Papa Kuhikuhi Kahiki

Kēkelē ma nā pilina ʻĀina mai ke Kulanui ʻo Istanbul Bilgi. Hoʻohana ʻo ia i nā satellite e nānā i ke kūlana o kāna hana a me kahi kikowaena pūnaewele e ana i ka mahana a me ka wela o kāna lepo. Hoʻohana ʻo ia i kēia ʻike e hoʻonui ai i nā hua. Ulu kulina, uala, ʻoliva, clover, palaoa, ka palaoa a me ka melemona ma 63 eka.

Zeinab's farm is a 100 donoms farm, growing apples, grapes and olives. She has a small food factory where apple vinegar, soup and grape products are made.

Since launching the Sakhrah Women’s Cooperative six years ago, Zeinab’s successful rural development model has attracted partnership opportunities and allowed Zeinab to expand her reach and connect with other rural female farmers to form the Female Farmers Union, the first of its kind in Jordan. Zeinab is an inspirational social pioneer who has faced a number of obstacles in support of the rights for rural women and hopes to expand her network to make a greater impact in neighboring countries

Ma hope o ka loaʻa ʻana o kahi MBA a me ka hana ʻana i ka agribusiness, hoʻi i ka ʻoihana ʻohana ma ke ʻano he puaʻa, mea hana pipi a kope. Ua hoʻokumu i kahi huahana puaʻa kuni. He mea hoʻokumu pū o FarmPage.

Michael Allen farms with his son in the North Eastern Part of South Africa in the Province of Mpumalanga. They produce corn and soya beans on 1000 hectare (ʻaneʻane 2400 eka).

ʻO nā mahiʻai i kahi hui o nā mokupuni liʻiliʻi i kapa ʻia ʻo Camotes Islands ma Cebu, Āina Pilipino. ʻO ka mahiʻai 8 hectares a hoʻolimalima lākou 25-35 hectares no ka hana ʻana i ka palaoa. Pili ka nuʻukia o ka mahiʻai i ka hoʻomohala kaiāulu a me ka manaʻo o ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka mahiʻai ma ke ʻano he mea hana e kōkua ai i nā mahiʻai ʻē aʻe e hoʻomaikaʻi i kā lākou hana e hoʻopakele ai iā lākou mai ka ʻilihune..

Alakaʻi i kahi hui mahiʻai kūloko nona ka 800 uhi nā mea hana 2500 heka o nā mea kanu, 2 growing seasons per year – grow maize, sorghum a me ka palaoa.

72 hectare farm – grows mangoes, Ê»omaÊ»omaÊ»o momona, kumulāʻau keaka. HoÊ»opukapuka pÅ« kekahi i nā mahiÊ»ai e hana 4,500 hectares o ka hana Ê»ana o ka maÊ»a a 4,000 Ê»eka o ka hānai a me nā hana pÄ«

Ma mua o 20,000 hectares i hoʻohana ʻia no ka hoʻonui hua ʻana, lāʻau avocado, hua waina, pipi bipi, palaoa, uala a me ka nahele. Ma mua o 3,000 aia ma lalo o ka hawai mīkini.

ʻO Heather Baldock a me kāna kāne ʻo Graeme e ulu i ka palaoa, barley, canola, peas a me lupins ma kahi mahiʻai ʻohana hanauna ʻekolu ma Eyre Peninsula, Nuhōlani Hema.

Luna nui o kā mākou mahiÊ»ai Ê»ohana. 100 hectares of white corn production – implementing a drying and storage system

Ua hānai Ê»ia Ê»o Knud ma kahi mahiÊ»ai Ê»ohana hanauna Ê»ehā. Ma hope o ke koleke, he started his own farm in 1987 which is a purely arable farm, based on a No-Till system. Ulu Ê»o ia i ka palaoa, barley, oat and oilseed rape. From 1990-2010, he purchased and exported ag machinery to 12 countries in Europe, ʻApelika, South and Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Now he is a freelance sales agent of No-Till machinery. At present, he is also studying the impact of agriculture on the nearby environment at a School of Applied Sciences.

