Showing posts with label govt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label govt. Show all posts

Friday, 14 November 2014

NA standing committee asks govt to abolish GST on agri inputs

National Assembly Standing Committee on National Food Security and Research on Friday recommended the government to abolish general sales tax (GST) over agriculture input and machineries, leading to decrease in the production cost of agriculture produce and thus providing relief to the farmers in the country.
The committee meeting was held at Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC) and presided by Malik Shakir Bashir Awan. No farmer would be inclined to grow cash crops like sugarcane, wheat and rice if the government failed to eradicate GST over agriculture machineries and inputs, majority of the members of the committee said.
Minister for National Food Security and Research Sikandar Hayat Bosan told the committee that he had written a letter to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif about forming a committee consisting of representatives of all provinces for revival of agriculture, to review all kinds of taxes in order to reduce production cost of various crops.
He said that he had raised the issue of GST over the tube-well during the last meeting of Economic Coordination Committee (ECC). He urged all members of the committee to raise this issue in the National Assembly as this committee can only give recommendations.
The committee also recommended sending the case of import of substandard wheat from Ukraine by a private party, despite sufficient sock of wheat in the country, to Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and National Accountability Bureau (NAB) to bring the influential mafia involved in this crime to justice.
Officials of the Punjab and Sindh Agriculture Department told the committee that the import of 0.6 million tons wheat from Ukraine would create alarming situation in the country as presently there is sufficient stocks of wheat in the country.
MNAs Rao Muhammad Ajmal Khan and Muhammad Raza Hayat Hiraj of Pakistan Muslim League (PLM-N) expressed annoyance over approval of support price of wheat at Rs 1,300 per 40kg by the government without the consultation of the standing committee.
Ajmal Khan said the government fixed wheat support price or minimum guaranteed wheat price without the consultation of farmers. “Farmers will not grow main cash crops if the authorities fail in providing adequate price to them”, he said.
Hiraj said that the committee has recommended increasing the support price of wheat but the government approved it without taking into consideration the recommendation of the committee. “If the committee is unable to provide relief to farmers and increase support price then there is no need to call this meeting in future,” he said.
The MNFS&R secretary Seerat Asghar said that provincial governments after due deliberation with their respective authorities agreed on support price of wheat at Rs 1,300 per 40 kg from Rs 1,200 per 40 kg. MNA Muhammad Safdar alleged that an influential mafia has imported wheat from Ukraine and now the mafia is mixing it with the local wheat damaged in the recent flood. The sale of such substandard wheat not only continues in Karachi but it is also now available in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), he said.
Seerat Asghar said that the Department of Plant Protection (DPP) had so far physically inspected 444,471 metric tons and got analysed by utilising the analytical facilities. “As many as 384 containerised shipments were inspected and got analysed; out of them 50 were rejected on technical grounds; 222 were released after fumigation due to presence of live insects; and 112 were found to be clear,” he said.
Asghar said that according to SRO-2008 the importers were to submit the pre-shipment clearance and issuance of release order. The shipments that fulfilled the criterion were only given released orders, he said.
He said that quality was being watched through PARC that showed that out of 40 samples analysed so far, 14 were short of minimum protein and gluten levels, 19 were short of minimum falling number, 9 were short of test weight and 6 were short of foreign matter requirement. None of the samples that did not qualify the phytosanitary conditions were allowed or given release order.

Saturday, 8 December 2012

Another Reason For Americans To Fear The End Of The Year: The 'Agriculture Abyss'

This week’s print edition has an article discussing another reason for Americans to fear the end of the year: the “agriculture abyss.”

Farm subsidies cost America’s government tens of billions of dollars each year, even though many farmers are earning more than ever thanks to high commodity prices. Little surprise, then, that with Congress desperate to avoid painful tax increases and spending cuts, both Republicans and Democrats are prepared to eliminate direct payments to growers.

Despite that bipartisan consensus, the last farm bill, passed in 2008, expired on September 30 with nothing to take its place. In June, the Senate passed a bill with bipartisan support that would eliminate direct payments to farmers and trim spending on conservation programmes and food stamps. These measures would save $23 billion over the next ten years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The House Agriculture committee’s version would save about $35 billion over the next ten years.

