- K-State Agricultural Events Calendar
- Best of Modern Ag on Display at Farm Show
- Nebraska Soybean Board Promotes US Beef, Pork in Japan Events
- UNL Agronomy and Horticulture Department 100 years old
- Neb. Game and Parks Commission OKs reorganization
- Several animal births at Nebraska State Fair
- CCC Rates Announced for September
- Pioneer Expanding IMPACT Program
- Turning Up Heat on Corn-Based Plastics
- Poultry Research Findings Reported
- Call Issued for New Pathogen Testing Regulations
- R-CALF CEO Defends Invitation
- Change Possible After November Voting
- USDA Takes Steps to Authorize RR Sugarbeets
- House Committee Hearing on Food Safety Scheduled
- Loans Benefit Electric Consumers
- Rural Development Funds Released
- USDA Announces Next Steps on Sugar Beets
- Temple Grandin Winner Off Screen
- Covert Veal Production Footage Released
- NCBA at Odds With Partnership
- Call Made for Continued Use of Antibiotics
- Organic Price Election Programs Announced
- Vilsack Responds to ERS Reports
- ERS Predicts Higher 2010 Farm Income
- Agriculture Helps Keep Unemployment Rates Low
- Water Management Summit in Gothenburg September 23
- Recipients of Rural Business Enterprise grants announced
- Ethanol Production, Demand Set Highs
Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack said Monday the U.S. will shift its emphasis in the fight against global hunger from giving emergency aid - to helping countries produce more of their own food. Vilsack told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs the U.S. will focus on providing expertise and training to boost agricultural productivity abroad under the new approach. He says developing nations may also be able to produce more food for trade - which will help improve the global economy.
Vilsack says this new approach is a more comprehensive view of food security that focuses on the notion that the country wants to make food more available and accessible - and also make sure it’s properly used. The Secretary didn’t provide details on how the approach would be funded - but said he and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton plan to meet 28 African ag ministers in the coming months to discuss the approach.
The Chicago Council on Global Affairs says the U.S. is the world’s largest donor of emergency food aid - mainly American crops - but spends 20 times as much on food aid to Africa as it spends on programs that could boost African food production. Spending on African farming projects was reduced to 60-million dollars in 2006 from 400-million dollars in the 1980s. President Obama has said his administration will ask Congress to double funding for ag development aid to one-billion dollars by next year.
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