logo

                  

advertisement
subscribe

advertisement

advertisement

Latest comments

  1. Re: Second annual Latinos in Agriculture forum deemed a success

    Posted on Wednesday, 22 May 2013 by Agriculture in the Black Sea Region.

    This project is for and about agriculture in countries aroung Black Sea...

  2. Re: Mastitis prevention and control: A prevention methodology

    Posted on Wednesday, 22 May 2013 by Justo Calderon.

    Great article, nice explanation, easy and interesting to reading And...

  3. Re: Documentary shows struggles of Maine co-op

    Posted on Tuesday, 21 May 2013 by David Bright.

    One correction. MOOMilk is not a co-op. It's an L3C corporation, a...

Feed

Reader favorites

  1. Participate in the 2013 Flavor Faceoff!

    5.0 of 5 stars from 6 votes.
  2. ‘Customer’ feedback: Make a good robotic milking facility great

    5.0 of 5 stars from 4 votes.
  3. Zoo study makes cow waterbeds available to moose

    5.0 of 5 stars from 3 votes.

Yevet Tenney's header

mike_gangwer

baxter_black

mechanics_corner

The Milk House

0808 PD: Progressive Events PDF Print E-mail
0 Votes
Archives - Past Articles
Monday, 19 May 2008 09:29

Alltech and its founder and president Pearse Lyons invited more than 1,700 employees, clients, reporters, researchers and nutritionists from around the world to its annual symposium in Lexington, Kentucky, in April.

During the opening session, Lyons introduced the symposium’s theme – the greenest generation.

The impact of biofuels on feed prices was a frequent discussion during the meeting. Nearly half (46 percent) of attendees said they believed production of biofuels would cause feed prices to rise by more than 30 percent, according to a straw poll conducted during one of the meeting’s general sessions. (See page 36 for more survey data).

Lyons said although some may call this the worst time to demand biofuels, in his opinion, it is the best time to respond with innovation. He detailed the company’s plans to build a closed-loop biorefinery, which will include a dairy; research biofuel production from algae; and promote dairy industry growth in the milk-deficient state of Kentucky. Inspiring young people to study science and agriculture will be crucial to fostering innovation.

“Young minds see opportunities, not problems,” Lyons said.

Speakers at this year’s symposium also focused discussion on the dairy industry. Attendees considered how milk might be the world’s new “white oil,” as demand for protein in developing countries continues to grow. During breakout sessions, domestic and international producers said for milk to become a product as valuable as oil, the worldwide dairy industry must measure not only how many liters or hundredweights of milk are produced, but what percentage of milk’s nutrients can or are turned into an eatable food product. Producers also said they will have to monitor and control the number and costs of inputs required for milk production.

Lyons closed the session by saying: “Our responsibility is to feed a hungry world and necessity is the mother of invention; we must constantly look for sustainable energy resources."  PD

By This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

0 Comments

Add Comment

 


advertisement

About Us | Subscribe | Advertise | Contribute | Contact Us | Industry Stats | Progressive Forage Grower | Progressive Cattleman

Copyright 2013 Progressive Dairyman

This site is optimized to be viewed with Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer 8 web browsers.

pp_logo_k_0910