USDA doubles its funding for climate mitigation projects
The Biden administration allotted $5.7 billion for climate mitigation work through USDA's conservation programs in the coming 12 months, double the amount offered in the just-ended fiscal year. There is record interest in USDA's stewardship programs "and we're confident that we can continue to get the support out to conservation-minded producers," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on Wednesday.
EPA restores pesticide exclusion zones
A new regulation will restore so-called application exclusion zones intended to protect farmworkers and other people from exposure to pesticides as they are being applied, said the Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday. The exclusion zones were created as part of a 2015 agricultural worker protection standard and were reduced in size in 2020 during the Trump era.
Fears of falling income drive farmer confidence to lowest level in eight years
Farmer confidence tumbled by 21 percent in the past two months to its lowest level since 2016, with three of every four farmers saying they expect bad times for the agricultural economy in the year ahead, said Purdue University on Tuesday. Producers taking part in the Ag Economy Barometer survey said they were worried about declining income because of low commodity prices and high production costs.
EPA sets restrictions on use of chlorpyrifos
Makers of the insecticide chlorpyrifos will modify their product labels to reduce runoff and spray drift of the pesticide into the habitat of endangered species and to limit the areas of the country where the chemical is used, said the Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday. The EPA also said it would propose a regulation limiting the use of chlorpyrifos to 11 crops.
We need more Native American restaurants
In FERN’s latest story, published with Eater, Sean Sherman and Mecca Bos make the case for commercial development of the rich and extensive array of Native American food cultures across middle America. It’s a way, they argue, to diversify the food scene in a region long dominated by conservative fare.
USDA provides $1.7 billion to buy food for emergency assistance
The Agriculture Department will distribute $1.7 billion for the purchase of locally and regionally produced food for emergency food assistance, said Agriculture deputy secretary Xochitl Torres Small on Tuesday. Most of the money would flow through schools, childcare facilities, and food banks and some would go directly to emergency food providers.
Corn and soybean stockpiles are biggest in four years, expected to grow larger
U.S. grain bins and warehouses held the largest corn and soybean reserves in four years at the beginning of the fall harvest, said the Agriculture Department on Monday. The stockpiles were expected to grow larger still due to bumper crops this year that would keep the pressure on weakening commodity prices for months to come.
Stabenow: Farmers need hurricane aid
Hurricane Helene struck the U.S. Southeast as crops were maturing for harvest and growers will need emergency assistance, said Senate Agriculture chairwoman Debbie Stabenow on Monday. Poultry barns and processing plants along with field crops were damaged from Florida to North Carolina and Tennessee, according to early reports.
Vilsack says Republicans ‘just don’t have the votes’ for farm bill
The Republican-controlled House has not advanced a new farm bill because "they just don't have the votes" to pass a bill that is $33 billion over budget, said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack over the weekend. Senate Agriculture chairwoman Debbie Stabenow was more "practical," he said, by proposing a smaller increase in so-called reference prices and finding the money to pay for it.
Five Missouri healthcare workers with respiratory symptoms to be tested for bird flu
Blood samples from five healthcare workers in Missouri will be tested for exposure to the avian flu virus, said the Centers for Disease Control in a weekly update on bird flu. The workers developed mild respiratory symptoms while involved in treatment of a patient infected with the H5N1 virus but who had no known contact with animals.
Farmers take out more operating loans as revenue tightens
Bankers reported a 10-percent increase in farm operating loans this summer, compared to a year ago, said the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank. "A moderation in the agricultural economy and lower farm sector liquidity has spurred higher financing needs and credit conditions have also shown signs of tightening," said the bank, based on quarterly reports from lender.
Global declaration calls for lower use of antimicrobials in agriculture
Nearly 200 United Nations member states, warned of the rising health threat of drug-resistant pathogens, approved a declaration on Thursday to step up their work to preserve the efficacy of disease-fighting medicines, reduce the death toll from antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by 10 percent, and “meaningfully reduce” antimicrobial use in agriculture by 2030.
House Republicans press leaders for a farm bill vote
Six of every 10 House Republicans signed a letter to Speaker Mike Johnson asking for a floor vote on the new farm bill during the lame-duck session of Congress, arguing that the legislation is a “must-pass item.” The letter was released on Thursday, a day after House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries listed the farm bill as one of his three top priorities for action after the Nov. 5 general election.
Grassland losses slow in Great Plains
Some 1.9 million acres of grasslands in the Great Plains were converted to cropland in 2022, said the World Wildlife Fund on Thursday in its annual Plowprint report. “While this figure’s significance cannot be downplayed, it marks an improvement from the previous 10-year average of 2.6 million acres annually,” said the group.
Huge losses in food supply and human health if superbugs spread
Drug-resistant pathogens could throttle meat, dairy, and egg production and cause millions of additional human deaths by 2050 if the superbugs are not controlled, said researchers on Thursday. They called for increased funding worldwide to prevent the spread of antimicrobial resistance.
Farm bill is on the lame-duck agenda of House Democrats
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries put the farm bill third on his short list of must-pass bills for the post-election session of Congress on Wednesday, behind averting a government shutdown and assuring military preparedness. The lame-duck session is the last chance to enact a new farm bill before lawmakers would have to start over in January, when a new Congress takes office.
Greater focus on sustainable food and ag carries global benefits — Vilsack
As a step to expand the global food supply and mitigate global warming, countries should spend more money on climate-smart food and agriculture innovations and use public-private partnerships to speed the adoption of promising practices, said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on Tuesday. As examples, he cited the international AIM for Climate initiative and the Biden administration's climate-smart agriculture project.
Lawmakers would triple lifespan of 45Z clean fuel credit
The 45Z tax credit, intended to encourage the development of sustainable aviation fuel and other low-carbon fuels, would be available until 2034 and limited to domestic feedstocks under companion bills filed in the House and Senate on Tuesday. Farm groups said the legislation would allow time for domestic production to rise while discouraging a flood of imported oil, grease, and tallow.
Rural Americans are less optimistic about inflation than the rest of the country
There is an urban-rural split as well as a partisan split in how Americans view inflation, one of the driving issues in this fall's elections, said three analysts on the farmdoc daily blog on Monday. Rural Americans are less optimistic than urbanites that inflation will ease, and rural Republicans are the least optimistic of all.
Number of California dairy herds with bird flu triples in a week
Bird flu was confirmed in 24 additional dairy herds in California last week, and the state now has the second-highest number of infected herds in the country, 34, said USDA data on Monday. All of the cases were discovered since Aug. 30.