other hand, the bank is also right to insist on extension of the repayment period because it is important that it recovers that money and be able to lend to other people. Running to the Prime Minister’s office or Parliament is just a temporary solution, what the farmers need is to seat with the bank and seek a fair solution. The farmers will still need other loans in the future because their livelihood depends on agriculture; coming up with a win-win situation for the two parties in the dispute is the way to go. The cassava farmers will be setting a bad precedent, if they insist on a waiver instead of seeking for a convenient way to repay back the loans. Other financial institutions will be hesitant to lend to farmers because of such scenarios. To avoid such risks in the future, it should be mandatory that any farmer who borrows must insure their crops. The farmers’ request for agriculture insurance against disasters threatening the sector, waiving of loan interest, among others, should be the focus of the stakeholders handling the matter. Source - http://www.newtimes.co.rw

07.06.2016

India - Rs. 694 crore crop insurance released for kharif season

There is some good news for drought-hit farmers in 136 taluks in the State. Farmers who lost crops in the kharif season last year are all set to receive Rs. 694.12 crore crop insurance amount released by insurance companies. President of the Gulbarga District Raitha Horata Samiti Kedarlingaiah Hiremath told presspersons here recently that farmers had paid Rs. 80.70 crore as insurance premium to insurance companies for kharif crops. Biggest beneficiary Mr. Hiremath said that Kalaburagi district, one of the worst-hit with farmers losing heavily, has been sanctioned the highest crop insurance compensation of Rs. 197.60 crore. Haveri dist. second Haveri district stood second in the State to get crop insurance of Rs. 123.50 crore for the kharif season. In Kalaburagi, 1.14 lakh farmers who had insured their crops would benefit. Jewargi tops in Kalaburagi In Kalaburagi district, Jewargi taluk topped the list with a sanction of Rs. 74.93 crore crop insurance, followed by Aland with Rs. 48.55 crore, Kalaburagi taluk Rs. 37.55 crore, Chitapur taluk Rs. 20.72 crore, Chincholi taluk Rs. 8.15 crore and Afzalpur which has been sanctioned Rs. 7.60 crore. There was no information available about the crop insurance sanctioned to Sedam taluk. Other districts The following are the details of crop insurance sanctioned to other districts: Dharwad Rs. 84.04 crore, Bidar Rs. 69.73 crore, Uttara Kannada Rs. 40.92 crore, Gadag Rs. 34.22 crore, Yadgir Rs. 33.23 crore, Belagavi Rs. 31.22 crore, Koppal Rs. 16.15 crore, Shivamogga Rs. 13.78 crore, Vijayapura Rs. 14.31 crore, Davangere Rs. 11.40 crore, Bagalkot Rs. 6.85 crore, Hassan Rs. 5.92 crore, Kolar Rs. 4.03 crore, Chitraduraga Rs. 2.49 crore, Tumakuru Rs. 17 lakh, Bengaluru Rural Rs. 14 lakh, Ballari Rs. 6 lakh, Mysuru Rs. 5 lakh and Bengaluru Urban Rs. 4 lakh. The rest of the districts have been sanctioned less than Rs. 1 lakh crop insurance. The figure pertaining to Raichur district was not available. Source - http://www.thehindu.com

06.06.2016

Germany - Millions of Euro damage due to stormy weather

Storms with heavy rain, hail and gale-force winds have caused millions of Euro worth of damage last weekend. The Vereinigten Hagelversicherung (hail insurance) alone reported 12,000 hectares as damaged worth almost 25 million euros in insurance. But these numbers are still rising because farmers have four days to report the damages and there are still severe weather alerts. Especially severe are the damages in the Southwest of Germany; areas around Nuremberg, Wiesbaden, Heidelberg, Würzburg, Augsburg and Stuttgart found themselves the center of the storm. A wide variety of crops damaged Strawberry plants, lettuce and young cabbages and several wine ranks were damaged. Almost all open field winter crops, such as maize, sugar beets, rape and beans are affected. The recorded damage exists of damaged leaves, ears and pods. The heavy rains damaged the young beet and maize plants and washed away the hilling of the potato beds. The claims of the damages are already being handled. The experts visit the farms to see the damaged areas. According to the weather forecast the entire week will be overcast with showers and thunderstorms. Source - freshplaza.com

