| |
AgriNotes & News is published weekly by the
Michigan Farm Bureau Information and Public Relations Division.
For
more information contact: Jill Haake, Manager Media Support
Services
Phone: (517) 323-6585
Fax: (517)
323-6541
E-mail: mfbinfo@aol.com

|
|
|
While China's recent entry into
the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the ongoing debate
over whether the country will accept U.S. biotech soybeans has
dominated agricultural trade news, the real news - and opportunities
- may be hidden elsewhere in the country of 1.3 billion people,
according to Scott Sindelar, director of the Agricultural Trade
Office (ATO) in Shanghi. Click
here for full story For more information,
contact John Vander Molen at (800) 292-2680, ext. 6588. |
| |
Located just four miles from Lake
Huron in Harbor Beach, the Kramer Family Farm is very aware
of its duty to protect the environment. Click
here for full story For more information,
contact Scott Piggott at (800) 292-2680, ext. 2021. |
| |
Pork producers are encouraged to
review biosecurity on their farms and be on the lookout for
signs of a deadly hog bacterium following last week's theft of
research samples from a Michigan State University (MSU) laboratory.
Click
here for full story For more information,
contact Ernie Birchmeier at (800) 292-2680, ext. 2024. |
| |
Twenty-eight projects, including
several involving Michigan Farm Bureau (MFB) members, have
been selected to receive $1.14 million in federally funded state
grants to create, enhance or expand agriculture development ventures
across Michigan. Click
here for full story For more information,
contact Bob Boehm at (800) 292-2680, ext. 2023. |
| |
Growing Chinese demand for consumer-oriented foods could
prove advantageous for U.S. agriculture, a group of Michigan Farm
Bureau members recently learned on a food and agricultural study
tour of China. See inside release for more details.
|
| Farmers leave China with expert's message:
Changing demographics give U.S. ag opportunities abroad |
| Contact: John Vander Molen, 800-292-2680, ext.
6588 |
| |
| SHANGHI, CHINA, Sept. 13,
2002 -- While China's recent entry into the World Trade
Organization (WTO) and the ongoing debate over whether the country
will accept U.S. biotech soybeans has dominated agricultural trade
news, the real news - and opportunities - may be hidden elsewhere in
the country of 1.3 billion people, according to Scott Sindelar,
director of the Agricultural Trade Office (ATO) in Shanghi.
"Traditionally, China had been a market for bulk commodities.
Obviously it's still a very important market for U.S. soybeans, but
we've seen tremendous growth in consumer-oriented foods," said
Sindelar, citing urbanization of the Chinese population and an
ever-growing middle class with more disposable income.
In comments to Michigan Farm Bureau members and others on a Sept.
1-15 China trade study tour, Sindelar said ATO's analysis of import
trends for the processing, retail, and hotel, restaurant and
institution (HRI) sectors suggest U.S. producers may need to take
another look at the Chinese marketplace.
"We need to be focused in our approach. We need to understand
what we have to offer and how we can get it into specific segments
of the market," Sindelar advised. "Our enthusiasm for the Chinese
market needs to be balanced with a realistic look at the
opportunities."
Calling the growth potential in the processing sector
"tremendous," Sindelar said China currently processes only 25
percent of its agricultural production, compared to 80 percent for
most countries. "Exports in the food processing sector have grown an
average of 14 percent annually, based on output value since 1981 -
that's a 20-year track record of double-digit growth," he said.
"China's gross value in the food processing sector in 2000 was $80
billion, while the U.S. value was $458 billion, so there's just
tremendous potential here in China."
The "Retail Revolution" has also seen phenomenal growth in China,
according to Sindelar, adding that the traditional "wet markets"
(farm markets) are quickly falling out of favor for "hypermarkets"
including Wal-Mart, Sam's Club and Metro, which are notorious for
large volumes and low costs. On the other end of the spectrum,
Chinese convenience stores, which are actually small supermarkets,
are becoming prevalent, with stores such as City Mart located on
nearly every block in Shanghi.
"We see the retail market growing at both ends," Sindelar said.