While similar in most respects, the two bills differ in how they compensate farmers for the removal of direct payments. (There is also a slight difference in funding for food stamps.) The Senate version offers farmers a revenue protection scheme based on their recent earnings. If farm income falls below 89% of its baseline, the government will cover the next 10% of losses. (Beyond that, losses are covered by insurance paid for by farmers.) The House’s scheme is similar but kicks in when earnings dip below 85% of the baseline. More significantly, the House also offers farmers a price protection scheme in which they are paid whenever market prices dip below legally established reference rates.

Since the reference prices are all below, in some cases far below, current prices, this difference might not seem to matter much. But Southern peanut and rice farmers complain that the Senate’s bill would make them lose out relative to Midwestern wheat and soya growers. Ironically, the Southerners’ biggest opponent has been Pat Roberts from Kansas, the senior Republican in the Senate’s agricultural committee. That may be one reason that John Boehner, the Republican speaker of the House, has not brought the house bill up for a vote.

The failure to reach a deal could have significant consequences:


At the moment negotiations over the fiscal cliff are consuming all the political air. From soil conservation to price supports to trade, American farm policies are all on hold. The expiry of the latest bill means several conservation programmes have been frozen, as have export loan guarantees.

This year’s harvest is long in, so the effects so far have been muted. But if there is no farm bill by the start of the next agricultural year, the government’s price-support scheme will automatically revert to what it was in 1949. Most crops have until the spring or summer, but the deadline for milk and other dairy products comes at the end of December. Applying the old formulas today would require the federal government to buy up enough milk to establish a minimum wholesale price more than double its current level, and, later on, enough wheat to raise its price by 67%.

No one really expects Congress to plunge taxpayers into this “agriculture abyss”. When the previous farm bill was about to expire in 2007 the first of several temporary extensions was passed just days before the government would have had to intervene in the dairy market. Frank Lucas, the Republican chairman of the House agriculture committee, says that “reverting back to an antiquated system…is not responsible,” while Debbie Stabenow, the Democratic chairman of the Senate agriculture committee, is confident that a deal will be reached before the end of the year. But as with the rest of the fiscal cliff, the mere fact that both sides want a solution is no guarantee it will happen.

Just one more thing to worry about over the holidays, I suppose.
Original Article Here

Saturday, 24 November 2012

Investments key for long-term resilience, rebuilding agriculture in Haiti – UN agency

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has stressed that investments are crucial to help rehabilitate Haiti’s agricultural sector in the wake of various natural disasters this year that caused colossal damage to the farming and fishing industries.

“If we don’t invest today, we will pay the price tomorrow,” said Director-General José Graziano da Silva.

Speaking at a joint press conference with Haitian President Michel Martelly at FAO Headquarters in Rome yesterday, Mr. Graziano da Silva pledged to support Haiti through interventions that address the country’s immediate crisis situations as well as the root causes of its food insecurity and poverty.

FAO and the Haitian Government are currently seeking $74 million over the next 12 months to help long-term resilience in the country. The funds would be used to rehabilitate irrigation schemes and rural access roads; restore local seed production; provide seeds, fertilizer and agricultural tools to small farmers; support inland fisheries; and vaccinate livestock, among other activities.

The funds would also go towards helping farmers plant crops for the next planting season which starts in December.

Mr. Graziano da Silva said the objective is “to make Haitians, especially farmers, more resilient to climate and other challenges.”

Last month, Hurricane Sandy caused significant damage to Haiti’s crops, land, livestock, fisheries and rural infrastructures. It killed 60 people and flooded, destroyed or damaged some 18,000 homes, as well as hospitals, schools and public buildings.

It was the third disaster to hit Haiti in the space of a few months. Between May and June, a severe drought struck at the beginning of the critical spring cropping season, and in August, Tropical Storm Isaac battered the country, displacing thousands of people. Together, the three disasters left two million Haitians at risk of food insecurity and resulted in losses of $254 million to the agricultural sector.

“If we don’t intervene quickly, over 60 per cent of the population deriving their livelihood from agriculture will be put at risk,” said FAO Assistant Director-General for Technical Cooperation Laurent Thomas.

Out of the $74 million sought, FAO has so far secured $2.7 million, with indications of a further $5 million-$6 million from different donors. The agency will also implement short- and medium-term projects in response to the current crisis, ranging from immediate relief activities to interventions that have a longer-term economic and environmental impact.
Original Article Here

Tuesday, 13 November 2012

Ukraine may start maize export to China soon

Ukraine may start its first shipments of maize to China by the end of this year under an agreement which will allow the former Soviet republic pay back a $3 billion loan to the Asian giant. Ukrainian Agricultural Minister Mykola Prysyazhnyuk said on Monday that the way was clear for shipments to start after the two sides reached agreement on sanitary and other quality requirements for supplies of the commodity. 

