Planting Seeds - Food & Farming News from CDFA

News Release – Horse Owners Urged to Check West Nile Virus Vaccine Status

http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/egov/Press_Releases/Press_Release.asp?PRnum=13-011

As the weather warms up and mosquitoes become more prevalent, California horse owners are advised to consult their veterinarian to ensure their horse’s vaccination status is current for maximum protection against West Nile Virus (WNV).

Even though the disease peaked in California a number of years ago, it remains a risk. In 2012, WNV infection was confirmed in 22 California horses, eight of which died or were euthanized. The number of detections was the highest since 2008. In addition, WNV infection was confirmed in 479 people in California, also a significant spike over recent years.

“Outbreaks of West Nile virus are still a risk for horses,” said California State Veterinarian Annette Jones. “Horse owners should contact their veterinarians as soon as possible to make sure their animals’ vaccination status is current. Vaccination will provide optimal protection against the disease.”

Signs of West Nile virus include stumbling, staggering, wobbling, weakness, muscle twitching and inability to stand. Horses contract the disease from carrier mosquitoes and are not contagious to other horses or people. Over the past 10 years, approximately 40% of horses infected with WNV died or were euthanized.

The best way to minimize the threat of West Nile Virus is to control mosquito populations and prevent exposure to them:
• Reduce or eliminate sources of stagnant or standing water that can serve as a breeding ground for mosquitoes, including old tires, buckets, wading pools and other containers.
• Stall horses during peak mosquito periods (i.e., dawn and dusk);
• Use equine-approved mosquito repellants and/or protective horse gear such as fly sheets, masks, and leg wraps;
• Place fans inside barns and stalls to maintain air movement, as mosquitoes cannot fly well in wind.

CDFA is cooperating with the California Department of Public Health to detect and respond to the disease in California. Horses provide an additional sentinel for WNV disease detection. For more information, click on http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/ahfss/Animal_Health/WNV_Info.html

 

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California and China: Growing Together

China signing ceremony 2013

Governor Brown signs an agreement on trade with Chinese government officials. Secretary Ross is behind the governor.

As we leave Beijing for Shanghai on China’s high speed rail, traveling at approximately at 180mph through vibrant countryside, it’s exciting to envision California’s future. Governor Brown is embracing that future with an agreement with six local Chinese governments to expand trade and investment opportunities, with agriculture as one of the seven priority sectors of the agreement. As the world’s ninth largest economy – California’s expanding relationship with China is all the more critical.

Our time in Beijing was exciting – showing great promise for California’s potential in the market. The agriculture delegation had opportunities to meet with several government agencies concerning market access for California’s specialty crop industry, and organic certification applications for U.S. producers. These meetings reinforced the need for the greater cooperation to expand mutually beneficial trade between our two nations. Market access for agricultural products is a very complex process. I applaud the U.S. Embassy and the USDA for their dedication, representation, and advocacy on behalf of U.S. farmers and ranchers.

We also met with representatives of the online division of one of the largest state-owned enterprises within the agricultural sector – COFCO. This online platform is China’s fastest growing business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce website and is doubling sales every year. This division focuses on selling grocery products to consumers and providing same day delivery in several cities. The dynamics of buying and selling food in Asia is changing and California needs to be part of the process. China, with its growing consumer class and younger consumer demographic, is a great place to start.

This trip is providing a fascinating look at China in several economic sectors. The similarities in issues – climate change, market access, and investment – link us more than they separate us.

China has a very prominent role in California’s future and I look forward to expanding our trade relationships in agriculture.

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Video – The never-ending work to stop invasive species

In our ongoing recognition of April as Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month, we have posted a video of Mark Hoddle of UC Riverside and his work to stop the goldspotted oak borer, a pest that threatens California’s oak groves. The UC is an essential and valuable partner for CDFA in the drive to protect California from invasive species.

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China Welcomes California!

CDFA Secretary Karen Ross in Beijing with members of the California agriculture delegation on Governor Brown's trade mission to China

CDFA Secretary Karen Ross (center) in Beijing with members of the California agriculture delegation on Governor Brown’s trade mission to China.  From left to right – Michael Gallo, Joseph Gallo Farms and member of California State Board of Food and Agriculture; Cathy Calfo, California Certified Organic Farmers; Sean Martin, Driscoll’s; Michael Rue, California Rice Commission; Chris Rosander, California Raisin Administrative Committee; Don Peracchi, DJ Farms; Melissa Poole, Paramount Farms; Julie Adams, California Almond Board; Jay Behmke, Yao Family Wines.    

