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Greenfield Milling Opens Opportunities for Southern Idaho Wheat Farmers

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U.S. Ag Groups Raise China Trade Status Concerns

A coalition of agricultural organizations is raising concerns about the potential negative impact to US farmers of removing China’s Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) status, which the US Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party is considering recommending to Congress. A letter sent to the select committee was led by Farmers for Free Trade, which counts many of the nation’s leading agricultural organizations as members. The coalition letter pointed out that in 2022, the United States exported $38.1 billion in food and agricultural products to China, a 22-fold increase since China gained PNTR status in 2000.

China's Soft Red Winter Purchases: The Right Wheat at the Right Time

The purchase by China of 1.12 million metric tons (MMT) of U.S. soft red winter (SRW) wheat for delivery in 2023/24 between Dec. 4 and 8 is a significant and, in terms of its volume, somewhat unexpected factor in the current market. The buyers clearly took advantage of a price opportunity, yet there are other influencing factors behind this buying surge to consider. China is in a wheat-buying phase driven in part by reported damage to its 2023 crop from rain at harvest. USDA expects China to exceed its WTO-agreed 9.6 MMT tariff rate quota again in 2023/24.

A Busy Year for USW Export Market Development Programs

U.S. Wheat Associates (USW) staff across the world have had quite a busy year in 2023. Blessed in 2019 with additional funding from the Agricultural Trade Promotion (ATP) program but handicapped by pandemic restrictions, our teams have been playing “catch-up” with positive results. The extra push helped USW conduct a record number of activities from trade teams and short courses to buyers’ conferences and board teams in 2023.

Idaho Farmland Protection Proposal Includes Property Tax Break

A farmland-preservation bill expected to be introduced during the 2024 Idaho legislative session will include a reworked incentive. "Agricultural protection" areas remain the proposal’s cornerstone. The new draft replaces a fund to incentivize protection areas with a property tax break. It also requires participating landowners to keep land in preserved status for a while after applying to end the designation. Farmland preservation “is going to be one of our top priorities, to see the bill through the session and offer an additional land conservation or preservation opportunity for interested landowners,” said Braden Jensen, Idaho Farm Bureau Federation governmental affairs director.

'Highly Irregular': Legal Experts Weigh in on Leaked Snake River Dam Package

There's nothing in the secret commitments the U.S. government made to plaintiffs in the case involving management of the four lower Snake River dams that anybody could sue over, according to a lawyer with experience in litigating similar disputes. "It sort of shows what the agencies are thinking, but there's no cause of action here," Karen Budd-Falen, an attorney in Cheyenne, Wyo., told the Capital Press. A litigant can only sue the federal government over a "final agency action." "A draft is not a final," she said.

IWC Endowed Chair Provides Fertilizer Market Review: What will 2024 Bring?

Over the last three years, fertilizer prices have been among crop producers’ top concerns.While the period from 2020-22 witnessed the sharpest increase in fertilizer costs, it is not the first time farmers have grappled with such price spikes. Other notable years include 2008 and 2011-12 when costs surged by as much as 60%. As we wrap up the 2023 crop year, we take a look at what happened during this turbulent time and how things are shaping up for 2024.

The Holidays Can Be Hard

The holiday season is a time to gather with family and friends to celebrate, but even for people surrounded by family and community, the holidays can be hard. Not all memories are joyful. Grief renews itself. Hopes and expectations are let down. Here are some things you can do to manage anxiety and depression that might creep in during the holidays from Dr. Angela Drake, a neuropsychologist at University of California Davis:

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