NEWS
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News
17.03.2015

France and Germany expect good crops and wheat harvest - 2015

Unusually warm winter weather in western Europe means wheat has escaped major frost damage in leading producers, creating pre-conditions for a large harvest this summer, observers said on Friday."Frost damage is still possible for a couple more weeks but the threat level is decreasing each day," one German analyst said. "The stage has been set for a good harvest, now we need favourable spring and summer weather."The European Union's largest wheat producer and exporter, France, is on course for another big harvest this year and crops are in excellent shape after unusually warm weather in the second largest producer, Germany.Some 91 percent of French soft wheat was in good or excellent condition on Mar. 9, up from 75 percent a year ago and the highest rating at this stage in five years, said farm agency FranceAgriMer."The mild winter allowed steady growth for later-sown crops," said Paul Gaffet of agricultural consultancy ODA. "There have not been any setbacks during winter and we envisage a harvest that will be as big as last year's."ODA's current estimate is for a French 2015 crop of 37.5 million tonnes, equalling 2014 output, while Strategie Grains estimates 37.4 million tonnes. FranceAgriMer estimates soft wheat sowings at 5.1 million hectares, up 2.6 percent on the year.In Germany, "frost damage has hardly been reported anywhere," one analyst said. "The likelihood of deep frosts is greatly reduced after mid-March, a great relief to farmers as wheat is very susceptible to frost damage because the mild autumn meant plants were in a more advanced growth phase than normal."Germany's winter wheat sown area for the 2015 harvest has expanded by 2.8 percent to 3.24 million hectares. As for the third largest EU producer, "The UK is looking good from the south to the north," said Guy Gagen, chief arable advisor to the National Farmers' Union.However, Britain's Home-Grown Cereals Authority estimates the wheat area in England and Wales fell by around 7 percent on the year to 1.69 million hectares.This reflects a switch to more spring-planted crops which tend to produce lower yields but can help control black-grass, a weed which can reduce wheat yields and has become widespread in England. Spring crops can also help farmers meet new EU rules encouraging crop diversity.In Poland, the fourth largest producer, winter wheat is in "good to very good" condition in most regions, said Wojtek Sabaranski of analysts Sparks Polska. Polish farmers were able to plant winter wheat at the best time and root systems are strongly developed, he said. Sparks Polska estimates the wheat acreage of all types at 2.38 million hectares, up 2 percent from last year.Source - http://agri.eu/

16.03.2015

India - Crop damage compensation to farmers before Mar 31

The Rajasthan government said that compensation to affected farmers, whose Rabi crops were damaged due to rains, will be announced after an assessment by district collectors before March 31.On Opposition demands during Zero Hour, Calamity Management and Relief Minister G C Kataria said the farmers whose crop damaged or perished due to rains or hailstorm from February 28 to March 3 would be given compensation as per the rules of National Calamity Relief and crop insurance procedure.The crop assessment of damaged crop was underway and it would be completed by the district collectors by March 18 and distribution of compensation would be started from March 20, Kataria said.On March 12 rain and storm occurred in Kota, a fresh crop assessment would be done in next fifteen days, he said.On MLAs demand to reduce the crop damage percentage from 50 per cent to 25 percent, Kataria said till now the compensation was being given on or over the 50 per cent crop damaged and to reduce this level, the state had written to the Central government for revision and amendments in the act.Source - http://zeenews.india.com/

