Glyphosate: The key points in an endless debate

DW_The European Union is deciding about the future of glyphosate — a controversial herbicide that may be linked with cancer. DW offers an overview on the most important points of the debate.

Bottles of RoundUp herbicide (picture-alliance/AP Photo/J. Roberson)

Despite warnings over potential risks to human health and the environment, farmers around the world are dependent on chemical giant Monsanto’s herbicide Roundup. Active ingredient: glyphosate.

In June 2016, European Union member states delayed a final decision on renewal for the weed killer, instead extending the license for 18 months. In October and November 2017, the European Commission again pushed back a vote on the issue.

The European Commission must make a decision, as the current license is due to expire on December 15. Although the European Commission on Food Safety had been pushing for a 10-year renewal of the license for glyphosate, this has been pedaled back to a five-year renewal. Tiếp tục đọc “Glyphosate: The key points in an endless debate”

Nể phục chàng boxing chế ra sông nhân tạo nuôi cá số 1 Việt Nam

NN 22/11/2017, 14:30 (GMT+7)Mới thoạt nghe tưởng như trăm phần trăm hư cấu nhưng thực tế chàng trai ấy đã bán được 20 dòng sông cho những người nông dân thỏa chí nuôi thả cá sạch…

Gần bùn mà chẳng hôi tanh mùi bùn
Trong khi những con sông tự nhiên đang dần cạn khô, đặc quánh rác, tanh hôi mùi tử khí thì lại có một người nghĩ ra ý tưởng đem rao sông nhân tạo để phục vụ cho việc nuôi trồng thủy sản. Chàng trai đó mới chỉ ngoài hai mươi tuổi, là cựu vận động viên boxing chuyên nghiệp của tỉnh Hưng Yên, Vũ Duy Hào.

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Hào đang thu hoạch cá

Tiếp tục đọc “Nể phục chàng boxing chế ra sông nhân tạo nuôi cá số 1 Việt Nam”

Trí thức trẻ về làng, đón đầu công nghệ mới

Phóng sự của Hoàng Thiên Nga

Khi lủi thủi quay về quê với mảnh bằng tốt nghiệp không được cơ quan, doanh nghiệp nào tiếp nhận, 17 thanh niên trí thức người dân tộc Dao ở thôn Bình Minh chưa biết cái rủi này sẽ nảy sinh cơ hội, giúp họ trở thành lực lượng nòng cốt của một hợp tác xã nông nghiệp tân tiến nhất tỉnh Đắk Lắk, như bây giờ.

Khách tham quan vườn organic ở HTX Bình Minh

Từ chàng nông dân tiên phong “organic”

Những năm 1954-1955, gần 100 đôi vợ chồng trẻ dân tộc Dao từ các tỉnh miền núi phía Bắc vào Tây Nguyên làm “cu li” cho các chủ đồn điền người Pháp, và định cư trên vùng đất mới. Nơi họ chọn làm quê hương bây giờ đã thành vùng nông thôn trù phú với 3 làng Bình Minh, Bình An, Ea Mố, thuộc xã Cư Suê huyện Cư Mgar, cách TP Buôn Ma Thuột 12 km. Tiếp tục đọc “Trí thức trẻ về làng, đón đầu công nghệ mới”

Khai hoang vùng đất phèn, nhận được đắng cay và nước mắt

NN – 09/11/2017, 14:30 (GMT+7) Năm 2012, Vườn quốc gia Tràm Chim (huyện Tam Nông, Đồng Tháp) được công nhận là khu Ramsar thứ 4 của Việt Nam. Để có thành quả này, mấy mươi năm trước, hàng trăm con người đã không quản nắng mưa, ngày đêm lội sình lầy trồng rừng.

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VQG Tràm Chim nhìn từ tỉnh lộ 843

Để rồi hôm nay, thành quả họ nhận được là cái kết quá “đắng”, khiến không ít gia đình ly tán, tha phương, thậm chí có những người dính vòng lao lý.

Từ nhiều năm nay, gần 100 hộ dân ở ấp K12, xã Phú Hiệp, huyện Tam Nông vẫn kêu cứu trong vô vọng về việc công sức bao năm của họ được trả bằng cái giá quá rẻ mạt. Trong ánh mắt, trong lời nói của những người nông dân lam lũ ấy, niềm tin đã tắt. Tiếp tục đọc “Khai hoang vùng đất phèn, nhận được đắng cay và nước mắt”

Using real-time satellite data to track water productivity in agriculture

New FAO tool offers water-scarce countries and river basins a way to boost productivity

Photo: ©FAO/Olivier Asselin

Watering crops in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

FAO 20 April 2017, Rome – Measuring how efficiently water is used in agriculture, particularly in water-scarce countries, is going high-tech with the help of a new tool developed by FAO.

