One of the really great things about Farm Foundation events is how the group brings together people from divergent backgrounds and points-of-view to freely discuss the issues affecting American Agriculture today. The latest session at the Foundation’s Food and Agriculture Policy Summit it is hosting here in Washington, D.C. is another great example of that.
Just a few minutes ago, Dr. Jonathan Bryant with BASF North America and Dr. Gale Buchanan, Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics at USDA finished their presentations bringing private and public sector viewpoints to the research and development session of the conference.
I caught up with the two of them right after their talk and asked how the private and public sectors can better work together to make sure the research dollars and knowledge flow back and forth between the two.
“Obviously, we need to keep supporting research and education programs at both the state and federal level,” said Buchanan.
Bryant echoed Buchanan’s sentiments about the need for public funding for research and development. “I think there are some very similar priorities. We obviously depend on the public sector to give us a good educated workforce.” He added that the private sector also depends on the regulatory function of the government.
Both men agree that they need each other for a dependable research and development function in the ag community.
“There’s much to be gained from the collaborative relationship that the private sector has with the public sector, because in the end, we all are trying to get to the same goal: provide for the needs of the American people and people all over the world,” Buchanan said.
During his talk, Buchanan pointed out that research and development pays back a return of 53 percent annually… better than any stock.
Bryant said that taking a long-term view is key for private companies and public institutions to make sure Americans are truly being served in this collaborative relationship.
You can listen to my conversation with Drs. Buchanan and Bryant by clicking here: Bryant-Buchanan1.mp3
Download the audio here. (mp3)

The world’s population will grow by 33 percent by the year 2040, but the amount of farmland to feed and fuel that growing demand won’t have to grow by that same one-third… that’s what attendees at the Farm Foundation’s Food and Agriculture Policy Summit in Washington, D.C. heard this morning.
“Agriculture’s role is not one of conflict between food or fuel. It is one that is quite compatible. Producing more food results in more fuel being produced as well.”
More fascinating conversation today at the Farm Foundation’s Food and Agriculture Policy Summit in Washington, D.C. as former Rep. Charlie Stenholm is on the stage again leading a discussion on how to restructure agriculture infrastructure.
In the spirit of the current talk of whether the government should bailout the American auto industry, Stenholm is asking the question: “Who will bailout the American farmers?”
An increasing world population coupled with increasing incomes will pose agriculture with some major challenges over the next three decades, as the world puts greater and greater demands on farmers to meet the world’s food and energy needs.
“Global population is expected to increase by one-third by 2040. Increasing incomes, particularly in developing countries, may bring changes in dietary preferences and greater demand for agriculture to provide food and energy,” says Farm Foundation President Neilson Conklin. All this will increase pressure on and competition for natural resources at a time when the impacts of climate change on production systems are not yet fully understood, he adds.
On a day when he moderated a conversation between seven former Secretaries of Agriculture, speculation swirled that former Rep. Charlie Stenholm would be the next person to lead the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
It was a pretty historic meeting this afternoon at the Farm Foundations’ Food and Agriculture Policy Summit in Washington, D.C. as six former Secretaries of Agriculture shared the stage and another joined by videotape.
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You don’t put together a traveling tractor show without a team of people making it happen. Here’s part of that team. Actually, most of the ones on site here in Middleburg, FL. There are a couple missing because they’re selling tractors to customers.
Six former U.S. Secretaries of Agriculture… John Block under Pres. Ronald Reagan, Clayton Yeutter under the first Pres. George Bush, Michael Espy and Dan Glickman for Pres. Bill Clinton, and Ann Veneman and Michael Johanns under the second Pres. George (W.) Bush… and one on video… Robert Bergland for Pres. Jimmy Carter… are on the diais today in Washington, D.C., discussing the future of agriculture as the Farm Foundation is hosting The Food and Agriculture Policy Summit.