Non User

Forest Industry News Forestry Logging Lumber Sawmill Equipment.
 
B2B Agriculture
Cattle Industry
Horses/Ponies
Pork Industry
Poultry Farming
Biotechnology
Fish Farming
Ovine/Caprine
Forest Industry
Ag Chemicals
Environment
Ag Equipment
Corn Industry
Wheat Trade
Rice Farming
Soybean Industry
Financial
Tobacco Farming
Cotton/Cottonseed
Vegetable Farming
Fruit Industry
Animal Feeds
Food/Beverage
USDA Resources
Page 5 of 8First | Previous [ 4 5 6 7 8 ] Next | Last

37. Kenya: Erratic Weather Could Dent Coffee Gains
The anticipated fall in volumes has increased demand for Kenyan coffee, pushing auction prices to as high as $200 for a 50kg bag of high quality coffee. According to Mr Wahome, heavy rains early in the year caused poor flowering since coffee requires periods of no moisture during the early stages of flowering. He said the most critical stage of flowering are the months of April and May when the crop requires a lot of rain for rapid growth of the young flowers. Changes in weather patterns...
Source14 hours ago

38. Home Depot Inc. still building on solid foundation
It remains financially strong with plenty of cash and excellent longer-term growth prospects, but the current industrywide problems can't be ignored. Some of its more volatile holdings were hammered hard, an indication that an aggressive strategy of seeking value and holding on tightly can have pitfalls. The Home Improvement Research Institute predicts sales of home-repair and remodeling products will decline 1.3 percent this year and doesn't expect the housing market to improve until mid-2008.
Source20 hours ago

39. Asia to bear the brunt of climate change
Today's Top Stories Asia to bear the brunt of climate change London - Global warming could reverse decades of social and economic progress across Asia, where food shortages loom and more than half the continent's 4 billion people live along vulnerable coasts, a new report issued by Oxfam and Greenpeace warned Monday. Today's Top Stories Asia to bear the brunt of climate change London - Global warming could reverse decades of social and economic progress across Asia, where food shortages...
Source5 hours ago

40. Documentary about Longview Farm family could be twice as good at twice ...
Owner of the world s biggest lumber company in the early 1900s, Long spent his estate on philanthropy, here and in the company town he created near Kelso, Wash. With millions of Midwesterners putting up homes of wood, he buys 250,000 acres of pine in Louisiana, picks it clean, converts it into 61 lumberyards, erects a Beaux-Arts skyscraper in downtown Kansas City and occupies the area s first million-dollar home (70-room Corinthian Hall, now home to the Kansas City Museum) Seeking his...
Source11/16/2007

41. Palm oil producers try to green image
The roundtable on sustainable palm oil production in Kuala Lumpur this week is set to implement minimum environmental practice criteria aimed at producing a new green-friendly product and turning around the product's tarnished image, much as tuna producers did more than a decade ago. The roundtable on sustainable palm oil production in Kuala Lumpur this week is set to implement minimum environmental practice criteria aimed at producing a new green-friendly product and turning around the...
Source15 hours ago

42. Brian Fallow: Bali meeting looks to Kyoto's successor
How daunting their task is, and how much New Zealand has at stake, is apparent from a book to be published this week, Towards a New Climate Treaty: Looking Beyond 2012, edited by Jonathan Boston of Victoria University of Wellington's Institute of Policy Studies. Even before the Kyoto Protocol comes into effect in the new year, the world will gather in Bali next month to see if it can muster the political will to begin negotiations on a successor treaty. How daunting their task is, and how...
Source5 hours ago

43. UWO to honor 'dedicated' and 'eccentric' professor
Olsen grew up in Shorewood, a suburb of Milwaukee, where he said in an auto-biographical account that he experienced poverty, homelessness and crime on a daily basis. The Advance Titan does not actively monitor the content of these posts and does not claim to have control over what gets posted. Throughout his professional career, he interviewed approximately 5,000 people and traveled to over 30 countries, including several underdeveloped nations. Kevin Demars, a graduate student who was...
Source

44. In New Delhi, it's man vs. monkey
While publicly lamenting the accident, the mayor's office fought off criticism for failing to remove the aggressive troops of monkeys that coexist uneasily alongside humans. N EW DELHI The authorities managed to do very little about the city's soaring wild monkey population until the deputy mayor toppled from his terrace to his death as he tried to fend off a gang of the animals. As Delhi expands, with half a million new residents moving in every year, the green areas in and around the...
Source16 hours ago

45. Confronting the Global Timber Barons
Alexander von Bismarck, executive director of the Environmental Investigation Agency in Washington, DC, explained in mid-November that the alliance had just successfully rebuffed efforts in a House subcommittee to gut the legislation, but he emphasized that continued public support is critical. Father Andres is part of a grassroots environmental movement thats trying to stop criminal deforestation, and the local timber barons have already killed some of his friends. Alexander von Bismarck,...
Source14 hours ago

Page 5 of 8First | Previous [ 4 5 6 7 8 ] Next | Last

 
Archive [1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20] days ago 
 


Non User