Blueberry industry asked to help with data program – Farm Progress

Posted: August 25, 2022 at 2:14 pm

The blueberry industry wants to get a better handle on effectiveness of efforts to increase the production, sales and value of the blueberry crop produced domestically for U.S. consumption and export markets, and the sales and value of blueberries imported to the U.S.

Participation from blueberry producers and marketers will be crucial to the data programs success, and the U.S. Highbush Blueberry Council has announced the selection of Bytecode IO as the winning vendor for the Blueberry Industry Production and Pricing Data Collection Program.

Already, the industry task force has played a crucial role in the selection process. USHBC has been working with a sample data set to start developing a model of the data capture and reporting. The second phase of work will expand on the initial sample set of data, ultimately reflecting a supermajority of blueberry volume, both imported and produced in the U.S.

Through this project, USHBC will launch a modernized data analytics platform designed with data governance in mind, which will be previewed atThe Blueberry Summitthis fall in Nashville, and fully launched on or around Dec. 1. For access to existing resources from USHBC, visit thedata and insights center.

In addition to Bytecode IO,Category Partnerswill continue to provide strategic support to the USHBC and remain a critical piece to this new managed analytics platform.

It wont be long and crops will come off, and wheat will go in. To help growers make wheat variety decisions, a vital piece of the Michigan Wheat Programs research agenda is being shared in the 10th consecutive report of high-management wheat research trials.

For more than 30 years, Michigan State University Extension has been conducting wheat performance trials, and 10 years ago, MWP provided funding and resources to include a high-management component.

To learn more about the 125 different varieties including 63 experimental lines tested across Michigan,view the 2021-22 report here.

Michigan boasts 2,017 farms with hogs and added more than $874 million to the U.S. gross domestic product, while supporting 10,513 jobs and creating more than $562 million in personal income in 2021, according to a recent report from the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC).

The report quantifies impact of state and national hog industries, and while the number of hogs in Michigan has grown, the number of farms in the state has dropped falling from 3,316 in 1997 to just over 2,000 in 2017.

According to the report, there are about 1.16 million hogs in Michigan, accounting for 1.6% of the total U.S. hog inventory.

The neweconomic reporthighlights how Americas pig farmers have made significant contributions to the U.S. economy over the past five years.

From farm to fork, the combined economic contribution from hog production and pork processing supports more than 600,000 American jobs and generates $178 billion of direct, indirect and induced sales that equate to $57 billion in value-added GDP, said Holly Cook, NPPC staff economist.

Key takeaways in the report include:

View more pork industry economic data atnppc.org.

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Blueberry industry asked to help with data program - Farm Progress

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