Philippines
accepts 250,000T rice offers from Vietnam, Thailand
Vietnam
also won a separate deal involving 80,000 tonnes of 25 percent broken rice at
$517.50 a tonne, below the NFA's budget of $520.50 a tonne
A farmer works on a rice paddy
field in Quang Ngai province, Vietnam March 14, 2018. Photo: Reuters
MANILA, May 4 -- The Philippines'
National Food Authority (NFA) on Friday accepted offers from both Vietnam and
Thailand for 250,000 tonnes of rice supply, as it rushes to rebuild depleted
buffer stocks ahead of the lean local harvest season.
The NFA, the state agency tasked with ensuring stable
rice supply and prices in the domestic market, increased its budget by about
10 percent for the rice purchases, after initial offers last week from
Vietnam and Thailand exceeded its reference prices.
It reopened the tender on Friday for the
government-to-government procurement. Vietnam will supply 130,000 tonnes and
Thailand will deliver the balance of 120,000 tonnes.
The NFA allocated $531 per tonne for its purchase of
50,000 tonnes of 15 percent broken rice, a deal won by Vietnam with an offer
of $526.50 a tonne.
Vietnam also won a separate deal involving 80,000
tonnes of 25 percent broken rice at $517.50 a tonne, below the NFA's budget
of $520.50 a tonne.
Thailand won a 120,000-tonne supply deal involving 25
percent broken rice with a similar offer of $517.50 a tonne.
The offers were still subject to final approval by the
NFA council, said Judy Carol Dansal, deputy NFA administrator and head of the
panel that held the tender.
The Philippines, a frequent rice importer, plans to buy
another 250,000-tonnes in an open tender later this month.
Delivery of its rice purchases begins next month, ahead
of the so-called lean months of July to September when there is minimal or
zero harvest locally.
President Rodrigo Duterte in April directed the NFA to
build up its rice buffer stock to the equivalent of 60 days of national
consumption, or as much as 1.92 million tonnes, from less than 2 days of
consumption in March.
The fresh rice purchases come as the dwindling supply
of cheap NFA rice led to a spike in domestic prices of the staple grain,
feeding into inflation which accelerated at its fastest pace in at least five
years in April.
Reuters
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Thứ Hai, 7 tháng 5, 2018
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