Gordon Wassenaar took time during a busy harvest for the Global Farmer Roundtable to visit his farm for a few hours near Prairie City, Iowa in October 2016.[/caption]
Sharing his farm with the world - Wallaces Farmer - By Rod Swoboda (Mar 15)
TRADE, TRADE RELATED, INFRASTRUCTURE:
China hits back at Trump, slaps new tariffs on U.S. goods worth up to $3 billion - NBC News / AP - By Alice Tidey (Apr 2)
""China would never submit if the U.S. launched a trade war," declared an editorial in a newspaper published by the ruling Communist Party." - Link
China imposes retaliatory tariffs on 128 US products - Nikkei Asian Review - By Issaku Harada (Apr 2)
"China's imposition of tariffs, however, is not directly related to planned sanctions by the U.S. against China for its intellectual property theft..." - LinkU.S. Envoy Says China Retaliation on Soybeans Would Backfire?- Bloomberg (Mar 29)
"U.S. Ambassador Terry Branstad warned China against retaliatory measures...?any effort to curb U.S. soybean imports would harm regular Chinese citizens more than American growers." - LinkAbandon tariffs ?before it?s too late?: MOFCOM - The Global Times (China) By Huang Ge (Mar 29) - Link
?India?s share in world trade in agriculture is just 2 per cent? - Times of India (Mar 28)
"The need of the hour is post-harvest management and food processing capabilities" - LinkFinance highlights importance of TPA - World Trade Online (Mar 30)
"The congressional committees with jurisdiction over trade, in separate releases this week, issued a reminder about their authority over trade negotiations and Capitol Hill?s priorities in those talks. The Senate Finance Committee on Friday blasted out an explainer on Trade Promotion Authority..." - Link (subscription-based)
NAFTA nations 'moving forward in significant way': Canada's Trudeau - Reuters - By David Ljunggren (Apr 5)
"Trudeau?s remarks to reporters in Quebec City were the latest in a series of upbeat comments by officials in the three countries..." - LinkWhite House Defends Trade Policies as Trump Aims New Threat at China - New York Times - By?Ana Swanson?and?Eileen Sullivan (Apr 6)
"Mr. Trump also defended his?surprise announcement Thursday night?that the United States would consider an additional $100 billion in tariffs on China, a total that would triple an earlier trade threat." - LinkArgentina imports 120.000 tons of soy-beans from United States - MercoPress (Apr 11)
"The surprise move pushed Chicago soybean futures to a one-month high, in the latest development to upend global soy trading after top buyer China last week proposed tariffs on U.S. imports amid an intensifying Washington-Beijing trade dispute." - LinkTrump directs top economic advisers to negotiate rejoining Trans-Pacific Partnership - Fox News - By Brooke Singman (Apr 12)
?The best thing the United States can do to push back against Chinese cheating now is to lead the other eleven Pacific nations that believe in free trade and the rule of law..." - LinkAG, AG TECH, RESEARCH, PRODUCTION, PROTECTION, RELATED ISSUES:
This Farmer Wants To Make Quinoa A 'Thing' In Rwanda - NPR - By Malaka Gharib (Mar 27)
"Since the crop is easy to grow and packed with protein, Habiyaremye hopes it can provide new nutritious food sources in the region." - LinkGM crops that produce industrial products could be grown in Britain for first time? - The Telegraph (Mar 29) - Link
The Next Big Thing in Agriculture: Smart Collars for Cows - Wall Street Journal - By Mike Cherney (Apr 2)
"Some startups are betting that technology can replace fences and become the dominant way to herd livestock" - Link
In Defense Of An Important Example Of Food System Transparency - Applied Mythology - By Steve Savage (Mar 28)?
"It turns out that the whole idea that consumers should worry about foods that are ?dirty? because of chemical residues is false." - LinkGenetically engineered salmon farm in Albany underway - The Star Press (Indiana) - By Seth Slabaugh (Apr 3)
"A biotechnology company is upgrading a defunct fish farm where it plans to grow AquAdvantage Salmon..." - LinkTwo very hungry caterpillars have created a hybrid mega-pest that threatens global food crops - ABC News (Australia) - By Dominique Schwartz (Apr
"...capable of stripping billions of dollars a year from the food and fibre industries..." - LinkNema to approve trials of GM cotton by next month - The Star (Kenya) - By Agatha Ngotho (Apr 6)
"The National Environment Management Authority will approve performance trials for genetically modified cotton by next month." - LinkIsraeli agriculture and high-tech form a winning team - Globes (Israel) - By Yasmin Yablonko (Apr 5)
"From mushrooms that nourish other crops to mass production of edible grasshoppers, Israeli startups are impacting agriculture." - Link
Deal brings Phytelligence fruit technology to India - Capital Press - By Dan Wheat (Apr 5)
"The Seattle agricultural biotechnology company Phytelligence will supply India with modern rootstocks and tree fruit, grape, nut and berry varieties." - LinkNew Gene Editing Tool May Yield Bigger Harvests - Voice of America - By Shelly Schlender (Apr 4) - Link
Kenya faces huge losses from armyworm, US warns - Daily Nation (Kenya) - By Kevin J. Kelly (Apr 10)
"Up to 50 per cent of an annual maize crop can be destroyed..." - LinkGene Editing for Good - Foreign Affairs - By Bill Gates (Apr 10)
"Over the next decade, gene editing [CRISPR] could help humanity overcome some of the biggest and most persistent challenges in?global health?and development." - LinkPOLICY, REGULATORY, ACTIVISM, OTHER:
California judge rules coffee needs cancer warning label - Chicago Tribune - By Brian Melley, Associated Press (Mar 30)
"[California Prop 65] been widely criticized for abuses by lawyers shaking down businesses for quick settlements." - LinkAttack of the Killer Cappuccino - Wall Street Journal, Editorial (Mar 30)
"Californians can look forward to cancer warnings on coffee...But however feeble the evidence, Prop. 65 encourages trial lawyers and their front groups to sue on behalf of the state by offering them a cut of the civil penalties. Last year Prop. 65 cases yielded $25.6 million in settlements, and more than three-fourths of that sum went to the lawyers." - Link



