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CRISPR’s impact on diesel is now

http://www.biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2017/11/29/crisprs-impact-on-diesel-is-now/ | Posted onDecember 2, 2017 in Agriculture, Energy News

CRISPR technology will ultimately impact what we eat, wear, and how we maintain our health — and it just crashed successfully into the big party known as the Advanced Transportation revolution. Specifically, a new path to producing fuel molecules that replace diesel.


70% of Americans Want Better Treatment for Farm Animals, Poll Finds

Organic Authority | Posted onDecember 2, 2017 in Agriculture News

A survey conducted by the nonprofit think tank Sentience Institute (SI), in collaboration with Ipsos Group, found that 70 percent of Americans have some level of discomfort with how animals are being used in the food sector and support changes to how animals are raised and slaughtered for food. “The public support we see for these proposals is remarkable,” said SI Research Director Jacy Reese. “Less than 10% of the population is vegetarian, but you can eat turkeys for Thanksgiving and still want society as a whole to shift away from animal agriculture.


Washington State Dept. of Ag favors tagging every cow with radio ID

Capital Press | Posted onDecember 2, 2017 in Agriculture, SARL Members and Alumni News

The Washington State Department of Agriculture may adopt rules requiring producers to tag every cow with radio-frequency identification, a level of electronic monitoring opposed by some ranchers. The department says the tags will help follow a cow from birth to slaughter, aiding animal-health officials to speedily respond to diseases and bringing the state in line with coming USDA standards.“These (the rules) are all intended to track an animal within hours rather than within days,” State Veterinarian Brian Joseph told the Senate Agriculture Committee Nov. 14.


Contaminated raw milk may have been sold in 4 states

Valley News Live | Posted onDecember 1, 2017 in Food News

Health officials have issued a warning about potentially tainted raw milk that was sold in four states. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is advising anyone who consumed Udder Milk products to seek medical attention. According to the CDC, people who drank raw milk from the company may have been infected with a rare germ called Brucella abortus RB51, which can cause an illness called brucellosis.Officials say a New Jersey woman became sick with an antibiotic-resistant strain of the bacteria after consuming Udder Milk earlier this year.


West's largest coal plant to stay open through 2019 with new approval

Utility Dive | Posted onDecember 1, 2017 in Energy News

The largest coal plant in the Western United States will keep operating through 2019 after its owners received approval from the federal Bureau of Reclamation and Bureau of Indian Affairs to extend its lease on Wednesday. The plant's owners, including Reclamation and a group of utilities, had planned to close the 2,250 MW Navajo Generating Station (NGS) in 2018.


FDA reaches out to Ag Commissioners on Food Safety

FDA | Posted onDecember 1, 2017 in Agriculture, Federal News

FDA's Scott Gottlieb wrote to the state Ag Commissioners reinforcing the agency’s commitment to work in partnership with the states to effectively implement FSMA.  Issues that are still being addressed include terminal markets, dispute resolution, on farm visits and agriculture water.


American farm towns, with changing priorities, reject industrial agriculture

Wall Street Journal | Posted onNovember 30, 2017 in Agriculture, Rural News

Rural Americans are turning their backs on the industry that made the U.S. the biggest meat-exporting country in the world. Residents of Tonganoxie, a 5,300-person town in northeast Kansas, spent part of the fall hanging white-and-red placards that say “No Tyson in Tongie” on fenceposts and pickup trucks. Their efforts were part of a public push against Tyson Foods Inc., TSN 0.10% the largest U.S.


Puerto Rico’s hurricane recovery hinders farm businesses’ seed research

NPR | Posted onNovember 30, 2017 in News

Puerto Rico's hot winter days and warm nights have played a key role in the global seed business for more than 30 years. So, the devastation wrought on the U.S. territory by Hurricane Maria in September stretches to the croplands of the Midwest and Great Plains.


Opioid crisis affects farmers harder than their rural neighbors

Bloomberg | Posted onNovember 30, 2017 in Agriculture, Rural News

The U.S. opioid crisis that’s sweeping through America’s heartland has hit farmers harder than the wider rural population. Almost three-quarters of U.S. farmers and farm workers say they have been directly affected by opioid dependence, either from taking an illegal dose or dealing with a habit themselves, or by knowing someone who has used. That compares with about 45 percent for the rural population as a whole, according to a poll commissioned by the American Farm Bureau Federation and the National Farmers Union, the two biggest U.S. farmer groups.


What is the Food and Ag Industries' Impact in your Community?

Feeding the Economy | Posted onNovember 30, 2017 in Agriculture News

America’s food and agriculture sectors feed the economy and fuel the nation. Together, they account for roughly one-fifth of the country’s economic activity, supporting over 22 million jobs or nearly 15% of US employment.


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