The Organic & Non-GMO Report Newsletter
Croatia to build country’s first non-GMO soybean processing plant
Croatia’s first non-GMO soybean processing plant is being built in Vukovar-Srijem County in the eastern part of the country. Croatia’s soybean producers recently attended a presentation about the Croatian Centre for GMO-free soybean processing. The project will cost 1.4 million kuna ($225,876). The facility will process 30,000 tons of Croatia’s non-GMO soybeans per year. Non-GMO […]
Read MoreLarge South Dakota organic farm faces criticism over soil erosion, poor management
A 34,000-acre organic farm in South Dakota that supplies organic grains to General Mills has been criticized for soil erosion due to tillage and failure to follow recommendations for soil conservation. In 2018, General Mills engaged in a strategic sourcing arrangement with an investment firm to transition Gunsmoke Farms near Pierre, South Dakota to organic. […]
Read MoreUSDA invests $2 million in value-added organic grains
Cornell University is leading a project to spread consumption of diverse and ancient grains in the Northeast and Midwest, funded by a $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The three-year project will develop infrastructure for organic cultivation and marketing of grains including bread wheat, naked barley, hulless oats, rye, emmer, spelt, […]
Read MoreNortheast’s leading organic soybean processor expanding operations to meet strong demand
By Joe Sylvester Boyd Station, a Pennsylvania-based processor of organic soybeans, is expanding this year with a $2.6 million grant from the state to help meet strong demand for its organic soybean oil and meal. The grant will be used to improve rail access at the company’s soybean processing facility, and allow Boyd Station to […]
Read MoreBiotech company CEO says GMO wheat needed to feed the world
The claim has been made many times, a humanitarian call that hides a profit-driven motive: genetically modified foods are needed to “feed the world.” The leaders of Monsanto said it, and other GMO proponents have said it. Now the CEO of an Argentine biotech company is saying it. Federico Trucco, the chief executive officer of Bioceres […]
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