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31.10.2014

Russia - Frosts destroyed the yield of cabbage

Due to abnormally low temperature the growers of Ulyanovsk region failed to harvest the yield of cabbage. From 23 to 27 October, the air temperature deviated from climatic norm by 7 degrees. Neither gardeners nor vegetable producers were ready for such a sharp fall of temperature. As a result, the cabbage in the fields was damaged by frost and unsuitable for harvesting and consumption.Gennady Solovyov, the owner of the agricultural company Laishevsky Ovoschi, states that his fields along with several other farms that had not harvested their cabbage, were seriously damaged by the October frosts.Although, according to Solovyov, the local agricultural companies might suffer significant losses, there is no need for the residents of Ulyanovsk to worry. There was about a thousand tonnes of cabbage left in the fields, which means, in terms of cash, a loss of 10 million roubles (196 thousand Euro). The increase in cabbage prices or deficiency of this product in the shops of the city is not expected.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

31.10.2014

India - Death blow to small farmers

For small farmers eking a living raising banana, cashew, or vegetables, the cyclone Hudhud has dealt a death blow.Having lost the crop that is about to bring them money, they are not able to come to terms with the destruction caused by the storm.At Appannapalem, not far from Visakhapatnam, Paila Appa Rao had a banana plantation in one acre and twenty cents of land. He had raised the crop two years ago and was about to reap it rich as the fruit was all set to ripen. But the gale on October 12 morning destroyed everything, he recalled.For Achhibabu, the loss is relatively small, but he is equally shattered.He had sown bitter gourd in 30 cents and it was wiped out. Paila Venkanna, an old farmer, had cashew plantation in 50 cents of land. It takes 10 years for the crop to give yield, and he has enjoyed the crop of just one year.With cashew being in great demand, he would have got good income for a few more years. But that was not to be.For Yeruku Naidu, who had raised eucalyptus in 40 cents of land, it’s the same story.All the families live at Roadpalem, a part of Appannapalem in Achyutapuram mandal.Source - http://www.thehindu.com/

31.10.2014

Greece - A lot of hail damage

Georgios Saltos' orchards were hit by a heavy hail storm at the start of October. This has caused a lot of damage to the orchard, located in the Achelous river, 12 kilometres from Mesolongi. The grower estimates the damage caused by the hail at around 20,000 Euro. The difference can be seen clearly: the fruits on the other half of the orchard look fine. The grower is trying to prevent decay with copper.When asked Georgios indicated that he consciously chose to protect his trees against hail. "Showers this size have only occurred twice in the last twenty years. Other good years compensate for bad years like this. And we're still trying to sell the damaged fruits for juice production through Bio Net West Hellas." Gerasimos Karantinos, who leads the cooperation Bio Net West Hellas, confirms this: "We are doing everything we can to limit Georgios' loss of income as much as possible."Georgios is one of the three founders of the West Hellas group and has been growing organically for more than 15 years. Besides oranges, he also grows mandarins.Georgios is not only bothered by the hail, the river has also partially burst its banks.Georgios also said that this tree was already partially in bloom due to the warm temperatures (it was still exceptionally warm for this time of year on the 20th of October) "The tree is confused and thinks it's March."Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

