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U.S. unlikely to dominate future corn exports, economist says
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - The United States remains the world's corn export king, although its empire is shrinking, says a Purdue University agricultural economist. Foreign nations that previously relied on the U.S. for corn are growing more of their own...Tags: Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Environmental Issues, Judges, Crime, Law and Justice
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Agricultural export market development endangered
“Now is not the time to abandon public support for agricultural export market development,” says Darrell Davis, Ipswich farmer and Chairman of U.S. Wheat Associates (USW). “America will likely start to lose jobs if a Farm Bill that includes...Tags: Consumers, Kristi Noem, Marketing, Science and Technology
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Lack of action on farm bill affects market promotion activities
The 2008 Farm Bill expired on September 30, 2012, without Congressional action to approve replacement legislation. The absence of a farm bill will have significant consequences regarding market development programs that U.S. Wheat Associates (USW) and...Tags: Finance, Economy, Business and Finance, Marketing, Agriculture
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R-CALF USA alerts DOJ and USDA of another JBS merger proposal
Billings, Mont. - In a letter sent on Oct. 24 to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack, and USDA Grain Inspection Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) Administrator Larry Mitchell, R-CALF...Tags: Consumers, Lawyers, Tom Vilsack, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Restructuring and Recapitalization
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Dust Bowl Kansas farmers set to plant winter wheat
CHICAGO -- Kansas farmers are preparing to plant winter wheat into the driest soil since 1991 after three seasons of drought causes Dust Bowl conditions in the biggest growing state and global reserves fall to a four-year low. About 97 percent of fields...Tags: United Nations, Chicago Board of Trade, Ukraine, Bank of America Corp., Kazakhstan
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Japanese company to
BUCYRUS, N.D. (AP) - A Japanese conglomerate is building a new grain elevator in southwestern North Dakota, giving the company easier access to the wheat Japan already imports from the upper Great Plains. Jim Peterson, marketing director for the North...Tags: Japan, Scranton, Economy, Business and Finance, Companies and Corporations
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New farm bill now?
Leaders representing the over fifty farm and rural organizations who are part of the “Farm Bill Now” coalition will stage another high-profile event next week on Capitol Hill to push lawmakers toward passage of the 2012 Farm bill. "Agriculture is one of...Tags: Consumers, U.S. House Committee on Agriculture, Tampa, Parties and Movements, Republican Party
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EU investigates suspected Chinese solar panel 'dumping' scheme
The European Commission will probe complaints that Chinese solar panel manufacturers are trying to dominate the hyper-competitive industry by resorting to shady import tactics. The government body said Thursday that it will launch a formal...
Tags: Renewable Energy, Germany, Economy, Business and Finance, Alternative Energy, International Organizations
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Russian trade bill means big opportunities farmers
SIOUX FALLS - The South Dakota Soybean Association (SDSA) welcomes the introduction of a Senate bill that would graduate Russia from the Jackson-Vanik Amendment to the Trade Act of 1974, and authorize President Barack Obama to establish permanent normal...Tags: Consumers, Russia, John McCain, Max Baucus, Trade Dispute
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Interview with Douglas Oberhelman, CEO of Caterpillar
Douglas Oberhelman is the most outspoken business leader in Illinois.
As CEO of Peoria-based Caterpillar, he has placed himself — and the issue of Illinois' fiscal crisis — centerstage through a series of sharp-tongued op-eds bemoaning the...Tags: La Grange, Internal Revenue Service, Social Security, Germany, Commodity Markets
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Hot numbers in cold times
As the world stumbles toward a summer of financial winter, one part of the American economy continues its merry, five-year waltz: U.S. ag exports are forecast to reach $134.5 billion in Fiscal Year 2012. That estimate, released by the U.S. Department of...Tags: Japan, Flu, China, U.S. Department of Agriculture, North American Free Trade Agreement
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More domestic production won't lower gas prices
The argument for increasing oil production in the U.S. to decrease gas prices at the pump has sparked passionate debate, but it undervalues the influence of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). In recent years, OPEC has shown an...Tags: Commodity Markets, Saudi Arabia, Restraint of Trade, Energy Resources, International Organizations
Nov 23, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Nov 16, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Nov 9, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Nov 9, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Sep 7, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Sep 7, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Sep 7, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Sep 6, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jun 22, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Mar 16, 2012
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Jun 10, 2012
|Story| Aberdeen News
Apr 19, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
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