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ASA Welcomes USDA Funding for Soybean Rust Monitoring
February 3, 2009…Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) welcomes the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) announcement to continue the Asian Soybean Rust Pest Information
Platform for Education and Extension (PIPE). ASA has been working with
USDA and Congress to secure federal funding for PIPE because the system
helps protect the U.S. soybean crop valued at more than $30 billion and
saves soybean producers millions of dollars annually.
"ASA is pleased that USDA will be providing over $750,000 in
funding for the soybean rust sentinel plot and diagnostic network in
FY09," said ASA Chairman John Hoffman, a soybean producer from Waterloo,
Iowa. "These USDA funds will be leveraged with approximately $500,000 in
federal and state checkoff investments and available state funding to
maintain a scaled-down soybean rust sentinel plot and diagnostic
network."
As a result of ASA’s successful advocacy efforts, PIPE has been
funded with more than $2 million of federal money for each of the last
four years. PIPE is a coordinated framework that 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. 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.
"While ASA is pleased that USDA will be providing this funding to
allow for a continuation of the sentinel plot system and diagnostic
network in 2009, ASA believes that an increased funding amount should be
made part of USDA’s regular budget for FY2010 and subsequent years,"
Hoffman said. "The threat and reality of soybean rust is not going to go
away, so we need a long-term funding pipeline for this important
program."
ASA strongly supported the President’s budget request last fall for
$2.3 million for soybean rust monitoring and control, and contacted
Congressional appropriations leaders for funding support. ASA efforts
included organization of a coalition of more than 50 diverse
stakeholders that urged Congress to provide funding for PIPE.
"Approval of these 2009 funds follows ASA efforts to secure continued
USDA funding for the system after Congress failed to complete and pass
an agriculture appropriations bill in the last Congress," Hoffman said.
"For 2010 and beyond, ASA is urging USDA to increase and make permanent
funding for this program."
Soybean rust was first discovered in the U.S. in 2005, and has spread
each year to key soybean producing regions. USDA’s Economic Research
Service has found that rust management due to PIPE 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. PIPE is administered by the Cooperative State Research,
Education, and Extension Service (CSREES).
"ASA’s joint efforts with USDA in preparing for and now monitoring
the advancement of soybean rust have been highly effective," Hoffman
said. "ASA commends 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."
For more information about PIPE, go to www.sbrusa.net to view the
national system of real-time soybean rust monitoring and forecasting
that is in place to help growers with prevention management decisions.
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA Chairman, (319) 290-5042, jhoffman@neotek.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at http://www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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