Showing posts with label Efficient rice production system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Efficient rice production system. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Minister rejects World Bank report

Monday, 24 October 2011
May Kunmakara
The Phnom Penh Post

Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh has rejected a recent World Bank report that dismissed the Kingdom’s goal of exporting 1 million tonnes of milled rice by 2015.

The report – dated July 12 but leaked last week – said uncompetitive prices and logistics bottlenecks would make even 500,000 tonnes of milled-rice exports virtually unattainable within the intended deadline.

However, Cham Prasidh rejected the World Bank’s calculations as shortsighted. Cambodia has already exported 2 million tonnes of unmilled rice this year, he said, which if milled would convert into about 800,000 tonnes of milled rice, or close to the government’s goal.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

US Investors on Landmark Visit To Cambodia

Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Tuesday, 15 June 2010

“There is also the potential for modernizing Cambodian rice production, which the US should consider investing in.”
A large group of US investors are in Cambodia this week in a sign that more American businesses want to move into the country’s marketplace.

The delegation, led by US-Asean Business Council, aims to learn more about the market and represents the biggest delegation ever organized by the group.

Chevron, Bunge, ConocoPhillips, General Dynamics, General Electric, Johnson and Johnson, IBM, and JP Morgan will all take part.

“We have companies from a wide range of sectors, and there are companies that have been established there for quite a while that have quite a presence there already,” Anthony Nelson, a spokesman for the US-Asean Business Council, told VOA Khmer ahead of the trip. “There are some companies that are just starting there, and there are companies that are looking to see what kind of opportunities exist in Cambodia.”

For General Dynamics, a defense industry contractor, the trip is a first.

“This trip is for familiarization purposes,” company spokesman Rob Doolittle said. “There is no area of particular interest that we have identified at this time.”

The team is scheduled to meet senior officials at the Council of Ministers, the ministries of Finance and Trade, and the Council for the Development of Cambodia.

Cambodia could be especially attractive to technology investors, Pan Sorasak, secretary of state for the Ministry of Commerce, has said.

“There is also the potential for modernizing Cambodian rice production, which the US should consider investing in,” he said in an earlier interview. “And there is tourism, where we can have cooperation among airlines.”

Cambodia runs a heavy trade imbalance with the US, which imports about $2 billion in goods each year while exporting only about $200 million.

Earlier this year, Cambodia was removed from a trade blacklist by the US administration, making more investment more likely.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Rethinking rice production practices

December 2, 2008
By MATT MCKINNEY
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA)

Fertilizers and genetically modified seeds aren't the only answers to growing more food. In Cambodia, in response to calls for the country to grow more of its own rice, a major aid organization, Oxfam America, is pursuing a cheaper solution.

It is encouraging rice farmers to follow a list of a dozen or so rules -- things like plant seedlings closer to the surface, in rows, individually and not in handfuls at a time -- that taken together could double a farmer's harvest, according to Yang Saing Koma, a Cambodian agriculturalist who's helping wage a campaign against age-old techniques. The techniques give seeds more oxygen and more room to grow into larger plants with more rice kernels, he said.

"There is a big potential to increase rice production using existing practices but you have to change your mindset, your attitude," he said.

First developed by a Jesuit priest working with rice producers in Madagascar, the ideas have become known in Third World development circles as the "System for Rice Intensification," or SRI. Promotion of the farming technique has become a cottage industry for groups working with the world's poor, with everyone from Oxfam to Cornell University teaching SRI to farmers from Cambodia to -- literally -- Timbuktu.

"It's so easy that one of its problems is that people think you're pulling their leg," said Brian Lund, regional director for Oxfam America's office in Cambodia. "It can double the yield, but when your neighbor sees that he'll say, 'Right, you must have slipped out last night and put some fertilizer on that.'"

Farmers use less water, less fertilizer and fewer seeds, but in the end the amount of rice produced per acre is greater than traditional practices, say proponents. And with less fertilizer to buy, farmers save money.

Koma, in partnership with Oxfam, recruited 38 farmers in 2000 to try SRI practices. He said he has more than 100,000 farmers using the system today.