"We're going to have these huge hypermarkets and small-scale
convenience markets. The middle area is going to have a hard time
competing as what we call supermarkets, stores such as Giant,
Safeway, and Kroger. They're going to have a very hard time
competing in China."
Turning to the HRI sector, Sindelar says sales growth has almost
doubled since 1998, with 15 percent annual growth in each of the
last 10 years. "This is where we really see just tremendous
potential," he said. "Consumers in Shanghi and other urban consumers
are starting to face the same lifestyle pressures as U.S. consumers
- two-income families, not a lot of time, and a need for
convenience. The opportunities in this sector will run the gamut
from very basic institutional type foods to very high quality,
five-star type restaurants."
Case in point is the growth in U.S. red meat exports to China.
Calling red meat one of the "rising stars" in consumer-oriented food
exports to China, Sindelar said 2001 was a record year for U.S. beef
exports to China.
"For 2002, just six months into the year, we're already up 40
percent on a record last year. That's simply tremendous," he said.
"We're seeing some real growth in this sector, which means higher
valued products, (hence) better returns for our farmers and our
businesses."
According to ATO figures, American agriculture has been leading
the way in the battle for consumer-oriented food sales to China,
capturing 33 percent of the market share last year. However,
competition from Australia and Canada is escalating.
"We're not the only ones trying to increase imports to China,"
Sindelar warned. "In fact, the biggest competition is from China's
own domestic agriculture."
What's driving the market
shifts? Sindelar said the liberalization of China as it
moves away from a centrally organized and command economy under a
communist system to a more market-oriented society is leading to
significant changes throughout the country. High on the list, he
said, is the urbanization of the general population, which is still
pegged as 69 percent "rural."
"The urban middle class of China is now estimated at more than
350 million people," Sindelar said. "Analysts believe that more than
200 million of these consumers can purchase U.S. food products on a
regular basis - 200 million people; that's more than the U.S.
population!"
Continued growth in China's Gross Domestic Product, which has
averaged 7 percent to 8 percent for several years, is also expected
to continue. And while that growth is concentrated primarily in
urban areas along the eastern China coast, it will allow more urban
consumers to purchase high-value, high-quality food products.
"The Chinese diet is shifting as incomes rise," Sindelar said.
"People are moving away from the traditional grain-oriented diets
and shifting to more meat, more fruit, and more vegetables. There's
also a growing recognition for brands now, particularly U.S. brands,
which is reflected in higher volumes and values of U.S. exports to
China."
Despite all the good news, Sindelar warned that a stable
transition within China from a rural to an urban society must be
backed by substantial foreign investment. "We estimate that, on each
day, there is $12.5 million of foreign investment just in Shanghi
alone," explained Sindelar.
China's entrance into the WTO could help maintain the investment
momentum, due in large part to China's desire to be recognized as an
internationally integrated economy that provides improved rule of
law, along with credit and banking reforms.
"It's going to take a while for the real benefits of WTO to
accrue to us. The risk to us is that they move into other
trade-distorting practices, much like we saw with soybeans and
poultry," Sindelar said. "WTO won't be the end of the challenges we
face in this market, but it does provide a starting point for some
ground rules and a process to resolve them." |
| --30-- |
| Michigan farmers doing what's right for
environment seek ways to gain public assurance |
| Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance
Program is voluntary starting point |
| Contact: Scott Piggott, 800-292-2680, ext.
2021 |
| |
| LANSING, Sept. 19, 2002 --
Located just four miles from Lake Huron in Harbor Beach, the Kramer
Family Farm is very aware of its duty to protect the environment.
"I'm a mom, and I take my kids to the beach, too," said Connie
Kramer, who operates the 160-cow dairy with her husband Terry. "I
always tell people that I'm a mom first, and then I'm a farmer. So
I'm not going to do anything in the name of farming that's not right
for families or for people in general."
Kramer represents a growing movement of Michigan Farm Bureau
(MFB) members who are choosing to reassess their farm management
practices in order to earn state verification as "environmentally
assured." The program they're doing it through is the voluntary
Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program (MAEAP).
