Animal Ag News 2/8

Carrie Muehling

  • Despite significant disruptions in trade throughout 2020, the United States exported nearly 2.4 million metric tons of dairy goods last year–a record-setting mark, according to data released by USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service.
  • Following one of the most difficult years in the history of the American sheep industry, Susan Shultz of Ohio has been elected to lead the American Sheep Industry Association as its next president. Shultz was unanimously elected during the final day of the sheep industry’s 156th Annual Convention on Jan. 29.
  • The executive committee of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association approved the organization’s top 2021 policy priorities with a continued focus on advocating for a business climate that increases opportunities for producer profitability. For more detailed information about NCBA’s 2021 Policy Priorities, click here.
  • The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) concluded its virtual Winter Business Meeting with the election of Jerry Bohn, a cattle producer from Wichita, Kan., as NCBA president.
  • New analysis of independent data show that reported new COVID-19 infection rates among meat and poultry workers are 60% lower than in the general U.S. population and two-thirds lower than case rates in the sector in May 2020. According to data from the Food and Environment Reporting Network, the meat and poultry sector was reported to have an average of 32.64 new reported cases per 100,000 workers per day in January 2021, two-thirds lower than the average of 98.39 new reported cases per 100,000 workers per day in May 2020. Since the Meat Institute and the United Food & Commercial Workers, America’s largest food workers union, jointly urged state governors to follow federal guidance and prioritize frontline meat and poultry workers for COVID-19 vaccination, employers have taken concrete steps to educate workers about vaccination and facilitate access to vaccines. Find more on case rates and health and safety measures, including vaccination, here.
  • IPPE Marketplace Week brought the animal food, meat and poultry industries together with more than 1,100 exhibitors providing information on a variety of feed and animal protein technologies and services. The IPPE Marketplace had visitor participation from 131 countries, and there were more than 81,000 Personal Guide page views. There were also more than 27 hours of TECHTalks presentations, 3 hours of Innovation Station/New Product Showcase videos and 34.5 hours of education programs available. This year’s digital event saw the most exhibitor TECHTalks presentations and Innovation Station/New Product Showcase videos ever, with a combined 200-plus submissions.
  • The National Institute for Animal Agriculture has announced a rebrand to reflect the organization’s new strategic vision to be the leading resource for the animal agriculture industry and provides value to all stakeholders involved in providing safe and healthy food for the world.
AgWired Animal, Animal Agriculture, Animal Bites

Farm Journal Adds New Positions to Fuel Growth

Cindy Zimmerman

Farm Journal has just announced a whole crop of talented new professionals from a wide range of backgrounds.

Rebecca Bartels, Director of Business Development, Trust In Food — Bartels leads overall revenue strategy and execution for the initiative, including creating differentiated value propositions for Trust In Food’s diverse set of clients from the agribusiness, food, non-government, government and academic sectors. She was previously with Meister Media Worldwide as business director for their international upstream value chain crop input and technology trade brand, AgriBusiness Global.

Emma Bruno, Digital & Data Marketing Specialist — Bruno joins Farm Journal’s audience development team to lead circulation and digital marketing efforts to engage America’s farmers, ranchers and growers with a wide range of brands. She was previously with American Marketing and Publishing with a background in website creation and social media.

Jason Hill, Senior Ad Operations Specialist — Hill joins Farm Journal’s industry-leading digital ad operations team, bringing more than 20 years of experience in digital media and advertising to this role. His extensive multi-platform experience contributes to improved transparency and accountability for clients.

Dustin Johansen, Director of Business Development, DDMS — Johansen will work with Farm Journal’s national livestock and crop sales teams to help clients integrate data, research and activation capabilities into marketing strategies. He was previously vice president, ag business development at Osborn Barr Paramore and serves as board co-chair for the Agriculture Business Council of Kansas City and vice chair of the MoKan NAMA chapter.

Todd Rowan, Sales Representative — Rowan will work with clients in both crop and livestock sectors to maximize customer reach and engagement across Farm Journal brands. He previously served as national business development director at Broadcast Management Services and in other roles in the broadcast and automobile industries.

Nicole Starr, National Accounts Manager, Livestock — Starr is responsible for sales across Farm Journal’s industry-leading content brands in the company’s beef, dairy, pork and influencer portfolios. She was formerly a senior public relations and communications specialist at Greenheck Group and Bader Rutter.

Danny White, Sales Representative, Machinery Pete — White will work with clients to target audiences and create sales leads on Farm Journal’s Machinery Pete platform. His 30-year marketing career includes serving as territory manager at Fastline Media Group and operating his own digital marketing business.

Farm Journal, Media

CIRB Annual Meeting was Virtual Success

Cindy Zimmerman

The 57th Crop Insurance and Reinsurance Bureau (CIRB) Annual Meeting was a virtual success.

Michael Torrey, CIRB Executive Vice President, said they were pleasantly surprised to have a record turnout for their first ever virtual meeting, which gave many more a chance to participate. “Allowing several individuals within companies, and participants from overseas, and even a lot of non-members, to be exposed to the CIRB program,” said Torrey.

