Tuesday, 30 September 2014
cashewnuts info in africa: Standard Export cashew bags, types, season and ave...
cashewnuts info in africa: Standard Export cashew bags, types, season and ave...: JUTE BAG For export, the bag called JUTE bag is what is widely accepted and they are always in 80kg. See photo below ...
Standard Export cashew bags, types, season and average price per metric ton
JUTE BAG
For export, the bag called JUTE bag is what is widely accepted and they are always in 80kg. See photo below
Types of Cashew nuts/Nut count
Presented by
Taiwo Kamorudeen Afolabi
For export, the bag called JUTE bag is what is widely accepted and they are always in 80kg. See photo below
Types of Cashew nuts/Nut count
It is the number or raw cashew nuts
per kg
170 excellent
180-190 very good
190-200 good
200-210 middle
210-220 low middle
230 limit acceptable- lower: poor
Please note that:
- It is necessary to balance this
information with the out-turn
i.e w200, w180, w170, w190, w210, w230 etc
Season
The season is always between February to May of every year.
Prices
750 to 850 USD per metric tone for Export
=N=95,000 to =N=100,000 for local price per metric tone
Total Export will cost =N=1.6million i.e one container
Profit on a container =N=335,000
Return On Investment 28%
Presented by
Taiwo Kamorudeen Afolabi
How cashew nuts can prolong Life Span
Eating Nuts Cuts Death Rates by 20%
1 October, 2014
The new epidemiological study published Wednesday 20th of November in
the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) implicated more than 118,000
healthy men and women volunteers, and found that those who regularly
consumed a one-ounce daily serving of walnuts, almonds, cashews, or
other nuts had a 20 percent lower risk of dying of any cause during the
three-decade long study, compared to those who did not consume nuts.
Eating nuts less often lowered the death risk too, in direct proportion
to consumption.
The Harvard study found that people who consumed regularly nuts
had the benefit of longer lifetime even if they did not practice
sports, and stay away from fruits and vegetables, and were overweight.
The risk of dying of heart disease dropped 29 percent and the risk of
dying of cancer fell 11 percent among those who had nuts seven or more
times a week, compared with people who never ate them.
--
New
Harvard study found that people who consumed regularly nuts had the
benefit of longer lifetime even if they did not practice sports, and
stay away from fruits and vegetables, and were overweight.
Nut eaters were:
- 29% less likely to die of heart disease
- 11% less likely to die of cancer
- 16% less likely to die of diabetes
- 24% less likely to die of respiratory disease
The new
epidemiological study published Wednesday 20th of November in the New
England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) implicated more than 118,000 healthy
men and women volunteers, and found that those who regularly consumed a
one-ounce daily serving of walnuts, almonds, cashews, or other nuts had a
20 percent lower risk of dying of any cause during the three-decade
long study, compared to those who did not consume nuts. Eating nuts less
often lowered the death risk too, in direct proportion to consumption.
The risk of
dying of heart disease dropped 29 percent and the risk of dying of
cancer fell 11 percent among those who had nuts seven or more times a
week, compared with people who never ate them.
Study
participants who often ate nuts were healthier -they weighed less,
exercised more and were less likely to smoke, among other things. Even
though, after taking healthy habits and other things into account,
researchers still saw a strong benefit from nuts.
The study
led by researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard School
of Public Health, united two researches that started in the 1980s on
76,464 female nurses and 42,498 male health professionals. Researchers
assessed the nut consumption and deaths from all causes among women
participating in the Nurse's Health Study and men involved in the Health
Professionals Follow-up Study. They filled out surveys on food and
lifestyle habits every two to four years, including how often they ate a
serving (1 ounce or 28 g) of nuts.
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the INC-NREF.
Source: https://www.nutfruit.org
Presented by Taiwo Kamorudeen Afolabi
+2348175615463, +2348023530627
cashewnutsinfo@gmail.com
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