Now targeting livestock operations, MAEAP has farmers complete
plans that assess everything from how manure is hauled to how farm
inputs are stored. If a plan meets standards developed with input
from agricultural groups, the state recognizes the farm as
MAEAP-verified.
In some cases, a farmer would have to make many improvements
before earning MAEAP verification. In other cases, it might simply
be a matter of documenting and verifying existing good practices of
a farmer.
Currently, there are 10 MAEAP-verified farms, said Jan Wilford,
who manages the program through the Michigan Department of
Agriculture's Environmental Stewardship Division.
Estimating the number of producers currently working toward MAEAP
verification is difficult because "there's no formal registration
process," until a farm requests state verification, Wilford said.
But more than 1,200 farmers and environmental resource people have
attended MAEAP educational sessions and about 200 farmers worked on
a Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plan - the core element of MAEAP
- during meetings with Michigan State University Extension
specialists this past winter, Wilford said.
The state hopes to have 85 percent of all livestock production
participating in MAEAP by 2005. MAEAP systems still to be launched
will focus on crop production and farmsteads, providing
opportunities for additional farmers to join the movement.
Reasons for wanting to become MAEAP-verified vary from producer
to producer, but Kramer sums up a common theme of wanting to be
known as a "good neighbor farm."
"In this day and age, farmers have to be proactive rather than
reactive," she said. "(Through MAEAP) we finally have agencies
working on our behalf with our best interests at heart and the best
interests of the environment at heart. They've developed creative
incentives that are going to help us be better managers and to be
more effective in pollution control."
Changes in store for the Kramer farm include adding a filter
strip near the cattle feed storage area to collect any rainwater
runoff. The strip will be beneficial, explained Kramer, because the
wildflowers and grass varieties that will be used are ones that can
utilize the nutrients in the runoff.
Rob Richardson's 3,500-head hog nursery and 2,000-acre Kalamazoo
County farm was MAEAP-verified this summer.
A new environmental safeguard that Richardson learned through the
CNMP development process was a better way of handling medical
wastes. Instead of simply collecting used veterinary hypodermic
needles in a bucket and periodically disposing of them, Richardson
now seals the used needles in concrete - a safer disposal method.
"We've had real good positive feedback from both the farm
community and the non-farm community," said Richardson of his farm's
MAEAP verification. "They think it's great that there are people out
here who are working to try to do things better to manage nutrients
on the farm."
Pat Albright - one of the MFB state board members developing a
CNMP for eventual MAEAP verification - hopes he'll receive the same
response in his community and be a role model for additional farmers
to get on board.
"Our Branch County farm sites are relatively close to lake
populations, and we own lake property ourselves," said Albright. "So
the concern about surface water and contamination is on our minds
all the time ... Participating in MAEAP is just the right thing to
do."
Albright's currently in the process of developing a CNMP for
property northwest of Coldwater where he has a 600-head hog
finishing barn and is adding a second finishing barn of the same
size. He plans to develop a CNMP for his home farm south of
Coldwater and hopes to have the Branch and Hillsdale County farmers
he contracts with to raise 6,000 to 7,000 head of swine annually
become active in MAEAP, too.
Albright said MAEAP should give him public recognition for the
proactive, "good neighbor" deeds he's already doing, such as
avoiding hauling manure on weekends and busy holidays.
And the program is a management tool to find more ways to utilize
manure as a valuable resource on the farm, he said. "If I look at
manure not as a waste but as a fertilizer source, then from a simple
economic standpoint I don't want it to leave my field because I'm
not going to get the value out of it," he said.
Concluded Wilford: "Being proactive and looking comprehensively
at a farming operation are two crucial elements to preventing
agricultural pollution, and they're also key to describing MAEAP.
"Through MAEAP, producers first learn about potential impacts of
their livestock system on the environment. Then they assess their
own farm, working with local resources to evaluate current practices
and to develop a plan for future actions. Only with producer action
and involvement in their management plan can we hope to see
long-term change and adoption of new techniques.
