Even as the trade war heats up, and soybeans could be on the front lines once again, the reality is U.S. farmers aren’t shipping as many soybeans to China as they did in 2018.
The American Soybean Association is concerned about how trade retaliation will impact farmer viability. Director of ...
China's retaliation on Friday against new U.S. tariffs is poised to accelerate Beijing's move towards alternative suppliers ...
Indigenous protests and poor roads have disrupted shipping of Brazil's bumper soybean crop in recent days via the river port ...
Rotating cereal rye and winter wheat into fields of corn and soy reduces fertilizer loss by 50% in Illinois, without ...
Farley Center is one of many organizations home to Latin American and Hmong farmers who associate the variety of vegetables ...
To continue to leave soybean farmers out of conversations and credits is to lose a strong contributor to the economic boon ...
Not only is USDA releasing its first survey-based acreage report of the year, but it’s the week President Trump is set to ...
The Soy Transportation Coalition (STC ... We would like to get some additional precipitation, not only for farm ground to help replenish and recharge the soil, but also for water levels on our rivers.
There's one resounding truth that farmers can hold on to when they are battling incessant commodity market volatility and seasonal risks.
and that retaliatory tariffs — like those that China imposed on farm products like chicken, pork and soybeans — harm their industries. But they also know that publicly opposing this ...