30.10.2014

India - Farmers staring at one of the worst crop failures

Though untimely, delayed, erratic, insufficient or excess rains have been ruining crops in the region for the last few years, farmers claim this year will see the worst crop failures in recent times. All three major Vidarbha crops, cotton, soyabean and orange, have suffered huge losses due to the truant rains.Generally, at least one crop survives nature's vagaries so farmers get some income. But this year farm activists are claiming that farmers are doomed. To compound the woes, crops are not getting the due price.Even rich farmers with large land holdings and irrigation facilities expect losses, which may disturb their lives for next many years. Founder member of Shetkari Sangathana and a farm activist from Wardha, Vijay Jawandhiya supports them."I have been in agriculture for the last 40 years. But this is the worst crop failure, with one of the lowest yields. To add to it, traders and government agencies like the Cotton Federation are not buying produce," he said.Jawandhiya is demanding that the state government should protect cotton farmers just like it protects sugarcane growers in Western Maharashtra. It should, he feels, bring in import duty on soyabean and allow subsidy to export cotton. "If the government doesn't stand up to support farmers, the vicious circle of debt will spread further and farmers will never overcome the agrarian crisis," he told TOI.Ram Newale raised the issue of very low minimum support price for cotton. "Vidarbha's economy depends on cotton, soyabean and orange. The whole equation has been disturbed due to low yield and low MSP. The declared MSP is Rs4,050 but in market the rate is lower than Rs3,500," he said.A visit to Katol taluka in Nagpur district, otherwise a prosperous agriculture belt with good irrigation and orange as the major crop, showed that delayed and deficient rains have ruined everyone, from a marginal farmer with 1 to 1.5 acre to farmers with 50 or more acre land. In fact, some farmers have not even harvested soyabean. Instead, they have ploughed the crop into the land as the produce would not fetch them even the harvesting cost.Khandala village in the taluka is known for its high output of oranges and a produce of over Rs4 crore annually. But farmers like Mohan Jogekar took the risk of sowing soyabean due to orange failure, and failed in that too.Madhukar Khujnare said the yield had fallen to less than 30%. Shobha Khujnare said her family would be forced to beg. "We sowed 60kg seeds and did not get even a single quintal of soyabean," she said.Vimal Chawda, an educated young farmer with irrigated land, claimed that his earnings would drop from about Rs20 lakh to Rs5 lakh. "I would survive as I have enough land and alternative sources of income. But this otherwise rich village would be completely doomed, since both orange as well as cotton and soyabean crops had failed. Power cuts added to the misery since the fields could not be watered at the right time. This year, even pest attack was very high," he said.Onkar Charde, an MSc in mathematics, had planted groundnut along with cotton and soybean, but is expecting his earnings to drop from the annual income of Rs3 lakh to just Rs50,000. "We won't even get our investment back," he said.Manohar Jogekar showed his pesticide purchase bills of Rs9,780, saying that his earning had fallen from Rs3 lakh to Rs50,000. Swapnil Dhote, who took soyabean in 10 acre and cotton in 30 acre, said that the yield had reduced from 7 quintals to half a quintal in cotton. "Conditions are too bad. But not a single survey has been conducted so far by government," he said.The situation in Yavatmal too is bad. Ramkrishna Patil from Pandharkawda, who owns 50 acres and won the Krishi Bhushan award in 2000, said farmers in his belt were completely ruined. "Soyabean farmers are badly hit, as the short duration (90 day) crop is damaged completely. In cotton, we would get some yield," he said.However, marginal farmers like Mahadev Dhepe from Umri Smarak village and Vaibhav Shedurkar from Palodi village in Darwha taluka claimed this was the worst year in the recent past.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