Pleasant weather and clear skies welcomed Governor Brown’s delegation to Beijing – the first stop on our three-city tour of this dynamic country.

As part of the trade delegation, I am here to promote California as a place for business and to build trade relationships that expand exports of California’s food and agricultural products.

Several agricultural companies have joined me on this mission – representing the strength of California’s agricultural industry. As such, we have taken the opportunity to develop side meetings for participating delegates with business and government entities.

Our first meeting with the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Foreign Agricultural Service provided an in-depth perspective on China as a market for California products. U.S. agricultural exports have increased 37 percent over the last year. For the last seven consecutive years, agricultural exports have reached record highs. Currently, Ag exports represent 20 percent of total U.S. exports to China – one in five products exported to this market is agriculturally based. So there is great potential for California on this mission and far into the future.

We also had the opportunity to meet with the China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Foodstuffs, Native Produce and Animal By-Products (CFNA). This organization represents more than 5,500 businesses in the agricultural sector and is looking for ways to build stronger relationships with California companies. I invited CFNA to visit California to meet with California exporters and to expand trade between our two countries. It is organizations like this that can help California expand its presence in China.

Our day closed with a visit to the State Forestry Administration (SFA) to discuss market access issues related to the nursery sector as well as intellectual property protection for plant products. The SFA was pleased to welcome the California delegation and we had a very positive discussion on the issues.

Again, great trade potential exists here in China, and I look forward to assisting California’s businesses in developing new trade relationships.

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USDA proclaims April as Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month

The Asian citrus psyllid, an invasive species that threatens California.

The Asian citrus psyllid, an invasive species that threatens California.

http://www.aphis.usda.gov/newsroom/2013/04/pest_awareness_month.shtml

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) today proclaimed April as “Invasive Plant Pest and Disease Awareness Month.” All month, APHIS will highlight how invasive species can enter the United States and spread, and how the general public can take simple, specific actions to leave these hungry pests behind. Invasive pests and diseases are non-native species that cause – or are likely to cause – harm to the economy, the environment or human health.

“At its core, APHIS’ mission is protecting animal and plant health in the United States,” said Acting APHIS Administrator Kevin Shea. “This includes programs to address the invasive pests and diseases that have cost the United States billions of dollars in lost agricultural jobs, closed export markets and damaged ecosystems. It’s a huge job, and APHIS needs the help of the public to be successful.”

Devastating invasive pests and diseases – insects, disease-causing microorganisms, snails, slugs, mites, microscopic worms, weed seeds and fungal spores – often hitch rides on things people move and pack. These common pathways include passenger baggage; plants and plant parts like fruit, vegetables and bud wood; Internet-purchased plants and plant products; firewood; and outdoor gear, among many others. Fortunately, once people are aware of these risks, they can easily prevent the spread of hungry pests.

Visit the Hungry Pests website, which is available in English and Spanish, at www.HungryPests.com to view an interactive map and learn about invasive pests and diseases that are affecting or could affect individual states, and how to report them. The website’s “What You Can Do” section offers the public “Seven Ways to Leave Hungry Pests Behind.” Also, by using Facebook and Twitter links, visitors can engage on the invasive pest issue on social media.

APHIS safeguards U.S. agricultural and natural resources from risks associated with the entry, establishment or spread of agricultural pests and diseases, as well as invasive and harmful weeds. In this battle, the agency works very closely with its many partners at the federal, state, county and local levels, and at universities and nongovernmental organizations. APHIS has had many successes combatting invasive plant pests and diseases, including the eradication of the Asian longhorned beetle in Illinois, New Jersey and Islip, New York; numerous exotic fruit fly outbreaks in Florida, Texas and California; the wheat disease Karnal bunt in Texas and California; plum pox virus in Pennsylvania and Michigan; the boll weevil from all 17 cotton-producing states with the exception of Texas’ Lower Rio Grande Valley; and Khapra beetle infestations in a number of states. APHIS is also closing in on the eradication of the European grapevine moth in California.

