John LaRose Jr.
Topics: Livestock/Meat, Agriculture Global, Young Farmers, Beef Cattle, Ag Europe,
British farmers are being offered a lump sum payment to leave the industry – but at what cost to agriculture? - Beef Central
Four in ten British farmers are over 65, while the average age is 59. To attract younger blood into the fields, the UK government is running a temporary scheme to entice some of these older professionals into retirement...Read More
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06/23/2022 SOURCE: geneticliteracyproject.org
Two anti-GMO stalwarts — the European Union (EU) and New Zealand — are showing signs of softening their stance toward the technology in the face of climate change impacts and pressure to innovate. Regulators and others in the EU and NZ are advising that existing regulations are out of date and fail to reflect recent advances in the technology, particularly the potential of new tools like gene editing. They say regulatory revisions may be required to reduce carbon emissions and ensure food production remains competitive. Any policy shifts in New Zealand and the EU are expected to have far-reaching effects on farmers, scientists and consumers in both jurisdictions, as well as trading partners and the rest of the world. Gene editing would revolutionize breeding programs in New Zealand, a particularly useful dividend for a country where plant-based commodities account for around half of the export earnings. Genetic engineering has also been fronted as a solution for the increased threat from pests and diseases, such as those afflicting the valuable kiwifruit and forestry industries. The technology could also be used to confer desirable traits on some of the country’s important export plant species.“ Gene editing offers the potential to produce a step change in NZ primary industry productivity, biosecurity and speed of innovation. This is particularly the case for perennial crops with slow or complex breeding cycles that are a feature of NZ’s plant-based exports,” notes a study published in the online journal Frontiers in Plant Science.
Pressure mounts on EU and NZ to review their strict anti-GMO policies
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06/21/2022 SOURCE: www.beefcentral.com
Four in ten British farmers are over 65, while the average age is 59. To attract younger blood into the fields, the UK government is running a temporary scheme to entice some of these older professionals into retirement...Read More
British farmers are being offered a lump sum payment to leave the industry – but at what cost to agriculture? - Beef Central
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06/20/2022 SOURCE: www.agriculture.com
Ukraine will soon receive the first temporary storages from abroad, the agriculture ministry said on Monday.
Ukraine soon to receive first temporary storage for 2022 grain harvest
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John LaRose Jr.
Topics: Agriculture Global, Ag Russia & CIS, Ag Europe, Government / Policies, Food Security/Shortage,
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06/17/2022 SOURCE: www.expressandstar.com
A farmer from Staffordshire has been handed a court bill of more than £8,000 for failing to comply with livestock disease control measures.
Staffordshire farmer fined thousands for failing to comply with livestock disease measures
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06/17/2022 SOURCE: www.lemonde.fr
COLUMN. Aiming to implement the European Green Deal, the Commission-proposed system to measure pesticide use reduction has managed to turn a situation of escalating risks into one of improvement.
'The agricultural Green Deal will not happen'
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John LaRose Jr.
Topics: Agriculture Global, Ag Europe, Government / Policies,
Animals farmed: pigs cloned by robots, horsemeat trial and bird flu culls
Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web
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John LaRose Jr.
Topics: Crop Consultant, Agriculture Global, Economics, Ag Russia & CIS, Ag Europe, World Hunger,
Ukraine’s agriculture industry sees huge losses | DW | 13.06.2022
Much of the intense fighting is now focused on Ukraine’s agricultural regions the south and east. DW correspondent Nick Connolly visits a farmer on the frontlines near Mykolaiv.
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Randy Krotz
Topics: Agriculture Global, Pork/Swine/Pig/Hog, Ag Europe,
ASF discovered in domestic pigs in Italy for the first time | Pig World
African swine fever (ASF) has been found in domestic pigs in Italy for the first time, delivering a major blow to the country's pork sector. Two cases were
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