30.10.2014

U.S. farmers switching corn for wheat

With most grain crops mired in bear markets, Oklahoma farmer Sherwin Ratzlaff figures his only chance to break even is to expand supplies of wheat that already are in surplus.“Wheat offers a better bottom-line return than planting corn, milo or canola,” Ratzlaff, 71, said by telephone from his farm near Enid, Okla. He boosted seedings of winter wheat that will be harvested in June by 18 percent from 2013 to 2,000 acres. “I’m optimistic that we can grow a good crop because we got rain after we finished planting.”He’s not alone. U.S. growers, the largest exporters, will seed the most winter wheat since 2007, according to a Bloomberg survey of 12 analysts. While wheat wasn’t spared from price slumps, growing conditions have improved in the Great Plains after a drought led to a 2014 harvest that was smallest in eight years, and government crop-insurance programs are providing wheat with a better floor for revenue than other crops.Increased sowing in the U.S. means that the global glut, already forecast by the government at a three-year high, probably will get even bigger. That’s good news for bakers, who are paying 5.5 percent less for flour than they were in January. Panera Bread said July 30 that its costs for fresh dough will decline through the end of the year.Even with Chicago wheat futures down 13 percent this year to $5.255 a bushel, that’s still above variable costs for most growers of about $4.50, based on six years of farm-production data, according to Dan O’Brien, an economist at Kansas State University in Colby. Corn futures are down 14 percent to $3.6425 a bushel, barely ahead of production costs near $3.50. That’s enough of an incentive to encourage more wheat output next year, O’Brien said.“We used to insure for profit, and now we are shooting to cover costs,” said Carmen Egging-Draper, a Scottsbluff, Neb.-based insurance specialist for Farm Credit Services of America, which counts 50,000 farmers and ranchers as members of its financial cooperative. “Most farmers have finished planting with nearly ideal soil conditions.”Bumper U.S. harvests in 2014 have pushed crop prices so low that taxpayers probably will pay about $4 billion more in subsidies and crop-insurance payments to growers than anticipated when a five-year farm law was passed in February, according to Vincent Smith, director of the Agricultural Marketing Policy Center at Montana State University.The Bloomberg Agriculture Index of seven farm products, excluding livestock, has tumbled 24 percent since the end of April. The Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials declined 15 percent over the same period, while the MSCI All- World Index of equities slid 1.3 percent. The Bloomberg Treasury Bond Index advanced 2.8 percent.American farm income this year was estimated to fall 14 percent to $113.2 billion, the government said Aug. 26. Since the forecast, prices for corn, the biggest U.S. crop, dropped 0.5 percent, while wheat, the fourth-largest, fell 6.1 percent.Goldman Sachs is expecting more losses. The bank expects wheat to reach $4.50 as quickly as within three months, saying in a Sept. 30 report that grain and oilseed prices need to fall near the cost of production to discourage farmers from planting more.While winter-wheat farmers in September got off to their fastest start to planting since 2006, rain has slowed progress this month from Missouri to Michigan, where farmers grow mostly soft-red varieties, data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture show. Farmers sowed 84 percent of the crop as of Sunday, Oct. 26, compared with 85 percent a year earlier, the USDA said Monday. Illinois was 41 percent done, compared with 75 percent on average for the date in the previous five years, while Indiana and Ohio were eight percentage points behind.“It is too early to definitively say that planting delays will translate into reduced yield potential,” Bennett Meier, a Morgan Stanley analyst, said in a report Oct. 21. “However, persistence or worsening of these delays into November could pose a yield risk, as plants may not have enough time to emerge before the ground freezes.”Wheat production in Kansas, the biggest U.S. grower, fell 23 percent to a 15-year low in 2014 as drought and freeze cut yields 30 percent, USDA data show. Growing conditions have improved. About 10 percent of the Plains had moderate to extreme drought as of Oct. 21, down from 22 percent a year earlier. Farmers still need normal moisture from February through May for the best yields.Planting of winter wheat, which accounts for about 70 percent of all U.S. wheat output, will increase 2.6 percent to 43.51 million acres, a Bloomberg survey of 12 analysts showed. Acreage in Kansas may rise to a 17-year high, said Jeff Kahle, the managing director for Quinter, Kansas-based United Plains Ag Cooperative, which buys grains in about 18 counties in western Kansas and Eastern Colorado.This year’s record wheat, corn and soybean harvests are cutting global food prices, with the United Nations reporting a sixth straight drop for costs in September, the longest slide since 2009. Cereal costs fell 15 percent since April to the lowest since July 2010. U.S. consumers paid about 51.3 cents a pound for flour in September, down 1.7 percent from a year earlier. Moderating wheat prices will help lower costs for dough at Panera, Chief Financial Officer Roger Matthews, said on a July 30 earnings call. The St. Louis-based company will report third-quarter earnings Tuesday.The outlook for more U.S. grain comes amid slowing demand. Exports this year will fall 21 percent to the lowest since 2010 amid increasing competition from other growers, USDA said Oct. 10. Wheat production this year in the top nine shipping-nations rose 1.3 percent to 448.4 million metric tons, a second straight record.Ukraine, Russia and Canada are all leveraging the dollar’s 5.6 gain in the past year to boost sales to some traditional U.S. customers. A stronger greenback makes U.S. exports less competitive with other suppliers.“The big European crop and increasing supplies from the Black Sea region and Canada will temper U.S. export sales,” said Randy Mittelstaedt, the research director at Chicago-based R.J. O’Brien & Associates, a 100-year-old clearing member at the CME Group. “U.S. wheat is losing out on incremental business because it is not competitive with larger global competition. Every time the market pops higher, there will be increased farmer selling and reduced demand.”Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net/

30.10.2014

Russia - Wheat threatened by lack of rain

Dry weather has damaged the early growth of winter wheat in Russia’s key growing areas, threatening to push up food prices not only domestically but also in key export markets such as Egypt, Iran and Morocco.The damage to the country’s wheat crop comes amid a ban on food imports from Western countries in response to sanctions imposed by the U.S. and the European Union following Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.The dry conditions started in September, when the winter wheat was planted, and caused the quality of the crop to deteriorate. Agricultural forecaster SovEcon, based in Moscow, projects Russia could produce less than 50 million metric tons of wheat in the 2015-16 crop year. In the prior season, Russia produced 59 million tons.“A lack of moisture resulted in a very weak development of winter grains. Weak plants are less resistant to low temperatures thus the risk of increased winter kill losses is quite significant,” said Andrey Sizov, managing director of SovEcon.As a result, Russia could export as little as 18 million tons of wheat in the 2015-16 harvest, compared with the record-high 24 million tons in the current season.While Russia doesn’t face the possibility of running out of wheat supplies, a smaller crop could cause domestic prices to rise, adding to the country’s consumer-price inflation woes, say analysts. This would hit countries that are heavily dependent on the country’s grain hardest—in particular for Egypt, Iran and Turkey, the country’s biggest customers.Egypt, the world’s largest importer of wheat, is relying heavily on wheat imports from Russia to bring down rising food prices—a key factor behind street protests in 2011 that resulted in the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak .Egypt, which sources wheat via international tenders, has already bought 1.6 million tons of Russian wheat in the 2014-15 crop year, which was then fed into the country’s state-subsidized bread system. The country typically imports around 10 million tons of wheat a year and gets over half of its supplies from Russia.Doug Bergman, vice president of agricultural derivatives at Chicago-based RCM Asset Management, said political uncertainty in Russia and a weakening ruble could also eat into the country’s production potential.“As sanctions pressure Russia’s finances, it will make it harder for the country’s farmers to maintain high yields because they don’t have enough credit to buy the materials they need, such as fertilizer and machinery,” said Charlie Sernatinger, head of grains trading at ED&F Man Capital Markets.Wheat prices hit a two-month high Wednesday, led not only by concerns over the size and quantity of Russia’s winter wheat crop, but also by fears over adverse weather conditions in the U.S. and Australia.Analysts and dealers said U.S. farmers may reap a smaller-than-expected crop of soft-red winter wheat because of rainfall in eastern parts of the U.S. farm belt, which slowed harvest progress of other row crops, and delayed planting of the grain.“I think the wheat market can go higher, but I would rather wait for a better correction to the downside to buy. Longer term, I think the price movement of wheat will be heavily dependent on the price of corn,” added Mr. Bergman.Source - http://online.wsj.com/