Mahiai mai 1976 - hāpai i ka mahiʻai i kahi kūlana kahi i ʻike ka poʻe he nui e pili ana iā ia a makemake e kipa. Na mea kanu mala, paʻakai, ulu lāʻau ulu, ka mahiʻai a me ka mahiʻai + wahi huakaʻi. Nā Kākoʻo no ka ʻenehana laiki ʻo Saguna (SRT), ʻo ia ka mālama ʻana i ka mahiʻai e hoʻohana ana i ka mahi ʻai zero.

Jorge farms in Argentina, mainly in the Buenos Aires province, but also a little in the Cordoba and La Pampa provinces. He’s involved in a family farming operation that has been no-till since 1994 with a crop rotation that grows 14 different crops on 4,500 hectare. Some of the farmland is owned and some is leased. He works to have the soil evergreen with good agricultural practices. The farm’s goal is to reduce the use of external inputs.

The operation produces corn for seed companies and also raises forage grasses, both of those crops under irrigation. The other crops produced on dry land include barley, palaoa, peas, canola, ka palaoa a me ka soybeans. In addition to crops, the farm raises some cattle and polo horses. Jorge likes to welcome international visitors to see his farm.

He firmly believes in networking and learning from others. Jorge is a member of AAPRESID and CREA and is on the board of Sociedad Rural de Pergamino.

Involved in three farming enterprises across a total of about 5,000 hectare, growing cotton, palaoa, sorghum and chickpeas. Involved with a farmer organization to ensure timely access to agricultural biotechnology. ʻO ka mea lanakila ʻo Kleckner Award - 2008

Produces soybeans and corn, runs a cattle livestock operation and sells diesel, has trucking business.

Hoʻomaka ka pā pua rose me kona makuahine e hana i nā pua rose maloʻo maloʻo no ka ʻoihana wahine; ua hana pū kekahi ma ka palaʻai, hana pipi a hulu hipa.

Responsible for agronomy and crop rotation, nutrient management plans, is very involved in the day-to-day management. He grows winter wheat, winter and spring malting barley, winter OSR, potatoes and sugar beet.

Ulu nui aʻe ma mua o 25,000 hectares o ka soybeans, palaoa, ʻo ka eucalyptus a me ke kō i nā wahi like ʻole o Brazil. ʻEleu i nā hui mahiʻai

Mahiai mai 1985 3,000 ʻO ka mahi kanu ʻāpala ʻeka a me nā wahi ukana, 400 eka māla māla me nā lako ukana, a me kahi mea kanu hoʻomaloʻo hua. Huina limahana o 650. ʻO kekahi o nā mea hana nui a mea kūʻai aku o nā pineapa mai Ghana mai.

Guillermo is a fifth generation farmer in Tlaxcala, which is in the center of Mexico. He is an agronomist and produces maize, triticale, sunflower, and vetch and rye grass forages. He is also now in the barley business in the seed program with Heineken.
Guillermo is focused on soil conservation since Tlaxcala has the lowest organic matter percentage in the country. He promotes conservation agriculture principles of crop rotation and residue management.
On the livestock side, he has 100 Angus and braunvieh cattle on 200 hectare. The challenges Guillermo is currently facing include climate, the hard winter, the cost of fertilizers and an unsupportive government.
He is currently promoting projects with a carbon capture perspective and also innovation for small farmer systems. Guillermo leads Fundación Produce activities and projects with farmers in his state. He’s an innovator on his own farm and then shares the technologies with groups of farmers.

ʻO ka mahiʻai maikaʻi loa i hāʻawi ʻia ma ka moku ʻo Greater Accra no ka hana ʻana i ka lāpaki a me ka ʻoki (ʻiole kōlea) ʻiʻo.

Hana ʻo Gheorge ma a 55,000 mahiʻai hectare, ʻo kekahi o nā mea nui loa i loko o ʻEulopa-e hana nui i ka hoʻolaha ʻana i ka biotechnology.

Luna Nui o Bwogi Farms, mai 2015. Passionate e pili ana i nā kao a me ka hana maiʻa. Komo i ka hoʻoliʻiliʻi, ka hoʻomaʻamaʻa ʻana a me ka hoʻoulu ʻana i nā tausani i nā hana hoʻokele maikaʻi loa o ka mahiʻai. ʻO ka mea hoʻokumu a me kahi lālā kōmike hoʻokō o Uganda Goat Farmers 'Cooperative, kahi kino i manaʻo ʻia e hōʻuluʻulu i nā mahiʻai kao i mea e hoʻonui ai i ka hana.

