What's new

Pakistani rice now available in Super markets of Chinese cities.

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Have some shame and sell directly yourself!
Did I say they sell it as repacked?

I said I know about this because I have people who sell rice. Now let me be more specific. The people who are very close to me who are involved in taking rice from the farmers and sell it to processors and some of them them are also involved in processing it.

As they are involved in the industry they know where the rice goes and repackaging occurs in UAE but they have no control on it. They sell it in local market in whole sale.

There are others such as relative of Qamar Zaman Qaira who dumped massive amount in UAE.

Its fault of GOP that let India trade mark Basmati rice which were created by Pakistan. It was GOP fault that our rice was banned in Qatar.

I have called these people out in Pakistan for hoarding rice so the price increases as that is both wrong anf unislamic. But its Pakistan my friend.

There is a reason why I have said before that FBR needs to be tackled as we are not even taxing properly. I know few industries in which people are making profits of between 50lakhs to over caror yet zero tax.

Sad really
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They even tried to register basmati as their endemic variety even tho its origin point is Pakistani Punjab
We should build up Pak brand

They got it trade marked few years ago.

They sell their own rice with the name of Pakistani rice.

Yep that is also right. One wonders why Qatar had banned Pakistani rice until this government got it reversed.
 
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no one like Basmatti rice which is tasteless, except desis
 
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Fruits needs to be processed. There are many processing plants who do it on rent in Punjab. What do you want to export it mainly depends on that.

Cherries when exporting to China need to be worm free and washed and packed. Now the processed fruits are also coming into domestic Pakistan market as well.
I have the facility of a processing plant.
As for the produce, citrus fruits.
 
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IN Pakistan’s context, rice statistics are pretty impressive. Sown on 2.89 million hectares (about 10 per cent of total cropping area), it earned $2 billion (around 8pc of export income) for the country.

Put it in the agricultural context, it is second to wheat in acreage and, in economic terms, only second to cotton (and its allied products as per Pakistan Bureau of Statistics data) in export earnings. It accounts for 3.1pc of value-addition in the agriculture sector and varyingly contributes 1.3-1.6pc to the GDP.

Last year, it assumed added significance when production hit 7.4 million tonnes placing Pakistan on the list of the 10 largest producers on the world rice chart. According to the Economic Survey of Pakistan (2017-18), the area under rice increased by 6.4pc — 2.74 million hectares in 2016-17 to 2.89 million hectares and production swelled by 8.7 per cent — from 6.84 million tonnes to 7.44 million tonnes.

Both these factors helped Pakistan post a 28pc increase in rice export. According to data from the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (Reap), it sent out a little over four million tonnes (for $2 billion) in 2018, as compared to 3.44 million tonnes for $1.6 billion in 2017. This showed a significant growth of 27.7 per cent in terms of value and 17 per cent in terms of quantity.

As far as profiling of rice is concerned, its three board categories are: basmati (long grain and aromatic), coarse (IRRI type) and a generic term called “others.” The last type comprises of hybrid, unapproved and some smuggled varieties that have crept in due to relaxed official control.

What adds to national seed confusion is the fact that the country has approved 108 varieties in the last 15 years — from 2003 to 2018. All of them are now entitled to sale. However, only 48 of them are actually released and found in the field, depending on requirements of different ecological zones. It is the Chinese hybrids which have made the difference in the last two years.

Punjab (with all kinds of basmati, super, IRRI and hybrids) leads the national production scale with a contribution of 53pc. Sindh (IRRI and hybrids) follows with 26pc, Balochistan (IRRI, hybrids) with 12pc and the remaining 9pc comes from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which has many local coarse varieties for hills and plains. Punjab’s contribution may increase as hybrid varieties are now getting more space while competing crops lose economic sheen.

However, this happy rice scenario has two sore points: it is still stuck in a low yield groove and failing in international retail markets. Despite a massive influx of seeds, Pakistan has not been able to break beyond 2.56 tonnes per hectares production. The world average is 4.7 tonnes per hectare production. With high yielding seeds and recommended practices, 4 tonnes per hectare is easily achievable.

The federal Ministry for Food Security and Research took an initiative in 2015 for improving yield and tradable surpluses and enlisted the Chinese for help. For the next two years, both sides made a beeline towards each others’ fields and laboratories. It resulted in better hybrid seeds arriving in Pakistan and making a difference the very next year i.e. 2018.

