USA Rice Joins Wheat, Pork and Dairy Processors in Expressing Concern about Japan and TPP
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 | Minister Amari |
WASHINGTON, DC -- Minister Amari's statement in Singapore that none of Japan's sensitive agricultural items will be fully liberalized may signal the end of hopes for the Trans-Pacific Partnership to become a truly comprehensive and forward-looking 21st century agreement. A country cannot shield its primary agricultural products from competition and still claim to be committed to a high-standard agreement liberalizing essentially all goods.
When Japan joined the TPP negotiations, it agreed to "to pursue an agreement that is comprehensive and ambitious in all areas, eliminating tariffs and other barriers to trade and investment," as stated in the earlier (November 12, 2011) TPP Trade Ministers' Report to Leaders. Yet according to several reports from the TPP Ministerial meeting just completed in Singapore, Japanese Minister of the Economy Akira Amari has now flatly told the other negotiating countries that Japan will not abolish tariffs in the five agricultural sectors it considers "sacred." Those five sectors include seven basic agricultural products, covering most of agricultural production: dairy, sugar, rice, beef, pork, wheat and barley. They also include many downstream products made from those seven items, such as flour and flour mixes made from wheat and rice.
The broad exemption that Japan is demanding will encourage other partner countries to withhold their sensitive sectors as well. The result would fall far short of a truly comprehensive agreement that would set a new standard for future trade agreements. In fact the TPP envisioned by Japan, if it stands, would be the least comprehensive agreement the U.S. has negotiated since the 21st century began.
U.S. negotiators still have a chance to push Japan to provide meaningful agricultural market access in the agreement. Failing that, the alternative is suspending negotiations with Japan for now and concluding a truly comprehensive agreement with those TPP partners that are willing to meet the originally contemplated level of ambition. It is a big step but one that will be justified if Japan continues to refuse to open its agricultural sector to meaningful competition.
Contact: Bob Cummings (703) 236-1473
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Notice of Open Tender
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AARQ Association for the Administration of Rice Quotas, Inc.
Independent bids are invited for rights to ship U.S.-origin milled rice to the European Union under a tariff-rate quota (TRQ) granted by the EU to the United States.
Bids must be submitted on May 29, 2014 for the July 2014 TRQ Tranche, in which the following quantity is available:
Volume (metric tons)
EU Duty
Semi-Milled or Milled Rice 9,680 zero
(HTS item 1006.30)
TRQ Certificates will be awarded to the highest bidder(s). Any person or entity incorporated or domiciled in the United States is eligible to bid. The minimum bid quantity is 18 metric tons. Performance security (the lesser of $50,000 or the total value of the bid) must be submitted with each bid. Potential bidders may obtain the required bid forms and bid instructions from:
AARQ Administrator
Economic Consulting Services, LLC
2001 L Street, NW, Suite 1000
Washington, D.C. 20036
Tel: (202) 466-1150 Fax: (202) 785-3330
Note: Potential bidders should consult regulations in the Official Journal of the European Union to determine the applicable tariff rate on semi-milled/milled rice. AARQ disclaims any responsibility for advising potential bidders on applicable tariff rates. Potential bidders should also consult EC regulations relating to testing for unauthorized GMOs.
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CCC Announces Prevailing World Market Prices
| WASHINGTON -- The Department of Agriculture's Commodity Credit Corporation today announced the following prevailing world market prices of milled and rough rice, adjusted for U.S. milling yields and location, and the resulting marketing loan-gain (MLG) and loan deficiency payment (LDP) rates applicable to the 2013 crop, which became effective today at 7:00 a.m., Eastern Time (ET). Prices are unchanged from the previous announcement.
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World Price
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MLG/LDP Rate
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Milled Value ($/cwt)
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Rough ($/cwt)
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Rough ($/cwt)
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Long-Grain
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17.52
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11.50
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0.00
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Medium-/Short-Grain
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17.18
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11.76
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0.00
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Brokens
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12.00
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This week's prevailing world market prices and MLG/LDP rates are based on the following U.S. milling yields and the corresponding loan rates:
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U.S. Milling Yields Whole/Broken (lbs/cwt)
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Loan Rate ($/cwt)
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Long-Grain
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57.94/11.23
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6.65
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Medium-/Short-Grain
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63.26/7.45
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6.58
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The next program announcement is scheduled for June 4. |
CME Group/Closing Rough Rice Futures | CME Group (Preliminary): Closing Rough Rice Futures for May 28
July 2014
| $15.050
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- $0.040
| September 2014
| $14.385
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- $0.050
| November 2014
| $14.505
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- $0.030
| January 2015
| $14.665
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- $0.015
| March 2015
| $14.820
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+ $0.035
| May 2015
| $14.820
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+ $0.035
| July 2015
| $14.820
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+ $0.035
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In the News
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Around Washington
Obama Faces Calls to Open Up to Cuba, Yet Again Wall Street Journal
Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue flew to Cuba this week for a round of meetings with Cuban entrepreneurs and government officials
Around the Country
Laws to Track Biggest California Water Users Ignored Desert Sun
The state is now trying to achieve a 20 percent reduction in urban per-capita water use by the end of 2020, based on the same law that targeted large agricultural districts
USDA Seeks Partnerships to Protect Soil, Water Mercury News
Secretary Vilsack said establishing new public-private partnerships can have an impact that's well beyond what the federal government could accomplish on its own
Vilsack, Stabenow Seek Partners for New Conservation Program Agri-Pulse
Under the plan, 35 percent of total funding will be directed to critical conservation areas, 40 percent will go toward regional or multi-state projects and 25 percent is earmarked for state-level projects through a competitive process established by state leaders in the Natural Resources Conservation Service
Around the World
Anger Over Coup Trumps Payout to Thai Farmers New York Times
Thailand's military ordered that 92 billion baht ($2.8 billion) be disbursed to rice farmers, a huge sum meant to lift rural incomes that were twice the market price for the farmers' rice
Science and Technology
Food's Big-Picture Guy New York Times
The way of the future is agroecology, a sustainable form of agriculture that draws on science, tradition and wisdom to treat farmers, earth and consumers respectfully
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Upcoming Events | Events Calendar
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Mission Statement | USA Rice Federation is the global advocate for all segments of the U.S.
rice industry with a mission to promote and protect the interests of
producers, millers, merchants and allied businesses. |
About Us | Editor: Michael Klein, (703) 236-1458, mklein@usarice.com
Fax (703) 236-2301
2101 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 610 Arlington, VA 22201
This report is time-sensitive, based on information available at press time. Content is derived from facts and sources believed to be reliable. Reprinting and/or distribution may be done with permission of the USA Rice Federation
Copyright © 2014. Please direct comments or questions to the editor or contact name listed for each story. |
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