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For the second time in he ast fve years, India has restricted the sale of rice exports to keep the local prices down
From ABC News
Might be good for Australian Rice growers, seeing as here is plenty of water around for rice production
Mick
 
For the second time in he ast fve years, India has restricted the sale of rice exports to keep the local prices down
From ABC News

Might be good for Australian Rice growers, seeing as here is plenty of water around for rice production
Mick
Rice as well as wheat has increased in price, which in turn has increased the price of Pork.
FromCapital Flows and Asset markets




Mick
 
"Concerns about food security underlie Singapore’s push into alternative proteins."

Singapore are getting serious with producing 'alternative' foods. We could be seeing a new era of food production to match the rise of the mega farms, cheap fertilizers and genetics.

"It is encouraging experimentation with cultivated animal cells, meat, dairy and eggs made from plants, and food made from microbial or gas fermentation."

 
Ah a vegan's delight not a morsal of meat to be seen.
Fortunately for this rooster, meat a plenty, red, white and fish, also eggs. All the real deal thankyou.
 
Ah a vegan's delight not a morsal of meat to be seen.
Fortunately for this rooster, meat a plenty, red, white and fish, also eggs. All the real deal thankyou.

I agree farmerge but the problem for Singapore is the lack of farmable land, reliance on other nations for food, and current worry of global insecurity. If quality synthetic foods can be produced it may help other nations with food production issues as well.

A country half the size of London, which makes only 1% of its land available for food production, Singapore imports over 90% of its food. To protect itself from a volatile food supply chain, disruption by unpredictable neighbours, inflation, pandemics and war, the government aims to produce 30% of the country’s food by 2030.
 
For the second time in the last fve years, India has restricted the sale of rice exports to keep the local prices down
... this story is gaining traction... Pakistani floods in Punjab didn't help...
 
Yup, I can see the day that even my/our stockpiles will look meagre and dire. While we haven't gone over board and certainly not in the doomsday prepper league, we have upped the ante on storing supplies.
 
Yup, I can see the day that even my/our stockpiles will look meagre and dire. While we haven't gone over board and certainly not in the doomsday prepper league, we have upped the ante on storing supplies.
When it comes to food supplies, je suis Mormon.
 
You have many concubines, um, stores/supplies/pantries?
The general consensus is that people can survive for around three days without water, with estimates typically ranging from two days to a week. Wilderness guides often refer to the “rule of 3”, which says that a person can live for 3 minutes without air (oxygen), 3 days without water, and 3 weeks without food
 
The articles above refer to Thai rice and Indian rice.'
Australian Rice does not seem to get the same premium as Asian grown rice.
But I suspect if there is a shortage, they will be keen to get their hands on it.
Mick
 
The articles above refer to Thai rice and Indian rice.'
Australian Rice does not seem to get the same premium as Asian grown rice.
But I suspect if there is a shortage, they will be keen to get their hands on it.
Mick
There may not be much Australian rice in future for them to get a hand on it. Looks like the submission by Sunrice that the additional buybacks would make it uneconomic to grow rice in most years has been totally ignored. Looks like 500,000 tonnes less to feed the starving masses.
 
Correct, it highlights the stupidity of people making decisions in Canberra who have little interest in or understanding of farming practices.
From Rice growers Australia
Rice has generally been grown only in those years when water sales are abundant and hence cheap.
Extremely low water allocation 2007 to 2010 saw almost no rice produced, as were the recent years 2018 2019.
The extremely wet years since then have seen rice production grow to 400,000 tonnes in 2020, 677 tonnes in 2022, and 655 in 2023.

Because rice is an annual crop, farmers can shift in and out of production as water costs rise and fall.
One of the other big growth areas, almond production, needs about 14 ML per hectare during the gowing season, most of which is provided by irrigation. Because they are perennial, they must be irrigated even in years when water is extremely scarce, otherwise the trees die.
From NSW DPI
And the growth in coprate Almond plantings has been phenomenal, and is projected to keep growing.
In 2020, temporary water was changing hands for 900 megalitre.
At those prices, very few rice growers would have been profitably growing rice.
For the almond growers, there was no choice.
It is impossible to get a handle on where all these almonds are going, but a good percentage is going into almond milk.
Not sure how many people will starve if almond milk disappears, but there might be a few if rice disappears.
Mick
 
I don't eat rice!
 
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