16.03.2015

USA - Southern crops suffer significant damage in storm

While it appears damages to Guam's infrastructure are minimal-to-none, and we're all breathing a huge sigh of relief since our community was spared from mother nature's wrath this time, your neighbors in southern Guam are justifiably concerned, as losses to crops are significant - putting a major dent into the livelihood of the island's agricultural sector.While many of us escaped Tropical Storm Bavi unscathed, that is not the case for many of Guam's farmers. According to Talofofo mayor Vicente Taitague, several farms in God's Country were damaged, as he noted, "There's no flooding damage there's no home damage, like I said the only damage we have is the farmers and the banana plantation."He brought us to one farm that produces everything from longbeans to eggplant and tomatoes, explaining, "As far as the extent of the damage it's about 30% of the plants are down on the ground, and when they came back this morning the put it up, make it stand up again so they would be able to salvage whatever they have."Farmers put up branches to prop up several trees that were downed, while many vegetables on the farm were bruised and damaged. "Right now, we're looking it over to see if we can salvage what we have and if not we're going to go ahead and clear the field and replant."This can cause a financial burden to farmers due to reduced production. Bill Reyes, a Talofofo resident who grows several fruits and vegetables, said he also experienced damage, although it was minimal. Department of Agriculture director Mariquita Taitague said her department will be assessing the damage; however, compensation will not be available to farmers unless the storm is declared a natural disaster by the governor. There is however a federal insurance program which does provide compensation."We have Farm Services here on Guam which is a federal program that you can buy insurance for your farm, because there are some farmers here who have bought insurance and will be compensated," he said.Source - http://www.kuam.com/

16.03.2015

Argentina - Floods could cut 2.5 million tonnes from soy crop

Flooding in the northern part of Argentina’s farm belt will reduce the country’s 2014-15 soybean production by one million to 2.5 million tonnes, experts said on Friday as growers started assessing damage done by heavy February and early March rains.Flood waters in Cordoba, Santa Fe and Santiago del Estero provinces have receded in recent days thanks to dry weather, allowing farmers to enter affected areas to take measurements.The government expects a record crop of 58 million tonnes, the same estimate made by local consultancy Agripac before cutting its forecast to 55.5 million tonnes. The flood damage would reduce the crop by 1.7 percent to 4.5 percent.“I think (1.5 million acres) will be lost to the floods, equal to 2.5 million tonnes,” said Agripac chief analyst Pablo Adreani. “The losses are in low- and medium-low lying areas.”Meteorologist German Heinzenknecht of the Applied Climatology consultancy estimated that 1.2 million acres of soy had been damaged by the floods. He said conditions will improve over the days ahead thanks to forecasted sunny weather.The Agriculture Ministry said in its weekly report it also expected dry, hot conditions in the northern farm belt will help dry up waterlogged fields over the coming week.The area hardest hit is north-central Cordoba, Argentina’s No. 2 farm province. Cordoba got 300 millimetres of rain last month, the most for the month since 1960.“The impact of the excessive water will be seen in yield loss and losses in harvestable area,” said analyst Gustavo Lopez of Agritrend. “Preliminarily, I estimate the losses at one million tonnes.”Earlier this month, the Buenos Aires Grains Exchange said it would probably cut its 2014-15 soybean harvest estimate of 57 million tonnes once damage from the flooding is factored in.The season’s crop estimates vary from one analyst to another, but all forecasts are above the record 53.4 million tonnes of soy collected in the 2013-14 season.Source - http://www.producer.com/

16.03.2015

Enhancements to 2015 crop insurance program

Federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz and Saskatchewan Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart announced details of the 2015 Crop Insurance Program which includes ongoing enhancements, giving producers more choice and flexibility to build an insurance package suited to the needs of their operation.The Crop Insurance budget for 2015 is $154 million. On average ,coverage levels are increasing to $183 per acre, up from $162 per acre in 2014. Premiums are going down to an average of $7.06 per acre from $7.47 in 2014.The improved coverage is a result of better forecasted crop prices and increased long-term yields. The lower premium is a result of lower rates to provide insurance coverage to producers.Three changes have been made to the Unseeded Acreage (USA) feature this year. First, new coverage levels of $50, $70, $85 and $100 per acre have been created, giving producers more choice about coverage for land that may be too wet to seed due to excess spring moisture. In past years, producers had a minimum coverage of $70 per eligible acre and could purchase additional coverage if they wanted. Secondly, a change has been made to how the USA premium is shown on a producer’s statement.The USA premium will now be shown separately from the producer’s Crop Insurance premium. In the past, these were bundled together.Finally, the USA premium will be charged on total acres normally seeded and not just acres insured through Crop Insurance.Source - http://www.grenfellsun.sk.ca/

