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Angus 62 Member

Joined: 30 Jan 2010 Posts: 123 Location: Colorado
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Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 8:13 pm Post subject: |
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| Silver is 100% right. I can think of lots of idle land that could be put into production or land that could generate much higher production if there was any money in it. In some ways the old family farms of years ago that raised hogs, chickens, milked cows etc. were more efficient then millions of acres of corn because there were a lot fewer stops between producer and consumer. The waste in todays food system in the form of transportation is tremendous.
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pointrider Member

Joined: 20 Mar 2005 Posts: 218 Location: Texas
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Posted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 11:07 pm Post subject: 2010 Agricultural Biotechnology International Conference |
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I thought some of you folks up in Canada might want to know about the 2010 Agricultural Biotechnology International Conference if you don't already know about it. It is scheduled for 12-15 SEP 2010 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, and it will feature many speakers including Graham Plastow. Ever hear of him? Here's what the conference website says about him.
"Graham Plastow
Director,
Alberta Bovine Genomics Program,
University of Alberta,
Edmonton, AB Canada
Meeting 2050 demand for animal protein
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
3:30 - 4:00 pm
Abstract: Global demand for animal products is predicted to double by 2050, yet available resources - land, water, & energy - are expected to decrease. How can genetics and genomics help satisfy this challenge?
Biography
Graham Plastow, former Chief Technology Officer of Sygen International (one of the world’s largest animal breeding companies when acquired by Genus in 2005) is Director of the Alberta Livestock Program at the University of Alberta. A pioneer of the application of genomics in livestock, he trained in Biology and Genetics at the University of Leicester. He has more than 25 years experience in the management and implementation of multidisciplinary research projects and technology transfer on an international basis. He joined Dalgety’s R&D Centre in the early 1980’s to explore the application of DNA technology in the food industry and was responsible for biotechnology research across the group as well as breakthrough R&D for the agriculture division (agchem, seed, produce, feed, and pig genetics). He was also responsible for developing a group wide food safety policy. He has led or participated in numerous international research collaborations and has held positions on boards and committees of industry and research organizations including the Roslin Institute, the Genesis Faraday Partnership (UK), and the Biotechnology Research and Development Organization in the US."
It will be interesting to know what he has in mind considering the abstract of his speech as presented on this website. Here is a link for the conference website if you would like to look around.
http://www.abic.ca/abic2010/
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pointrider Member

Joined: 20 Mar 2005 Posts: 218 Location: Texas
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Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 8:19 pm Post subject: an urban grocery store concept for the (near?) future |
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Here's part of the article. You might want to see the picture in the article and read the rest of it, so I'm including a link at the bottom.
"A concept for a grocery store that actually grows its own fruits and vegetables on site is taking the 'local' adage to an entirely new level.
The do-it-yourself grocery store concept called Agropolis combines hydroponic, aeroponic and aquaponic farming to grow vegetables without soil in an urban environment. Shoppers will come in and see all the produce growing on-site and point to what they want. Nutrients from fish in aquaculture tanks goes to feed the plants, and the whole place becomes an ecosystem. A restaurant there will also serve produce from the urban farm.
Agropolis was just presented this week at the Nordic Exceptional Trendshop 2010 conference an annual event that showcases technology taking place through September 3 in Arhus, Denmark. As conference attendee Augustus Schraven writes in Tech the Future, the concept came about as a solution to a challenge laid down by Rob Nail, a VP of corporate development at the interdisciplinary Singularity University on the NASA Ames campus.
Nail asked a team of business professionals to figure out a way to produce food locally without arable land. The diverse team consists of MBA student Robert Denning, bioinformaticist Rand Hindi, entrepreneur Anders Hvid, tech and public health expert Maggie Jack, comp-sci masters student Derek Jacoby and biotechnologist business strategist Sam Thorp. According to their site, the team would like to collaborate with NASA to put 'sensor and robotic innovations' in hydroponic systems, research genetically modified organisms that could work best in the controlled growing environment and integrate advanced lighting such as LEDs into the design."
http://news.discovery.com/tech/harvest-produce-at-the-grocery-store.html
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