An exchange program for youth leaders in agriculture is preparing to send eight new participants abroad for three months.
- Jon Burleson
According to experts, locking in a feed price at this time may be advisable because changes in supply and demand for soybeans could mean current low feed prices won’t be around for much longer.
LINCOLN, NEB. – A new analysis by the Nebraska Farm Bureau estimates the ongoing retaliatory tariffs imposed by countries on U.S. agricultural exports will cost Nebraska producers $943 million in lost revenues in 2019.
American drivers can begin the summer driving season with new higher blends of ethanol.
- By Brian Hoops, president and senior market analyst, Midwest Market Solutions
CORN
- Katy Moore
LINCOLN, Neb. — Trade disruptions add uncertainty to the U.S. agricultural economy. President Trump’s recent announcement to increase the tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods continues to chip away at an already fragile sector. On top of trade disputes and tariffs, the EPA has been…
WASHINGTON – In what could easily be described as “worst case” for America’s soybean growers, the Trump Administration has confirmed what the industry has feared for months: Heavier tariffs on Chinese goods are planned for Friday, May 10.
The U.S. Grains Council (USGC) strongly supports a decision announced last month by the World Trade Organization’s (WTO’s) Dispute Settlement Body determining China administered its tariff-rate quotas (TRQs) for wheat, corn and rice inconsistently with its WTO requirements.
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