16.03.2015

India - Heavy rain damages crops in Unnao, Dehat

Heavy rain and hailstorm threw normal life out of gear in neighbouring districts of Kanpur Dehat and Unnao and caused largescale devastation of crops on Sunday. City areas like Nawabganj along with Mandhana and Bithoor situated on the outskirts too witnessed heavy hailstorm accompanied by swift wind that uprooted several trees. The crops were severely damaged as fields were waterlogged.The unseasonal rain has dashed the hopes of farmers, who were trying to recover from the damage of crops caused by rains on March 1 and 2. The rain has ruined farmers with small land holdings with hailstorm only aggravating the situation.Most of the Unnao farmers are aghast. The loss of crops would also lead to vegetable and pulses price hike in coming days. The potato crop of Farrukhabad suffered the second major blow after March 1 rain.The hailstorm resulted in a white carpet in several areas of Unnao and Kanpur. The fickle weather has disturbed the weather experts as it was bad for people's health and crops. The fluctuation in weather could lead to outbreak of various diseases. While the days were warm, nights were chilly with temperature hovering around 10 to 12 degrees Celsius.After the hailstorm, children came out braving the rain to collect the hails. Several octogenarians claimed that they had not witnessed such a weather in March in their entire life. They said that these rains were unusual and they were still using blankets.Weatherman said that chilly nights had prevented the day temperature from crossing 30 degree mark so far.Meanwhile, the rain continued to lash the Industrial City and Unnao till late in the evening. Knee-deep water had accumulated at a number of places, including VIP Road that left several vehicle owners marooned.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

16.03.2015

Rains in north, central India may affect production of wheat, other crops

Widespread rainfall across north and central India, particularly Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh, could impact wheat, mustard, jowar, grapes and vegetable production and quality. At the same time, the weather conditions are beneficial for Apple, cherry and pear crops. "Hailstorms accompanied with rain have created a massive loss. Farmers may see losses from 10-100%," said Sopan Kanchan, president of the Grape Growers Association of India. According to him, the worst-hit place is Nashik, one of the top grape producing regions in the country. Farmers will suffer huge losses as harvesting is going on, he said. Maharashtra produces 12-15 lakh tonnes of grape a year.The met department forecast rain and snow to continue over Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and parts of Uttarakhand over the next 24 hours. Punjab, Haryana, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh will also receive rainfall in the next 24 hours before the weather system heads northeast, it said. Harvesting of wheat has started in Gujarat, Maharashtra and Karnataka. Indu Sharma, director of the Wheat Research Institute at Karnal, said teams would go out to fields on Monday to assess losses across the country."Rains from now onwards are not beneficial for wheat as water-logging will impact the crop," she said. "In central India, there should not be much negative impact as the crop is mature, but there could be lustre loss. Further rains could lead to discolorisation also, leading to farmers getting lower returns." On the overall position for the country, she said there may not be huge losses. Vegetable crop nurseries for summer plants have been destroyed at some places, said Sriram Gadhawe, president of the Vegetable Growers Association of India."Vegetable prices in the short term may increase. We have yet to see if any major damage has occurred on onion crop," he added. In the hill states, meanwhile, farmers and scientist said they were happy with the snowfall and rains. "Lower temperature from December 30 will allow the plants to have moisture for a long time till May," said SP Bhardwaj, a horticulture expert from Himachal Pradesh. "We should look at a bumper production.Source - http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/

13.03.2015

Australia - Multi-peril crop insurance workshops spur interest among SA farmers

Multi-peril crop insurance provider Latevo International says its workshops have been well attended in South Australia.The Australian company partnered with insurer Allianz last year, to offer the program which was taken up by 29 farmers nationally.Eight of those will receive payments following bad seasons in their areas.Latevo is holding information workshops across the country and was in South Australia this week.Latevo International chief exeuctive Andrew Trotter said they were trying to inform people about the product."We'd like to see that we're insuring well over 100 clients this year, the real aim and you get really good balance in multi-peril program is when you get 250 to 300 farmers and that's where we want to get to over the program so it does stand on its own two feet," he said.The workshops are now being held in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.Source - http://www.abc.net.au/