"MAEAP not only links producers with the best local resources for
their specific operation, it also provides an objective look at
implementation to verify that concerns have been adequately
addressed." |
| --30-- |
| Editor's
Note: To find a MAEAP farm in your area, contact MAEAP
Manager Jan Wilford at (517) 241-4730. |
| MSU research lab theft prompts pork producers
to be on guard against deadly hog bacteria |
| Contact: Ernie Birchmeier, 800-292-2680, ext.
2024 |
| |
| LANSING, Sept. 19, 2002 -
Pork producers are encouraged to review biosecurity on their farms
and be on the lookout for signs of a deadly hog bacterium following
last week's theft of research samples from a Michigan State
University (MSU) laboratory.
Sometime between Thursday night and Friday morning, research
materials, including small samples of bacteria used to develop swine
vaccines, were taken from the Biomedical and Physical Sciences
Building. The stolen material is Actinobacilllus pleuropneumoniae,
or APP, a bacterium in swine that can cause serious respiratory
infection in young pigs, encephalitis and rapid pig mortality.
The bacterium is not a threat to humans, either by direct contact
with the agent or by eating meat from an infected animal. APP,
however, is of concern to the pork industry, which is why MSU has
been working to develop vaccines to protect swine and why the theft
prompted the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service and the National Pork Board to issue a
precautionary advisory to hog producers in Michigan and throughout
the country.
"There are no known reports of APP," said Ernie Birchmeier,
Michigan Farm Bureau (MFB) livestock specialist. "But hog producers
and veterinarians should pay specific attention to swine populations
and be alert to any unusual symptoms in pigs, such as encephalitis,
acute pneumonia and sudden death."
Birchmeier stressed that rapid diagnosis is critical to
minimizing the bacteria's impact since the disease can be treated
with injectable antibiotics. Vaccines are also available as a
preventative measure.
While MSU Police Chief Jim Dunlap said there is no indication
that the theft was related to political activism, Birchmeier advises
all hog farmers to evaluate their security measures. "That could be
as simple as checking door locks and making sure facilities are
properly lit," he said.
According to APHIS, while there are some reports of APP swine
infection via contaminated clothing or airborne transmission, most
cases of infection occur by nose-to-nose contact after the
introduction of infected carrier pigs.
Clinical signs of the endemic strain of APP are difficulty
breathing, fever, reduced appetite, and rapidly occurring death,
APHIS reported. Cough and, in some cases, frothy and blood-stained
nasal discharge can also be seen.
"Producers should be vigilant but not panic," cautioned Sam
Hines, executive director of the Michigan Pork Producers
Association.
The National Pork Board is urging producers to "go on a
heightened state of alert" and do the following:
- Review the farm's biosecurity and security plans. The Pork
Checkoff-funded Biosecurity Guide and Security Guide are available
online at www.porkboard.org or by calling (800) 456-PORK.
- Report any suspicious activity or people around a farm to
local law enforcement officials.
- Alert a veterinarian to any unusual health situation on the
farm.
The MSU Department of Police and Public Safety is
working with federal and state authorities in investigating the
theft. In addition to the samples, research notebooks and computer
disks were taken. |
| --30-- |
Additional Media Contacts:
- To reach Sam Hines with the Michigan Pork Producers
Association, call Mary Kelpinski at (517) 699-2145
- To reach Michigan State University officials, call university
spokesman Terry Denbow at (517) 355-2262
- To reach State Veterinarian Joan Arnoldi, contact Sara
Linsmeier-Wurfel with the Michigan Department of Agriculture at
(517) 241-4282
- For assistance arranging an interview with a hog producer from
your area, call Jill Haake, Michigan Farm Bureau's manager of
Media Support Services, at (800) 292-2680, ext.
6585.
|
| Michigan food, ag industry will benefit from
funding for value-added agricultural development projects |
| Contact: Bob Boehm, 800-292-2680, ext. 2023 |
| |
| LANSING, Sept. 19, 2002 -
Twenty-eight projects, including several involving Michigan Farm
Bureau (MFB) members, have been selected to receive $1.14 million in
federally funded state grants to create, enhance or expand
agriculture development ventures across Michigan.