The WaPOR open-access database has gone live, tapping satellite data to help farmers achieve more reliable agricultural yields and allowing for the optimization of irrigation systems.

WaPOR was presented this week during a high-level partners meeting for FAO’s Coping with water scarcity in agriculture: a global framework for action in a changing climate. It allows for fine-grained analysis of water utilised through farming systems, generating empirical evidence about how it can be most productively used.

Worldwide water utilization – the majority of which is used by agriculture – has outpaced the rate of population growth for most of the last century and some regions are close to breaching viable limits. Tiếp tục đọc “Using real-time satellite data to track water productivity in agriculture”

Why eating insects makes sense – Tại sao nên ăn Côn trùng – một nguồn thực phẩm thay thế cho thit

 

Published on Sep 25, 2014

The world’s population is projected to reach 11 billion by the end of the century. Feeding that many people will be a challenge, and it is further complicated by the impact of climate change on agriculture. That is why some people advocate an unusual way to boost the food supply and feed people sustainably: by eating less meat, and more insects.

About 2 billion people already eat bugs. Mexicans enjoy chili-toasted grasshoppers. Thais tuck into cricket stir-fries and Ghanians snack on termites. Insects are slowly creeping onto Western menus as novelty items, but most people remain squeamish. Yet there are three reasons why eating insects makes sense.

First, they are healthier than meat. There are nearly 2,000 kinds of edible insects, many of them packed with protein, calcium, fibre, iron and zinc. A small serving of grasshoppers can contain about the same amount of protein as a similar sized serving of beef, but has far less fat and far fewer calories.

Second, raising insects is cheap, or free. Little technology or investment is needed to produce them. Harvesting insects could provide livelihoods to some of the world’s poorest people.

Finally, insects are a far more sustainable source of food than livestock. Livestock production accounts for nearly a fifth of all greenhouse-gas emissions – that’s more than transport. By contrast, insects produce relatively few greenhouse gases, and raising them requires much less land and water. And they’ll eat almost anything.

Despite all this, most Westerners find insects hard to swallow. One solution is to use protein extracted from bugs in other products, such as ready meals and pasta sauces. Not having to look at the bugs, and emphasising the environmental benefits, might make the idea of eating insects a bit more palatable. For more video content from The Economist visit our website: http://econ.st/1ytKwbp

Using Remote Sensing to Map Rice Paddy Drop in the Mekong Delta

Gislounge_The Mekong River Delta is an important water source flowing through South East Asia. Primarily feeding the rice fields of Vietnam, the Mekong River Delta has long been an area of great fertility due to water flow and silt build up. However, agricultural efforts in the area have shown a decline in production because of the weather effects of El Niño. This year’s El Niño has been particularly strong, causing droughts in South East Asia.

Satellites including Europe’s Sentinel-1A can now track the rise and fall of different agricultural products around the world. The satellite’s imagery showed that rice production in the Mekong Delta has decreased in the past year, threatening the livelihoods of local farmers as well as food security worldwide. Tiếp tục đọc “Using Remote Sensing to Map Rice Paddy Drop in the Mekong Delta”

Hanoi farmers earn big during rat hunting season

Last update 06:30 | 12/11/2017

The current rat hunting season has offered a good chance for many farmers in Hanoi’s outlying district of Thach That to earn money.

Hundreds of people in Canh Nau, Di Nau commues in Thach That are flocking to local fields for hunting rats. Each kilo of rat meat is sold at between VND100,000 (USD4.54) and VND120,000 (USD5.45), more expensive than pork or chicken.

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The rat hunting season often lasts from the lunar month of September to the lunar month of December after the summer-autumn rice crop. During this time, many households in Canh Nau can earn around VND1 million (USD45.4) per day. Tiếp tục đọc “Hanoi farmers earn big during rat hunting season”

Specialty rice: the path from the gene bank to the market

Last update 07:40 | 28/08/2017
VietNamNet Bridge – Many of Vietnam’s precious rice varieties only exist in the national plant gene bank and yet to be used commercially. 


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Vo Tong Xuan, a leading rice expert, said when he visited other countries to learn about rice markets, he met many overseas Vietnamese who wished they could buy the special rice which was formerly available.

However, many specialty rice varieties are no longer grown on Vietnam rice fields as farmers focus on high-yield varieties.

Many of Vietnam’s precious rice varieties only exist in the national plant gene bank and yet to be used commercially. 

Xuan has tried to prove that if scientists and businesses join forces to restore precious rice varieties, they will succeed because the demand is high. As people’s income has improved, they want to buy better products.