06.06.2016

Nepal - MoAD seeks additional Rs 60m for agriculture insurance scheme

The Ministry of Agricultural Development (MoAD) has sought an additional Rs 60 million from the Ministry of Finance (MoF) to extend subsidy on premium of crop, livestock and fowl insurance schemes. The ministry has demanded the additional sum, as Rs 120 million allocated by the MoF at the beginning of this fiscal year is not likely to be sufficient to extend subsidy on premiums. “We recently wrote to the MoF demanding the additional amount, as the amount allocated for this financial year is not going to be sufficient,” an official of the MoAD said. High subsidy extended by the government on premium of crop, livestock and fowl insurance has rapidly raised demand for these schemes. The government has been extending 75 per cent subsidy on insurance premium to farmers to insure crop, livestock and fowl since fiscal 2013-14. According to the Ministry of Agricultural Development, farmers have insured crops, livestock and fowls worth Rs 3.67 billion in the first nine months of the current fiscal year. To provide cover to these assets, farmers bought insurance policies worth Rs 167.15 million during the review period. Since 75 per cent of this premium cost is borne by the state, the government needs to release Rs 125.36 million to 17 non-life insurers. Of this amount, a total of Rs 80 million has already been released to insurance companies via Insurance Board in first and second quadrimesters. The MoAD has Rs 40 million left for the last quadrimester, however, the premium subsidy amount has exceeded the allocation by the end of the ninth month of the fiscal. The MoAD had released Rs 21 million outstanding dues of premium subsidy from fiscal 2014-15 in this fiscal. As the total allocation for premium subsidy witnessed shortfall of Rs 5.36 million till the ninth month of the fiscal, the MoAD has sought an additional Rs 60 million from the Ministry of Finance to extend premium subsidy. Insurers in fiscal 2014-15 had collected Rs 142.4 million in premium from crop, livestock and foul insurance and settled claims worth Rs 61.6 million, according to Kundan Sapkota, deputy director of the Insurance Board. During the first quadrimester of this fiscal, 17 non-life insurers settled claims worth Rs 21 million on crops, livestock and fowl insurance. Источник - thehimalayantimes.com

06.06.2016

USA - New reporting tool aims to save time for farmers, ranchers

U.S. Department of Agriculture recently announced farmers and ranchers filing crop acreage reports will be able to take advantage of an initiative aimed at streamlining reporting. Farmers and ranchers filing those reports with the Farm Service Agency and participating insurance providers approved by the Risk Management Agency now can provide the common information from their acreage reports at one office and the information will be electronically shared with the other location. "If you file your report at one location, the data that's important to both FSA and RMA will be securely and electronically shared with the other location," said FSA Administrator Val Dolcini, in a news release. "This will avoid redundant and duplicative reporting, and we expect this to save farmers and ranchers time." This new process is part of the USDA Acreage Crop Reporting Streamlining Initiative. This interagency collaboration also includes participating private crop insurance agents and insurance companies, all working to streamline the information collected from farmers and ranchers who participate in USDA programs. "Accuracy in crop reporting is a key component for crop insurance, because an error in this information can affect premiums or claims. This is going to greatly improve efficiencies and reduce mistakes," said RMA Administrator Brandon Willis. Since 2009, USDA has been working to streamline the crop reporting process for agricultural producers, who have expressed concerns with providing the same basic common information for multiple locations. In 2013, USDA consolidated the deadlines to 15 dates for submitting these reports, down from the previous 54 dates at RMA and 17 dates for FSA. USDA representatives believe farmers and ranchers will experience a notable improvement in the coming weeks as they approach the peak season for crop reporting later this summer. More than 93 percent of all annual reported acres to FSA and RMA now are eligible for the common data reporting, and USDA is exploring adding more crops. Producers must still visit both locations to validate and sign acreage reports, complete maps or provide program-specific information. The common data from the first-filed acreage report will now be available to pre-populate and accelerate completion of the second report. Plans are underway at USDA to continue building upon the framework with additional efficiencies at a future date. Dolcini also reminded farmers and ranchers that they can now access their FSA farm information from the convenience of their home computer. "You can see your field boundaries, images of your farm, conservation status, operator and owner information and much more," said Dolcini. The new customer self-service portal, known as FSAFarm+, gives farmers and ranchers online access to securely view, print or export their personal farm data. To enroll in the online service, producers are encouraged to contact their local FSA office for details. Source - http://www.brainerddispatch.com