"Shipments of Ukrainian maize will be made in accordance with inter-government agreements and by private companies as well," Prysyazhnyuk was quoted as saying by his ministry. The outline agreement should enable Ukraine to pay off $3 billion worth of credit extended by China this summer, he said. A list of Ukrainian exporting companies would be sent to China in the near future. 

Analysts say Ukraine, a major wheat producer which is also the world's fourth-biggest maize exporter, may in future be able to compete with the United States for China's maize market. The former Soviet republic said in July that it would supply 2.0 million to 2.5 million tonnes of maize to China every year to pay off the $3 billion loan. China's overall maize imports could total 6.0 million tonnes this year and might reach 8.0 million tonnes in 2013, according to Ukrainian agricultural ministry figures. 

Saturday, 29 September 2012

We must help farmers over CAP reforms

The Government has the chance to show leadership and to ensure that CAP reform does not lead to serious disadvantages for our farmers, NFU President Peter Kendall has said.

Speaking to delegates at Food Security 2012, Mr Kendall expressed his continued concerns that the European Commission proposals to reform the CAP would do very little if anything to ensure European farmers contributed to the global food security challenge.

Mr Kendall, however, said it was not too late for the Government to revert the course of CAP reform – and in doing so, showing leadership to other member states and influential MEPs.



“Under previous reforms, we had very clear direction of travel in favour of a policy that eliminates distorting support, brings decoupling, supports competitiveness and sensibly delivers targeted support to deliver environmental goods. There is a real danger that those positive steps will be lost in this round,” said Mr Kendall.

“Being positive about CAP reform might sit uneasily with some British politicians. But it’s essential if the UK government wants to achieve its ends of downsizing the CAP.

“It needs to set out a pragmatic, relevant policy vision that can command support amongst a sizeable proportion of your allies. This can only be achieved through diplomacy, guile and sound ideas. It means dropping some of the hectoring on the CAP.



"And it also means the UK moving away from a purely narrow approach to reform based solely on the delivery of public goods to a much more rounded, vision based on helping farmers to become more competitive through use of decoupled payments, targeted investment support and exploiting the future Horizon 2020 research programme to deliver more applied R&D.

“To me, this is a much more progressive approach that has the potential not only to serve the ends of food security, but also meeting the serious financial challenges ahead in Europe through growth.”

Original Article Here



Friday, 21 September 2012

FG designs initiative to lure youths into agriculture

The Federal Government is designing an initiative to create a new generation of young commercial farmers that will help transform the agriculture sector and guarantee food sufficiency for the nation now and well into the future. 
The initiative with which government intends to create up to one million jobs by 2015 is called the Youth Employment in Agriculture Programme (YEAP) while the participating youths will be known as ‘Nagroprenuers’.

The minister of agriculture, Akinwunmi Adesina, said yesterday in Abuja that the programme will encourage many Nigerian youths to embrace agriculture as a business and be able to eke out a living and be lifted out of poverty status.

Adesina said the initiative which is a major part of the agricultural recovery and growth programme for Nigeria being implemented by his ministry was borne out of the passion to create more jobs for young people and especially due to strong concerns that the current generation of farmers is ageing rapidly.

At the YEAP workshop that had many youths in attendance, the minister repeatedly said that agriculture is being repositioned to transform the economic prospects of the nation because no sector has greater capacity to create jobs as quickly and sustainably as the sector.

“The agriculture sector is already large contributing over 40 percent of GDP and 70 percent of all employment. It has an unprecedented potential for growth. No nation has succeeded in driving sustainable economic development without fixing its agricultural sector. The evidence is all around us - China, India, Vietnam, Thailand are today big players in the world economy through transforming their agriculture,” he stressed.

Nigeria’s agriculture sector which was once vibrant is seemingly at its lowest ebb due to long years of neglect. The government has, however, planned to revive the industry with its transformation action plan which hopes to generate about 3.5 million jobs and push the country back into food sufficiency.

