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colorado

Articles: 49 results from the past year. For older articles, see advanced options.

Pumped up prices
Associated Wholesale Grocers’ lawsuit against United Potato Growers of America and two dozen other defendants has been shifted to U.S. District Court in Idaho, America’s top potato-producing state with 30 percent of the nation’s supply.
Monday, June, 17, 2013 - Associated Press - Markets

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Grocers allege potato group pumped up spud prices
A battle between grocers and potato growers has been silently hitting shoppers’ pocketbooks, according to a U.S. wholesaler accusing America’s spud farmers of driving up prices while spying on farmers with satellites and aircraft fly-overs to enforce strict limits on how many tubers they can grow.
Friday, June, 14, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Acres of alfalfa lost to winter kill
Farmers scramble to replace valuable cattle feed
Monday, June, 10, 2013 - Minnesota Public Radio News - News

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Monsanto: Modified wheat ‘isolated occurrence’
A genetically modified test strain of wheat that emerged to the surprise of an Oregon farmer was likely the result of an accident or possibly tampering, the company that developed it said June 5.
Wednesday, June, 05, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Pork industry hunts for deadly pig virus
While the U.S. imports millions of pigs each year from Canada, it imports pigs from virtually no other country, and no Canadian cases of PEDV have been confirmed. Veterinarians and epidemiologists say pigs are infected through oral means and that the virus is not airborne and does not occur spontaneously in nature.
Monday, June, 03, 2013 - Reuters - News

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Unapproved modified wheat found in Ore. field
Field workers at an eastern Oregon wheat farm were clearing acres for the bare offseason when they came across a patch of wheat that didn’t belong.
Monday, June, 03, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Hydropower from ag ditches pushed in Congress
As costs mount to repair aging water supply networks and make them more efficient in the face of recurring drought, irrigation district managers say the electricity from small hydropower projects could be sold to provide money to help cover their expenses.
Monday, June, 03, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Water supplies stressed
Groundwater resources have shrunk by 1,000 cubic kilometers since 1900 as the amount of water extracted exceeds the rate at which aquifers are recharged, according to “Groundwater depletion in the United States.”
Monday, June, 03, 2013 - Reuters - Opinion

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Japan suspends imports after modified wheat found
Japan has suspended some imports of U.S. wheat after a genetically engineered version of the grain was found on a U.S. farm.
Friday, May, 31, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Latest news
Ottawa takes a hardline approach toward U.S. meat labeling regulations, beef processing season ends, and hundreds of property owners in South Dakota could face a tax increase due to higher land classification standards.
Tuesday, May, 28, 2013 - Agweek - News

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Swine virus confirmed in Iowa, Ind. hog herds
Farms in two of the nation’s leading pork producing states have tested positive for the potentially fatal porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV), U.S. pork industry veterinarian official says.
Wednesday, May, 22, 2013 - Reuters - News

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Several groups pursuing plans
Other ag interests in the U.S. and Canada are developing similar plans for nitrogen fertilizer facilities
Monday, May, 20, 2013 - Agweek - News

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Simplot wants approval for 5 biotech potato varieties
This month, tuber processing giant J.R. Simplot Co. asked the U.S. government to approve five varieties of biotech potatoes. They’re engineered not to develop ugly black bruises — McDonald’s, which gets many of its fries from Simplot, rejects those.
Tuesday, May, 14, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Latest news
The American Meat Institute released a video tour of a pork slaughter plant hosted by Temple Grandin, Superior East entered into a joint venture with CHS, and Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed an executive order allowing over-width fertilizer application vehicles to travel at night in S.D.
Monday, May, 13, 2013 - Agweek - News

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Recent storms help some areas, hurt others
The drought’s intensity also has lessened in parts of Minnesota. The previous week, 21 percent of the state was in severe drought, the second worst of four drought categories; the rate is 16 percent now.
Monday, April, 29, 2013 - Agweek - News

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Mont. Sen. Baucus announces retirement
Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, chairman of the Finance Committee, will retire from the Senate after 36 years, becoming the sixth Senate Democrat to leave the chamber in 2014.
Friday, April, 26, 2013 - - News

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Rain eases drought for some farmers, but not all
Rain that moved across the Midwest in the past week helped ease drought conditions for some farmers, but not everyone, according to the latest drought monitor report released Thursday.
Thursday, April, 25, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Record freeze extends wheat crop damage
The coldest start ever to the wheat-growing season in Kansas and freezing weather across the southern Great Plains are compounding damage to U.S. crops already hurt by the worst drought since the 1930s.
Wednesday, April, 24, 2013 - Bloomberg - News

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Bankruptcy case dismissed
A U.S. bankruptcy court has dismissed the case of former Grafton, N.D., farmer Tom Grabanski.
Monday, April, 22, 2013 - Agweek - News

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Colo. company explores production of nitrogen fertilizer at ND ethanol plants
Colorado company Agrebon Inc. and North Dakota partners are in discussions with North Dakota’s two largest ethanol plants in Casselton and Hankinson to build small-scale nitrogen fertilizer factories on their campuses.
Friday, March, 29, 2013 - Agweek - News

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