Monday, November 25, 2019

VIETNAM PEPPER MARKET UPDATE 25TH NOVEMBER 2019.



According statistics of the Vietnam Pepper Association/Customs, by the end of October 2019, Vietnam exported 254,583 tons, including 228,233 tons black pepper and 26,350 tons of white pepper, total export turnover reached 644.1 million USD.
Compared to the same period in 2018, exports increased by 21.1% in volume to 44,302 tons, but decreased value by 7.0% equivalent to 48.7 million USD. The average export price of black pepper in the first 10 months of 2019 reached 2,473 USD/ton, white pepper reached 3,019 USD/ton.
The export price of black pepper decreased by 662$/ton and white pepper decreased by 1,556/ton compare with the same period 2018.
China is still the largest import market of Vietnam Pepper in the first 10 months, reached 54,649 tons, up 22,991 tons, roughly 21.46% of Vietnam Pepper. However, in the last 2 months is only around 800 tons due to border trade continue is still stuck and increased a lots cost when clear customs. We foreseen this situation more difficult and maybe China customer have to official buying pepper pay full tax from Vietnam. This may also keep pepper prices stable/up or down not much and less volatile sudden as before.
The second largest is USA was 43,102 tons, an increase of 5,034 tons, accounted for 16.9%. Followed by Indian markets imported 17,785 tons, down 72 tons; Germany imported 9,605 tons, up 2,567 tons; Arabs imported 9,478 tons, up 912 tons.
Market is still moving very steady and firm from last week. The main reason were due to exporters big short for Light Berries to extra oil (density from 280 – 300gr/l) while Vietnam Light Berries  in this year very less than usual. Nepal and other Asia countries also buying December/Jan shipment beside China covering few boxes white pepper. However, USA/EU quiet at our side and asking big discount for first half 2020 shipment.









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Wednesday, November 13, 2019

SAFRON - USA TESTS GROWING POSSIBILITY

Researchers in Rhode Island have been growing test plots of the pricey plant—and it's thriving. Some think this could disrupt the global saffron economy.

 Jessica Fu








Dr. Rebecca Brown thought that the sun had set on this year’s saffron harvest. The autumn-blooming plants—which she and her colleague had planted in the University of Rhode Island’s agronomy farm to the northwest of campus—hadn’t produced flowers in days, and winter was imminent.

“We were already a couple of weeks into harvest,” she says. “We thought it was finished.”

Then on Thursday morning, Brown discovered that, unexpectedly, fresh flowers had sprung out from the soil overnight—a sign of just how suitable growing conditions on the Northeast could now be for a lucrative plant that Americans have traditionally imported.

This is the third year that Brown and her colleague, Dr. Rahmatallah Gheshm, have harvested saffron in Rhode Island. Brown is an associate professor of plant sciences, and Gheshm is a postdoctoral fellow in agro-ecology. Their harvests are part of an ongoing research project aimed at assessing how viable commercial farming of the crop could be in the Northeast.

Saffron flower in handRahmatallah Gheshm   

The disproportionate amount of work that goes into producing each strand makes saffron the most expensive spice in the world, commanding up to $10,000 per pound

“We’re just trying to answer some very basic questions starting with: Can we grow saffron outdoors in Rhode Island?” Brown says. “[We’re] looking at whether we needed to provide winter protection or not, and what sort of planting density would be best here.”

At the center of every saffron flower are three thin, red threads, called stigma. Once extracted, producers sell these stigma as a valuable and aromatic spice, also called saffron, a coveted ingredient in Middle Eastern, South Asian, and European cooking. Its labor-intensive production and the disproportionate amount of work that goes into producing each strand makes saffron the most expensive spice in the world, commanding up to $10,000 per pound. This means that farmers in the Northeast stand to make a lot of money if commercial saffron harvesting could be incorporated into their production schedule.

Saffron plants in Rhode Island don’t appear to need the protection of hoop houses during the winter, when the leaves sprout in scallion-like grasses.

To conduct their research, the scientists planted 6,000 corms—the bulbous beginnings of every saffron flower—into a field measuring approximately 158 square feet. The land was divided into 16 separate plots, each measuring about 13 by 2.5 feet. To find saffron’s optimal growth conditions, Brown and Gheshm varied density among the plots, protected some with hoop houses during the winter, and left others uncovered year-round.