At the event, the minister explained that the government’s vision is to move Nigeria into becoming an agriculturally industrialised economy, to create wealth, jobs and markets for farmers, and revive the rural economy. He maintained that the plan is to grow the size of the sector from the present $99 billion per year to about $300 billion by year 2030.

“We are turning Nigeria into a breadbasket and a power house for food production. That is why we made a fundamental paradigm shift in how we look at agriculture. Today, agriculture is being treated as a business, no longer as a development programme. We are also focusing on private sector driven investments to unlock the potential of the sector. All these will serve to attract the young people into agriculture. There is lot of money to be made in agriculture,” he told the youths.

Adesina noted that to be competitive in today’s global agricultural markets, with changing technologies, demands for quality and standards, there is need to change the labour composition of Nigeria’s agricultural sector.

While encouraging the youths to embrace agriculture, he said that the sector requires new skills, younger people and more entrepreneurial farmers, who will be able to compete at the global scale, well vast in business, to be able to run sound agribusinesses that will make Nigeria’s agriculture modern, commercial and profitable.
Original Article Here

Friday, 14 September 2012

Green Agriculture Gets a Boost from the Harper Government

Canadian farmers will have the opportunity to increase their profits while improving their environmental impact with the support of the Harper Government. The Honourable Lynne Yelich, Minister of State (Western Economic Diversification), on behalf of Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz, announced today an investment for the Canadian Fertilizer Institute to study greenhouse gas mitigation in fertilizer application.

"Our Government's top priority remains the economy, and investments in research play an important role in keeping our economy strong," said Minister Yelich. "This investment will help provide farmers with the tools and knowledge needed to preserve their land and surrounding environment, ensuring they remain profitable well into the future."

The Canadian Fertilizer Institute will use this $700,000 investment to study greenhouse gas mitigation in fertilizer application using the 4R Nutrient Stewardship system-Right Source, Right Rate, Right Time, Right Place-a set of beneficial management practices (BMPs) created by the fertilizer industry to achieve cropping system goals. This will help farmers use fertilizer more efficiently, which will help to protect the environment, leave more money in the pockets of farmers and increase yield potential on the farm.

"There are many advantages for farmers to adopt the 4Rs into their cropping systems," said Mr. Norm Beug, Chair of the Canadian Fertilizer Institute. "The 4Rs offer a framework to farmers as they implement BMPs to optimize fertilizer efficiency, which minimizes nutrient loss and leakage into the air and water. The 4R approach maximizes farmer returns for every tonne of fertilizer used and allows farmers to quantify their practices to receive credits for ecological goods and services."

This project is supported through the Agricultural Greenhouse Gases Program (AGGP), a five-year, $27-million initiative that focuses on the development of on-farm greenhouse gas mitigation technologies. The AGGP will provide funding to various partners across Canada to investigate innovative mechanisms, tools, and approaches that provide real solutions for the agriculture sector.

The AGGP is Canada's initial contribution to the Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases, an international network of more than 30 member countries that coordinates and increases agricultural research on greenhouse gas mitigation and makes new mitigation technologies and beneficial management practices available to farmers. In June 2012, Canada was officially named Council Chair of the Alliance for 2012-13. For more information on the Global Research Alliance, visit www.globalresearchalliance.org.

Media Relations
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada
Ottawa, Ontario
613-773-7972
1-866-345-7972
Jeff English
Press Secretary
The Office of the Honourable Gerry Ritz
613-773-1059

Monday, 3 September 2012

Illegal pesticides threaten agriculture and fragile ecosystem

The spread of counterfeit pesticides and fertilizers that contain dangerous toxic substances is one of the biggest dangers threatening agriculture in the country, and its delicate ecosystem.

While the Agriculture Committee in the Shura Council, the lower house of Parliament, has warned of weak government supervision of the pesticides market and the expansion of its illegal outlets, banned pesticides are still used in large quantities.

“The government has no control or supervision on the import or distribution of pesticides and fertilizers. We are obliged to deal with small pesticide and fertilizer outlets because the Agriculture Ministry doesn’t help us by any means,” says Reda Nassif, a farmer from Monufiya Governorate.

Nassif says many factories produce counterfeit pesticides and fertilizers, carrying the name of famous companies with the same packaging design, to deceive naive farmers. But after analyzing their components, farmers realized they contain dangerous toxic chemicals that paralyze plants and increase the salinity of the soil.

