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Recent AgClips

Outlook remains dim for farmers as trade war and weaker growth raise risks, new report says

CNBC | Posted onApril 5, 2019 in Agriculture News

A new report sees few reasons for optimism in the U.S. agricultural sector, pointing to the global slowdown impacting demand, the continued trade war with China and flooding in the nation’s farm belt. “U.S. agriculture will face challenges in 2019 as slowing domestic and global economic growth rates, trade talks continue and weather casts uncertainty in the short- and long-term markets, ” the latest quarterly rural economic review from CoBank’s Knowledge Exchange division said.According to CoBank, U.S. commodity markets remain focused on negotiations between U.S.


How climate change is fueling the U.S. border crisis

The New Yorker | Posted onApril 5, 2019 in Federal News

The western highlands, which extend from Antigua to the Mexican border, cover roughly twenty per cent of Guatemala. The population in the highlands is mostly indigenous, and people’s livelihoods are almost exclusively agrarian. The malnutrition rate, which hovers around sixty-five per cent, is among the highest in the Western Hemisphere. In 2014, a group of agronomists and scientists, working on an initiative called Climate, Nature, and Communities of Guatemala, produced a report that cautioned lawmakers about the region’s susceptibility to a new threat.


Debate over what is considered milk and how to label it heats up

KWTX | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in News

If you walk through the dairy aisle, there's quite the variety: two percent, whole milk, almond, and soy milk. Those last two are now in question as the battle over what is considered "milk" is heating up. Louisiana State Senator Francis Thompson, D-Delhi, has introduced a bill that would remove the term "milk" from anything that is not dairy. For farmers like Mike Brian, it could help sagging profits. "We're in the middle of three years of extremely low prices and that's a nationwide thing," said Brian, owner of Feliciana's Best Creamery.


US sues California, says water policy violates state law

Capital Press | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in Federal, SARL Members and Alumni News

The federal government sued California on over a water policy it said violates the state's environmental protection law. The U.S. Department of Justice filed suit in Sacramento federal court to block a contentious plan approved in December to increase river flows in the San Joaquin River and three tributaries to help revive dwindling salmon populations. It was part of a larger effort to protect the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, which state officials called an "ecosystem in crisis." The delta supplies water for the majority of California's people and farms.


Veterinary physicians push for tax exemption bill

Vermont Digger | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in Rural News

Vermont veterinarians are hoping to formalize an unofficial sales and use tax exemption that has been applied to some veterinary supplies for 50 years.Veterinarians and their patients support the exemptions, which have been in place since 1969 relating to some human medical supplies and to some animals used in agriculture. Over the years, the exemptions came to be applied to a wide range of veterinary supplies used on all animals, companion or otherwise.


Wisconsin's effort to stop CWD is bringing people together

Journal Sentinel | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Wisconsin groups and individuals have launched a grassroots push to urge Gov. Tony Evers and the Legislature to combat chronic wasting disease.Called the CWD Action Initiative, the effort is focused on protecting the health of Wisconsin’s wild deer and elk populations.  The drive was publicly unveiled in recent days.


New York approves statewide plastic bag ban

CBS News | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in News

New York's Democrat-controlled legislature worked into the night Sunday to wrap up work on a new state budget that includes new tolls on motorists driving into the busiest parts of Manhattan and a statewide ban on plastic bags. The Senate and Assembly began voting on budget bills Sunday and hoped to finish their work on the $175.5 billion spending plan early Monday.


Dow Chemical: Ready for a return

Chemical Week | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in News

Dow Chemical re-emerges this week as a standalone public company with its 1 April spin off from DowDuPont. The portfolio is narrower and management promises strong earnings growth and sharper discipline on cost and capital allocation.


Progress seen in effort to eradicate Nutria from California

Capital Press | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in Rural News

More than 400 nutria have been captured in the first year of an effort to eradicate the invasive South American rodent from California.The state Department of Fish and Wildlife said Monday the semi-aquatic rodents were trapped in five counties in the San Joaquin Valley.Nutria are an agricultural pest, destroy wetlands critical to native wildlife and threaten water delivery and flood control infrastructure through destructive burrowing.Nutria were imported in the early 1900s for the fur trade, but the market collapsed and the rodents escaped or were released.


Canada’s $27B canola market could lose $2.7B over China’s import block

Global News | Posted onApril 4, 2019 in Agriculture News

China’s decision to block imports of Canadian canola products signals a significant threat to Canada’s canola farming industry — and has the government rushing to resolve the dispute. The canola farming and export business in Canada is a major economic driver and represents one of the country’s most valuable commodities. The crop contributes approximately $26.7 billion to the economy every year and employs more than 250,000 people, according to Brian Innes, vice-president of public affairs with the Canola Council of Canada.


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