With Agriculture Secretary Vilsack’s leadership, APHIS works tirelessly to create and sustain opportunities for America’s farmers, ranchers and producers. Each day, APHIS promotes U.S. agricultural health, regulates genetically engineered organisms, administers the Animal Welfare Act, and carries out wildlife damage management activities, all to help safeguard the nation’s agriculture, fishing and forestry industries. In the event that a pest or disease of concern is detected, APHIS implements emergency protocols and partners with affected states and other countries to quickly manage or eradicate the outbreak. To promote the health of U.S. agriculture in the international trade arena, APHIS develops and advances science-based standards with trading partners to ensure America’s agricultural exports, valued at more than $137 billion annually, are protected from unjustified restrictions.

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Governor Brown Visits CDFA

Governor Brown speaks at the California State Board of Food and Agriculture meeting at CDFA headquarters, as board president Craig McNamara and CDFA secretary Karen Ross look on.

Governor Brown speaks at the California State Board of Food and Agriculture meeting at CDFA headquarters, as board president Craig McNamara and CDFA secretary Karen Ross look on.

Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. stopped by this week at the monthly meeting of the California State Board of Agriculture, at CDFA headquarters. The board is comprised of gubernatorial appointees. The governor pointed out that he last attended a state board meeting during his first time in office roughly 35 years ago. He also expressed his appreciation for the work carried out by the board and stated his optimism about agriculture. “It’s obvious that agriculture is a big part of California’s future,” he said.

Governor Brown was introduced by former CDFA director Richard Rominger, who served during the governor’s previous terms, and current State Board president Craig McNamara, who thanked the governor for being a strong supporter of agriculture for many years.

CDFA secretary Karen Ross is accompanying Governor Brown next week on a trade mission to China. “We are the gateway to the whole Pacific,” the governor said. “And that’s the message I’ll take to China.”

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Growing California video series – “Urban Farmer”

The latest segment in the Growing California video series, a partnership with California Grown, is “Urban Farmer,” a story about a community organization working to produce food and educate young people.

 

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From the New York Times – Indiana Dairy Finds Way to Let Cows Power Trucks

Fair Oaks Farms shop

By STEVEN YACCINO

FAIR OAKS, Ind. — Here at one of the largest dairy farms in the country, electricity generated using an endless supply of manure runs the equipment to milk around 30,000 cows three times a day.

For years, the farm has used livestock waste to create enough natural gas to power 10 barns, a cheese factory, a cafe, a gift shop and a maze of child-friendly exhibits about the world of dairy, including a 4D movie theater.

All that, and Fair Oaks Farms was still using only about half of the five million pounds of cow manure it vacuumed up from its barn floors on a daily basis. It burned off the excess methane, wasted energy sacrificed to the sky.

But not anymore.

The farm is now turning the extra manure into fuel for its delivery trucks, powering 42 tractor-trailers that make daily runs to raw milk processing plants in Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee. Officials from the federal Department of Energy called the endeavor a “pacesetter” for the dairy industry, and said it was the largest natural gas fleet using agricultural waste to drive this nation’s roads.

“As long as we keep milking cows, we never run out of gas,” said Gary Corbett, chief executive of Fair Oaks, which held a ribbon-cutting event for the project this month and opened two fueling stations to the public.

“We are one user, and we’re taking two million gallons of diesel off the highway each year,” he said. “That’s a big deal.”

The switch comes at a time of nascent growth for vehicles that run on compressed natural gas in the United States, as some industries — particularly those that require long-haul trucking or repetitive routes — have started considering the advantages of cheap natural gas, close to half the price of a gallon of diesel fuel for the same amount of power.

The American Gas Association estimates there are about 1,200 natural gas fueling stations operating across the country, the vast majority of which are supplied by the same pipelines that heat houses.

But the growing market is also drawing interest from livestock farmers, landfill management companies and other industries handling methane-rich material that, if harnessed, could create a nearly endless supply of cleaner, safer, sustainable “biogas,” while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

To be sure, no one is pretending that waste-to-energy projects will become a major part of the larger natural gas vehicle market. But supporters say it could provide additional incentive to make biogas systems, which have lagged behind other sustainable energy solutions, more commercially viable.

“You’re essentially harvesting manure,” said Erin Fitzgerald, a senior vice president at the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy, who says that farmers across the country are starting to think about whether the model tried at Fair Oaks will work for them. “It’s not glamorous. It doesn’t really catch your eye like wind and solar.”

Mike McCloskey, a co-owner of Fair Oaks, said he first started looking into renewable energy options for the farm more than a decade ago, when the smell of manure, used as fertilizer on his fields, started drawing complaints from some neighbors.