“The owners of these factories make huge profits because they use very cheap materials to produce these pesticides and fertilizers, and then sell them at expensive prices, and that’s how the business goes,” Nassif says. “All types of potassium fertilizers that exist in the Egyptian market, for example, are fake.”

Latest Agriculture Ministry reports put the total amount of pesticides imported last year at about 7 billion tons, with a total value of LE1 billion. This consumption exceeds that of the rest of the region.

Nassif explains that major farming companies import pesticides and fertilizers in large quantities, then distribute them to small shops spread throughout villages nationwide.

No restrictions are imposed on these imports, and because Egyptian farmers tend to be more attracted to imported products than local ones, they flock to buy any new product that enters the market, even without knowing its source.

“We heard recently about some Israeli pesticides that entered the Egyptian market, but because, in general, farmers fail to differentiate between pesticides coming from different sources and countries, they could never discover whether they used them without being aware [of it],” Nassif says.

He says he thinks it’s a foreign scheme aiming to spread disease or destroy crops and plants to force Egyptians to import their crops, “because who doesn’t own his food doesn’t own his dignity,” Nassif bitterly adds.

Osama al-Tayeb, microbiology and immunology professor at 6th of October University, sees another dangerous aspect of the situation. Farmers started to replace the original, natural pest resistors with more advanced and modified products that are hazardous to crops and human health.

Tayeb says over the past decades, farmers have used a natural poison — Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt — produced by bacteria to get rid of pests that attack their crops. It used to be produced by the National Research Centre and was distributed by Kafr El Zayat Pesticides and Chemicals Company, at very cheap prices.

This natural pesticide was safe and could decompose in less than a week without leaving any toxic residues in soil or plants. But now, farmers have started to import genetically engineered seeds that can produce toxic materials by themselves in large quantities. These can cause environmental problems and health dangers, because they can change some genes inside the human body and be harmful to health, Tayeb says.

He says that after the temic type of pesticide — which kills worms in soil — proved to be a very toxic substance causing birth defects and cancer, and after its import was banned, farmers started smuggling it in illegally because they had got so used to it.

Although some farmers do not realise they are using genetically engineered products, Tayeb says he thinks the lack of awareness isn’t the only reason behind the distribution of these products. Another is the strong desire to make higher profits. When farmers hear about products that can save their crops, they insist on buying them without asking whether they are legal.

Facing this situation, which some experts call a “pseudo black market” and in which most traders don’t know their products are illegal, the Agricultural Pesticide Committee, under the supervision of the Agriculture Ministry, launched an awareness campaign a few months ago to teach farmers which pesticides and fertilizers to use and which to avoid.

But many experts think these campaigns won’t achieve their goals because the committee doesn’t know how to communicate at the farmers’ levels.

Natasha Arthur, marine biologist and environmental expert, says it’s important for governments to work closely with agricultural organizations to make sure the public is not exposed to high levels of pesticides that result in adverse health effects.

“Pesticides have the capacity to persist in the soil and water for decades, affecting plant life and animal life, which in turn can affect humans and cause health problems like cancers, nerve damage and birth defects,” Arthur says.

Although it rarely rains in Cairo, she says, pesticides can end up in lakes and rivers through the air, wind and birds, poisoning them.

“Communities that rely on rivers for food are at risk of consuming the toxic active and inactive components of pesticides, as the bio-accumulate in big fish,” Arthur says. Bio-accumulation is the accumulation of chemicals in the tissue of organisms.

Fertilizers can also pollute the marine system and cause environmental disasters, particularly in a country like Egypt where farmers don’t have drainage pipes to get rid of extra irrigation water and dump it in lakes and rivers.

This can lead to a toxic bloom. When farmers use fertilizers for crops, or even areas such as golf courses, then rain, wind or the rest of the irrigation water carries fertilizer rich in nitrates and phosphates to the lakes and oceans. This provides an over supply of nutrients for the growth of algae, and the algae grow very quickly — resulting in the death of fish and plant life in lakes.

A similar occurrence happens in the ocean. Plants and animals die because of the quick overgrowth of algae and other plants, preventing sunlight from penetrating lakes and oceans and decreasing oxygen levels.

Corals also die because they need sunlight and clean water to thrive, and because corals provide a habitat for most sea life, fertilizers in the ocean can kill many species along the food chain.

