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USDA Provides Winning Data in Women in Data's Climate Sustainability Datathon

November 16, 2023 Stephanie Ho, USDA Office of Communications

USDA partnered for the first time with Women in Data for the non-governmental organization’s just-concluded Climate Sustainability Datathon, which is a friendly contest for people who really like to work with data.

Forestry Technology

USDA's Disaster Mapping Team Provides Data in the Most Critical Times

September 20, 2023 Terry Matlock, Public Affairs Specialist, National Agricultural Statistics Service September 20, 2023

As we observe September as National Preparedness Month, it is important to remember that being prepared is the most important thing you can do to assist in dealing with any disaster or emergency. Unfortunately, no amount of preparation will stop a natural disaster or emergency from occurring, but...

Research and Science

USDA Climate Hubs Go Global

May 22, 2023 Aleksey Minchenkov, Communications Director, Foreign Agricultural Service

For more than a decade, USDA’s Climate Hubs has been at the forefront of supporting climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts for U.S. farmers, ranchers, and forest landowners. Last week, the department significantly boosted its efforts globally, by launching the International Climate Hub.

Climate

Expanding Commodity Markets and Incorporating Indigenous Knowledge and Values into Climate Smart Agriculture

January 24, 2023 Heather Dawn Thompson, Director of the USDA Office of Tribal Relations

USDA’s Office of Tribal Relations is excited about the Department’s new investments through Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities. We’re investing a total of $3.1 billion in 141 projects. More than 20 tribes and tribal groups across the nation are partnering in many of these projects.

Climate Initiatives

Biofuels: Ready to Fly into the Future

September 13, 2021 Justin Bredlau, PhD, AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellow, Office of the Chief Scientist and William Goldner, PhD, Senior Advisor for Renewable Energy, Natural Resources, and Environment, Office of the Chief Scientist

Imagine flying from Los Angeles to the Washington, D.C. region on a plane fueled with American farm products or forestry waste. Sounds farfetched? Well, it is already becoming a reality. Thanks to U.S. production of sustainable aviation fuel, airlines can help address climate change and create rural...

Climate Energy Research and Science

ARS Scientists Tackle California Climate Woes

May 27, 2021 Scott Elliott, Agricultural Research Service Office of Communications

A team of USDA agricultural scientists in the Golden State are helping farmers make the most out of a natural resource that is becoming ever more precious – water.

Climate Research and Science

Transforming Debris into Treasure: The Long Road of Wood Product Development after Hurricane Maria

August 09, 2019 William A. Gould, Eva Holupchinski, Javier Rosario and Josh Fain, USDA Caribbean Climate Hub and the USDA Forest Service International Institute of Tropical Forestry

Extreme climate events can be devastating. However, some of their effects can be transformed into opportunities.

Forestry Climate

Big Data Shows How to Improve Profits and Help Environment

April 22, 2019 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Technology always changes the way we think and how we do things. Now, thanks to research at Michigan State University (MSU), farmers have a new tool to determine precisely where to focus their efforts… or not. The result can save them money and save the environment from excess – wasted – fertilizer.

Research and Science Technology

A New Industrial Revolution for Plastics

September 19, 2018 Kate Lewis, USDA BioPreferred Program

Remember “plastics make it possible!” – the advertisement campaign from the 1980s? There’s a new kind of plastic in town 30 years later – bioplastics.

Biotechnology

Too Hot for Coffee! Warming Temperatures in Puerto Rico Present a Challenge to Coffee Growers

May 04, 2017 William A. Gould, USDA Caribbean Climate Hub Director and Isabel K. Parés-Ramos, USDA Caribbean Climate Hub Coordinator

Climate projections indicate Puerto Rico may be warmer and drier, likely impacting one of the Island's most iconic crops. This could result in less-favorable growing conditions in the coming decades for coffee. A new study by the USDA Caribbean Climate Hub shows that if greenhouse gas emissions and...

Climate
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