July 7, 2025 | 20:03 GMT +7
July 7, 2025 | 20:03 GMT +7
Hotline: 0913.378.918
Japan's Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Shinjiro Koizumi inspects a warehouse storing stockpiled rice in Kanagawa, Japan May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon.
Of the new release, 100,000 tons of 2021 crop year rice will be sold first, to retailers of all sizes and local rice sellers with sufficient milling capacity, he said. The rest will follow from the 2020 crop year.
Soaring rice prices have become a major concern for consumers and policymakers ahead of key elections in Tokyo and nationwide. Consumers have been forming long queues to buy the 5 kg bags of stockpiled rice priced at 2,000 yen ($13.82) since they began hitting store shelves in the past week and a half.
"We want to continue responding without slowing down so that the stockpiled rice can reach consumers quickly and at a low cost," Koizumi said during a press conference.
"We must never allow the virtuous cycle of prices and wages in the Japanese economy as a whole to break down. If the cause lies with rice, then I believe we must address such issues promptly."
Japan has so far released about 600,000 tons of rice from its roughly 900,000-ton emergency stockpile since March. About half of that was sold directly to retailers just in the past two weeks under Koizumi's new distribution policy.
Data on Monday showed average supermarket rice prices dropped for the second straight week, to 4,223 yen per 5 kg in the seven days to June 1, down 37 yen.
Koizumi has signalled readiness to release the entire emergency rice stockpile and utilise imports if necessary to stabilise prices until the new harvest arrives in August. Further price trends and policy measures will be closely watched as Japan heads into the elections in the coming weeks.
(Reuters)
(VAN) Global cereal production set to reach an all-time high, although hot and dry weather could impact yields.
(VAN) Coffee prices on July 3, 2025, declined globally, with Robusta dropping by 1.4%. Domestic prices fell by VND 900, trading at VND 94,300 – VND 94,800/kg.
'Rice prices keep rising while market activity stays sluggish, and many people are struggling to put food on the table,' a source in Ryanggang province told Daily NK.
(VAN) Japanese consumers have made a sharp shift away from high-priced rice to noodles and other cost-effective staples, the start of a possible sea-change in diets in the country, retailers and industry experts say.
(VAN) Global prices of key fertilizer ingredient urea have surged alongside escalating violence in the Middle East, which threatens to choke supplies of the crop nutrient from a significant producing and exporting region.
(VAN) Coffee prices on June 27, 2025, have rebounded globally. Domestic prices rose by VND 3,000, climbing to around VND 93,500 – VND 93,800/kg.
(VAN) Coffee prices on June 26, 2025 declined globally, with Robusta drop 4%. Domestic prices dropped by VND 2,400 VND, falling to VND 92,000 – 92,500 VND/kg.