Ahmed Droubi, biologist at Greenpeace — an international environmental protection association that recently started working in Egypt — says there is a monopoly in the pesticide and fertilizer market in Egypt.

“About seven big farming organizations dominate the whole market as they are the only importers who can manipulate prices as they like and create market need whenever they want,” Droubi says. “Therefore, small farmers resort to smuggling illegal pesticides and manufacturing fake fertilizers as they can buy them at cheaper prices.”

Droubi says the association plans to cooperate with government agriculture authorities to impose laws and regulations to protect farmers’ and consumers’ rights. It also plans to find solutions for problems related to pesticide misuse and the use of wastewater for irrigation, as well as other issues, such as corruption.

“We have some agricultural lands that exist a few meters away from the Nile, but irrigation water doesn’t reach them,” Droubi says. “At the same time, fresh water can reach some golf courses and resorts that contain artificial lakes in deserts, and this is obviously unfair.”

While many experts say farmers don’t trust the government and prefer not to buy from its outlets, Nassif says farmers would buy from them.

“We are sure the government will bring us good types of fertilizers and pesticides. That’s why we beg the Agriculture Ministry and farming associations to start distributing pesticides and fertilizers through specific known outlets at reasonable prices, under government supervision,” says Nassif. “We resort to the black market because we have no other alternative.”

Some steps could be taken to overcome the problem, he says, such as setting up strict restrictions on imports and making an office in every village responsible for inspecting shops.

“Unfortunately, the farmers union still exists as an entity but its role has always been marginalized, and poor farmers have no voice. They need someone to speak on their behalf and express their requests and complaints,” Nassif says. “We need to remember that Egypt is an agricultural country in the first place.”
Original Article Here

Friday, 24 August 2012

FG secures $74 million loan to boost agriculture


The Federal Government has signed a $74 million loan with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) to boost cassava and rice production in the country.
President of the organization, Dr. Kanayo Nwanze said that the programme is expected to improve the value chain of rice and cassava production in six states of the federation targeted at reducing unemployment and improving household income, at the signing ceremony in Abuja,.
Present at the  ceremony were the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and her counterpart from the Ministry of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi Adeshina.
The Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala stated that the federal, state and local government will provide a counterpart fund of $31 million to be paid for a period of six years.
Okonjo-Iweala said the IFAD credit would be beneficial to the country as it would help create jobs and help the country to be self-sufficient in food production.
She said the agreement comprised an IFAD credit of $74m, which would attract zero interest rate and a repayment period of 40 years, as well as a grant of $0.5m.
The minister explained that the credit was on soft terms, adding that the three tiers of government would provide counterpart contribution to the tune of $31.2m.
Okonjo-Iweala said, “We are signing this credit to underscore the importance of IFAD’s commitment to the development of agriculture in this country, and it also demonstrates that our relationship with IFAD is yielding benefits to this country.
“The IFAD partnership development programme, which is what we are kicking off today, is valued at $105.2m and comprises of an IFAD credit of $74m and a grant of $0.5m.”
She added, “The credit is on soft terms and the Federal Government, states and local councils will provide counterpart contribution to the tune of $31.2m. This project will be implemented over a period of six years and there is no doubt that it will be a strong contributor to the very important plan for the agriculture sector.
“The IFAD credit is one of the most beneficial because there is no interest, only 0.75 per cent commitment charge and 40 years’ repayment period; and so, it is really a very great credit for the country to access.”
Also speaking at the event, Adesina said the funding would be used to boost rice and cassava production in six states.
The project, he noted, would cover 40,000 households in Anambra, Ebonyi, Ogun, Niger, Benue and Taraba states.
“IFAD is working very closely with us and they are supporting us in rice and cassava production. The programme will target 40,000 households in six states and it will help us to strengthen the agriculture value chain, improve market infrastructure, particularly feeder roads between the production centres and the markets, and enhance productivity of farmers,” he said.
Nwanze said the organisation had financed nine projects valued at $229m.
He said Nigeria was currently receiving 40 per cent of the total loans given to West and Central African countries.
“Funding for this project was approved in April this year. We have financed a total of nine projects valued at $229m, and currently, Nigeria receives about 40 per cent of total loans to West and Central Africa, comprising of 21 countries, and this shows how important Nigeria is to the continent,” Nwanze said.
Original Article Here

