High demand, price of rice good news to US farmers
WILLIAMS, Calif. - Dipping its left wing, a canary-yellow biplane makes a sharp turn and dives over a flooded field, showering rice on the shallow water 15 feet below.
It's aerial seeding season for rice farmers in California, which produces about 20 percent of the crop grown in the U.S. With the price of rice surging internationally, much of the medium-grain rice being planted between the Sutter Butte mountains and California's Coastal Range has already being sold, even though harvest still is months away.
"It's nuts," said Pat Daddow, head of the California Rice Exchange, a platform where processors bid on and buy rice. "We've sold an ungodly amount of rice, the price has nearly doubled and this is the crop they're just beginning to plant."
The greater demand and new foreign customers driving the global price hike have been a boon to American farmers, who are welcoming the reprieve after years of shouldering high fuel and fertilizer costs and weak prices for their grain.
Commodity traders and economists attribute the global price increases to everything from weather a drought in Australia, floods in Asia to the declining value of the dollar, the jump in fuel costs and increased buying power in countries like China and India, said Nathan Childs, an economist and rice expert with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The cyclone that ravaged Myanmar more than a week ago, killing tens of thousands and displacing many more, also devastated the impoverished country's rice-growing heartland. The country, also known as Burma, had produced enough to feed itself, and was expected to export up to 600,000 tons of rice to neighbors including Sri Lanka and Bangladesh this year.
But one of the main factors pushing up prices this month is a peculiarity of the rice market. Although rice as in Middle Eastern pilaf, Asian rice bowls, or Latin American beans and rice is a staple around the world, less than 8 percent of the global crop is traded internationally. Most of it is eaten less than 60 miles from where it's grown.
That means that when some of the largest producers among them India, Vietnam, China, and Brazil curtail exports to protect prices at home, the international marketplace reels and prices for imported varieties soar, Childs said.
"A thinly traded market will be more volatile, easily shaken up," Childs said.
The most expensive rice varieties the ones known in the trade as aromatics can't be grown in the U.S. But with imported types such as such as Thai jasmine and Indian basmati selling for $1,000 and $2,000 a ton, respectively, farmers here are still reaping profits.
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