Javier was born and raised in Nicaragua. During civil unrest in the 80's, the family migrated to Guatemala and then to the US. i 2015 he moved back to Nicaragua. He has a poultry farm that includes 13 chicken houses and an 870 acre sugar cane farm. They produce 530,000 chickens every 36-day cycle, huina kokoke 7 pōʻaiapuni / makahiki.

ʻO ka mahiʻai nāna e hoʻokele 3 mahiʻai (ʻaneʻane 2,000 eka), me ka mahiʻai a kona ʻohana. Hana i ka palaoa, pulupulu, ʻōmato, uala, beet kō, sunflower, palaoa a me nā moa. Hoʻohana i nā ʻenehana hoʻoulu hou.

Third generation farmer and rancher, veterinarian. Operates 500 head cow/calf business and 25,000 head feedlot; grows forage and grain.

He ʻenekini kīwila ʻo Jose Luis i hoʻi mai e hana ma ka mahi manu moa a kona ʻohana i nā makahiki ʻelua i hala. Aia ka mahiʻai 13 hale kauhale i hiki ke hoʻonui i nā hale ma mua o 500,000 manu i ka manawa hoʻokahi. Aia nā hoʻolālā e kūkulu i nā pono hou me nā ʻenehana ʻenehana hou aku, e hoʻohana ana i ka ikehu lā a me ka hana hoʻopōʻaiapuni i ka wai e mālama i ka ʻoihana i ʻōmaʻomaʻo e hiki.

Luna Hoʻokele Nui o UNIPRO, kahi hui o 2,000 mahiʻai. Holomua nā mahiʻai a ulu i ka nui o ka kulina melemele. ʻIke lākou i nā pono o ka biotech corn, makemake nui i ka hoʻomanawanui ʻana i ka maloʻo no ka mea he wahi maloʻo ia.

Ulu ʻo Charles 50 eka o ka maize a me 12 ʻeka o ke kofe a nānā i ka hoʻonui ʻana i ka puka / ʻeka. ʻO ia nō hoʻi kahi mea kūʻai komo a me kahi wili palaoa. Kūʻai ʻo ia i ka maize mai nā mahiʻai a wili ia e hoʻonui i ka waiwai. He poʻokela ʻo Charles o ka ʻenehana a kaulana i ka ʻāina.

Mateusz is a regenerative farmer from Poland on a mission of putting farmers at the center of climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts in a profitable way. As part of his family farm’s transition to farming with the cycles of nature rather than against them, i ka 700 hectare farm has been in permanent grassland since 2008. It produces highest-quality hay for export and domestic market.
Mateusz together with his brother Paweł set up the European Carbon Farmers, a business promoting carbon farming, developing climate finance vehicles and working on transforming agricultural policy – in particular the CAP (Common Agricultural Policy) of the European Union from action- to result-based payments centered on soil carbon maintenance and enhancement.
Mateusz is actively involved in the work of UNFCCC’s COP26 – Climate Champions, where he is the Regenerative Agriculture Fellow. He also manages the Regenerative Agriculture Program in Poland through EIT Food.

MahiÊ»ai hui - 7,918 hectares o ka palaoa hoÊ»oilo, pāheÊ»e oilseed, barley malting, bt kulina no ka silage, pua lā, Ê»umiÊ»umi, sugar beets – 650 waiÅ« pipi, 750 heifers, 600 bipi me ka hiki no 1200 120 limahana.

Brad Clark is farming with his two brothers in the Driftless region of Southwest Wisconsin amongst the river bluffs and valleys of the Mississippi and Wisconsin Rivers. The brothers farm 5,000 row crop acres growing corn, soybeans, small grains (barley, rai, palaoa), and alfalfa. They are currently milking 1,000 dairy animals and raising the young stock on-site.

ʻO Tim Couser mahiʻai me kona mau mākua ma kahi mahiʻai ʻohana ma Central Iowa kahi e mahi ai i ka palaoa, soybeans, aia, ke kulina hua a me nā ʻano soybeans me kahi hana hoʻopau pipi.

Nā mea ponoʻī 7,000 ʻeka o nā ʻāina mahi i ke Komohana Australia ma ka lihi o ka Outback. I kēia makahiki ua hoʻolimalima ʻo ia i kekahi 7,000 ʻeka no 6 makahiki. Ulu ʻo ia i ka palaoa, canola. Kākoʻo lōʻihi a me ka mea noiʻi o ka mahiʻai i ke komo ʻana i nā ʻenehana hou. Agronomist ʻoihana.