Thursday, 16 August 2012

Scottish Agriculture Lending Seen Rising For Third Straight Year


By Whitney McFerron 
Scotland’s agricultural debt was 1.67 billion pounds ($2.6 billion) on May 31, up 3.5 percent from the same time a year earlier and heading for a third consecutive annual gain, the region’s chief statistician said.
About 89 percent of advances from banks and mortgage companies went to owner-occupier farms, while 8 percent went to tenant farmers and the remainder went to agricultural contractors and livestock salesmen, according to the chief statistician’s report on the government’s website. Agriculture debt rose for a third straight year “despite difficult lending conditions in the economy,” it said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Whitney McFerron in London at wmcferron1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Carpenter at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net
Original Article Here

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

HC restores approval to agriculture school


In a relief for an agricultural school in Dahanu, the Bombay high court has struck down the Maharashtra State Agricultural Council's order cancelling approval granted to it.
A division bench of Justice D D Sinha and Justice V K Tahilramani on August 10, 2012 heard a petition filed by Kandivli-based Amrapalli Education Society at Kandivli which runs an agricultural school at Virewadi in Dahanu. On July 12, 2012 the approval granted to the school was cancelled by the Maharashtra State Agricultural Council. The Society moved HC.
The State government's advocate submitted that in Maharashtra there as many such agricultural schools mushrooming. He said due to there total chaos due to unrestricted growth. Therefore in the Vidhan Sabha there was a suggestion made to prepare a master plan for such agricultural schools. The master plan has been prepared and has been sent to all agricultural universities for their suggestions. The final plan will be will be published thereafter.,'' he added,.
However the Society's advocate showed the court that while permission was given on May 23, 2011 the government took a decision on June 4, 2011 not to give permission to any schools. The judges said since permission was given in May 2011, the government's decision will not be applicable retrospectively. They quashed and set aside the order cancelling the approval.
Original Article Here

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Monsoon plays truant but agriculture minister Pawar insists all is well


Searching in vain: The failure of the the monsoon to arrive is having a devastating effect on crops


By SAVITA VERMA
The two-week hiatus of the southwest monsoon has finally got the government worried, though no one is ready to press the panic button yet. 
Agriculture minister Sharad Pawar on Tuesday admitted that the delay in the monsoon has already affected sowing of important Kharif crops in many parts of the country. All hopes are now pinned on revival of the monsoon. 
'By and large, the situation may not be fully satisfactory but it is not bad either. There is ample opportunity to cover the delay,' Pawar said.
He added that the agriculture ministry was in touch with states, who have already prepared contingency plans. States have been told to ensure availability of seeds of alternative crops and varieties and be ready to implement these plans in the event of further delay in the monsoon rains. 
The situation could, however, improve as the window for sowing rice, pulses, oilseeds and cotton is still open till mid-July. There are hopes of the monsoon picking up in July and August which will lead to pick-up of Kharif sowing. 
Till now, the rainfall deficiency is 31 per cent though the weather department says the monsoon is expected to advance and rainfall is expected to be better from next week onwards. 
Dr S.C. Bhan, Indian Met department director, said the monsoon had now become active and the deficiency in rains is expected to be covered. It has already advanced into parts of Madhya Pradesh and remaining parts of Maharashtra. It is likely to advance into Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand in the next two days.
Towards the weekend, monsoon is expected to enter Delhi. D.K. Joshi, chief economist from CRISIL, said while June rainfall is not very critical, the situation would get difficult if rains falter in July too. 
Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar yesterday
'More worrying is the apprehension about El Nino, which may lead to distorted rains,' he said, adding: 'As it is the economic growth has been slow, a bad monsoon would further create pressure on inflation and impact growth. Prices will rise further.'
A fall in farm output appears imminent. In areas of south and central India where sowing has not taken for crops such as sorghum and pulses, a 5-10 per cent fall in yield may take place, according to B. Venkateswarlu, director, Central Research Institute for Dryland Agriculture. 
Sowing has been affected in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, parts of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. The widespread deficiency in rains in western and central India has affected coarse cereals such as maize, bajra and jowar. 
However, the overall situation of rice is not worrisome. 
'It is quite possible that production will be good in major rice producing states such as Punjab, Haryana, Andhra Pradesh, Orrisa and Chhattisgarh,' Pawar said. 
Rice has been sown in 3.96 million hectare, which is comparable to the normal area of sowing at this time of the year but less by 0.19 million hectare than last year, the minister said. 
There have been widespread rains in north-eastern and eastern states, coastal Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka which will help in increasing transplantation of rice, he said. 
There is an opportunity to increase the area under pulses and oilseeds which are grown as contingent crops. The sowing of pulses in most of the states generally increases during the first fortnight of July.

