'Countries such as Vietnam, India, Cambodia and Myanmar would also be encouraged to focus on sustainable rice selling in order to provide their farmers a steady income, he [Deputy Commerce Minister Yanyong Phuangrach] added'.
'Our farmers need our help. I think most people will agree with that. Let's have an honest discussion that puts things in perspective and come up with policies that can help make the lives of our farmers more bearable, so once again we can put a smile back on all those grumpy faces'.
The outlay for the rice-pledging scheme will increase; apparently there is a need for more storage capacity (Nation, July 16).
'The biggest problem, however, is that even now, after so many bad turns, the government does not seem to realise that it has to be more proactive and make some major corrections to its rice-pledging scheme will not stumble into the same pitfalls as it has in the past few years. Having the prime minister eat freshly-cooked rice and proclaim that it is fragrant and delicious won't help'.
Bloomberg (July 19) suggest that yes, a loss may occur.'The government is prepared to take a big loss as it struggles to offload record stockpiles of rice built up through the state-buying programme, with plans to call for bids on the ageing hoard of grain every two weeks.
"The sale will probably be at a loss as the government aims to increase domestic prices, not to make profits out of the program," Deputy Commerce Minister Yanyong Phuangrach told reporters'.
'The government is confident that the rice-pledging scheme will not negatively affect the country's fiscal position, and is continuing the programme as it helps to increase purchasing power and narrow the income gap, the finance minister said yesterday'.
'Phuti Srisamutnak, president of the Thai Farmers Support Association, said farmers remained poor, despite the high pledging price. Humidity was the main factor that pressured the price, allowing farmers to earn much less than Bt15,000 per tonne. Usually, they get only Bt12,000 a tonne from millers, claiming the rice is of low quality.
"The cost of production has increased considerably in line with the high pledging price. After the government set the price at Bt15,000, the cost of production [including rentals, pesticide, fertiliser, labour, transport, tractor rentals, and fuel) also went up by Bt3,000 a tonne. The cost of production has been increased from Bt5,000 per tonne per rai to more than Bt8,000," he said'.
'In the meantime, her administration [Thai PM] has to bat away daily reports on the rice “scheme,” as the local papers call it. Stories hint at galloping costs and widespread corruption. The government has acknowledged the program has already cost [US] $4.4 billion in its first year. How much it will eventually cost depends on a factor outside of the government’s control, the global price of rice'.
- Quality control.
'Mr Suttipong [TV host] argued that he posted about the alleged contamination of some rice brands [amongst them CP brand Umbrella] with good intentions, because he is concerned about the health of consumers.While he was composing the post on his iPhone, he accidentally hit the send button, despite the post being incomplete. He immediately deleted the post but it had already been shared by many people, he said.He insisted that his comments had nothing to do with politics or the intention to discredit any brand of rice'.
'A consumer watchdog is calling on the government to inspect packaged rice after random tests found several samples to be tainted with high levels of methyl bromide, which is used to kill rice-eating bugs.
Meanwhile, three state agencies - the Agriculture Department, the Medical Sciences Department and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) - said they found no contamination in tests they conducted earlier.
Saree Ongsomwang, secretary-general for the Foundation for Consumers, said her agency had teamed up with the Bio Thai Foundation to collect 46 random samples of packaged rice sold under 36 brands to test for chemical substances, including methyl bromide, organophosphate, carbamate compounds and fungicide.
All samples, collected between June 19 and 27 from supermarkets, retail shops and department stores, were tested at an independent laboratory.
Tests found that 12 of the 46 samples were free of contamination, but traces of methyl bromide were found in 34 samples, of which one sample was found to have exceeded the safe level with 67.4 milligram per kilogram of the chemical. As per the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) codex, levels of methyl bromide in food should not exceed 50mg per kg'.
'And another concern on Facebook is clicking "Like" on your friends' messages and pictures. Before you click "Like", please consider if you should'.
Bangkok Post (July 24) pays a visit to a rice warehouse: sorry sight. And the expectations are that the government is useless in ensuring proper storage.
