Friday, April 9, 2021 CapitalPress.com 9 Big Idaho Potato Truck to hit the road again By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press The Big Idaho Potato Truck will take to the highway again this year, after last year’s national tour was cut short as COVID-19 clo- sures began. This year’s tour is tentatively slated to start July 1. “That is just in the exercise of caution to allow us time to see how the pandemic sorts out,” Idaho Potato Commission President and CEO Frank Muir said. “We are gauging the start based on that, and we will still evaluate as we get closer.” The commission will delay the Idaho Potato Commission The Big Idaho Potato Truck makes an annual promotional tour around the U.S. It’s part of a national marketing campaign to set Idaho potatoes apart from others. tour’s start further if conditions warrant, he said. Various safety protocols are to be followed at tour stops. The event lineup is not fi nal- ized. Muir said venues and event organizers have shown strong By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Wikipedia Feta cheese the economic well-being of America’s dairy farmers and jeopardize dairy processing jobs and workers throughout the supply chain who sup- port our industry. These bar- riers must be removed,” she said. Jim Mulhern, president and CEO of National Milk, said “we need USTR to con- tinue pressing our trading partners to eliminate tariff s and nontariff barriers that restrict our dairy exports. The best way to do that is by implementing new free trade agreements and enforcing existing agreements.” USTR’s 570-page report examines 65 trading part- ners and country groups, highlighting signifi cant bar- riers to U.S. trade. It can be found at: www.ustr.gov . 100 festival in Florida when the com- mission called it back March 13; Muir cited safety and well-being of fans and crew. The average full-length tour costs $700,000 to $800,000, he said. The commission last year USDA: NW wheat acres stable, more corn, soybeans nationwide EU monopolization of common food names a key focus for USTR The USDA fore- casts more corn and soy- bean acres nationwide, but expects a stable wheat crop in the Pacifi c Northwest. If growers’ intentions are realized, the agency said in its prospective plantings report, Idaho and Oregon farmers will plant the most corn on record. “Certainly stronger corn prices have helped provide support to wheat prices as has good demand,” said Glen Squires, CEO of the Washington Grain Commission. Idaho farmers are pro- jected to plant 400,000 acres of corn, up 2.6% from 390,000 acres in 2020. Oregon farmers are projected to plant 120,000 acres, up 20% from 100,000 acres in 2020. Washington corn acres are likely to decline 8.3%, from 180,000 in 2020 to 165,000 this year. The largest increases are expected in the Dako- tas, where producers intend to plant a com- bined 8.9 million acres, an increase of 2 million acres from 2020. Pro- ducers across most of the Corn Belt intend to plant fewer acres than last year, according to USDA. Soybean growers intend to plant 87.6 million acres in 2021, up 5% from last year. If realized, this will be the third highest planted acreage on record, accord- ing to the agency. Squires expects numbers will change due to demand. “There has been some good demand, particularly with China,” he said. “We hope that it continues.” In the Northwest, wheat acres are expected to remain relatively stable. Washington farmers are expected to plant 2.33 mil- lion acres, down 0.4% from amount in dryland pro- duction, it provides a good deal of continuity,” Oregon Wheat CEO Amanda Hoey said. Harvest outlook will be dependent, in part, on needed moisture, she said. “We did not have any major reports on winter kill as it was fairly mild and while the wheat looked small coming out of win- ter, we did get snowfall in much of the state thereafter and now just require those essential spring rains for fi n- ishing,” she said. 2.34 million acres in 2020. Idaho growers are pro- jected to plant 1.27 million acres, up 2.4% from 1.24 million. Oregon wheat farm- ers are expected to plant 720,000 acres, down 2.7% from 740,000 acres in 2020. “Not much change for PNW as is often the case,” Squires said. “Exact same planted wheat acres from last year. Just some reduc- tion in winter wheat off - set by increase in spring wheat.” “With such a large Best Prices on Irrigation Supplies Fast & Free Shipping from Oregon 10% OFF 1-844-259-0640 PROMO CODE: www.irrigationking.com CAP10 S232382-1 PEAK NITROGEN DEMAND 80 % NITROGEN UPTAKE The U.S. Trade Represen- tative’s offi ce on March 31 released the 2021 National Trade Estimates Report, not- ing tariff and nontariff barri- ers impacting U.S. exports of goods and services. Among its top con- cerns for agricultural trade is “restrictions on the abil- ity for U.S. producers to use the common names of prod- ucts that they produce and export.” The U.S. “remains highly troubled by the EU’s over- broad protection of geo- graphical indications, which adversely impacts both protections of U.S. trade- marks and market access for U.S. products that use common names in the EU and third-country mar- kets,” USTR said in the report. The European Union’s aggressive and growing misuse of geographic indi- cations in its trade agree- ments blocks U.S. exports of products with generic food names and wine terms, such as feta, bologna and chateau. “USTR’s recognition of GI misuse as a means of confi scating market share is an important step toward proactively addressing this problem,” Jaime Castaneda, executive director of the Consortium for Common Food Names, said in a state- ment on USTR’s report. “We are encouraged that CCFN members’ persistent work alongside the U.S. government on this issue has elevated the concerns sur- rounding GI abuse from a relatively obscure issue just a decade ago to a priority for the agency,” he said. “It is imperative that USTR and its interagency partners work to ensure com- mon names are not further restricted by the European Union’s blatant attempts at monopolizing generic terms that consumers around the world have come to know and love,” he said. The consortium contin- ues to work alongside USTR to build on the precedent set in the recent U.S.-Mexi- co-Canada Agreement nego- tiations on the inclusion of a list of common cheese names to be protected from GI restrictions in perpetu- ity. Similar proactive mea- sures are necessary to ensure that products with common names can continue to be sold around the world with- out unfair limitations. Castaneda also serves as senior vice president of trade policy for U.S. Dairy Export Council and National Milk Producers Federation, which have also raised strong con- cerns over the issue — as well as other barriers in key dairy markets such as Can- ada, China, Mexico and the EU. Several of the groups’ concerns were incorporated in USTR’s report. “Exports are extremely important to the U.S. dairy industry, which shipped more than $6.5 billion of product to destinations worldwide in 2020,” said Krysta Harden, president and CEO of U.S. Dairy Export Federation. “Obstacles to those exports negatively aff ect interest in hosting the truck, which has been missed. The fl atbed truck and its giant potato payload a decade ago began annual tours, typically from early March to early September. The truck last year was at a strawberry saved nearly $700,000, which it put into its reserve account, by stopping the tour in March. The commission this year expects to save about $300,000 by starting later, Muir said. The com- mission board March 24 voted to spend it on national advertising, including on television streaming service Hulu, web-based grocery pickup and delivery service Insta- cart, and recipes.com. 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