USA / All Themes
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
DES MOINES --- Most of the people walking through the line outside the window are talking about the butter cow or the butter figure of Olympic gymnast Shawn Johnson.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
with rent By Gene Lucht, Iowa Farmer Today Jeff Ward would like to remind small or beginning farmers they have a relatively new weapon in their arsenal when negotiating rental contracts this year, thanks to the beginning farmer tax credit.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
FLOYD --- Pam Johnson says new advances in corn-trait technology will bring about savings to companies and corn growers.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
DES MOINES (AP) --- A Dallas County farmer plans to appeal the decision of a panel that denied him permits for two large hog confinements.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
DES MOINES (AP) State legislators don’t seem eager to wade back into the hot-button issue of regulating giant livestock production centers despite pleas from environmental officials for help.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
It’s no secret farmland rental rates jumped this past year. The 2008 Iowa cash rent survey proves the point, showing a historically large jump from a statewide average of $150 per acre to $177/acre.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
PELLA --- The new farm bill could be a factor for landlords trying to decide whether to change tenants this summer and fall.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
Flooding earlier this growing season prompted concerns about having enough corn to supply the market for livestock, ethanol, exports and other markets.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
ST. LOUIS (AP) --- Monsanto Co. is unloading a controversy with its $300 million sale of the Posilac cow hormone to drug maker Eli Lilly & Co. Posilac was never been a big part of Monsanto’s future growth plans, but the genetically engineered hormone has gotten much public attention because of concerns about its effect on human health. The sale, announced Aug. 20, means Monsanto’s name won’t be associated with what some activists call “one of the mosthated products in the world.” “I think I would term this addition through subtraction for Monsanto,” said Frank Mitsch, an analyst with BB&T Capital Markets in New York. “Did they really need to spend their time defending this product when it’s not the reason people are buying their stock?” Dropping the hot-button Posilac strengthens Monsanto’s longterm strategy to focus on selling high-tech seeds to farmers worldwide. Monsanto was founded as a chemical firm selling everything from aspirin to herbicide. Now, its scientists focus almost exclusively on genetic seed research, and Monsanto plans to double its annual gross profit in four years by developing crops resistant to pests, herbicides and drought. Posilac was a profitable and growing business within Monsanto, although the company doesn’t break out annual revenue from the hormone, said spokeswoman Danielle Jany. She said Monsanto did not sell the Posilac division because of outsiders’ criticism, but said losing the hormone will help the firm’s long-term bottom line. “It allows Monsanto to focus on its core seeds and traits business,” she said. The Posilac brand will be absorbed into Eli Lilly’s Elanco animal health unit. The Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical maker said it might make additional payments to Monsanto for Posilac, contingent on the results of the deal. Monsanto said the sale will be completed “as soon as practical.” Posilac is the brand name for a hormone called recombinant bovine somatotropin, or rBST. It increases milk production in cows, and Monsanto said it sold more than half a billion Posilac units since the product was approved in 1994. Critics have attacked the hormone as unhealthy additive for humans and cows alike. Organic food groups say Posilac injections increase infections in cows, and the hormone might remain in the milk consumed by humans. Some dairy farmers label their milk as “hormone free” in response to the criticism. Eli Lilly is prepared to defend its acquisition. “We recognize that there is a challenge out there,” said company spokesman Mark Taylor. He called many of the criticisms “misperceptions,” and said Posilac will complement Elanco’s line of antibiotics and other drugs for dairy cows. “This product has been proven safe,” Taylor said. “It’s been used
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
Two significant deadlines are looming for crop-protection assistance, the Farm Service Agency reminds farmers.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
ZEARING (AP) --- A manmade “forest” of wind turbines is rising in a roughly 48-square-mile area between Zearing and Colo.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
DES MOINES (AP) --- Iowa labor officials on Aug. 22 accused meatpacking plant Agriprocessors with 31 new and repeat safety violations.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
Monte Shaw said what many ethanol industry leaders were thinking when the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced this past week it was denying a request from Texas Gov. Rick Perry for a waiver from the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS).
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
Billed as “The World Series of Swine Shows,” the NBS showcases many of the top breeding boars and foundation females in the country, and all eight major breeds, according to a news release.
Iowa
Agriculture
31.08.2008 02:19
iowafarmertoday.com
SPENCER) --- If you visit the Clay County Fair Website (http://www.claycountyfair.com), you will know exactly how many days, hours, minutes and even seconds there are left until the gates to the 2008 Clay County Fair swing open.
Iowa
Agriculture
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Date: 09 January 2009 - 01:35
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