The grants were awarded under the state's Julian-Stille
Value-Added Agricultural Development Act. Created two years ago, the
Act aims to enhance the overall value of Michigan-grown commodities
through food or agricultural processing activities.
Initial funding was made possible due to a one-time federal
appropriation from the U.S. Department of Agriculture with the
stipulation that the money be allocated for projects involving
Michigan's specialty crops. Specialty crops are generally fruits and
vegetables, but are specifically defined as any agricultural crop
except wheat, feed grains, oilseeds, sugar beets, cotton, rice,
peanuts and tobacco. Livestock and poultry were also ineligible for
grants this funding cycle.
Under the Act, competitive grants were available in four
categories: 1) marketing research and technical assistance, 2)
detailed business plan development, 3) utilization of innovative
technology, and 4) various land, facility, equipment or
infrastructure development.
Grant applications were evaluated, scored, and ranked by both
Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA) and independent,
third-party review teams according to several criteria established
by the Act. According to MDA Director Dan Wyant, 75 applications
were received with requests totaling $4.5 million.
"The response for the competitive grants was overwhelming,
highlighting the agriculture industry's commitment and desire to
help develop or strengthen its markets and add value to the
commodities Michigan grows," said Wyant.
"All of the projects had merit, but with limited resources only
the top proposals could be selected," he added. "We encourage those
that couldn't be funded to work with the Department's agriculture
development staff and others to identify potential funding
resources."
Projects selected to receive funding are:
- Category 1 - Marketing Research and Technical Assistance
- Michigan Apple Committee, DeWitt - $47,500 to conduct
marketplace research for fermented and distilled Michigan apple
beverages.
- Leelanau Fruit Co., Suttons Bay - $45,000 to develop a
brandied cherry product targeted to both the domestic and
international baking industry.
- Great Lakes Glads, Inc., Bronson - $41,500 to conduct market
research to determine the potential for flowering potted
peonies.
- Michigan Cherry Committee, DeWitt - $40,000 to determine
extended potential for a new Michigan Balaton tart cherry.
- Michigan Grape and Wine Industry Council, Lansing - $30, 000
to develop web-based resource manual for existing and potential
Michigan vintners and wineries.
- Asparagus Enterprises, Inc., DeWitt - $25,000 to provide
technical assistance for launch of new product line, "Chunky
Asparagus Salsa."
- Chateau Chantal, Old Mission Peninsula - $20,000 to develop
a pilot "Great Lakes Wine Academy" to partner with local
community college culinary school to teach consumers wine
characteristics and pairing with foods.
- SubTerra, LLC, White Pine - $15,000 to conduct research on
potential markets for re-utilizing the White Pine Mine as a
biosecure growth chamber for plants.
- Cherry Marketing Institute, DeWitt - $10,000 to identify
positioning strategies for high value, new Michigan Balaton tart
cherries.
- Michigan Potato Industry Commission, DeWitt - $10,000 to
conduct comprehensive research on the potential for a potato
hydration plant.
- Uncle John's Cider Mill, St. Johns - $2,500 to provide
technical assistance for the development of a pilot, small scale
fermented apple beverage production facility.
- Category 2 - Business Plan Development
- 21st Century Alliance of Michigan, Ubly - $50,000 to develop
a business plan for an integrated and coordinated dry bean
supply chain.
- Category 3 - Utilization of Innovative Technology
- Great Lakes Packing Co., Kewadin - $50,000 to develop
technology capable of recovering and recycling cherry juice lost
in the pitting process.
- Michigan Apple Committee, DeWitt - $50,000 - to apply
technology for the production of fermented apple beverages.
- Sills Farm Market, Lawrence - $50,000 to adapt technology to
enable production of fresh cut apple slices.
- Great Lakes Glads, Inc., Bronson - $28,925 to utilize
software that will allow for partnerships with non-profit
fund-raising organizations in the sale of flowering, potted
peonies.
- St. Julian Wine Co., Paw Paw - $28,800 to apply technology
for the construction of wine barrels made of Michigan white
oak.