13.03.2015

Spain - Winds damage avocado and banana crops

Damage to agriculture caused by strong winds last weekend have been estimated at 70% for avocado crops and at 50% for bananas in some areas of La Palma. This is the general assessment carried out by technicians of the Agricultural Extension Agencies and reported by the Council this Tuesday.According to the agricultural technicians, banana trees have suffered severe defoliation, which added to the low temperatures registered during the winter will make good plant growth more difficult.The wind was more intense in Amagar and the Tijarafe coast, where it is estimated that between 30 and 40% of the crops may be affected.The cultivation of avocados has also been hit in this municipality, where up to 30% of the fruit has dropped in some plots.Meanwhile, in the Aridane Valley, avocados were also the most affected by the wind, with 60% of the fruit estimated to have dropped.Here, technicians stress that the losses are countless, since the damages caused by the wind storm add to those of previous months, and thus almost 100% is estimated to have been in many areas of Los Llanos de Aridane.As for banana plantations, the wind damaged 50% of the crops in farms of El Remo and Las Hoyas, two very reputable areas for banana cultivation on the island.In areas of La Laguna and Todoque, also in Los Llanos de Aridade, up to 50% of the crops were affected.Also noteworthy are the losses caused by the wind to orange growers, with up to 40% of the crops affected in farms of El Paso, Los Llanos and Puntagorda.Given these reports, the insular Councillor of Agriculture, José Basilio Pérez, expressed his concern about this new setback, after strong winds also affected the agricultural sector in January and February.Last weekend, wind gusts reaching 129 kilometres per hour were registered by the station of the State Agency of Meteorology (AEMET) located in El Time, Tijarafe, in the west of the island.The Councillor was concerned about the fact that some agricultural subsectors do not have group insurance as a safeguard against such situations."We must ensure that the various insurance providers, both collective and individual, carry out their assessments in the shortest time and make their payments effective also as soon as possible to somehow palliate the effects of the wind," stated José Basilio Pérez.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

13.03.2015

Canada - Improvements to Saskatchewan crop insurance needed

Crop insurance is an important program, and more time should be devoted to analyzing how it works and how it can be improved. 
Programs are a bit different in each province, but in Saskatchewan, coverage for unseeded acreage this year is separate from yield coverage. Producers can choose between $50, $70, $85 and $100 an acre for land that is too wet to seed. This seems like a reasonable change, but it’s interesting to note that the premium rate rises as the coverage increases.
On multi-peril yield coverage, there’s more likelihood of a payment at 80 percent yield coverage than at 50, 60 or 70 percent, and the premium rates reflect this. 
But why should the premium for $100 per acre unseeded acreage coverage be three times as much as coverage for $50 an acre? Either land is too wet to seed or it isn’t. 
Perhaps the program is taking morale hazard into account, believing producers won’t try as hard to seed wet land if they’ve bought higher levels of coverage.
This bias in unseeded acreage premium rates was probably in the previous program, but transparent coverage and premiums mean it can now be identified. 
The perception of inadequate yield coverage is producers’ main complaint and the main reason why a significant percentage of them don’t insure their crops. Coverage is based on an individual’s yield history, but those yields are typically well below what producers are targeting. 
Maybe the 10-year average used for yield coverage doesn’t adequately take recent agronomic advancements into account. Maybe a producer hasn’t been growing a particular crop for the full 10 years, which results in area average yield data being substituted. 
It may also be true that producers have selective memories about the years with poor yields that pull our averages down. Enhancing yield coverage isn’t easy when the program has to remain actuarially sound, but the perception that coverage is too low is probably the biggest challenge for maintaining participation.
Insured prices are another issue. 
The price assumptions are set in December and don’t capture recent changes in the market. The insured price on field peas in Saskatchewan will be only $6.26 a bushel. Yellow peas are currently worth around $8.50 and a new crop price as high as $7.50 has been available. 
There is a contract price option, but not many producers forward contract their peas. If they do, it’s usually only the first 10 bu. per acre. 
A couple of other pricing options are available in Saskatchewan, but they don’t offer any certainty of improved values. 
Producers sometimes mistakenly believe that crop insurance guarantees a certain gross return per acre, but that’s not the case. Let’s say your yield coverage on canola is 30 bu. per acre. The insured price is $9.30 a bu., which provides coverage of $279 per acre. 
However, you can grow a 30 bu. crop and end up with a lot less money per acre if canola prices drop. 
Alberta farmers can buy a spring price endorsement to protect themselves from dropping prices, even if they aren’t in a yield claim situation. 
Producers who buy that option have some protection against a drop in prices on the yield stipulated within their production guarantee. 
Wouldn’t that be a useful tool to have in Saskatchewan? 
We should be asking more questions and making more constructive suggestions to improve crop insurance.Source - http://www.producer.com/