Gabriela Cruz, an agronomist engineer, is managing the farm in Elvas, Portugal that has been in her family for more than 110 years with her sister. Using conservation practices and efficient water use they are growing wheat, barley, green peas, clover, maize and biodiversed pastures for raising beef cattle and Iberian pigs in Portugal. Gabriela was recognized as the 2010 GFN Kleckner Global Farm Leader award recipient.

Ua hele mai i ka home i ka mahiʻai ʻohana ma hope o ka hoʻonaʻauao a me ka hana ma UK. ʻEnehana hoʻohui, ka mīkini a me ka hoʻokele ʻōnaehana kiʻekiʻe i ka ulu ʻana i ka kulina a me ka silage no nā dairies nui.

ʻO DonDon Farm, kahi hui o ka mahiʻai kaiaola a me ka mahiʻai kākoʻo kaiāulu, iecaianoaaiiuo a me ka mahiai hoʻokele kūlana-paipai 'Community Supported mahiʻai a me ke kanu mea kanu.

Papaya, dragon fruit, malunggay, ʻomaʻomaʻo momona, guava, jack fruit, pomegranate, mango sweet and giant, rice, palaoa, ladyfinger, maiʻa, citrus, and bamboos are grown. Produces vegetables: hot pepper, ʻōmato, palaoa, string beans, okra, eggplant, and others. Specializing in a hot pepper, the siling tingala. Click to watch bio

Mahiʻai laiki a Dimmy, soybeans, ka palaoa a me ka palaoa i ka hānai puaʻa ʻana, pipi bipi a me nā bipi waiū ma ka hema o Brazil. i 1995 he sold his farm and bought new land in Maranhão State. Ma ke ʻano he mahiʻai paionia ma ia wahi, ua hoʻohana ʻo ia i ka ʻenehana a me ka mālama ʻana e hoʻokō i nā hua kiʻekiʻe. Mahiʻai ʻo ia e pili ana 2,000 hectares a ke pili nei i kāna kaikamahine.

He kekelē laepua ʻo Yara ma ka Agronomy a me kahi Masters in Crop Production and Physiology, me kahi Masters in Management Human Resource Management. Ua hana ʻo ia ma ke ʻano he agronomist ma Brazil a laila hele i ka US e hoʻopaʻa haʻawina. Hana ʻo ia 9 mau makahiki i ka noiʻi ʻana e pili ana i nā genetics o ka mea kanu ma Hawaii. Ka hala 4 ua hoʻi ʻo ia i Brazil e mahiʻai.

Agronomist, 3,200 hectare mahiʻai me 2,600 hectares under pivot irrigation – biotech corn and soybeans, kālika, kāloti, 1100 mau bipi wahine. 650 limahana, 350 paʻa a 300 kau e ʻohiʻohi kālika.

Raised in the city but married to a farmer, Judith de Vor is now a proud dairy farmer who is working with her animals every day. Together with her husband Rick and 3 kids, as a fifth generation they continue their love for the animals and the land while raising cows. They are working in a sustainable and regenerative way – as much as possible. Their environment, the society, nature and landscape management are important parts of the way they farm. Judith is running several projects for increasing biodiversity and endangered bird species are protected at the farm. Thousands of people are being welcomed each year on the farm. From open farm days to school classes, agricultural organizations and policy makers; they all come to the farm to learn and understand farming and food production. Judith believes dialogue is very important when it comes to making true connections.

Judith is an advocate for agriculture and part of TeamAgroNL and a Nuffield farming scholar. She promotes Dutch food and farmers and speaks at several events all over the world. With a background in political science, agricultural policies has her interest. She is also an agricultural social innovator. Judith is stimulating and supporting other farmers with new ideas, leadership and personal development with special attention to mental health. She is currently working on creating a new mentoring program.