30.10.2014

USA - The end of tobacco subsidies

After 76 years, tobacco farmers are no longer going to receive federal payments to maintain their financial stability. The last federal subsidies to tobacco farmers will go out this month.While the federal movement has subsidized tobacco farmers since 1938, for the last 10 years it has been making payments out of a 10-year $10 billion federal program to wean the nation’s 10,000 tobacco farmers off of subsidies. That program ends at the end of October.The subsidy program for tobacco initially was to provide price support and crop quota protection year to year, but in recent years the funds were more specifically set aside to help pay for crop insurance. As much as 60 percent of crop insurance payments made by tobacco farmers in the United States have been paid for by federal subsidies.As one Winston-Salem, N.C. farmer explained to National Public Radio, “our safety net now is gone.”But tobacco farmers will survive, thanks to a burgeoning market for tobacco products in China and Southeast Asia, which makes up for a lessening demand for tobacco in the United States and Europe.The U. S. Agriculture Department estimates the U.S. tobacco crop brings in about $1.5 billion a year.Most American tobacco farmers have contractual agreements with tobacco companies, which determine how much farmers get per acre of tobacco. While the price per acre has dropped, and many tobacco farmers are using less acreage for tobacco, they manage to make ends meet by growing other products on the extra acreage such as wheat, some other vegetables and fruit in warmer climates.Tobacco growers also battle the continuing effort by health officials to reduce smoking, and a state-by-state or county-by-county effort to raise much need revenue through sin taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products.Source - http://millionairecorner.com/

30.10.2014

USDA To Spend $4 Million On Improving Honeybee Health In 5 States

Midwestern farmers and ranchers are getting $4 million in federal help to improve the health of honeybees, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Wednesday.The aid through USDA's' Environmental Quality Incentives Program would help producers in the Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan implement conservation practices, such as seeding alfalfa or clover crops on pasture land.Bees play an important role in food production, pollinating an estimated $15 billion worth of crops, according to USDA. Their numbers have been declining at a sharp rate in recent years due in part to colony collapse disorder, blamed on a number of factors including mites, pesticides and habitat loss."The future of America's food supply depends on honeybees, and this effort is one way USDA is helping improve the health of honeybee populations," Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a statement Wednesday.The government is focusing its efforts through the EQIP program on the five Midwest states because about two-thirds of the commercially managed honeybees spend their time there from June to September. The $4 million for fiscal 2015, which began Oct. 1, builds on $3 million approved in fiscal 2014, USDA spokesman Justin Fritscher said.The federal government also is providing $8 million in similar incentives in those states through the Conservation Reserve Program, according to U.S. Sen. John Hoeven, D-North Dakoa, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee.North Dakota has led the nation in the production of honey for a decade. Production in 2013 totaled about 34 million pounds — more than one-fifth of all the honey in the country and a crop valued at nearly $65 million.The state has taken steps in recent years to combat the decline of honeybees, particularly developing guidelines in 2013 for farmers, ranchers, landowners and beekeepers to better protect bees.Source - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/