Last year’s three-pronged increase was the result of the same effort: the area increased by 6.4pc, production went up by 8.7pc and average yield jumped from 825 kilogram per acre in 2010-11 to over 1,000 kilograms.

Despite this, improvements on the supply side and corresponding initiatives on the marketing side — domestic and international — is still a distant dream. Exports are largely restricted to bulk dumping in Middle Eastern markets while brand development is encouraged for domestic markets. These brands can then go beyond national borders and claim a niche in the world market.

Agreeing to the argument that domestic brand development is necessary for claiming a share in international retail markets in the future, Shahzad Malik, one of the largest rice brand owners, is not much hopeful about the prospects. “The domestic market is overwhelmingly dominated by loose sales. There is hardly any quality consciousness for brands. Since brand development is an expensive exercise — entailing a huge and sustained media presence — traders avoid it because there is no premium on it. That is why one can count domestic rice brands on fingers.

One or two brands, which have emerged on the domestic scene in the last few years, are restricted to supplying to international chains like Metro or Hyperstar. Considering investment on brand development as expensive, they take the easy and short-term route of open sales to domestic markets, he said.

“Multiply the domestic expenses on brand development with the dollars exchange rate (140 at time of reporting) and one will know why no one has dared developing international brands,” said one member of Reap, who did not want to be named. Since no Pakistani brand has a direct share in the world retail market, almost all exports are dumped in Dubai for those who have the share and can buy it for repackaging and re-export. Translating this domestic success in foreign advantage needs policy space, planning, investment and sustained production, which is the missing link so far, he pointed out.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1474525
 
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I have the facility of a processing plant.
As for the produce, citrus fruits.
Just get good card box packing send samples to Chinese customs at border get them inspected and you are good to go.

The processing for other fruits is similar to citrus. Just insure good quality and you are in business my friend. If you need more detail guide the is BRI counsel to help you do business it is free of cost and gives very detail guidelines on exporting to China.
 
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no one like Basmatti rice which is tasteless, except desis
That is incoreect. Basmati rice has been available in Australian supermarket since 90s and at time there werent many desi here.

In fact doctors recommend basmati rice as part of diet due to it being more healthy.
 
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Are there many South Asian style food restaurants in China?

If not someone could open one and give exposure to the chinese masses.
 
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As they are involved in the industry they know where the rice goes and repackaging occurs in UAE but they have no control on it. They sell it in local market in whole sale.
let me make myself clear:
If you know something like this is happening you should either if sell directly to those in UAE don't let the Indian brand repack our rice or don't sell to them...

Its fault of GOP that let India trade mark Basmati rice which were created by Pakistan. It was GOP fault that our rice was banned in Qatar.

I have called these people out in Pakistan for hoarding rice so the price increases as that is both wrong anf unislamic. But its Pakistan my friend.

There is a reason why I have said before that FBR needs to be tackled as we are not even taxing properly. I know few industries in which people are making profits of between 50lakhs to over caror yet zero tax
I wish current govt take this into account and do something abt it....
 
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Engro EXIMP Agriproducts (EEAP) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Engro Corporation. Situated in the heart of the basmati growing region it operates the most modern integrated plant for processing rice in the country. Set up at a cost of USD 55 Million, it is capable of exporting 70,000 tons of rice. EEAP processes and exports the finest basmati & non-basmati rice in raw, parboiled and steamed forms locally and around the world. Some of the largest European and Middle Eastern brands are our customers while our brand Onaaj is the premier wholesale rice brand in Pakistan. We export the best quality rice Pakistan has to offer with varieties across basmati and non-basmati rice. Our plant and products are ISO 9001, ISO 14001, OHSAS 18001, Sedex, BRC Food and Food Safety System 22000 certified. Most critically all our customers are repeat customers because of the integrity, ethics and professionalism that are core EEAP values.

With the highest quality, access to superior paddies, a robust ecosystem of farmer engagement and support and multiple and superior packaging options as per buyer need, our packaged rice products are unparalleled in the region.


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In last 8 months, country earned US$ 1,257 million by exporting about 2,500, 162 metric tons of rice as compared the exports of 2,665,869 metric tons worth of US$ 1,261 billion of same period of last year.
 
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