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ASA Seeking USDA Help to Fund Soybean Rust Monitoring
and Early-Warning System
October 7, 2008… Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) is urgently requesting help from U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Ed Schafer in funding for 2009 the soybean
rust early warning and management system that has helped soybean farmers
manage and protect their crops. The system, known formally as the
Integrated Pest Management Pest Information Platform for Extension and
Education (ipmPIPE), was developed in 2004 between agencies at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture and the soybean industry.
"After four years as the critical early warning and management system
for soybean farmers to minimize the impact of Asian soybean rust, the
program has no funding secured for the 2009 crop year," said ASA
President John Hoffman, a soybean producer from Waterloo, Iowa. "Without
funding for the ipmPIPE system, the U.S. soybean crop, with an estimated
farm-gate value of $37 billion, will be put at risk."
The ipmPIPE has been highly effective in helping growers make
informed decisions about fungicide application. The system includes a
surveillance and monitoring network, a Web-based information management
system, criteria for deciding when to apply fungicides, predictive
modeling, and outreach. USDA’s Risk Management Agency has provided more
than $2 million in funding for this program in each of the last three
years.
"We regret that the broken Congressional appropriations process
leaves us with no option but to seek USDA funding for this critical
program," Hoffman said. "Soybean farmers have been and remain willing to
work with USDA. In each year since 2005, more than $500,000 of state and
national checkoff funding has been contributed toward this effort. But
soybean farmers cannot assume the entire responsibility and cost of this
program by themselves."
The development of the Web-based tracking and early-warning system
has greatly enhanced the ability of farmers to manage risk and avoid
unnecessary fungicide applications. USDA’s Economic Research Service has
found that rust management due to ipmPIPE saved farmers an estimated
$299 million in 2005. Surveys conducted by land grant universities
estimate a $299 million savings in 2006 and another $209 million in
2007.
"While losses due to rust have not been severe, growing conditions in
the last several years have been atypical, mainly due to drought in
Southern and Southeastern states, which inhibits the spread of rust,"
Hoffman said. "We will not be protected from soybean rust without the
tools that ipmPIPE provides."
The American Soybean Association strongly supports the continuation
of ipmPIPE. The risks are simply too great, and the costs too small, to
abandon it now. ASA is asking Secretary Schafer for his commitment to
continue this highly effective and critically important program.
"Our partnership with USDA in preparing for and now monitoring the
advancement of soybean rust has been remarkable," Hoffman said. "We
commend the Department for its early recognition of the dangers posed by
soybean rust and for the many agencies that have reached out to growers
to work together in fighting it."
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 233-9480, jhoffman@neotek.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at: www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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