Ka mālama Ê»ana i ke kālā mahiÊ»ai, nenoaio i?, seed production – 2 nā mahiÊ»ai a pau 1600 hectares – 900 hectares o ke kulina, 700 hectares rotates into durum wheat – pivots and sprinklers for irrigation – 5 limahana + lālā o ka Ê»ohana

Ulu i nā mea kanu hybrid a me nā meaola; hōʻike i nā ʻenehana hou a me nā ʻanoʻano a hoʻoili i ka ʻenehana i nā mahiʻai. ʻO kāna mahiʻai kahi mahiʻai aʻo no ka ʻōpio a me nā mahiʻai. Hana ʻo ia me nā mea ulu hua e kōkua iā lākou e loaʻa i nā lawelawe aʻoaʻo, enehana, a hoʻohui iā lākou me nā mahiʻai ʻē aʻe e hoʻohana nei i nā hana ʻoi loa.

ʻO Richard Franke Dijkstra mahiʻai me kona ʻohana ma South Brazil kahi e ulu nei i ka soybeans, nā piʻa ʻai, palaoa, palaoa, barley, lau nahele a me nā ʻoka ʻeleʻele; 50% o ka soybeans a me ke kulina a lākou e kanu ai he GM a 100% o ka hana ʻaʻohe mahi ʻai. ʻO Richard a me kāna kaikoʻeke hoʻi e hana a 480 waiū pipi a hānai 4000 puaʻa i kēlā me kēia makahiki.

Andre grows 3,000 hectares of no-till GM soybeans and GM-hybrid corn along the border of Brazil and Paraguay. He also raises cattle in the same area during the winter season, reducing the meat carbon footprint.
He has improved the first Low Carbon Agriculture Project on his farm, working with a public bank fund and a multi-national input company provider’s support to implement and share his best practices with other producers. Best management practices and environmental responsibility are his guidance when making production decisions.
Andre is an ag leader in the State of Mato Grosso do Sul. He is president of the State Soybean Growers Association. I ka mahi ʻana i ka mahiʻai, he also consults with other producers on precision agriculture and integrated production systems.
Andre recently took part in advocacy efforts to amplify internet connectivity in rural areas.

16 hectare farm – grows cotton, palaoa, sorghum and cow pea – leader of local cotton producers cooperative.

Lili graduated from Sichuan Agricultural University with a Master’s degree in microbiology. Hana Ê»o ia no ke aupuni, a i loko 2011 ua hoÊ»oholo Ê»o ia e hoÊ»omaka i kāna mahi mahiÊ»ai ponoʻī. Māla Ê»o ia i nā mea Ê»oi aku ma mua o 800 acres of leased land – fruits, nā mea kanu, a me ka hua kanu.

Agronomist – farms 3650 hectare, 1000 ʻo lākou he ʻoliva lulu drip. ʻO ka mea nona kahi ʻoihana like e hana a kūʻai aku i kāna aila ponoʻī. Hana i ka waina mai a 100 māla waina hectare.

MahiÊ»ai 190,000 acres – 108,000 eka kulina, soybean, palaoa a me sunflower. Ê»O nā soya 100% GM, e like me 80% o ke kulina. Hāpai mākou i kā mākou keiki bipi ponoʻī a kÅ«Ê»ai i nā bipi keiki no kā mākou hānai hānai. Waiu 1,900 mau bipi wahine.

He kanaka mahiʻai ʻo Tim, educator, and agvocate. His family operates Deer Run Farm – a 30 acre
“truck” farm on Long Island, New York – where they grow leafy greens, hōʻike ʻo ia iā mākou i kāna mahiʻai ʻoiai e kamaʻilio ana e pili ana i kekahi o nā hoʻolālā ʻoihana, and herbs. Though conventional, the farm fashions itself biointensive, using Integrated Pest Management, naturally-derived biorationals, and organic amendments. Fractional monoculture is also a focus: small-scale, intensive cropping punctuated by rotations and cover crops. Ma ka hopena, Deer Run Farm was hailed as a “national model” by the New York State Agricultural Environmental Management program for its stewardship. As one of a handful of farms outside of New York City, it faces unique challenges, especially those associated with urban-edge agriculture.
i 2005, he enrolled in the University of Florida’s Plant Medicine Program – an interdisciplinary “plant doctor” degree that parallels an M.D. or D.V.M. In the offseason, he’s an Associate Professor of Crop Science at Ferrum College, VA.

