International seminar on approaches and methodologies for crop monitoring and production forecasting

25 – 26 May 2016, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, this international seminar will provide a platform to exchange knowledge and lessons leaned with different systems and methodologies for crop monitoring and production forecasting. This seminar will in particular focus on identifying an appropriate methodology to monitor AMIS crops in Bangladesh.
Around 60 experts are expected to participate in the event. These include technical staff from national institutions in Bangladesh as well as resource person from Australia, China, the EU, India, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, the United States and Viet Nam. Participants are furthermore expected from the Asian Development Bank, the International Rice Research Institute and FAO.
The two-day seminar will cover the following aspects:
1. A contemporary perspective on crop monitoring and forecasting - technology, methodology, institutions and challenges
2. Country experiences in the use of remote sensing, GIS and agro-meteorology as well as institutional arrangements for crop monitoring
3. Methodological development of production forecasting
Documents
Related links
Contacts
- Mr Nur A. Khondaker
Assistant FAO Representative (Programme) - Mr Shamim Ahmed Choudhury
Programme Officer - Mr Bidhan Baral
Project Director, AMIS Project in Bangladesh
Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics - Mr Mukesh Srivastava
Senior Statistician
FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific
Presentations
Inaugural Session:
1. Recent initiatives of Bangladesh to improve agriculture and rural statistics
2. Crop forecasting: Its importance, current approaches, ongoing evolution and organizational aspect
Session 1: Global initiatives in crop monitoring and forecasting
2. Preparation of the USDA World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) Report
Session 2: Remote Sensing application in crop monitoring
1. Application of remote sensing technology in Bangladesh: challenges and prospects
2. Satellite based rice area monitoring and yield forecasting
3. Crop production forecasting using remote sensing data - experience of China's Crop Watch system
4. Testing Point Area Sampling Frame as candidate for Master Frame in Nepal
5. Crop Assessment using Space, Agro-Meteorology & Land based observations : Indian Experience
Session 3: Agro-meteorology based crop monitoring
1. Availability of agro-meteorological data for crop monitoring in Bangladesh
2. Agrometeorological approaches to crop yield forecasting
3. Improved wheat yield and production forecasting with a moisture stress index, AVHRR and MODIS data
4. AGROMET model based yield prediction in India
Session 4: Crop monitoring and production estimation using survey and administrative data
1. Crop Monitoring System in Bangladesh: Main Challenges and Recent Initiatives
2. The Crop Production Survey & Estimate of China
3. Survey based crop forecasting and updating in the Philippines
4. Improving Reliability of the Administrative Crop Reporting Systems
5. Current system of crop forecasting, monitoring and production estimation in Viet Nam: Lessons Learnt
6. U.S. Crop Production Forecasting and Estimation Methodology
Session 5: Crop simulation and modelling based on diverse set of data: Integrated approaches
1. Forecasting Rice Production in Bangladesh using Statistical Model
3. Early season crop forecasting with econometric modelling: FASAL in India
4. Forecasting and estimation of rice production in Japan
6. Natural Hazard Damage Assessment of Rice Yield in part of Gilan province