Thai Rice Packers are offering compensation if anyone dies after consuming contaminated rice (Nation, July 25).
- Corruption
'However, she [the PM] admitted checks on rice stocks at 2,000 warehouses have found evidence of corruption at 27 of them'.
'... each phase of the rice-pledging scheme process is susceptible to fraud, such as the inflated number of registered farmers, 3 million tonnes of incorrect rice stocks reported and the loss figure of Bt220 billion'.
- Illegal pledging.
'The International Grains Council in London estimated the equivalent of 750,000 tonnes of milled rice a year was coming into Thailand, senior economist Darren Cooper said. That would be about 900,000 tonnes of unmilled rice, or paddy.
"Clearly shipments (to Thailand) started going up since the intervention scheme started," Cooper said. "It is highly attractive for the neighboring countries to try and get as much rice across to Thailand as possible and supply into the scheme."'
- Theft
'On June 15, several businesses began to purchase rice for storage in the Mekong Delta under a government programme that aims to ensure farmers' income level.The government has covered 100 per cent of interest rates on three-month loans to assist businesses to buy rice.However, the large remaining stockpile of winter-spring rice, due to low exports over the last few months, is a challenge, as the eligible enterprises do not have enough warehouse space to store the forthcoming summer-autumn rice'.
'Philippine Ambassador to Cambodia Noe Wong and Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh signed a deal in April for the Philippines National Food Authority to import rice through the Cambodian state-owned enterprise Green Trade.Thon Virak, Green Trade’s director, said yesterday that the company is waiting to schedule a meeting because relevant partners are busy preparing for the election.“We are still waiting for the delegation from the Philippines to come here for a detailed discussion,” Virak said. “We plan to send the invitation letter to them, but need to wait for Cambodia’s new government to form after the national election.”Last year, a similar agreement between Cambodia and the Philippines was also planned but could not be finalised after Cambodia reportedly delayed a decision to lower prices to levels the Philippines was demanding'.
'Cambodia exported nearly 176,000 tonnes of rice in the first six months of the year, a 125 per cent increase from the same period in 2012, when about 78,000 tonnes left the country.Most of that, or about 60 per cent, went to countries in the European Union, which grants Cambodia duty-free tariffs under its Everything But Arms agreement to provide opportunities for growth.In June, however, the EU readmitted Myanmar to its trade preference scheme in response to wide-ranging political and economic reforms taking hold in the country since President Thein Sein took power in 2011'.
'Srey Chanthy, Acting Interim President of the Cambodian Economic Association, said that Myanmar, with its “large land cultivated area” and “plenty of rice surplus”, can be a big player. But the decades out of the game have taken their toll.“It will take Myanmar years to be recognised in the market and improve their production standards,” he said.Chanthy said that Myanmar will have to put in place a new institutional structure and a relevant legal framework with quality standards before it can meet market needs'.
'With its first shipment expected in November, the Baitong Rice Export Company and the Federation of Cambodian Rice Millers Association will send 3,000 tonnes of fragrant rice to Brunei, the smallest of the 10-member ASEAN states, with a population of a little more than 400,000'.
'“In the first six months of this year we’ve exported about 200 tons of organic rice, which is about double last year’s figure,” said Cedac president Yang Saing Koma, adding that farmers aren’t producing enough to meet demand. “We hope that by next year, we’ll be exporting 1,500 tons annually.”'
'Market forces and realities on the ground should allow farmers to choose hybrid rice or not.“There should be no subsidy for hybrid rice,” said Susan R. Brena who heads the Seed Technology Division of the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice).“If you want agriculture to take off, let’s teach our farmers to pay for premium quality seeds,” she told Malaya Business Insight....The plan is to increase the hectarage of hybrids by 72 percent to 284,400 hectares; last year it was 164,787 hectares – or just 3.5 percent of the country’s of 4,689,960 hectares. The hybrid rice hectarage will be expanded to 388,000 hectares next year'.