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“We Must Secure America’s Future in Agriculture” Braun Releases Report on Aging Farmers

 U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging Ranking Member Mike Braun released a report entitled, “Feeding the Future,” which examines the challenges that older farmers are facing and provides recommendations to Congress and the Administration to secure America’s future in agriculture.

Farmers are the oldest workforce in America. 40% of the nation’s farmland is owned by farmers 65 and older. As these farmers retire over the next 20 years, it is expected that around 350 million acres of farmland will change hands, so it’s a priority that we safeguard our agricultural lands and food supply.

In March, Senator Braun introduced the Protecting America’s Agricultural Land from Foreign Harm Act of 2023. This bipartisan legislation would stop America’s top foreign adversaries (Iran, North Korea, China, and Russia) from purchasing U.S. farmland and was highlighted in a recent Senate Agriculture Committee hearing

To ensure America’s future in agriculture, the report identifies that Congress and the federal government must adopt policies that:

  1. Proactively attract and retain farmers
  2. Increase agriculture innovation
  3. Streamline regulations and protect domestic agriculture

Read the full report here.

“I think we need to come up with policies that encourage people to get into farming so that you can’t only do it by being of the heritage of it in the U.S., especially in policies that try to keep family farms going from generation to generation,” Braun said in an interview with Agri-Pulse.

Source : senate.gov

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Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties

Video: Developing disease resistance in new wheat varieties


Dr. Colin Hiebert, research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada – Morden, is focused on developing new tools that wheat breeders can use to improve, diversify and strengthen disease resistance in new wheat varieties. This includes new genomic tools that address resistance to five diseases including: Fusarium head blight, leaf rust, stripe rust, stem rust and common bunt.

Learn more about how research conducted at AAFC-Morden will impact wheat variety development, production and profitability for the future. This research is part of the Canadian National Wheat Cluster and funding is provided through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Alberta Grains, Sask Wheat, Manitoba Crop Alliance, Western Grains Research Foundation and Canadian Field Crop Research Alliance.