30.10.2014

Australia - Exotic strain of wheat disease confirmed

Scientists have discovered an exotic strain of a wheat disease in Australia that, when serious enough, can reduce yields by more than 20 per cent.The disease 'leaf rust' is a well-known foe to Australian grain producers, who have learned the best way to avoid it is to grow resistant wheat varieties.But the new strain, sourced from overseas, means many varieties will lose their resistant status."The rust will have come into the country, probably on people's clothing, walking into a crop overseas and then walking into a crop here," says Dr Hugh Wallwork, of the South Australian Research and Development Institute."We suddenly get a completely new strain of the rust in Australia; obviously in this case it differs in its virulence," he said."It's more virulent in a number of varieties and sometimes these introductions can be more aggressive."Testing by the University of Sydney revealed the exotic strain was present throughout the south east of South Australia, on the Eyre Peninsula, Yorke Peninsula and in the Adelaide Plains.Dr Wallwork says the disease should not have much effect on this year's crops because it's arrived too late in the season."The real concern is for future years," he said."If this rust survives on volunteer [plants] through the summer, and it usually does, then in subsequent years we'll be finding a number of varieties that we thought had good resistance are now a lot more susceptible."We do try and encourage people to remove all green volunteer wheat during the summer period."The disease will not survive in stubble or soil, it needs green host plants to sustain itself.Dr Wallwork says treatment for the exotic strain is no different to what farmers have been using for leaf rust.Seed treatments and foliar fungicides are commonly used and often farmers will use herbicides during autumn and facilitate heavy grazing in a bid to remove any self-sown susceptible wheat.Scientists are now working on re-classifying the resistance of wheat varieties."Mace, which is probably half the area of South Australia if not more - we've always rated that as being moderately resistant," Dr Wallwork said."We now have to rate that as being at least moderately susceptible or perhaps a little worse.""Other varieties, like Emu Rock, had been moderately susceptible; they're now probably susceptible to very susceptible."Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net/

29.10.2014

Spain - The New Delhi virus was detected in several areas of the Guadalquivir Valley

The 2014-2015 horticultural season is beginning about three weeks later than expected as farmers are afraid and uncertain about the New Delhi virus, which affected production last year, when it was detected in the province of Almeria and caused damage mainly to the zucchini production. Currently, the news in Almeria is that this virus has also reached the Guadalquivir Valley, as was noted by a well-known blog about agriculture created by entomology expert Antonio M. Aguilera.The virus (ToLCNDV) had already been detected in a few plants in September last year in this area. However, Aguilera recently found new occurrences of the virus, this time in black melon plants, in a small greenhouse of Cordoba. "The foliar symptoms could be attributed to a thousand and one reasons but there is no doubt it is the New Delhi virus as the fruit also has longitudinal cracking," he stated in his blog. "It seems this time it is a more serious infection, with many affected plants, which may impede continuing the crops until the end," he says.These cases in these agricultural areas with little tradition in the cultivation of cucurbits, and the relatively little presence of this virus in Almeria during spring and summer, indicated that the "preventive measures taken against the whitefly in Almeria have been effective, that this virus is still largely unknown and that, unfortunately, it hasn't been eradicated and it is still latent in the fields. "Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

29.10.2014

USA - Novel system detects and measures 'scars' left by hail storms

Using data from an instrument aboard a 3-year-old satellite, graduate student Jordan Bell is developing a system to detect and measure the 'scars' left by hail storms that pound the Midwest and the Great Plains.Ultimately, he hopes to develop a system that will automatically detect and measure crop damage caused by hail storms anywhere in the U.S.Bell, a master's student in atmospheric science at The University of Alabama in Huntsville, and other scientists will present their work and discuss opportunities for further research using data from instruments aboard the Suomi (pronounced sue-me) National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite during a November workshop hosted by UAH.Working through NASA's SPoRT (Short-term Prediction Research and Transition) center in UAH's Cramer Research Hall, Bell is using data gathered by both Suomi's Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) instrument and NASA's Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer to develop a tool that can track when crops have a significant change in their "health.""For instance, if you look at Iowa during the growing season, it's all corn," Bell said. "If there is a damaging hail storm, within a couple of days you will see the damaged corn begin to wilt. The pixels detected by the satellites are no longer as green as they were before. You will see the scars left by the storm damage."Because Suomi's sensors look at most spots on Earth (and everywhere in the U.S.) every day, an automated tool might be built to recognize sudden changes in vegetation in one area on the ground. Ultimately, Bell will merge the satellite data with National Weather Service Doppler radar data that indicate the presence of hail inside a storm, to give the satellite detectors a "heads up" on where to look for hail damage.Bell's short-term goal is to get his hail damage monitoring system integrated into SPoRT's disaster monitoring and response activities. Later, he hopes it will become part of the National Weather Service's storm damage assessment took kit, so the weather service can more accurately and efficiently track hail damage without having to do the same kinds of labor-intensive on-site surveys done to track tornado damage.In the long term, other possible users might include federal and state agencies, such as the USDA, and companies that provide or underwrite crop insurance, as well as commodities traders and others.The weather service estimates that hail causes about $1 billion a year in crop and property damages across the U.S., although that can vary greatly from year to year: a single storm in April 2001 caused an estimated $2 billion in hail damage alone.Bell will have a poster on his research at the Second Suomi NPP Applications Workshop on Nov. 18-20 at the Westin Huntsville at Bridge Street. Organized by UAH and sponsored by NASA and NOAA, the free workshop is designed for scientists who might use Suomi data in the Earth science and applications communities.The Suomi satellite was launched on Oct. 28, 2011 as a partnership between NASA and NOAA. In the three years since its launch, Suomi instruments have been used for weather forecasting, and disaster response and management. Topics to be discussed during the workshop include that work plus potential applications research in ecological forecasting, air quality and public health monitoring, and water resources management.Source - http://www.azosensors.com/

