Skip to content Skip to navigation

AgClips

Recent AgClips

Trump indicates little change in U.S./Canada trade in NAFTA reset

Meatingplace (free registration required) | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Rural News

Speaking to reporters after meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, President Donald Trump yesterday downplayed the extent of changes he will seek in U.S./Canadian trade as he looks to re-negotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).  "We'll be tweaking it, we'll be doing certain things that are going to benefit both of our countries," Trump said at a joint news conference with Trudeau on Monday. "It's a much less severe situation than what's taken place on the southern border.


Bill would make Massachusetts first state to commit entirely to renewable energy

Metro News | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in SARL Members and Alumni News

A recently introduced bill would make Massachusetts the first state in the nation to commit entirely to renewable energy sources for electricity, heating and transportation.Called the 100 Percent Renewable Energy Act, the measure has already garnered the support of 53 House and Senate members — more than a quarter of the legislators on Beacon Hill, said Ben Hellerstein, state director with Environment Massachusetts.


Transformations in the Food System, Nutritional and Economic Impacts

Choices magazine | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in News

Choices magazine this month focuses on opportunities and challenges of contemporary food systems in general, with a particular focus on aspects that are more common in urban systems. Urban agriculture issues are especially relevant given that over 50% of the world’s population resides in urban areas. In the United States, the share of the population in urban areas is even higher, at 80% (World Bank, 2016).


From raw milk to veterans working on farms, Rep. Schmid optimistic for agriculture bill

Taunton Gazette | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in SARL Members and Alumni News

Raw milk is back on the legislative menu this session, with a majority of the House signing onto a farm bill that Westport Rep. Paul Schmid said would benefit legislative districts from the urban cores to the rolling pastures and forests far from Boston.  The Senate passed a similar bill 36-1 last year, and with more than 60 percent of the House already endorsing Schmid's bill, the horizon appears bright for an omnibus agriculture bill this session.


South Dakota legislature looks at funding animal disease lab

KDLT | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in SARL Members and Alumni News

A South Dakota State University lab has been working to find solutions to livestock diseases for nearly 50 years, including a bird flu outbreak in 2015.  But the building that houses the lab is making this a difficult task. This is where a new bill comes into play. The Senate Appropriations Committee introduced the “State Animal Health Lab bill”, or SB 172, which would fund renovating the existing 63,000 sq. ft. facility and constructing an additional 80,000 sq. ft. building.


HSUS teaming with company to screen companies for aniaml welfare

Financial Advisor | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

Teaming with the Humane Society of the United States, Folio can now screen out companies involved with factory farms, which have come under increasing criticism from animal rights advocates for the overcrowding and mistreatment of their livestock.  “We are very interested in allowing people to invest in a way that alligns with their values,” said Greg Vigrass, president of Folio Institutional. “Working with filters for investments has always been in our DNA and we recently stepped up the commitment.”  The Humane Society maintains a list of firms that engage in factory farming.


Animal research saves human lives

Missoulian | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

A recent column (Dec. 19) denouncing the significance of biomedical research that uses animals and encouraging the University of Montana to abandon such projects was grossly misleading with respect to the true need and value of animals in research, including their treatment and care.


Troopers Use ‘Big Data’ to Predict Crash Sites

Pew Charitable Trust | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Rural News

As more and more states use “big data” for everything from catching fraudsters to reducing heath care costs, some highway patrols are tapping it to predict where serious or fatal traffic accidents are likely to take place so they can try to prevent them.


Is the chicken industry rigged?

Bloomberg | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

Many industries, such as health care and retail, make use of information-sharing services, but Agri Stats provides chicken producers with a rare level of detail, in uncommonly timely fashion. The company’s reports, portions of which Bloomberg Businessweek reviewed, contain exhaustive data about the internal operations of the nation’s biggest poultry corporations, including bird sizes, product mixes, and financial returns at participating plants. According to a 2011 presentation prepared by Agri Stats, the company gathers information from more than 95 percent of U.S.


Bees, pesticides and the activist hive

The Wall Street Journal | Posted onFebruary 16, 2017 in Agriculture News

A pesticides ban in Europe could soon be overturned on the grounds that it was based on unreliable data. Meanwhile, revelations that one of the scientists behind the ban was also involved with a nongovernmental organization that campaigns against pesticides continue to undermine the ban’s integrity.  Two European chemical companies, Bayer and Syngenta, appeared before the European Court of Justice this week to argue that the European Union should revoke a ban on neonicotinoid pesticides. “Neonics,” as these sprays are known, were introduced in the 1990s as a safer, greener alternative.


Pages