TH True Milk is moving ahead with the project on restoring Vietnam’s specialty rice varieties. It will use world’s most advanced technologies, Vietnamese brainpower and natural resources will be used to create special rice products for the world market. Tiếp tục đọc “Specialty rice: the path from the gene bank to the market”

Dè chừng nhập siêu từ Thái Lan

Nguyễn Duy Nghĩa Chủ Nhật,  29/10/2017, 15:47 (GMT+7)


Hàng hóa Thái Lan đang lấn át hàng Việt Nam, ngay cả đối với gạo, mặt hàng xuất khẩu chủ lực của Việt Nam. Trong ảnh: Thu hoạch lúa ở ĐBSCL. Ảnh: TRUNG CHÁNH

(TBKTSG) – Năm 2015, trước thềm Cộng đồng kinh tế ASEAN (AEC), Việt Nam nhập siêu từ Thái Lan 5 tỉ đô la Mỹ, tương ứng với 160% kim ngạch xuất khẩu của Việt Nam sang Thái.

Việt Nam hy vọng việc hình thành AEC sẽ cải thiện tương quan thương mại giữa Việt Nam với Thái Lan. Nhưng dường như ta chỉ cầm cự được trong năm 2016. Trong chín tháng đầu năm 2017, ta đã nhập siêu từ Thái Lan 4 tỉ đô la Mỹ, bằng 81,6% nhập siêu cả năm 2016. Hiện Thái Lan đứng đầu các quốc gia Đông Nam Á và trên trường quốc tế chỉ thua Hàn Quốc (số 1) và Trung Quốc (số 2) về nhập siêu vào Việt Nam. Tiếp tục đọc “Dè chừng nhập siêu từ Thái Lan”

Two seafood “kings” see profits fall as business problems mount

Last update 12:00 | 28/08/2017
VietNamNet Bridge – Because of unexpected changes in the market or poor business decisions, Minh Phu and Hung Vuong, the kings in the seafood industry, have been seeing a severe drop in profits. vietnam economy, business news, vn news, vietnamnet bridge, english news, Vietnam news, news Vietnam, vietnamnet news, vn news, Vietnam net news, Vietnam latest news, Vietnam breaking news, seafood, DOC, VASEP

Hung Vuong Seafood Company, called the ‘catfish King’, has announced the decision to divest from An Lac Real Estate and dissolve the company. Hung Vuong holds a 76 percent stake in the real estate firm with charter capital of VND300 billion.

Hung Vuong will liquidate four land plots with total area of 20,000 square meters. Tiếp tục đọc “Two seafood “kings” see profits fall as business problems mount”

NA discusses draft revised Law on Fisheries

vietnamnews Update: October, 28/2017 – 09:20

The National Assembly discussed the draft revised Law on Fisheries at its plenary session in Hà Nội yesterday.– VNA/VNS Photo

HÀ NỘI – The National Assembly discussed the draft revised Law on Fisheries at its plenary session in Hà Nội yesterday.

Several lawmakers stressed the need to establish centrally-run, municipal and provincial fisheries surveillance systems to ensure fisheries law enforcement and defend sovereignty over waters.

The work should also meet requirements for a capable surveillance system to prevent fishing practices which would result in an import ban from the European Union, one of the country’s major seafood markets. Tiếp tục đọc “NA discusses draft revised Law on Fisheries”

EU gives Vietnam ‘yellow card’ over illegal fishing

Fresh fish in Vietnam. [Commission]

The European Union said on Monday (23 October) it has given a “yellow card” to Vietnam, warning the Pacific country it could ban seafood exports unless Hanoi does more to tackle illegal fishing.

The European Commission said Vietnam should fix the problem “within a reasonable timeframe” but did not set a deadline.

Cartoon: Sedated Pork in Vietnam

Cartoonists at Tuoi Tre Cuoi, the caricature magazine of Tuoi Tre, have revealed their thoughts about the food scare

By Tuoi Tre News

October 25, 2017, 19:56 GMT+7

​Cartoon: Sedated Pork in Vietnam

Cartoonists at Tuoi Tre Cuoi, the caricature magazine of Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper, have revealed their thoughts about the recent food scare whereby pigs at a major slaughterhouse in Ho Chi Minh City were found to have been injected with sedative immediately prior to being butchered. Tiếp tục đọc “Cartoon: Sedated Pork in Vietnam”

Vietnam re-exports Thai fruit to China

Last update 12:00 | 24/10/2017

VietNamNet Bridge – In the first nine months of the year, Vietnam imported $680 million worth of fruits from Thailand, or 60 percent of total fruit imports, according to the General Department of Customs (GDC). And by the end of August 2017, $817.9 million worth of fruit had been sold to China, 73 percent of which was from Thailand. 

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China is among the biggest export markets for Vietnam’s fruit with the growth rate in the first eight months of the year at 60.2 percent.

Meanwhile,Thailand has taken over China’s position as the No 1 seller of fruit and vegetables to Vietnam, accounting for 60.7 percent of Vietnam’s imports. China, which is now in the second position, accounts for 15.7 percent only. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam re-exports Thai fruit to China”