06.06.2016

USA - Sign up for forage insurance by July 15

Annual Forage Insurance coverage is available in Nebraska for annual forage plants seeded for use as livestock feed or fodder. This includes, but is not limited to, plants seeded for grazing, haying, grazing/haying, grain/grazing, green chop, grazing/green chop, or silage. The sign-up/sales deadline is July 15 for coverage on fall-planted forage (planted between July 15 and November 15) with coverage available for a growing season from September 1 to March 31. The acreage reporting deadline is November 15 so a producer has until then to report actual planted acreage upon which coverage will apply. Annual Forage Insurance is also available for a spring growing season from March 1 to September 30 for forage planted between December 15 and July 15. The sign-up/sales deadline for this coverage is December 15. If you purchased an Annual Forage insurance plan last December, the acreage reporting deadline is July 15. The Annual Forage Insurance Plan is based on the rainfall index data provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Climate Prediction Center (NOAA CPC). Producers can insure up to 90% of the Expected Grid Index across a series of two-month intervals. The Expected Grid Index represents the average precipitation data for the Grid ID in each interval. The grids are 0.25 degrees in latitude by 0.25 degrees in longitude. This translates to roughly 17 miles by 17 miles at the equator. Due to curvature of the earth, actual size will vary based on location. Each grid has an historic precipitation index calculated for it for each of the two-month intervals dating back to 1948. Both irrigated and non-irrigated acres are insurable. Each county in Nebraska has a County Base Value determined by the Risk Management Agency (RMA) that represents its annual forage productive value regardless of production method. For example, the 2016 County Base Value for Cedar County is $157.56 per acre. A producer can attach liability coverage between 60% ($94.54 per acre) and 150% ($236.34 per acre) of the County Base Value depending upon their coverage needs. Annual Forage Insurance Plan premium costs will vary depending upon the coverage selected. Producers interested in using the Plan are encouraged to access the decision support tool on the RMA website to explore various coverage options, premium costs and performance data based on historical rainfall indices. Premium costs are subsidized from 51% to 59% depending on coverage level selection. Catastrophic (CAT) coverage is also available. Source - http://columbustelegram.com

06.06.2016

India - Over Rs 50,000 farmers from Gujarat buy crop insurance online

Having faced the worst of droughts, farmers in Gujarat have started taking crop insurance seriously with more than 50,000 of them registering for the new crop insurance cover given by Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) via the state portal. Under the PMFBY launched this year, farmers' premium has been kept at lower ranges, between 1.5%-2% for foodgrains and oilseed crops and up to 5% for horticultural and cotton crops. There is no cap on the premium. "More than 50,000 farmers have so far enrolled for PMFBY for the 2016-17 kharif season in Gujarat via the state portal on crop insurance," said a senior agriculture ministry official. Gujarat is the only state at present which is enrolling farmers under the scheme strictly through its e-portal. In other states, including Uttar Pradesh, farmers are being registered by concerned agencies including banks, Primary Agricultural Credit Society (PACS), he said. "So, the exact number of farmers registered for the scheme, both online and through other ways, would be known later. Once the banks upload the details of insured farmers on the central crop insurance scheme portal, it will be known to all stakeholders," he added. Karnataka government has also prepared its state portal for PMFBY, and it will be launched soon. As of now, 11 states -- Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Uttarakhand and West Bengal -- and one Union Territory, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, have notified the PMFBY. Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

06.06.2016

India - No compensation for agriculture, livestock losses

Government today admitted that no compensation has been made/ sanctioned against the loss in lieu of damages caused to agriculture and livestock in Kashmir Division during devastating floods of September 2014. In a written reply to a question of MLA Usman Abdul Majeed in Lower House, Minister Incharge said no relief has been given to agriculture and livestock that got affected during floods of 2014 in Kashmir Division. “But Rs. 11.47 crore crop compensation and Rs. 2.55 crore livestock was provided to Jammu Division. However, six months free ration at a cost of 35 kg per family per month was provided to flood affected people with an amount of Rs. 172 crore under SDRF,” the Minister said. He said 230715 houses were damaged during the devastating floods of 2014 which were provided financial assistance worth Rs. 565.69 crore through NDMA under PMNRF and additional financial assistance of Rs. 956.69 crore under PMDP-201. The Minister further said that an amount of Rs. 86.52 crore stands disbursed to the un-insured traders including shopkeepers and businessmen who suffered damages due to floods of September, 2014. The affectess of Septemper 2014 floods were paid relief as admissible under SDRF norms (2010-15) as per category of damage. Additional financial assistance was also provided under prime Minister’s National Relief Fund (PMNRF) and prime Minister’s Development Plan (PMDP) -2015, over and above the SDRF norms, he stated. “Rs. 42500 lacs to fully Damaged Pucca Houses, Rs 167600 lacs to fully demaged kacha house, Rs. 187600 to severely damaged pucca house and Rs. 63800 lacs to severaly damaged kacha house was disbursed,” the Minister added. Source - dailyexcelsior.com

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