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Power company to purchase carbon credits from farms
COLUMBUS – American Electric Power signed an agreement June 14 with an affiliate of
CO2 pipelines to stretch across the Midwest
Investors are lining up to build carbon dioxide pipelines to carry CO2 from Midwestern ethanol plants to “sequestration” sites in North Dakota or Illinois.
$1 million lawsuit filed by Carroll County farming family over gas lease
CARROLLTON, Ohio — A Carroll County family farm has filed a $1 million lawsuit against Chesapeake Exploration and is seeking a temporary restraining order and injunction against the company. Robert, Carolyn, James L. and Bruce R. Starkey, all of Mechanicstown, filed the lawsuit June 11 against Patriot Energy, Buckeye Oil Products, Bass Energy and Chesapeake
Poison hemlock: Prolific weed chokes plants, and can kill livestock
Poison hemlock is a weed that livestock owners cannot afford to ignore because all parts of this plant including leaves, stems and roots are poisonous when ingested.
Loudenslagers carried on father’s hard work, tradition
Loudenslager brothers are two of this year’s Ohio Ag Hall of Fame inductees.
NASA shuttle carries camera to help farmers
WASHINGTON — Among the 32,000 pounds of cargo in NASA’s space shuttle Endeavour there is a camera that will help U.S. farmers and provide unique educational opportunities for students. AgCam Students and faculty at the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, built the agricultural camera, known as AgCam, that will be delivered and installed on
The carbon offset market may not be the solution we want it to be
Alan Guebert explains the challenges and effectiveness of the young, evolving, $2 billion carbon offset market.
Forest carbon market program on tap Dec. 6
Learn about the Forest Carbon Market and the benefits it has in maximizing a woodland’s value at this virtual program on Dec. 6 from 6-7:30 p.m.
Some things, you simply cannot make up
A month ago an editor friend replied to a draft copy of one of these weekly efforts with the simple email comment: “You’ve got to be kidding.” My reply assured him I wasn’t kidding because, “No one, not even me, can make this stuff up.” For example, could you make up the fact that when
Farmers need to watch for drought-induced herbicide carryover
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — This summer’s lack of rain has translated into the potential for summer-applied herbicides to carry over into winter wheat or even spring-planted corn and soybean crops — something growers need to be monitoring, two Purdue Extension weed scientists say. Factors In a normal year, soil moisture helps dissipate herbicide soil concentrations,






