Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Ag Today Tuesday, April 22, 2014


Fields and farm jobs dry up with California's worsening drought [National Public Radio]
…On a recent afternoon on the main drag of Orange Grove, Calif., about a dozen farm workers gather on the sidewalk in front of a mini-mart….Salvador Perez paces back and forth with his hands stuffed in the pockets of his jeans. If there is no water, there's no work, he says in Spanish. Perez was laid off when the citrus farmer he worked for ran out of water….You hear a lot of these stories up and down California's Central Valley. Everything that everyone has been warning about over the past few months is starting to happen. Workers are getting laid off as prized fruit and nut trees are going unwatered, and fields are going fallow.

California edging closer to regulating groundwater for the first time [KQED – San Francisco]
We hear a great deal about California’s reliance on its “frozen reservoir,” a reference to the (currently anemic) Sierra snowpack. We hear a lot less about the Golden State’s invisible reservoir, the water that resides in underground aquifers beneath our feet. That’s about to change. Today, state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) puts a trio of water conservation bills before her Natural Resources and Water Committee, the centerpiece of which (SB 1168) is a frontal assault on the management of California’s groundwater, which, compared to other western states, is almost unregulated….If you want to see farmers and ranchers turn ornery, make like you’re a state bureaucrat going after their water — or their right to pump as much as they need out of the ground….California is the only western state that doesn’t exercise some degree of control over its groundwater. But how much control is too much? Matt Conant, a walnut grower in Sutter County, articulated the greatest fear of many in the ag community: “I’m afraid that the state will come in and try to over-regulate groundwater and surface water,” he told me outside a recent hearing of the State Water Resources Control Board.

Editorial: Mercury News editorial: Feinstein bill risks further damage to Delta [Mercury News]
California Sen. Dianne Feinstein's willingness to do Big Ag's bidding at the expense of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta is increasingly alarming. Last week she released a revised drought bill that has environmentalists up and down the state fuming -- with good reason….We sympathize with the Central Valley farmers who provide the vast majority of the state's fruits and vegetables. The state needs to find every drop of water available for them, as long as it doesn't permanently harm the Delta. But Big Ag has a dirty little secret: Wealthy Central Valley farmers have doubled the area of profitable almond orchards in recent years to 800,000 acres, largely for export….Feinstein has a choice. She can pander to corporate farming interests who are big donors, or she can stand up for reasonable protection for the Delta to ensure safe, adequate water supplies for future generations in California -- both on farms and in cities.

Supreme Court weighs truth in labeling in fruit juice case [Sacramento Bee]
Dual marketing disputes have ripened for the California-based makers of Pom Wonderful pomegranate juice, with Supreme Court justices sounding sympathetic Monday to some company claims. In the first of two key court cases, justices seemed Monday to accept Pom Wonderful’s argument that Coca-Cola misleadingly labeled as “Pomegranate Blueberry” a product that had only an infinitesimal amount of either juice….In a legal twist, the validity of Pom Wonderful’s own marketing claims anchors a second pending case. On May 2, in arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the company will defend health claims that have been disputed by the Federal Trade Commission.

U.S. dairy insurance plan a template for reluctant livestock farmers [Reuters]
A plan in the new U.S. farm law to help dairy farmers limit losses from rising feed costs or falling milk prices may become a model in coming years for livestock producers who have resisted similar types of insurance. The plan, called the Margin Protection Program, takes a page from the popular multibillion-dollar government-backed crop insurance programs for grain, cotton and other crops. In short, MPP will create formulas to insure against loss of "revenue" rather than actual loss of animals. Cattle and hog producers have traditionally rejected government risk-management schemes because they abhor any idea of government controls….But the thrust of the 1,000-page Agricultural Act of 2014, signed into law Feb. 7, was to move away from "direct payments" toward more elaborate insurance coverage. The dairy program aims to convince not just dairy farmers but all livestock producers they can benefit as crop producers have.

U.S.-Japan Trade Deal Is Coveted—but Elusive [Wall Street Journal]
The U.S. and Japan had hoped to demonstrate the strength of their alliance with an announcement of a landmark trade agreement during President Barack Obama's visit to Tokyo. That is now uncertain, with no deal just hours before Mr. Obama's arrival….A trade deal between the two countries is crucial to the success of the broader Trans-Pacific Partnership, a U.S.-led initiative meant to eliminate tariffs among 12 economies that account for around 40% of global economic output and 30% of trade….The U.S. had hoped to conclude the trade agreement as early as last year. But after months of talks, including intensive negotiations over the past two weeks, significant differences with Japan remain on key issues, particularly U.S. access to Japanese agricultural markets. Japan wants to protect its own farm products, including rice and beef, while the U.S. is demanding full access for its agricultural goods.

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