Friday, June 17, 2022 CapitalPress.com 7 Cover crop seed demand rises; competitors squeeze supply By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SCIO, Ore. — Fierce competition for acreage in Oregon’s Willamette Val- ley is limiting the supply of cover crop seed just as demand is increasing. Seed growers haven’t planted as many acres of cover crops, including clo- ver and radish, due to expec- tations of higher returns for wheat and grass seed, said Jerry Hall, president of GO Seed in Salem, Ore. “A lot of the shortage is market-driven,” he said. Clover and other legumes fi x nitrogen, helping farmers reduce fertilizer expenses, while cover crops generally improve soil health, poten- tially decreasing the need for other farm inputs as well, experts say. Meanwhile, the USDA aims to double cover crop plantings by corn and soy- bean farmers to 30 million acres in less than a decade to reduce erosion and sequester carbon. “Where’s the seed going to come from?” wonders Gary Weaver, owner of Weaver Seed of Oregon near Scio, Ore. “We won’t have a problem producing it if the price is right.” Because cover crops are typically planted for agro- nomic reasons rather than to generate revenue, prices for seed must remain cost-eff ec- tive for farmers. That constraint can pose an economic dilemma for the cover crop industry, since seed producers often need a fi nancial incentive to expand their acreage. “How do we keep that seed aff ordable for the farmer on the other side?” Hall asked. “It’s a balancing act to keep it aff ordable.” In Oregon’s Willamette Valley, a popular seed pro- duction area, the acreage of cover crops grown for seed has plunged about 50% since last year due to competition, Weaver said. “There’s going to be short- ages for the next few years as long as this wheat price stays up,” Weaver said. “You can’t blame the farmers.” In light of soaring prices for competing commodi- ties, as well as fuel and fer- tilizer, the outlook for cover crop seeds is tough to pre- dict, he said. Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Chad Weaver, left, and Gary Weaver examine a fi eld of kale grown for seed at their company, Weaver Seed of Oregon near Scio, Ore. “We don’t know where it’s going,” Weaver said. Based on the drop in Ore- gon’s acreage, a seed short- age is likely looming in the near term, he said. At the same time, the pop- ularity of cover crops is tak- ing off , Weaver said. One of the company’s seed dealers expects sales to climb 20% this year. “The innovators have done their job,” Weaver said. “The neighbors are looking over the fence.” The USDA is promoting the conservation benefi ts of cover crops by off ering farm- ers reduced insurance premi- ums and other incentives to plant them. However, the USDA can further help farmers by advising which cover crop varieties will perform well under their growing condi- tions, Hall said. Currently, the agency doesn’t make such recom- mendations to avoid being perceived as a “shill” for any particular producers, but site-appropriate seed is key in helping cover crops suc- ceed, he said. One possible solution would be a national cover crop testing program to examine how diff erent vari- eties perform across agricul- tural regions, Hall said. “We need to get more information to the farmer.” Competition from other crops isn’t the only factor aff ecting the seed supply. Production is also dependent on specialized seed-cleaning equipment for cover crops, he said. “It’s more than just replacing the screens.” Historically, seed produc- ers have often been reluctant to make the additional invest- ments, Hall said. “Apparently, we’re not as good at hyping cover crops as we are hemp,” he joked. Seed producers also bene- fi t agronomically from grow- ing cover crop seed, since they can suppress weeds, Hall said. Less herbicide spraying and soil tillage means fewer passes over the fi eld, cutting fuel usage as well. “If we add to the rotation, instead of doing grass after Minnesota farmer takes over U.S. Wheat leadership role OCEAN SHIPPING REFORM ACT OF 2022 maybe $11 a bushel, and you may come out with $5. It just depends on the qual- Rhonda Larson started ity of your wheat.” farming “as soon as I could In Larson’s area, farm- reach the pedals,” she said ers raise a lot of sugar beets, with a laugh. with wheat acreage in direct An East Grand Forks, alignment, she said. Minn., wheat farmer, Lar- “Wheat is wonderful for son recently took over as the ground, and it makes chairperson of the U.S. great ground for other Wheat Associates board of crops,” she said. “So you directors. She will serve a want to plant it, but ... it has one-year term. to be economically feasible She replaces Grass Val- that it’s going to be worth ley, Ore., farmer it.” Darren Padget, who Larson wants to served an extended, keep wheat “on the two-year term due forefront” for the to the COVID-19 public. pandemic. Padget is “I think a lot of now past chairman. people don’t under- U.S. Wheat is stand that food the overseas mar- comes from ... the Rhonda keting arm for the ground, and farmers Larson industry. Larson raise it,” she said. said she wants to ensure “I think the pandemic has wheat remains profi table for put a little more emphasis farmers. on food and where it comes “I’d like to keep wheat from, but I still think there’s as a good, viable crop for a disconnect between farmers,” she told the Cap- the grocery store and the ital Press. “Yes, the price is farmer. I think a lot of peo- there right now, and we can ple think