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EPA announces 12-month delay of farm worker pesticide-handler rule

Safety + Health | Posted onJune 1, 2017 in Agriculture, Federal News

The Environmental Protection Agency has delayed until May 22, 2018, the effective date for its revised Certification and Training of Pesticide Applicators final rule.


Massive explosion rocks Wisconsin corn mill plant, sparks fire

CBS News | Posted onJune 1, 2017 in Agriculture News

Rescue crews are scouring the rubble of a corn mill plant for two employees following an explosion that killed at least one person and injured about a dozen others in southern Wisconsin. Numerous fire crews raced to the scene of  the large explosion and fire in a corn milling plant about 45 miles northeast of Madison, Wisconsin. Richards said one person was killed and two people were still missing as of Thursday morning. Authorities said about a dozen people were injured in the blast, though no details about the injuries have been released.


How John Deere developed one of the best GPS locators in the world

Network World | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Agriculture News

One of the most accurate GPS-based location systems in the world isn’t a hyper-secret military technology or a top-of-the-line scientific device – it’s John Deere’s worldwide correction network, a dual-band GPS system that lets farmers track their planting, harvesting and more to an accuracy of less than an inch.


Proposals could make it easier for farmers to profit from manure bioenergy

Midwest Energy News | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Agriculture, Energy News

A pair of federal efforts could make it more profitable to turn organic waste from agriculture and other sources into energy by taking advantage of the Renewable Fuel Standard. One is a bill recently introduced in the U.S. Senate that would create a 30 percent investment tax credit for qualifying biogas and nutrient-recovery systems.


The rice industry is furious at the existence of “cauliflower rice”

Quartz | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Food News

The fight over the US government’s definitions for certain foods has flared up again. It’s no longer just a fight for milk farmers, who’ve grown increasingly angry about plant-based food companies (think soy, almond, and cashews) calling their liquid products “milk.” For the first time, vegetables are being roped into the debate—all because of the arrival and popularization of “cauliflower rice.”“Only rice is rice, and calling ‘riced vegetables’ ‘rice,’ is misleading and confusing to consumers,” Betsy Ward, president of industry lobby USA Rice, said in a statement earlier this month.


Oregon livestock company prevails in trade secrets dispute

Capital Press | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Agriculture News

An Oregon livestock nutrition company has prevailed in a lawsuit over trade secrets against a former employee who was found to have intentionally destroyed evidence. A federal judge has entered a default judgment against Yongqiang Wang, the former employee, as punishment for deleting emails and giving away a computer likely containing information related to trade secrets owned by Omnigen Research.U.S.


Sheep research station on USDA chopping block, again

Capital Press | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Agriculture, Federal News

The beleaguered research station, the only USDA-ARS research facility dedicated to the sheep industry, is being threatened with closure for the third time since 2014.The U.S. Sheep Experiment Station at Dubois, Idaho, is one of 17 Agricultural Research Service laboratories slated for closure under President Donald Trump’s Department of Agriculture FY 2018 budget proposal.Brown said it’s a one-of-a-kind facility in the U.S. doing research on sheep breeding, range management, reproduction and wild/domestic sheep interaction. “It would be irreplaceable.


American beekeepers lost 33 percent of bees in 2016-17

Science Daily | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Agriculture News

Beekeepers across the United States lost 33 percent of their honey bee colonies during the year spanning April 2016 to April 2017, according to the latest preliminary results of an annual nationwide survey. Rates of both winter loss and summer loss -- and consequently, total annual losses -- improved compared with last year. Winter losses were the lowest recorded since the survey began in 2006-07


Trump proposes selling Northwest's transmission grid

Oregon Live | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Energy, Federal News

Buried among the revenue-generating ideas in President Donald Trump's new budget proposal is a plan to sell off publicly owned transmission assets, including those operated by the Bonneville Power Administration.For public power companies – and really all utilities in the Northwest – the proposal will ring alarm bells and resurrect a debate about the control of assets that were built with federal dollars but paid for by local ratepayers.Bonneville operates three-quarters of the region's high-voltage transmission system, which it uses to market power from 31 hydroelectric dams in the Columbi


In the Pacific Northwest, Non-Wires Transmission Alternative ‘Reflects a Shift’ in Grid Planning

Green Tech Media | Posted onMay 30, 2017 in Energy News

Can efficiency, demand response and distributed energy replace new power lines? The Bonneville Power Administration is finding out. The Bonneville Power Administration is taking its first step into “non-wires alternatives” for power grid investments -- not necessarily by choice, but certainly with a lot of preparation in advance. Last week, the federal agency that manages the Columbia River hydropower complex and power grid across the Pacific Northwest announced it has given up its nearly decade-long effort to build a new transmission line along the I-5 corridor.


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