A shortfall of 0.32 million hectares has been reported in groundnut due to less sowing in Gujarat, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. The agriculture minister said there was no need to worry for Punjab and Haryana since 94 per cent of the crop area is under irrigation. 
The sowing of Kharif crops such as paddy, pulses and oilseeds begins in April but gains momentum after the onset of monsoon in June. Spurred by good monsoon, the country had produced a record 252.56 million tons of foodgrain in the 2011-12 crop year (from July to June). Rice production stood at record 103.41 million tons, out of which 90.75 million tons were grown in Kharif.
Original Article Here

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Govt, FAO to introduce framework to improve food security


The Food and Agriculture Organisation, FAO, is to introduce the Country Programming Framework, to improve food security and aid to the country.

This will be used by the organisation to define the medium term response to the assistance of member countries in the pursuit of national development objective.

The Minister of Food and Agriculture, Kwesi Ahwoi, at a workshop in Accra said the framework is a step by the FAO to further collaborate with government in the selection of programmes for implementation in areas where the organisation has comparative strength.

GBC NEWS

Vic farming has an image problem: report


AAP 
A VICTORIAN government inquiry has found state secondary students should be schooled on careers in farming.
The plan would be to interest young people in a life on the land as there is a farming labour shortage of about 100,000 workers nationally.
A Victorian parliamentary committee's found farming has an image problem among young people in rural communities, perpetuated by farmers talking down farming.
Prue Addlem, whose family farm is between Bendigo and Kerang in northern Victoria, says reports often focus negative aspects of agriculture, like drought and flooding.
Original Article Here

Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Govt to provide agri tools to farmers on subsidised rates


By: Ahmad Ahmadani 
ISLAMABAD - A rare gesture can be termed as right step towards right direction, the PPP-led government in a bid to promote solar tube wells in the country is mulling to provide agricultural tools to the farmers on subsidised rates.
Viewing worsening energy crisis with each passing day coupled with mounting political pressure ahead of general election year on the political arena of the country, ruling coalition government is however now genuinely working on a strategy to promote alternative as well as renewable energy sources including solar in the country in a bid to meet the growing demands of country’s vast agriculture sector. On 12th June, a meeting in collaboration with Pakistan Council of Renewable Energy Technologies to promote alternative energy sources is scheduled to be held in the premises of Ministry of Industries (MoI) where a strategy is likely to be evolved regarding the provision of agricultural tools run on solar energy to the farmers on very subsidized rates.
It was also learnt that ahead of general election the government, in a right move to promote solar tube wells for agriculture sector, has decided to provide a great chunk of the subsidy only to secure the sympathies of the over burdened as well as ignored farmers of the country bearing sky-high prices of electric power from a long times to make both ends meet. Following the announcement of proposed tax in federal budget of fiscal year 2012-13 on Peter engines coupled with grand sales tax (GST), the government is now leaving no stone unturned to address the deep concerns of farmers amicably.
Sources were of the view that government should come on forefront in a bid to promote production of solar energy tools including its panels and relevant spare parts at large numbers in the country. The government must allocate great share of subsidy for the agriculture sector or convince the banks for leasing of solar technologies in country though so far they remained reluctant to offer loans in this regard to incumbent government.
Similarly, Advisor to Prime Minister on Industries Muhammad Bisharat Raja on Tuesday visited Pakistan Council of Renewable Energy Technologies and held talks with the delegations of farmers seeking relief for the agriculture sector from the federal government. However, he assured them that their concerns and reservations would be brought in the notice of Premier Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani and various measures would also be taken to increase agricultural production in the country.
It is worth mentioning here that agriculture of the country had been badly hit due to heavy shortfall of electricity or some other pretext resultantly the target of cotton growing could not achieved.
It was targeted that cotton would be grown up in 64 lakh acres but so far only 40 to 50 lakh acres have been cultivated for cotton crop in the country.
Similarly, rice crop that requires heavy quantity of water will be hit badly due to long hours power load shedding. Further, the national kitty was expected to get Rs25 billion with cotton crop.
Original Article Here

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