13.03.2015

CelsiusPro & World Bank partner on Ukraine weather-index insurance

Swiss weather index insurance specialists CelsiusPro AG have partnered with the World Bank in a project implemented by the IFC to bring more affordable agriculture insurance to the Ukraine through index-insurance techniques.The aim is to ultimately make agricultural insurance in Ukraine more affordable for smaller companies, expanding farmers’ access to financial services and helping to boost agricultural productivity in the country.The initiative aims to improve index area yield insurance, with triggers likely based on weather-indices calculated by CelsiusPro, as well as to train insurers to help them sell more localised products in Ukraine.Index insurance is an innovative approach to insurance provision that helps unlock productivity gains and makes financial services more widely available at lower costs via data analytics. It typically involves parametric insurance policies which are triggered based on index values, typically involving metrics such as actual weather measurements, satellite data and sometimes yield indices which combine a number of weather factors.“We want to enable local insurers to offer yield shortfall covers, not only to the largest firms, but also to mid-sized and small producers,” Mark Rueegg, Chief Executive Officer of CelsiusPro commented on the launch. “Our firm offers a chain of services from data sourcing, index, and policy design to the automated handling of policies via one platform. Streamlining design, calculation, and policy management processes via our technology is what ultimately reduces costs and makes index insurance affordable.”Gary Reusche, Program Manager for the Eastern Europe Access to Finance Project, added; “The project aims to offer better quality insurance products at lower premiums. With CelsiusPro and their advanced technology, we have found a strong partner to achieve exactly that.”The project is implemented by International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, in partnership with the Austrian and Hungarian governments. It builds on seven years of work to develop an agro-insurance market in Ukraine, part of a broader World Bank effort in index insurance implemented through its Global Index Insurance Facility (GIIF).Since the index-insurance project launched in 2008 over three million hectares of land have been insured by Ukrainian insurers and 8490 contracts have been sold, with a total sum insured of $1.8 billion and more than $80 million in insurance premiums.However, agri-insurance sales thus far represent less than 10 percent of the market in Ukraine and so more work is required to increase penetration and uptake, hence the focus on developing new index-insurance products for crop yield.Source - http://www.artemis.bm/

13.03.2015

Africa - Insure livestock, farmers advised

The Insurance Association of Zambia (IAZ) has urged farmers to insure their livestock to mitigate losses which arise from livestock diseases in the country.IAZ President Shipango Muteto said there was need for farmers to insure their livestock as the country was faced with several livestock diseases such Contagious Bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP), Corridor disease and Foot and Mouth disease which were destroying a lot of animals.Mr Muteto said in an interview in Livingstone that farmers could sell some of their cattle and procure insurance services to cover their livestock.“There are a lot of insurance products that are available to carter for livestock and our appeal to farmers is that they should consider insuring their animals.“For instance a farmer with more than 20 cows can sell one cow and secure an insurance cover for more than five years,” Mr Muteto said.He noted that most farmers in Southern Province depended on animals as their source of wealth and it was important to preserve their wealth through insurance.“When farmers are compensated after losing their animals from livestock diseases, they can restock their animals and continue with their farming business.“Most of our members provide life or livestock insurance for cattle, sheep, goats and chickens among others,” Mr Muteto said.He said there were also insurance schemes such as weather index insurance which worked through associations and ensured that a group crop failure was covered.“The index measures the minimum level of rainfall expected for the crop to grow.“Last year, an insurance company working in the area of cotton compensated and paid K300, 000 to farmers in Mumbwa and Chipata to farmers who recorded a crop failure,” he said.Source - http://www.times.co.zm/