13,000 acre grain and oilseed farm – GM canola, ka palaoa a me ka soybeans, a mauÊ»u mauÊ»u rai, palaoa hoÊ»oilo, Ê»oka, hānai canola palaoa, hemp, sunflowers – Variable rate fertility, RTK / GPS a me ka palapala Ê»ana o nā hana āpau. 6 hana piha, 22 Nā limahana hapa manawa

ʻEhiku ʻeka ʻāina mahi ʻai o ka maize, pulupulu, hua palaoa, hua kukui, ʻuala a me ke kō. Hana ʻehā mau lālā o ka ʻohana ma ka mahiʻai, a i 5 ʻoi aku ka nui o ka poʻe e hana ma ka mahiʻai no ka wā huki lima ʻana a me ka puliki ʻana i nā manawa.

Hiki i ka ʻoihana ke lawe mai a momona a hiki i 114,000 pipi i kēlā me kēia makahiki. Hoʻopuka pū lākou i ka compost a loaʻa 160 He mau eka o ka ʻāina palena e hoʻāʻo ai me ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka compost no nā ʻano mea kanu like ʻole.

Mahiʻai ʻo Giuseppe ʻElia 600 hectare, e ulu ana ke kulina a me ka palaoa; loaʻa 200 pipi waiū, hoʻohana i ka mahiʻai mahi ʻai. He alakaʻi ʻo ia i nā ʻoihana mahiai mālama.

ʻO Rosalie Ellasus kahi mahiʻai hanauna mua, ke ulu nei i ke kulina a me ka laiki ma San Jacinto, Āina Pilipino. ʻAe ʻo Rosalie i kāna mahiʻai e hoʻohana ʻia ma ke ʻano he pilote hōʻike no nā mahiʻai mea liʻiliʻi e kipa a aʻo mai. He pelekikena ʻo ia no ka Hui ʻIliʻi Pilipino a he lālā ʻo ia ʻo Truth About Trade & Pūnaewele Pāhana Global Technology.

Hoʻomaka ʻo ia e mahi i nā pōpoki i kona wā i hōʻoia ai i kahi pūnaewele Cable TV e ʻae iā ia e hoʻohana i kahi hapa o kā lākou mahiʻai hale kiaʻi no ka mahi iʻa. Hoʻomaka me hoʻokahi loko a ua hoʻonui ʻia i kēia manawa e hoʻopaʻa i 5 mau tona o ka iʻa i kēlā me kēia pōʻaiapuni hana. Ke ulu nei nō hoʻi i nā mea kanu me ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka wai loko iʻa no ka wai.

Hānai ʻia i ka māla fairy ʻohana. Ma hope o ke koleke, hana ma kahi mahiʻai ʻē aʻe a no kahi mea kōkua. Holo i kāna hua ponoʻī a me kāna ʻoihana ponoʻī i nā makahiki 1990. Komo i loko o nā hui mahiai he nui.

He loio ʻo Henrique i loea i ke kānāwai hana. He alakaʻi kānāwai ʻo ia no kahi hui hana hua palaoa Palakila, ABRASGRÃOS. ʻO ia ke kolu o ka hanauna o kā lākou mahiʻai ʻohana, i hoʻomaka i ka wā i hele mai ai kona kupuna kāne mai Italia a Brazil. Mahiʻai ʻo ia me kona makuakāne a me kona kaikaina. Kanu lākou i ka soya, palaoa, māla māla, ka palaoa a me ka ʻoka ma 2,800 hectare. Hāʻawi ʻia ka mālama kūikawā i 1,200 heka o ka ululaau maoli.

Haumāna Biotechnology, hoʻokumu i kahi hui e hoʻolaha i nā papahana ʻenehana ag. Ua hoʻolaʻa ʻia kona ʻohana i ka mahiʻai ma ka ʻākau o Mekiko. Ua kanu ʻo ia i ka GM a me ka palaoa mau i kāna mahiʻai e hōʻike ai i ka ʻokoʻa.

Agronomist. HoÊ»oponopono i kahi mahiÊ»ai a puni 400 ha a he mau puaÊ»a hoÊ»i. He has been planting Bt corn for several years – and prefers it to conventional. Ê»Ike i ka waiwai Ê»enehana āna i Ê»ike ai i kāna mahiÊ»ai.

ʻO Richard Fordyce kahi mahiʻai ʻehā i mahi i ka palaoa, ʻo ka soybeans a me nā pipi bipi ma kahi mahiʻai ʻohana ma North Central Missouri. Lawelawe ʻo ia i ka mokuʻāina ʻo Missouri ma ke ʻano he alakaʻi no ka ʻĀina mahiʻai.

