Sat.Mar 25, 2023 - Fri.Mar 31, 2023

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The Agriculture Resilience Act Is a Win for Sustainable Nutrition Science 

The Equation

The Agriculture Resilience Act (ARA) of 2023 was re-introduced in Congress today. The ARA is comprehensive, science-based legislation that covers many topics related to environmental and climate concerns in agriculture, including conservation on both agricultural and pasture land, renewable energy, and food loss and waste. The ARA is bold legislation that equips farmers with funding for climate resilience, including a much-needed focus on soil health.

Science 100
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Registration Open for Farmers Union Summer Camps at Kamp Kenwood

Wisconsin Farmers Union

Registration is open for Farmers Union Camp! Kamp Kenwood is the heart of summer fun in the Chippewa Valley, serving as the home for the Wisconsin Farmers Union (WFU) camp program since the 1940s. Each summer, hundreds of youth from across the Midwest attend the camp, which is nestled beneath the pines on the shore of Lake Wissota near Chippewa Falls.

Lodging 52
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Household Food Waste Taxes: Findings from South Korea, Lessons for the U.S.

Ohio State University

Starting as early as 2005 select localities in South Korea required households to separate food waste and pay a weight-based fee for discarded items. Dr. Seunghoon Lee, postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will share research in which he exploits the gradual country-wide expansion of this program to evaluate how food waste taxes affected household food waste rates, food purchasing patterns, eating habits, and time use.

Food 52
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Winnebago Tribe Turns to Organic Farming, Looks to Build Future of Food Sovereignty

Agritecture Blog

Credit: Omaha World-Herald. Editor’s Note: Small actions towards community self-sufficiency and food sovereignty can have resounding effect on the longterm health and sustainability of the land, the people, and the local food system. CONTENT SOURCED FROM OMAHA WORLD-HERALD Written by: Jessica Wade March 31, 2023 Aaron LaPointe stood before a large map on his office wall in Ho-Chunk Inc. headquarters just as harvest season got underway.

Food 52
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Repurposing Cropland in California: A Solution for Everyone?

The Equation

I may be a romantic, but I firmly believe that we can reimagine agriculture, rural disadvantaged communities and the environment in a way that makes everyone happy. I love nature, and I see agriculture as part of nature, not as a foe. But agricultural practices, especially in California, must be updated to survive the future. One powerful change that is growing momentum is strategic cropland repurposing.

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AkinovA & Ceres Imaging Partner on Next Gen Ag Insurance Risk Models

World Agri-Tech

AkinovA, a technology enabled marketplace for the effective transfer of (re)insurance risks, has announced a partnership with Ceres Imaging, the data analytics company that builds AI-driven risk solutions for agricultural (re)insurance providers. The partnership will provide AkinovA’s partners with access to Ceres’ global agriculture data set which is refined by more than 11 billion individual plant-level measurements and validated by over a decade of R&D including 30 university research par

Yield 52
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Food and Farm Resilience Bond AB 408 (Wilson) passes Assembly Agriculture Committee

CalCAN

Yesterday the Assembly Agriculture Committee passed Assembly Bill 408 , the Climate-resilient Farms, Sustainable Healthy Food Access, and Farmworker Protection Bond Act of 2024 with a bipartisan 10-0 vote. AB 408 is authored by Assemblymember Lori Wilson (D-Suisun City) and proposes a $3.4 billion bond for the November 2024 ballot to invest in creating a more equitable and climate resilient food and farming system.

Food 52

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From Faltering to Flourishing: Local Food Supply Chains are Making a Comeback 

Agritecture Blog

Image sourced from the National Young Farmers Coalition Written By: Christian Kanlian , Food Systems Consultant at Agritecture Many Americans never doubted the continual abundance of modern day grocery stores, until they couldn’t find toilet paper during the start of the pandemic. With painful disruptions caused by fluctuating demand, shipping bottlenecks, and labor shortages, supply chains are becoming a new topic of conversation at dinner tables across the country.

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The Silver Lining in This Year’s Dirty Dozen List

The Farmers Daughter USA

Photo by Lucinda Hershberger on Unsplash The Environmental Working Group recently released it’s 2023 Dirty Dozen list. This annual propaganda allegedly ranks the fresh produce with the highest levels of pesticide residues. EWG urges consumers to buy organic versions of those crops. This year strawberries and spinach topped the organization’s list.

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Partnerships for Water are Partnerships for all the Global Goals

Farming First

Water and partnerships play a key role in delivering the Sustainable Development Goals – especially Zero Hunger. The post Partnerships for Water are Partnerships for all the Global Goals appeared first on Farming First.

Farming 52
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Local Food Producers Bill

Caff

The Local Food Producers Bill, if passed, will help identify and create a legal definition for “Local Food Producers”, independently-owned farms operated on less than 500 acres who sell direct to their local community. Join us today in calling on our state leaders to pass this bill! SIGN THE LETTER HERE BACKGROUND: California agriculture has been consolidating rapidly due to the increasing involvement of hedge funds and other investment groups, with farm operations overseen by farm m

Food 52
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The Food Revolution is Being Led by Women

Agritecture Blog

Editor’s Note: The following list details some of the many women leading the charge in the agricultural industry. As there are numerous women in agriculture around the world specializing in technology, operations, business development, and more, this list is not exhaustive but rather meant to illustrate the variety of ways in which women are creatively solving the world’s food crisis.

Food 52
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Using Grazing Animals to Reduce the Risk of Wildfires

CalCAN

This is the second in a three-part series to share the details of three bills that CalCAN is sponsoring in the 2023 legislative year. Here, we summarize SB 675 (Limón), a bill to integrate prescribed grazing outreach, infrastructure, best management practices, and planning into existing wildfire prevention grant programs. Catastrophic wildfires have taken a tremendous toll on Californians in the past 6 years.

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Top 10 Chicken Breeds for Colorful Egg Production

Farmbrite

An introduction to the colorful world of chicken eggs In recent years, colorful eggs have become popular among consumers. There has been a boom in demand for blue, green, tan, and chocolate colored eggs in addition to the commonly seen brown and white eggs. There are several chicken breeds that have been bred to lay colored eggs, and adding these to your flock is a great ways to increase your farm’s profitability.

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FY2022 Annual Report

Sustainable Harvest International

Learn more about SHI’s impact in FY2022.

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Bringing the Freshest Salad Greens to Saudi Arabia with Bather Smart Farm

Agritecture Blog

Bather’s microgreens are grown vertically to maximize yields. Credit: Bather Smart Farm. Written by: Sarah Jordan March 29, 2023 In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital city, Khalid Shokair and his family have established Bather Smart Farm , a 2500-square-meter facility that grows microgreens, edible flowers, salad greens, and herbs. They are pioneering vertical farming in the region and operate the first smart farm of its kind in Saudi Arabia.

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Keep It Rural: Tornadoes Touch Down in Rural Mississippi

Daily Yonder

Extreme Weather: Tornado Edition Last weekend, tornadoes tore through the South, devastating rural towns. A confirmed 25 people were killed in Mississippi and one in neighboring Alabama. Mississippi was hit hardest, especially Rolling Fork and Silver City, where a tornado touched down early Friday night, reaching wind speeds of 170 miles per hour. Another tornado moved through Tchula, Black Hawk, and Winona, reaching speeds of 155 miles per hour.