your food comes make some money, but we from the grocery store, and all know it ebbs and fl ows. not from us.” When it goes down, people She also wants to empha- can’t aff ord to plant it.” size that farmers are stew- Larson called for better ards of the land. wheat quality, noting farm- “The ground is our big- ers are subject to discounts gest asset, so we are very, for sprout damage, low fall- very concerned about tak- ing number tests, test weight ing care of (it) and making and protein level. sure it’s there for the next “All of that aff ects your generation to farm,” she bottom line,” she said. “You said. might go in there and think Larson raises wheat, you’re going to get, now, soybeans and sugar beets on By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Getty Images Congress passed the Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 2022 on Monday. Congress passes ocean shipping reform bill By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congress on Monday passed the Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 2022, a bill that aims to ease longstanding sup- ply chain problems and port disruptions. The House passed the bill, 369-42. The bill had already passed the Senate in late March. President Biden was expected to sign the bill into law on Thursday. The White House recently released a video featuring Biden talking with retail CEOs and calling on the House to pass the bill. The legislation will broaden the powers of the Federal Maritime Commis- sion, giving it authority to investigate late fees charged by carriers and prohibit ocean carriers and marine terminals from refusing to fi ll available cargo space. Agricultural indus- try leaders say the act will empower the Federal Mar- itime Commission to crack down on excessive fees charged by carriers and ensure ranchers and farmers are treated fairly. More than 90 agricultural and business organizations on June 10 had signed a let- ter urging Congress to pass the bill and Biden to sign it into law, and the bill’s pas- sage on June 13 was widely applauded. “Today’s actions couldn’t have come at a more needed time for the United States and the world as changes from the Ocean Shipping Reform Act will enable more U.S. agricultural prod- ucts to reach the global mar- ketplace,” Ted McKinney, CEO of the National Asso- ciation of State Departments of Agriculture, said in a statement. The measure, McKinney said, will help maintain “fair ocean carrier practices” and lessen undue burdens on the food system. grass after grass, we’re going to clean up those fi elds,” he said. While legumes fi x nitro- gen, cover crops like rad- ish can alleviate fertilizer expenses by “scavenging” nutrients that would other- wise leach into the ground, said Chad Weaver, general manager of Weaver Seed. As the plant decays, those nutrients then become available for the next sea- son’s crop, he said. “You’re going to buy less commercial fertilizer.” In areas with scarce water or declining aquifers, cover crops help retain moisture by reducing runoff and increas- ing absorption, Chad Weaver said. Evaporation is also decreased compared to bare ground. “The sun’s not beating down on the soil,” he said. “It keeps it cooler.” Boosting benefi cial insects and microbes while fully reaping other rewards typically takes about three to fi ve years of planting cover crops, Chad Weaver said. “You’re basically building the project,” he said. “It’s got to be consecutive years and sticking to that program.” “I was pleased to team up with President Biden to urge passage and look for- ward to him quickly signing the Ocean Shipping Reform Act into law so farmers and ranchers can continue to meet the needs of families in America and overseas,” American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall said in a statement. The Agriculture Trans- portation Coalition, a group representing agriculture exporters in U.S. transporta- tion policy, called the bill’s passage “great news” and a “big step forward.” The measure was spon- sored by Sens. Amy Klo- buchar, D-Minn., and John Thune, R-S.D., and Reps. John Garamendi, D-Calif., and Dusty Johnson, R-S.D. Experts say the legisla- tion will be the largest over- haul of shipping regulations since 1998. her father’s 3,000-acre farm with her brothers and her son, 38. Larson said she loves the smell of the dirt as she farms. “I love sitting up on top of the grain drill and fi lling it, it’s sunset and it’s beau- tiful and it’s still,” she said. “And then your neighbors — farm people are diff er- ent. You’ve got neighbors who will come running whenever you need them.” Larson was encour- aged by former U.S. Wheat senior adviser Jim Frahm to go through the leadership positions at the organization as she ended a term on the board representing Minne- sota farmers. “He said it was his last meeting because he was retiring, and I said, ‘Well this is my last meeting, too, because I’m going to go off the board, too,’” she recalled. “And he said, ‘No you’re not, you should go through the chairs.’ And I thought, ‘Well, maybe I should.’” At the end of her term, Larson most hopes to have kept wheat on the radar for farmers. “It has to be economi- cally feasible to plant,” she said. Larson began her term during the U.S. Wheat meet- ing June 8 in Bend, Ore. Michael Peters of Okarche, Okla., is vice chairman. Clark Hamilton of Ririe, Idaho, is secretary-treasurer. Join us! 46th Annual WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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