ʻO Jake Freestone ka luna mahiʻai ma Overbury Farms, Aia ma ke Komohana Komohana, Aupuni Mō'ī Hui Pū 'ia, kahi e mahi ai lākou i ka palaoa hana ʻai, ʻaila kāpae, barley malting, peas, linseed a me ka soya pū me 1,200 hipa wahine.

Jack farms in southern Manitoba, Kanaka, 14 miles from the US border. He’s a fourth generation farmer who grows canola, corn and soybeans along with dry beans, including pinto beans, pīni moana, black beans and kidney beans. ʻO ka mahiʻai 4,700 acres in the Red River Valley. The farm is not in expansion mode, but trying to gain more productivity through technology and biotechnology, doing more with less.
Jack is the former chair of Pulse Canada which represents the pulse crop industry. He also chaired the Canadian Canola Growers Association. He’s presently a director on the Manitoba Canola Growers Association and on the Canadian Canola Growers Association. He has participated in many international agriculture trade missions to five continents.
Jack and his family received the Red River Valley Exhibition Farm Family of the Year Award in 2017.
Jack is married to Dianne and they have three grown children and five grandchildren.

Manages demo farm showing combination of modern agriculture with enhancement of biodiversity and natural conservation. Works with dairy.

Mea mahi kō. Loaʻa iā ia 40 mau hectare o ka ʻāina ma nā kuahiwi a me kahi mahiʻai 22 hectare ma ke kūlanakauhale pono, ma hea 5 o kēlā mau hectare i hoʻohuli ʻia i hua, hana manu ʻana a me nā puaʻa. Ua koho wale ʻia ʻo Ryan i pelekikena no ka Hui ʻAha ʻApelika Pilipino (PCL) - Negros Occidental Mokuna. He kākāʻōlelo ʻo Silay City.

10,000 acre farm – grows corn, Ê»O Alfalfa a agave azul

ʻO nā mea kanu nui i ka ʻāina: ʻōmato, palaoa, pīni

Mahiʻai 2100 acres of row crops (palaoa, pulupulu, rice, soybeans – mostly flood irrigated) in partnership with son. Have 3 full time employees with additional seasonal employees. Most crops are genetically enhanced.

Hoʻololi i ka ʻoihana ʻohana e ulu i ka kope, hua nut macadamia, ʻāpala, lāʻau, me ka hana waiū a me ka hipa. Hoʻohana ʻia a hiki i 1,000 nā limahana i nā wā kiʻekiʻe.

Nā māla me kona makuakāne a me ʻelua mau kaikuaʻana. Hana i ke kī ʻōmaʻomaʻo Kepanī ma 10 hectares e hoʻohana ana i ke ʻano kuʻuna, Kamairi-cha. E ulu hoʻi i ka laiki 5 hectares a loaʻa e pili ana 20 pipi hoʻoulu pipi. ʻAi ka pipi i ka forage a me nā silage laiki homemade.

Harold Grall is a farmer in Dumas, Texas managing irrigated and dryland acres producing corn, grain sorghum and wheat with very limited tillage to preserve residue along with water conservation measures to protect the Ogallala Aquifer. He applies very limited tillage and maintains as much crop residue as possible to reduce wind erosion, keeping soil surface shaded and cooler, with less evaporation. The Increased water holding capacity of his soil allows him to fully store water from big rainfall events and winter snows.

Mahiʻai 130 hectares o ka maize Bt, Aia ka mahiʻai ma kahi ʻāina i hoʻomalu ʻia e nā mahiʻai liʻiliʻi. Ma o ke kumukānāwai o kahi Production Zone hiki iaʻu ke kanu 100% o kahi (130i loko o 2009) me ka palaoa GM.

Agronomist, ke kuhikuhi ʻana i ka hana mahiʻai ma 40,000 hectare o ka palaoa, canola, soybeans, ka palaoa a me ka sorghum i loko o kahi hui e hana i ka hapalua o ka huina o nā palaoa no ADP ʻeono mau mea hānai pipi. Kanu ʻo ia i nā mea kanu GM.

Grows soybeans, palaoa, palaoa, barley, ʻoka, canola and sorghum. All corn and soy production is GMO. Kahului 10% o ka hana. ʻAʻole i nā mahiʻai. Iecaianoaaiiuo Livestock ma maoli hānai. Hoʻopili ʻia i ke kālepa palaoa honua.

