Home Fertilizer innovation challenges announced at Virginia farm
News

Fertilizer innovation challenges announced at Virginia farm

Contributors
farm
(© flownaksala – stock.adobe.com)

A future with better crop yields and enhanced environmental stewardship may be realized sooner than later, as the nation’s innovative agriculturalists step up to embrace the challenge.

Farmers, students and representatives from national and statewide agricultural organizations gathered—masked and socially distanced—at Creamfield Farms in Hanover County on Aug. 26 to learn about two programs intended to accelerate the use and development of fertilizer technologies.

The Environmental and Agronomic Challenge aims to identify existing Enhanced Efficiency Fertilizers that meet or exceed environmental and agro-economic criteria. Competitors are tasked with creating EEFs that control fertilizer release to reduce nutrient losses to the environment. Winners will receive scientific evaluation from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The Next Gen Fertilizer Innovations Challenge aims to generate new methods of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizer application. Competitors are challenged with finding solutions to addressing environmental concerns while simultaneously maintaining or increasing crop yields using nitrogen and phosphorus. Each winner will be awarded $10,000.

The competitions are sponsored by USDA, EPA, The Fertilizer Institute, the International Fertilizer Development Center, the National Corn Growers Association and The Nature Conservancy.

EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said the innovations will have an impact on food production and environmental protection—not just at home, but globally. “The agricultural practices we implement in the United States are implemented around the world, and we set the gold standard for environmental protection and agricultural practices,” he said.

Essex County grain farmer Scott Mundie, a Virginia Farm Bureau Federation member who spoke at the event, said he grew up on a row crop and cattle farm that eventually transitioned from conventional tillage to no-till and minimum tillage.

“Change is intimidating and expensive,” Mundie told the group. “Virginia farmers, like me, have continued to adopt and implement an increasing number of conservation practices that protect our natural resources by promoting soil health, conserving water, enhancing wildlife and efficiently utilizing nutrients. For decades, farmers have pushed the boundaries of innovation by investing in agricultural research and adopting practices with the goal of improving productivity while enhancing sustainability.”

Ongoing advocacy, developments in precision agriculture and funding for state and federal cost-share programs will advance those goals, he said.

Entries for the Environmental and Agronomic Challenge will be accepted through Oct. 30, and entries for the Next Gen Fertilizer Innovations Challenge will be accepted through Nov. 30. Winners will be announced in early 2021. For more information or to register, visit  epa.gov/innovation/next-gen-fertilizer-challenges.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

staunton
Local

Staunton: Police ID suspect in shots fired incident near Gypsy Hill Park

derek dooley uva football
Football, Politics, U.S. & World

Former UVA Football walk-on is a long shot in the Georgia GOP U.S. Senate run-off

Former UVA Football walk-on Derek Dooley rallied to clinch a spot in the June 16 run-off for the Republican nomination for Jon Ossoff’s U.S. Senate seat from Georgia, but per the latest polling data, he’ll need to pull off another comeback to win the primary.

homeless shelter food line buffet soup food insecurity
Politics, U.S. & World

State AGs win injunction to block Trump effort to keep people hungry over politics

A coalition of state AGs that includes Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones has won a preliminary injunction blocking the Trump regime’s attempt to block states from getting USDA grants for their SNAP and WIC programs over MAGA politics.

interstate 81 i-81
Local

Staunton: VDOT announces Interstate 81 closure overnight Saturday

uva baseball chris pollard
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Ranking prep recruiting, transfer portal pick-ups, assessing needs

FIFA world cup 2026 soccer
Etc.

Two former UVA Soccer stars set to compete in the 2026 World Cup

drought update
Virginia

Yes, Virginia, still in a drought: 7.5 inches of rain behind, with summer heat upon us