Today, the farm is running sophisticated $12 million “digester” facilities that process its overabundance of manure, capturing natural gas that runs electric generators or is pumped underground to a fueling station. The leftover byproduct is still spread on the fields as fertilizer.

While Mr. Corbett would not divulge how much money the farm saves by its switch to biogas fuel, he said the gas stations had already brought in new revenue from other trucking fleets.

Dennis Smith, director of the Clean Cities program for the federal Department of Energy, said about 8,000 large-scale dairy and swine farms across the country could potentially support similar biogas recovery projects. When coupled with landfills and wastewater treatment plants, he said, there is potential to someday replace as much as 10 billion gallons of gasoline annually with renewable fuel.

Still, not everyone is convinced that the time is ripe for more manure-powered vehicles, particularly when regular natural gas remains abundant and cheap.

“The market is just not firm yet,” said Michael Boccadoro, a bioenergy consultant from California who is finishing a study of the possibility of neighboring dairies in the San Joaquin Valley sharing a single digester. “It’s all a tiny bit premature.”

That has not stopped AMP Americas, a Chicago company that partnered with Fair Oaks on the fuel project. The company plans to build 15 more natural gas stations this year, with some in Texas and the rest along two major Interstates in the Midwest.

For now, each station will be supplied primarily by traditional pipeline gas, but the company plans to partner with more dairy companies along the way, getting help from Mr. McCloskey and the Fair Oaks story.

“I think the whole country is ready for this,” Mr. McCloskey said. “I think you’re going to look around in five years and be very surprised at what you see.”

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News Release – State Board to Discuss Agricultural Outlook with State and Federal Leaders

http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/egov/Press_Releases/Press_Release.asp?PRnum=13-010

The California State Board of Food and Agriculture will discuss the economic, trade, and policy outlook for California’s $43.5 billion agricultural sector on Tuesday, April 2nd in Sacramento. The meeting is scheduled from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at the California Department of Food and Agriculture, 1220 N Street – Main Auditorium, Sacramento, CA 95814.

“California’s agricultural production and exports are at an all time high,” said CDFA Secretary Karen Ross. “However, changes within the global and domestic markets can have a significant impact on the future prospects of our farmers and ranchers. It is an important and timely discussion to have as the federal budget and the farm bill remain unresolved.”

California has more than 81,500 individual farms, 75 percent of which are on less than 100 acres. The state leads the nation in dairy, tree-nut, and fresh fruit and vegetable production. In addition, California agriculture employs an average of 385,300 individuals per year. California’s agricultural economy is vital not only to the economy of the state, but too the nation as well.

Invited speakers include: Ambassador Islam Siddiqui, Chief Agricultural Negotiator, Office of the United States Trade Representative; Assemblymember Susan Talamantes Eggman (D-Stockton), Chair of the Assembly Committee on Agriculture; Vernon Crowder, senior vice president and agricultural economist for Rabobank’s Food & Agribusiness Research and Advisory Group; Richard Rominger, former USDA deputy secretary and CDFA director; and Sue Sigler, California Association of Food Banks.

“California’s long term agricultural outlook is important to the state and nation,” said Craig McNamara, President of the California State Board of Food and Agriculture. “How we position ourselves globally, respond to consumer expectations, and adjust to changing dynamics in the water and labor arena are essential for our industry.”

The California State Board of Food and Agriculture advises the governor and the CDFA secretary on agricultural issues and consumer needs. The state board conducts forums that bring together local, state and federal government officials, agricultural representative and citizens to discuss current issues of concern to California agriculture.

Follow the board on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/Cafood_agboard

 

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From the Associated Press – Farmers Team Up to Convert Beets to Ethanol

root vegetablehttp://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iXggnp-PGRxZUU-FhjozTvH_xdFA?docId=dc9bbff72c614d2d8ada6e51116b74ad

By GOSIA WOZNIACKA, Associated Press

FIVE POINTS, Calif. (AP) — Amid the vast almond orchards and grape fields that surround Five Points in California’s Central Valley, a once-dominant crop that has nearly disappeared from the state’s farms is making a comeback: sugar beets.

But these beets won’t be processed into sugar. A dozen farmers, supported by university experts and a $5 million state grant, are set to start construction of a Fresno County demonstration plant that will convert the beets into ethanol.

If the demo project in Five Points succeeds, the farmers will build the nation’s first commercial-scale bio-refinery in nearby Mendota to turn beets into biofuel. Europe already has more than a dozen such plants, but most ethanol in the U.S. is made from corn.