29.10.2014

Russia will lose up to 3 MMT of grain. And that’s just the beginning

The Russian meteorological agency has warned that the Russians will face abnormally low temperatures in the upcoming winter. A true “Russian winter” will come to Russia. Snow fell in most of Russia as early as October 20-24, with temperature down at freezing levels.Meanwhile, cereals remained unharvested on 6% of areas, mostly in the Asian part of the country. In particular, roughly 770 Th ha of cereals remained unharvested in Siberia and some 950 Th ha in the Urals on October 22. With average yields in these regions approximating 1.5 and 1.7 MT/ha, respectively, crop losses total about 2.8 MMT in bunker weight.Most Russian analytical companies reduced their grain crop estimates on average by 1 MMT to 102-103 MMT. However, these estimates are not final yet.A loss of 3 MMT of grain in Russia seems not so significant on a national scale, but it needs to be taken into account that part of the grain was harvested in unfavorable conditions – this negatively affected the quality of late-harvested Russian wheat.In view of a bumper global grain crop in 2014/15 season, these losses are not so significant – they will only support prices for a short time. But the Black Sea region is fraught with a more considerable bullish factor able to fuel market tension up till March 2015.The early arrival of a “Russian winter” with snow and frost from October 20-24 caused a tighter schedule of winter crop planting and hardening in both Russia and Ukraine. The degree of crop’s preparedness for winter causes serious concerns. Although weather allowed seeding 97-98% of planned area, crops had not enough time to develop adequately before entering the winter because cold set in suddenly following drought.Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net/

29.10.2014

India - Hudhud a twister for sugarcane

It is estimated that crop in 2,300 ha has been damaged. Most of the cane grown in the area is used for making jaggery. Even if some of the cane can be used to make jaggery, the units are in no condition to work as there is no power.Sugarcane, paddy, cashew, casuarina — anything that came in the way of the severe cyclonic storm Hudhud met with the same fate, leaving farmers shell-shocked.In Munagapaka mandal, where mostly sugarcane is grown, the destructive gale twisted the cane, broke the stalk, and bent it. The crop may appear to be alright for about a month, but rots from within, say farmers, who do not know what to do.Loss is still being assessed by enumerators.Apart from the loss, it costs a lot for farmers to remove the destroyed the crop.Most of the cane grown in the area is used for making jaggery. Even if some of the cane can be used to make jaggery, the units are in no condition to work as there is no power.Four teams of enumerators are at work and they have to cover 27 panchayats. Estimates have put the damage to sugarcane crop in 2,300 ha and paddy in 230 ha so far. Cashew and casuarina have also been damaged. Cashew groves present a sorry picture with tree after tree uprooted at Nagavaram and other areas.CompensationSince it will take some time for the loss to the assessed, the government should give some advance compensation for sugarcane-growers based on preliminary information, says Boddeti Prasad, former chairman of RECS.In the low-lying areas such as Vadrapalli, paddy is still under a sheet of water. All other crops in the area such as sugarcane, coconut, banana, cashew have been fully damaged, says farmer Petakamsetty Ramu Naidu.Farmers say that a canal that once served as an outlet for water was encroached upon decades ago and it was causing problems every time there was a cyclone.In the Nagavaram, Rajupeta, Venkatapuram areas alone, cashew crop in 300 acres has been fully damaged, says a farmer P. Ramasuryanarayana.Hybrid cashew takes four to five years to grow and, from then on, farmers get Rs.60,000 to Rs.70,000 a year. While sugarcane and paddy are yearly crops, casuarina has to grow for five years, getting a one-time income of Rs.1 lakh an acre.But it also could not withstand the gales. In many villages, power is still being restored.Source - http://www.thehindu.com/