The program featured an agricultural economic outlook, policy forecast, and a timely panel on the role of crop insurance in climate change policy. Audio recordings of the meeting presentations and interviews are available on the CIRB Annual Meeting virtual newsroom.

CIRB is co-hosting a virtual 2021 Crop Insurance Convention tomorrow, along with National Crop Insurance Services (NCIS) and American Association of Crop Insurers (AACI). The virtual joint convention will be held February 9 from 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM CST.

In this interview, Torrey talks about the CIRB annual meeting and the state of the crop insurance industry.
Interview with Michael Torrey, CIRB 11:06

Audio, CIRB, Crop Insurance

Industry Ag News 2/5

Carrie Muehling

  • Many rural counties are still struggling with COVID-19, high unemployment and the environmental impact from natural disasters and wildfires. How will all these competing, and often complex factors be addressed in a new congress? Those are some of the topics Agri-Pulse plans to explore during a webinar discussion “Top rural issues in the New Congress: A discussion with Rep. Dusty Johnson, Rep. Abigail Spanberger and AEM’s Kip Eideberg” on Feb. 12 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. EST. Click here to see more information & register for this free webinar.
  • Armond Morris, peanut farmer from Tifton, Georgia, was elected chairman of the Georgia Peanut Commission during the monthly board meeting in January. This is Morris’ twentieth term as chairman of the commission. He has also served as chairman of the board previously in 1996 and 1997, 2003 and every year since 2005.
  • Bridging the rural-urban divide can’t just happen by having a small number of people sitting in on an occasional keynote. And yet, that divide may be one of agriculture’s most daunting challenges. That is what led to the creation of a new community called Grounded and Rising. Grounded and Rising is the brainchild of Janice Person, one of the industry’s most active advocates. According to her, the divide has grown in 2020, and she wants to help reverse that trend.
  • Colleen Callahan, director of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, was honored during the 2021 annual meeting of the Illinois Society of Professional Farm Managers by being named the 2021 recipient of the organization’s Outstanding Service to Agriculture award.
  • Agri-Pulse is pleased to welcome Nutrien as the Platinum sponsor for the 2021 Ag & Food Policy Summit. This year’s virtual summit will feature three half-day sessions, March 22-24, with the theme: “Climate Risks, Rewards and Uncertainties.”
  • The U.S. Department of Agriculture announces details of the 97th annual Agricultural Outlook Forum, which will be held virtually on February 18-19, 2021. The 2021 Forum, themed “Building on Innovation: A Pathway to Resilience,” will focus on the central role science and innovation have played in helping the agricultural sector overcome challenges and build resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Once again, during National FFA Week, individuals will have an opportunity to step up and support FFA and agricultural education through Give FFA Day on Thursday, Feb. 25. This year, the organization has a goal of getting 1,500 donors during the 24-hour period. To prepare for Give FFA day, visit FFA.org/GiveFFADay.
Zimfo Bytes

Role of Crop Insurance in Climate Change Policy

Cindy Zimmerman

The Role of Crop Insurance in Climate Change Policy was the theme for the closing panel of the 57th annual Crop Insurance and Reinsurance Bureau meeting held virtually Thursday.

The panel included Bruce Knight, Strategic Conservation Solutions, LLC; Callie Eideberg, Environmental Defense Fund; Jonathan Coppess, University Of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, College of Agricultural & Consumer Economics; and Josh Tonsager, National Association of Wheat Growers.

Listen to their conversation here:
CIRB Climate Change Panel 51:46

Audio, CIRB, climate, Conservation, Crop Insurance

Virtual CIRB Meeting Gets Ag Economic Update

Cindy Zimmerman

The food and agriculture economies are continuing to feel the impact of COVID-19 as the pandemic enters a second year of global disruption.

“Beginning in mid-March, when it was declared a pandemic in the United States…the impact on agriculture was immediate,” said American Farm Bureau Federation chief economist John Newton, speaking today at the virtual 57th annual Crop Insurance and Reinsurance Bureau Annual meeting.

That impact hit nearly every sector of food and agriculture, with ethanol and meat production hit particularly hard, and recovery continues to be slow.

Listen to Newton’s presentation here:
2021 CIRB presentation - John Newton, AFBF 55:30

2021 CIRB Annual Meeting Photo Album

Audio, CIRB, Crop Insurance

Truterra Launches First Farmer-Owned Carbon Program

Cindy Zimmerman

Truterra today announced the launch of TruCarbon, the first farmer-owned carbon program.

Truterra is the sustainability business subsidiary of Land O’Lakes, one of America’s largest farmer-owned cooperatives, and TruCarbon is a new program that will help farmers generate and sell carbon credits to private sector buyers. The program is designed to provide both the best experience for farmers and a novel approach for carbon credit buyers to incentivize change at scale.