The idea to grow saffron in Rhode Island came to Gheshm after he was inspired by the Vermont-based saffron research of a friend and former classmate he’d met in their shared home country, Iran. He was curious about how harvest of the spice could be transferred to the particular climate of the Ocean State.

“The milder winters encouraged us to try planting saffron outdoors in Rhode Island, in southern New England,” Gheshm says. In Vermont, researchers needed to transfer their saffron plants into hoop houses during the winter to protect them from the cold.

The study’s results won’t be final until after this season’s harvest is over, but Brown and Gheshm tell me that they’ve already gleaned some preliminary findings. For one, saffron plants in Rhode Island don’t appear to need the protection of hoop houses during the winter, when the leaves sprout in scallion-like grasses. After this year’s harvest, Brown and Gheshm plan to conduct a follow-up experiment, looking at how saffron farming might be able to co-exist—particularly in the summer when saffron plants are dormant—with other crops that local farmers already grow. The project has secured funding from the Department of Agriculture’s Specialty Crop Block Grant Program.
Saffron samplesRahmatallah Gheshm   

At the center of every saffron flower are three thin, red threads, called stigma. Once extracted, producers sell these stigma as a valuable and aromatic spice

“Could we grow something else like basil or lettuce on that land while the saffron is sleeping underneath?” Brown asks. If so, farmers “could make more money off the space.”

Right now, Iran is the highest saffron-producing country in the world, exporting nearly half of the world’s market, according to UN trade data. However, compared to the sunny, dry conditions in Iran, Rhode Island has a much higher humidity level—the impact of which Brown and Gheshm wanted to observe in their study. So far, however, it appears that the humidity might not be a problem. U.S. is a major saffron buyer, and its demand has never been higher. In 1992, the U.S. imported $3.17 million worth of the spice, a value that has since risen steadily to $16 million last year, according to Census data.

Because of issues like America’s economic sanctions against Iran, Gheshm explains, most of the U.S.’s saffron imports come from through Spain, which is both a major importer and exporter of the spice. Brown believes that local production of saffron can meet the rising demand from American consumers, which she attributes to an increasingly diverse population. What better way to get around a middle man than to grow it in our own backyards?

https://newfoodeconomy.org/saffron-northeast-university-of-rhode-island-iran/

Jessica is a reporter for The New Food Economy. Reach her by email at jessica.fu@newfoodeconomy.org and on Twitter @JessTiaFu.

Monday, November 04, 2019

IPC MARKET REPORT No. 44/19, 28 October - 1 November 2019



LOCAL MARKET
Market this week showed mixed response with a rather static outlook.
In local market, Malabar black pepper was traded with a 1% deficit as compared to the previous week with an average of USD 4,202 per Mt.
Indonesia black and white pepper was reported stable with an average of USD 1,639 per Mt for black pepper and USD 3,313 per Mt for white pepper. Farmers in Lampung were reported to hold selling their pepper in the hope of better price.
Malaysian black and white pepper was also reported stable at an average of USD 1,993 per Mt and USD 3,505 per Mt respectively.
Furthermore, Viet Nam black and white pepper was also reported stable and unchanged.
Sri Lanka black pepper continuously moving up, in local market it recorded an increase by 2% as compared to the previous week and was traded at an average of USD 2,708 per Mt.
Whilst, China white pepper was reported stable with an average of USD 4,595 per Mt.

INTERNATIONAL MARKET
In international market, the trend also showed mixed response. FOB price of India black pepper was reported with the same 1% deficit as compared to the previous week at an average of USD 4,484 per Mt. Indonesia black and white pepper was reported steady with an average of USD 2,040 per Mt for black pepper and USD 3,926 per Mt for white pepper. Malaysia black and white pepper continued to be traded stable and unchanged. Furthermore, Viet Nam black pepper 500 g/l, 550 g/l and Viet Nam white pepper were reported stable and unchanged averaging at USD 2,250 per Mt, USD 2,315 per Mt and USD 3,400 per Mt respectively. China reported a stable international trade for its white pepper with an average of USD 4,795 per Mt.






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