13.03.2015

India - Rain a concern for crops

India has received an unusual amount of winter rain and there is more in the forecast, which doesn’t bode well for the country’s pulse crops, say analysts.An average of 28 millimetres of rain fell across the country from Feb. 26 to March 4, which is 358 percent above normal for that period. The winter is India’s dry season.Much of the rain fell in northwestern and central India, where most of the rabi (winter) season pulse crops are grown.Northwestern India received an average of 57 mm of precipitation, which was 441 percent above normal, while central India received 20 mm, or 689 percent more than usual.India’s agriculture minister told Parliament 12 million acres, or eight percent of the country’s winter crops, were damaged by the rain, according to a report in the Tribune, an Indian newspaper.Drew Lerner, president of World Weather Inc., thinks the Indian press and politicians are guilty of exaggerating the amount of damage that occurred.“That sounds pretty inflammatory to me,” Lerner said about the 12 million acre estimate.He does not believe the crop was at a vulnerable stage of development when the rain fell from Feb. 28 to March 1. He certainly doesn’t think eight percent of the crop has been damaged.However, a second wave of rain could be trouble, which is what’s in the forecast. Lerner expects another major rain event from March 12-17.“Some of the rain totals could be rather impressive for India,” he said.The system is expected to dump most of the moisture on the states of Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. Most areas will receive 13 to 25 mm, but parts of central and eastern Madhya Pradesh could receive 50 mm, which is significant.It is not what farmers want as they enter the rabi harvest period because crops are vulnerable to moisture.“The rain in this coming week will be more damaging than anything that has occurred up until this point,” said Lerner.Half of India’s rabi chickpea crop is grown in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh are home to two-thirds of the country’s lentil crop and three-quarters of its peas.Chuck Penner, an analyst with LeftField Commodity Research, said some recent rainfall statistics sound impressive, but it is important to keep in mind that this is India’s dry season, so a 500 percent increase over normal might be only 10 mm of rain.“I think it is being overplayed a certain amount,” he said.“I don’t think it has done a huge amount of damage yet.”Penner has been following pulse crop prices in India, and as of March 9 there was no indication that any of them were on the rise, which would suggest damage was minimal.However, Penner agreed that if the crops receive another deluge it could cause quality problems for India’s pulses or even yield losses if it results in crops sitting in water.“It could add to the misery, that’s for sure,” he said.India is coming off a disappointing kharif (summer) crop harvest, and rabi pulse plantings were 10 percent below the previous year. As a result, the country has already been importing large volumes of pulses.A disappointing rabi harvest would further boost demand and bolster yellow pea, red lentil and other pulse prices.Source - http://www.producer.com/