- Category 4 - Land, Facility, Equipment or Infrastructure
Development
- Leelanau Fruit Co., Suttons Bay - $75,000 for the purchase
of equipment and infrastructure to re-open the Buckley, MI sweet
cherry processing facility
- Peterson Farms, Inc., Shelby - $75,000 for the purchase of
state-of-the-art equipment to increase value-added fruit juice
processing capacity.
- Stokes' Blueberry Farms and Nursery, Grand Junction -
$75,000 to purchase equipment allowing for the grading and
sorting of fresh blueberries.
- Honee Bear Canning, Lawton - $72,750 for the expansion and
renovation of the company's fresh asparagus line.
- Rocky Top Farms, Ellsworth - $71,300 for the expansion of
the processing and packaging operations at the family fruit
orchards.
- Great Lakes Glads, Inc., Bronson - $56,250 for the
construction of a production facility for flowering, potted
peonies.
- Crosby Mint Farms, St. Johns - $45,000 for the purchase of
mint processing equipment.
- JD Farms, Rogers City - $37,500 for the development and
construction of a specialty, edible bean milling and bagging
facility.
- Black Star Farms, Suttons Bay - $33,000 to expand the
winery's distillery operations.
- St. Julian Wine Co., Paw Paw - $30,400 for the purchase of
fermenting processing equipment to produce premium wines from
Michigan-grown red Vitis vinifera grapes.
- Northern Michigan Natural Growers, LLC, Kaleva - $24,575 for
the purchase of equipment to produce premium organic fresh
pressed fruit and vegetable juices.
|
| --30-- |
 |
Editor's Note: The following story ideas are
designed to provide a quick look at the issues affecting
agriculture. For more information on any of these subjects, please
call Jill Haake at the Michigan Farm Bureau home office at (517)
323-6585. Or for a local angle from a producer in your area, call
Jane Bennett at (517) 323-6584. |
|
| MFB proud of State Fair Youth Livestock
Auction success |
| The Michigan Farm Bureau (MFB) was proud to be
among the individuals and corporate buyers who were recognized for
their support at this year's Michigan State Fair Youth Livestock
Auction. MFB, the state's largest general farm organization,
received the Governor's Loyal Buyer Award, which recognized buyers
participating at the auction for at least five of the past six
years.
Netting nearly $155,000 for the youth exhibitors and scholarship
funds, the 2002 auction easily surpassed the $1 million mark for
gross sales since 1996, according to Michigan Department of
Agriculture (MDA) Director Dan Wyant. As well, more market steers,
lambs, and hogs were shown than recorded previously, and more than
200 youth competed in various skill events.
The Michigan Youth Livestock Scholarship Fund, now in its third
year, granted six $1,000 scholarships and $21,000 in educational
awards to more than 120 youth livestock exhibitors in skill
contests, said Ernie Birchmeier, MFB livestock specialist and
Michigan Youth Livestock Scholarship Fund President.
For more on scholarship recipients and top auction items, consult
the MDA Web site at www.michigan.gov/mda.
Contact: Ernie Birchmeier, (800) 292-2680, ext. 2024 |
|
| Web survey measures ag biosecurity |
| America's farmers are being invited to provide
input on biosecurity issues on their farms through a Web-based
survey this fall. The Extension Disaster Education Network (EDEN)
received U.S. Department of Agriculture funds to identify farmers'
educational needs on homeland security. The producer survey results
will guide what types of educational programs should be offered on
agricultural security.
The EDEN survey will be conducted from Sept. 1 through November.
To take the survey, producers may visit the EDEN Web site at
http://www.agctr.lsu.edu/eden and click on "Homeland Security
Surveys," then click on "Survey of Ag and Horticulture Producers."
The survey is anonymous and takes less than 10 minutes to complete.
It can be taken anywhere producers have access to the Web, including
libraries and Extension offices.