TruCarbon offers buyers carbon credits that are created using leading soil and conservation science, and precision data and verification methods. The program offers farmers a streamlined experience, making it easier for them to develop and sell carbon credits so that they can focus on crop production and caring for the land. Through the Truterra Insights Engine data platform, the new TruCarbon program provides farmers and their trusted ag retailer advisors a powerful soil health planning suite of tools to help them decide what is best for their business while optimizing their fields’ carbon credit potential. TruCarbon also maximizes the value and return for farmers with premium carbon credit value.

TruCarbon is launching with Microsoft as its first secured buyer to purchase carbon in 2021 to help meet their commitment to be carbon negative by 2030. For this initial launch, participating farmers may receive $20 per ton of carbon with payments this summer. Qualifying farmers may be compensated for carbon sequestration retroactively up to five years based on the soil health practices they adopted in prior growing seasons. Truterra will handle soil testing and other activities designed to ensure maximum credit quality and value. Farmers can begin the information and enrollment process by visiting https://www.truterraag.com/CarbonSurvey.

For more information about TruCarbon and how to get involved, visit: https://www.truterraag.com/Carbon.

Read more here.

AgWired Precision, Cooperatives, Environment, Precision Agriculture

Senators Question EPA Nominee on RFS and WOTUS

Cindy Zimmerman

The Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule and the Renewable Fuel Standard were two topics Environmental Protection Agency nominee Michael Regan addressed during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on Wednesday.

Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) called WOTUS the “one that everyone ought to be concerned about because that’s the number one issue.”

Regan, who currently serves as North Carolina Secretary of Environmental Quality, said he hopes we can learn from both the Obama-era and Trump-era WOTUS rules. “As a state secretary, I’ve been on the receiving end of both. I’ve had conversations with farmers about both and I think that we do have a clear opportunity to look at how we protect our water quality while not overburdening our small farmers.”

Regan hearing - Sen. Inhofe 1:33

Regan promised that the RFS will be a priority for the new administration. “You have my commitment that we will look at the RFS program and we will introduce some transparency into that program. We will let science lead us and we will follow the letter of the law as it was intended for that program.”

Listen to Sens. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) and Joni Ernst (R-IA) question Regan about biofuels and water issues.
Regan hearing - Sen. Duckworth 1:51

Regan hearing - Sen. Ernst 5:38

Audio, Biodiesel, Biofuels, climate, EPA, Ethanol, Water

Precision Ag News 2/3

Carrie Muehling

  • CommoditAg has added two new suppliers, YieldMaster Solutions and Attune Agriculture, to further expand its line of high-quality farm products. CommoditAg now offers new biostimulants and biologicals from YieldMaster Solutions and an adjuvant system from Attune.
  • Syngenta Crop Protection is collaborating with artificial intelligence and deep learning company Insilico Medicine to accelerate the invention and development of new, more effective crop protection solutions that protect crops from diseases, weeds and pests, while also protecting ecosystems.
  • February 3rd marks the 40th anniversary of Exacto, Inc., an innovative turnkey chemical manufacturer with roots in agriculture, turf and ornamental, and industrial vegetation management sectors.
  • AGCO has joined the NEVONEX partner network as part of AGCO’s continued strategy to make it easier for farmers to work seamlessly across their farm.
  • Syngenta Group achieves milestone of 125 million acres of farmland actively managed by growers using the Group’s digital services. Syngenta Group is the only agricultural company to have leading digital service platforms in the top four agriculture markets: The United States, Brazil, China and Eastern Europe.
  • The National Corn Growers Association is launching the Consider Corn Challenge III open-innovation contest, looking for participants to answer the call and submit proposals for new uses of field corn as a feedstock for producing sustainable chemicals and products with quantifiable market demand.
  • Ag-Analytics and Davide Cammarano, Purdue associate professor of agronomy, have announced a recently established research partnership. Using precision agriculture data, Cammarano’s research team will develop farm management strategies that optimize economic outcomes for businesses and individuals.
  • Agri-Pulse’s eBook, “Agriculture’s Sustainable Future: Feeding more while using less” seeks to answer common questions and where the industry might be going regarding sustainability.
AgWired Precision, Precision Ag Bytes, Precision Agriculture

Preview of the 57th CIRB Annual Meeting

Chuck Zimmerman

2021 CIRB Annual MeetingThe Crop Insurance and Reinsurance Bureau is holding its virtual 2021 CIRB Annual meeting tomorrow February 4, hosted on Zoom. CIRB’s 57th Annual Meeting will feature distinguished speakers, such as Dr. John Newton from American Farm Bureau Federation and Jim Wiesemeyer from Pro Farmer, to provide updates for the crop insurance industry.

You can find the agenda here.

A virtual newsroom has been started on AgNewsWire to host content from the event. To start, I spoke with Perry Harlow, CIRB’s new Manager of Membership & Events, to get a preview.

Interview with Perry Harlow, CIRB (7:10)

Coming up next Tuesday, February 9, CIRB will co-host a virtual joint convention with National Crop Insurance Services (NCIS) and American Association of Crop Insurers (AACI). The agenda includes dynamic speakers from the crop insurance industry and recognize those individuals who have served the industry for many years.

Click for more information on the joint agenda.

Ag Groups, Audio, Insurance, Virtual