12.03.2015

Canada - Crop rotation impacts canola yields

Canola is one of the biggest crops in Canada and it’s only getting bigger. In the five years from 2008 to 2013 Canadian farmers went from growing 10 million to 18 million metric tonnes, nearly doubling the canola harvest. With market demand anticipated to only increase in years to come, driven by a rising global demand for vegetable oils and other canola products, the same land is going to have to yield ever more bushels per acre.Raising canola yields on the same land requires more intensive cultivation as well as rotating canola more frequently than in the past. This strategy carries significant risk of heavy losses as many canola pests and diseases are capable of overwintering in fields and on surrounding vegetation making them harder to control.To test out the possible effects of this more intensive cultivation, researchers from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada undertook a series of trial to see what happens. This team, which includes Neil Harker of the Lacombe Research Centre in Alberta, recently published their results in the Canadian Journal of Plant Science under the title “Canola rotation frequency impacts canola yield and associated pest species.”The researchTo study the effects of more intensive cultivation the scientists conducted six years of trials at five sites across the Prairies using glyphosate and glufosinate resistant canola, treating them with the recommended amounts of herbicide each season. Each field had previously grown no-till wheat, barley, or oats. In different fields, they tested different rotation rates, alternating canola with various crops on one- and two-year intervals. After five years, researchers collected and analyzed the data, looking for the effects of temperature and precipitation, weed densities, blackleg disease levels, root maggot damage and canola yield.“In terms of the number of sites,” Harker told us, “and the way it was conducted there hadn’t been a study quite like this before. To make this more useful we conducted an all-phases study, which means that if we had wheat in one year and canola the next we also had canola in that first year and wheat the next.” The all-phases nature of the research helped the research team eliminate single-year effects, like weather that may have just been, by chance, better for one crop rather than another.The resultsAmong the major results of the study was the finding that canola seed yields were not hurt significantly by decreasing the years of rotation between crops. At the same time, canola yields always improved when wheat or field pea were followed by barley between canola plantings. So while there was not significant loss with intensive cropping, yields were higher with rotations, as was expected. “What stood out to me the most,” Harker said, “was how consistent the improvement in production was with years between canola crops. In other words as you go from zero years (between crops) or continuous canola you had yield improving constantly as you put both one year and then two years between them.”As for diseases and pests, the study confirmed what was long suspected, that growing canola intensively invites increased yield losses due to predation. “As you went from zero to two years,” Harker said, “you had pests, whether they were insects or disease, decreasing.”Without a year or two of rotation between canola persistent pests proved highly resilient and hurt yields significantly. Another result of interest was that higher yields were produced at sites that had relatively uniform precipitation (no extremes of wet or dry) and generally cooler temperatures. If you live in a region that regularly experiences cooler than provincial average temperatures this may be another reason to consider canola planting.While high frequency rotation of canola may be profitable in the short term it will be highly risky in the long term. To ensure sustainable production (and a profitable farm) the researchers recommend that farmers balance high immediate-income low diversity cropping with lower immediate-income, higher diversity systems. This can be accomplished by not using your entire farm for intensive cropping but only a portion, retaining one area in longer-term canola rotation. Managed over several years, rotating the areas of higher intensity cultivation, can yield strong returns for the careful farm manager.Harker and his colleagues plan to continue the study for three more years. In addition to seeing how the trends they’ve identified continue they will be working with economic specialists to calculate the effects of different rotation strategies on a farmer’s bottom line.Source - http://www.grainews.ca/

12.03.2015

Argentina - Soybeans at risk

Northern growing regions in Argentina have been hit by heavy rain over the past week, which has resulted in flooding in fields of soybean crops.Abundant rain has added to soil moisture, which was already high after showers throughout February.Furthermore, the wet weather in these areas has increased the risk for disease in the soybean crops.Levels of damage will become clearer over the next few weeks, although the Buenos Aires Grains Exchange said yesterday (5 March) that it may lower its 2015 soybean harvest forecast from 57Mt, the current estimate.In contrast, areas of the southern Pampas growing belt have been suffering from drought like conditions.A lack of soil moisture for soybean crops in southeast, and central Buenos Aires could result in loss come harvest if moisture levels don’t improve.However, rain is forecast to increase across southern Argentina by the end of next week, which could allow moisture levels to increase (MDA Weather Services).Source - http://www.thecropsite.com/

12.03.2015

USA - Disease continues to squeeze orange forecast

Already forecast to be lower than last year’s yield, citrus greening has dropped this season’s orange production prediction even further.The National Agricultural Statistics Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture on Tuesday said the season’s Florida orange production will be down 1 percent from the earlier forecast.“Citrus greening continues to have a huge impact on our industry,” Doug Ackerman, executive director of the Florida Department of Citrus, said in a release. “But, there is also reason for hope. Growers in some parts of the state continue to report positive yields — proof that the hard work and dedication of our industry is making a difference.”The 2014-2015 crop was already forecast to be below the 2013-14 yield.Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam has asked state lawmakers for $18 million to fight diseases impacting the citrus industry. The money would also be used to grow clean citrus stock and plant new trees in areas where diseased trees have been removed.The state budget for the fiscal year that started July 1 includes $3.5 million for citrus-disease research and $500,000 for in-state citrus-breeding programs and to develop and acquire new citrus varieties.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

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