"There are factors concerning agriculture that lead experts to
disagree about whether or not farming and the food supply are at
risk to bioterrorism," said Steve Cain, EDEN delegate and Purdue
University Cooperative Extension Service specialist. "Whether or not
there is a real threat to the American food supply, the risks bring
up issues that society must deal with." |
|
| Vegetable chemical use survey to be
conducted |
| Vegetable growers in Michigan and 18 other states
will soon be asked to provide information on pesticide use through
the Vegetable Chemical Use Survey. Information gathered from growers
will be used to set state and national estimates of producers' use
of pesticides on 23 vegetable crops nationally, and seven vegetable
crops in Michigan (asparagus, snap beans for processing, carrots for
fresh market, cucumbers for processing and fresh market, pumpkins,
squash, and sweet corn for fresh market).
A local interviewer from the Michigan Agricultural Statistics
Service will contact vegetable producers to gather information on
vegetable crop chemicals used, acres treated, and rates applied.
Data collection will begin Oct. 7, and end Dec. 6. Data will be
gathered from more than 600 vegetable growers in Michigan.
Individual grower information is strictly confidential and
individual reports are combined to set state and national estimates.
The Michigan Department of Agriculture has agreed to grant one
credit of private pesticide recertification credit to those
operators who complete the survey, which is conducted every other
year.
The survey results are official U.S. Department of Agriculture
estimates and help establish the facts about chemical use in
agriculture. Accurate and timely information on actual usage is used
in the decision-making process for the Food Quality Protection Act
which has an impact on the product registration, re-registration,
and product alternatives. This information also helps to justify and
support section 18 applications.
The National Agriculture Statistics Service will publish the
resulting state and national estimates of vegetable growers' use of
agricultural chemicals in July 2003. |
|
| MFB member appointed to United Soybean
Board |
| Michigan Farm Bureau member Lois F. Mason, of
Lenawee County's Blissfield, was recently appointed to the United
Soybean Board. Mason was one of 19 members appointed and will serve
a three-year term beginning December 2002.
"The board administers soybean promotion and research programs to
enhance domestic and foreign markets for soybeans and soybean
products," said Secretary of Agriculture Ann M. Veneman. "I am
pleased these individuals have agreed to provide their time and
expertise to serve on this board."
The 62-member board is authorized by the Soybean Promotion,
Research, and Consumer Information Act.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) selected the appointees
from soybean producers nominated by Qualified State Soybean Boards.
USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service monitors operation of the
board. |
| Farm Bureau Quick Facts |
| Rice grains with less phytic acid could mean
improved nutrition for the world's malnourished, more nutritious
animal feed, and less potential for water pollution from manure.
Cereals like rice store most phosphorus in the grain as phytic acid,
which can't be digested by one-stomached animals like fish,
chickens, pigs and humans. The new stock - what scientists call
germplasm - is helping create improved varieties with less phytic
acid This rice has only half the phytic acid content of its parent
and an increased amount of more easily digested phosphorus.
New York-based Gourmet Impression has invented two hand-held
tools that allow restaurants, caterers and other food businesses to
turn pizzas into edible advertisements. The "Stamper" and the
"Roller" allow companies to emboss their logo or advertising
messages on food. Initial prototypes are designed for pizzas,
calzones, bread sticks, cheeses, melons, white bread, pita breads,
brownies, pies, butter sticks and baked potatoes, the company said.
The Stamper tool works like a rubber stamp and easily and quickly
embosses a text message or an image into a food item. Everything
from personalized 'Happy Birthday' messages to advertisements and
company logos can be embossed within seconds.
The Korean market has increased 600 percent over the past few
years, and the United States supplied 64 percent of the $14 million
pet food exports to Korea in 2000. Over the next few years, the pet
food market is expected to grow 15 percent to 20 percent annually,
according to the Mid-America International Agri-Trade Council and
Food Export USA-Northeast.
According to the Mid-America International Agri-Trade Council and
Food Export USA-Northeast, South Korea is the sixth largest U.S.
export market, importing more than 70 percent of its agricultural
needs. 2002 growth rates are expected to exceed 2001 U.S.
agricultural import totals of more than $3.3 billion. Primary
opportunities for growth include fresh, processed, and frozen fruits
and vegetables; healthy food; home-meal replacements; snacks;
confectionaries; and dairy products.
Editor's Note:
For more information, contact Michigan Department of Agriculture
spokeswoman Sara Linsmeier-Wurfel at (517) 241-4282.
| |