29.10.2014

Salt-ruined farmland costs billions of dollars every year

Salt residue from soil irrigation degrades around 5,000 acres of farmland every day at a global annual cost of $27 billion dollars in lost arable revenues.Using cheap, short-sighted ways to water land without adequate drainage methods are the chief reason behind the land spoilage, according to the report by the UN University’s Canadian-based Institute for Water (UNU-INWEH). The total area being affected, the report notes, has shot up over the last two decades — from 111 million acres in 1991 to 160 million in 2013, representing some 20 percent of the world's irrigated lands.Researchers warn that big investment is necessary to reverse the trend.The authors of the study said the most vulnerable parts of the world are arid regions in developing countries, where pressure to increase crop yields in the short term may lead governments to forgo installing or maintaining the simple, but costly, drainage systems necessary to keep salt away from the soil.The area around the rapidly shrinking Aral sea, which straddles the Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan border — along with river valleys in Iraq, Pakistan, India and China — are among the areas that have seen crop yields drop because of the accumulation of salt. The problem also affects agriculture in the United States, most notably in California’s San Joaquin Valley."Each week the world loses an area larger than Manhattan to salt-degradation,” said Zafar Adeel, director of the UNU-INWEH. “Efforts to restore those lands to full productivity are essential as world population and food needs grow, especially in the developing world."The study’s authors suggested that the annual loss figure of $27 billion could even be an underestimate. And the amount of land lost is denting efforts to keep a growing population adequately fed."To feed the world's anticipated nine billion people by 2050, and with little new productive land available, it's a case of all lands needed on deck," said the study’s principal author Manzoor Qadir, assistant director of water and human development, at UNU."We can't afford not to restore the productivity of salt-affected lands," he said.Source - http://america.aljazeera.com/

29.10.2014

India - Paddy farmers in Kottayam facing a crisis

Paddy cultivators in the district are facing a deep crisis. The heavy north-east monsoon and the resultant delay in harvesting have led to widespread damage to paddy. There is an abject dearth of combine harvesters and above all, in spite of the commencement of paddy procurement operations by the Kerala State Civil Supplies Corporation, uncertainty looms large over the timely disbursal of the remuneration.Says Jose George, paddy field officer “We were expecting nearly 27,000 mt of paddy during this viruppu season from the district. However, if things move at this pace, it is not going to be even 22,000 mt”.During the just concluded puncha season, the Civil Supplies Corporation had procured more than 49,000 mt from the district. The procurement during the last viruppu season was also depressing, he said.The procurement agencies who were expecting 25 to 30 quintals per acre earlier, do not expect more than 20 quintals per acre under the present conditions, Mr George said.The situation in Vechoor, Thalayzham areas where more than 3,500 acres are under viruppu crop is dismal. Since the combined harvesters were not available on time in the right numbers, paddy in most of the polders is facing damage.In fact, the farmers have joined together and initiated manual harvesting in the area.Harvesting, which was expected to commence by early October, started effectively only after 15th of the month. The Uma variety of paddy which can be harvested after 120 to 140 days have not been harvested even after 170 days in many places. In areas like Kelakkari, the harvesting should have been completed nearly two weeks back, though it is yet to begin this year.While the rains played havoc with the virippu crop, what has complicated the situation was the dismal performance of authorities in keeping the combine harvesters ready. “We need 100 combine harvesters now, in place of the less than 30 operational in the district now,” said Mr George.Machines provided by contractors from Tamil Nadu, who arrive with own maintenance team, charge up to more than Rs.2,000 an hour, though in many polders, the harvesters remain jammed in the heavily wet conditions of the fields.So far, the disbursal of remuneration of the procured paddy has not begun and there is confusion over the timely disbursal of the funds. Says Fr. Thomas Peeliyanickal, executive director, Kuttanad Vikasana Samithi: “There is nothing new about the current state of affairs. It is a repeating phenomenon. Unless the authorities take a sympathetic outlook and bring out a comprehensive strategy, the condition of the paddy farmer is not going to change.”Source - http://www.thehindu.com/