California energy officials say the beet plant is an example of expanding state investment in biofuel production and an innovative way to achieve the state’s goal of increasing alternative fuel use over the next decade.

“We’re trying to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to shift our transportation fuels to a lower carbon content,” said Robert Weisenmiller, chair of the California Energy Commission, which awarded the grant. “The beets have the potential to provide that.”

The farmers say so-called energy beets can deliver ethanol yields more than twice those of corn per acre. That’s because beets have a higher sugar content per ton than corn. And, the farmers say, the bio-refinery would bring jobs and investment to an area that’s dealing with water pumping restrictions and overly salty soils.

“This project is about rural development. It’s about bringing a better tax base to this area and bringing jobs for the people,” said John Diener, a grower who farms about 5,000 acres of diverse crops in Five Points and whose ranch will house the demonstration plant.

Driven by a federal mandate to reduce dependence on foreign oil, America’s ethanol industry has boomed over the past decade. Plants in 28 states now produce more than 13 billion gallons of ethanol each year, according to Geoff Cooper, vice president for research and analysis for the Renewable Fuels Association. Today, nearly all the gasoline sold in the U.S. contains the biofuel, generally at the 10 percent level.

About 95 percent of U.S. ethanol is made from corn, Cooper said. But that percentage could soon change because the Renewable Fuel Standard, established by Congress in 2005 and later expanded, caps the amount of ethanol produced from corn at 15 billion gallons.

Dozens of non-corn ethanol plants are now being developed and constructed throughout the country, experts say. Other California projects involve producing biofuels from food processing wastes, remains from field crops and manure from the dairy and poultry industries. Across the U.S., plants are looking at converting wheat straw, municipal waste and wood pulp into biofuel.

In central California, the bio-refinery would resurrect a crop that has nearly vanished. The birthplace of the sugar beet industry, California once grew over 330,000 acres of the gnarly root vegetable, with 11 sugar mills processing the beets. But as sugar prices collapsed, the mills shut down. Only one remains in the Imperial Valley.

When the last local mill in Mendota closed in 2008, farmers formed a cooperative and tried — unsuccessfully — to buy it back.

“We were left with a choice: Are we going to build our own sugar mill, which is expensive, or come up with something else?” said William Pucheu, a farmer from Tranquility who is part of the cooperative.

The farmers flew twice to Europe to tour beet-based biofuel facilities. This month, Mendota Bioenergy LLC — the company formed by the cooperative — received a grant to build the demo plant, which will turn about 250 acres of beets into 285,000 gallons of ethanol per year.

If it’s successful, a commercial bio-refinery would be built in Mendota, capable of producing 40 million gallons of ethanol annually. The bio-refinery, to debut in 2016, would put a total of about 80 beet growers and 35,000 acres back into production.

Both the demo plant and the commercial plant would run year-round and use beets grown by local farmers. The plants will also burn almond prunings and other wood waste to generate electricity for internal use and will convert some of those prunings into ethanol. They will process waste pulp from the beets to produce biomethane for compressed natural gas, and will produce fertilizer and recycle water for irrigation.

To area farmers, the beets are an ideal crop: they grow in poor and salty soils, and can use lesser-quality water, said Frank DelTesta, a third generation farmer who used to grow 150 acres of beets in Tranquility and is now growing some for the demo plant.

“Everybody liked growing beets, because they grew well here,” DelTesta said. “My family has been growing beets for generations and not having that crop in our rotation has affected the yields for other crops like cotton.”

And it’s not just farmers who would benefit, said project manager Jim Tischer. The group’s projections show the bio-refinery would create about 100 long-term jobs, as well as 150 seasonal agricultural jobs. It would lead to millions of dollars of local economic activity and generate taxes — a boon to Mendota, Tischer said, a town of 11,000 with one of the highest unemployment rates in the state.

The beet project comes at a time when the Midwest drought has reduced corn’s availability, leading nearly three dozen corn ethanol plants to halt production. At the same time, there are plenty of stockpiles of ethanol, experts say, because Americans are driving less and buying more fuel-efficient cars.

But the beet farmers say they aren’t worried, because ethanol is cheaper than regular gasoline.

“As times goes by, customers will start buying more of it,” Diener said, “because at the end of the day, it’s a cost saving deal and others are motivated by the ethics of the green energy business.”

Copyright © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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