28.10.2014

World losing 2,000 hectares of farm soil daily to salt damage

Every day for more than 20 years, an average of 2,000 hectares of irrigated land in arid and semi-arid areas across 75 countries have been degraded by salt, according to a study by UN University's Canadian-based Institute for Water, Environment and Health, published Oct. 28.Today an area the size of France is affected -- about 62 million hectares (20%) of the world's irrigated lands, up from 45 million hectares in the early 1990s.Salt-degradation occurs in arid and semi-arid regions where rainfall is too low to maintain regular percolation of rainwater through the soil and where irrigation is practiced without a natural or artificial drainage system.Irrigation practices without drainage management trigger the accumulation of salts in the root zone, affecting several soil properties and reducing productivity."To feed the world's anticipated nine billion people by 2050, and with little new productive land available, it's a case of all lands needed on deck," says principal author Manzoor Qadir, Assistant Director, Water and Human Development, at UN University's Canadian-based Institute for Water, Environment and Health. "We can't afford not to restore the productivity of salt-affected lands."The study, "Economics of Salt-induced Land Degradation and Restoration,"is published Tuesday Oct. 28 in the UN Sustainable Development journal 'Natural Resources Forum,'Zafar Adeel, Director of UNU-INWEH, notes the UN Food and Agriculture Organization projects a need to produce 70% more food by 2050, including a 50% rise in annual cereal production to about 3 billion tonnes."Each week the world loses an area larger than Manhattan to salt-degradation. A large portion of the affected areas in developing countries have seen investments made in irrigation and drainage but the infrastructure is not properly maintained or managed. Efforts to restore those lands to full productivity are essential as world population and food needs grow, especially in the developing world."Well known salt-degraded land areas include:Aral Sea Basin, Central Asia,Indo-Gangetic Basin, IndiaIndus Basin, PakistanYellow River Basin, ChinaEuphrates Basin, Syria and IraqMurray-Darling Basin, Australia, andSan Joaquin Valley, United StatesThe paper, authored by eight experts based in Canada, Jordan, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, details crop productivity losses at farm, regional, and global scales, the cost of doing nothing, and the net economic benefit of preventing and/or reversing land degradation.The estimated cost of crop losses was drawn from a review of more than 20 studies over the last 20 years in Australia, India, Pakistan, Spain, Central Asia and the USA.Globally, irrigated lands cover some 310 million ha, an estimated 20% of it salt-affected (62 million ha). The inflation-adjusted cost of salt-induced land degradation in 2013 was estimated at $441 per hectare, yielding an estimate of global economic losses at $27.3 billion per year.In India's Indo-Gangetic Basin, crop yield losses on salt-affected lands for wheat, rice, sugarcane and cotton grown on salt-affected lands could be 40%, 45%, 48%, and 63%, respectively. Employment losses could be 50-80 man-days per hectare, with an estimate 20-40% increase in human health problems and 15-50% increase in animal health problems.In the Indus Basin in Pakistan, wheat grain yield losses from salt-affected lands ranged 20-43% with an overall average loss of 32%. For rice, the crop yield losses from salt-affected lands ranged 36-69% with an overall average loss of 48%.Even in the USA's Colorado River Basin, studies show the annual economic impact of salt-induced land degradation in irrigated areas at US $750 million."It is important to note that the above numbers on global cost of salt-induced land degradation refer to economic losses based on crop yield losses only," the paper says."However, the crop yields from irrigated areas not affected by salinization have increased since 1990 due to factors such as improved crop varieties, efficient on-farm practices, better fertilizer use, and efficient water management practices. Consequently, there may be larger gaps in crop yields harvested from salt-affected and non-affected areas under similar agro-ecosystems, suggesting an underestimation of the economic cost of salt-induced land degradation.""These costs are expected to be even higher when other cost components such as infrastructure deterioration (including roads, railways, and buildings), losses in property values of farms with degraded land, and the social cost of farm businesses are taken into consideration. In addition, there could be additional environmental costs associated with salt-affected degraded lands as these lands emit more greenhouse gases, thus contributing to global warming."Among methods successfully used to facilitate drainage and reverse soil degradation: Tree planting, deep plowing, cultivation of salt-tolerant varieties of crops, mixing harvested plant residues into topsoil, and digging a drain or deep ditch around the salt-affected land.Reversing land degradation and bringing salt-affected lands back into highly productive state are expected to result in favorable environmental benefits in addition to economic gains, although functional markets for many of the ecosystem services are currently embryonic or nonexistent.Although there is a cost of investing in preventing land degradation, reversing land degradation, or restoring degraded land into productive land, these costs of action are much less than the costs of letting land degradation continue and intensify.Pertinent policies, well-designed salinity management plans, supportive institutions, skilled human resources, provision of facilities and infrastructure for disposal of salts, capacity development of farmers, and utilization of locally available resources and indigenous knowledge of communities are crucial in combating salt-induced land degradation.Salt-induced land degradation may also affect the business sector negatively either directly or indirectly, targeting their inputs, outputs, or processes. The businesses in close connection with natural resources may be affected, such as those dealing with basic resources (forestry, wood, pulp, and paper), food and beverage, construction and materials, industrial goods and services (transportation and packaging), utilities (water and electricity), personal and household goods (clothing, footwear, and furniture), leisure and travel (hotels and restaurants), and real estate. Therefore, reversing salt-induced land degradation would help these sectors achieve potential economic gains by providing needed levels of materials and services.Source - http://www.eurekalert.org/

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