Kauka Lapaʻau Manu; kūkākūkā ma nā pilikia wai mahiʻai, Paipai ikaika i ke kōkua ʻenehana a me ka hoʻoili ʻenehana no ka mahiʻai liʻiliʻi.

Hānai ʻo Gerrid Gust a me kona ʻohana i kahi canola, ʻāpala, ʻo nā olonā a me nā palaoa cereal me ke durum a me ka palaoa keʻokeʻo palupalu ma nā pā o Kanada.

ʻO Alfredo Gutierrez kahi agronomist a me ka mea mahiʻai waiū ʻelima hanauna ma ka moku waena o Mekiko, kahi e mālama ai ʻo ia i ka olakino holoholona a me ka meaʻai, lako pono, enehana, a me ka hana ʻana me nā mea i hoʻohuli ʻia o ke kō, triticale, barley, peas & mauʻu rai.

Gina Gutierrez is serving as Community Outreach Agvocate for the Global Farmer Network. She is a 5th generation dairy farmer from the central region of Mexico. i 2015, Gina started a Facebook page advocating for the dairy industry. ʻO La Vida Lactea i kēia manawa aneane 60,000 ukali. She completed a Master's Degree in Corporate Law. She writes regularly for Ganadero and Holstein de Mexico magazine. i 2018, Ua lanakila ʻo Gina i ka makana ʻo Kleckner Global Farmer Network.

Deceased (1935-2021) Hafers was born in Santos, São Paulo, i loko o 1935, and presided over the Brazilian Rural Society (SRB) in the period between 1996 a 2002.

Hafers worked as a broker and exporter of cotton in the family business between the 50s and 70s. From foreign trade, he expanded his activities to agriculture, planting coffee in Northern Paraná, first on leased land, and from 1962 onwards own land.

Still in the 1970s, it started forestry and expanded its business to the industrial sector, with the foundation of Pisa Papel de Imprensa S / A. He was president of the Paranaense Association of Coffee Growers (Apac) and founder of the managing institution of the Coffee Museum and the Museum of Immigration.

Nā mahiÊ»ai 2,000 acres – grows soybeans, barley, palaoa, Ê»oka, canola, specialty beans, grass seed. First planted biotech crops in 1998 – appreciated better weed control, diversified crop rotations, maikaÊ»i nā hua a me nā loaÊ»a kālā

No ka mea 1993 ua hoʻokele 10,000 ʻeka o ka ʻāina i hoʻoinu ʻia e hana ana i nā lau aʻa (uala, ʻakaʻakai, kāloti a me nā parsnips) a me nā mea kanu cereals (rai, ka palaoa a me ka palaoa). Hoʻohana ka mahiʻai 100 kanaka.

Ulu ʻo Bishnu Poudyal i ka paddy, kini, ʻO ka palaoa a me nā palaʻai a hana i kahi waiū liʻiliʻi kokoke i Kavre, Nepala. Hoʻokipa ʻo ia i nā mea kipa i kāna mahiʻai i hoʻoulu ʻia e kāna ʻoihana a he lālā ʻo ia o ka Global Farmer Network.

Nā māla me ke kāne ʻo Kenneth Bray, ʻo wai ka ʻohana 8 o kona ʻohana e mahiʻai i kēia ʻāina. Hoʻomaʻa nui lākou i nā Holsteins maemae 96 ʻeka ma waenakonu o ʻIlani. Hoʻohana lākou i kahi ʻōnaehana kahua hānai. Noho paʻa ʻo Cheryl ma ka mahi holoholona pipi a kona ʻohana a me ka ʻoihana.

Kristjan farms 28,000 acres in the southeast corner of Saskatchewan, Kanaka, growing malt barley, hard red spring wheat, canola, fall rye, yellow peas and oats. He returned from university in 2008, determined to grow the family farm from the 2,000 acres that it was as he was growing up.
Kristjan used his interests in finance (he's a CPA) and people to make the business decisions and assemble the team needed to grow. The farm forward contracts its crops and adjusts the crop rotation to some degree according to the sales contracts that can be accessed.
The farm uses no-till on most of its acres, with minimum tillage on the rest. Technologies include variable rate fertilization and a 6-9 year nutrient management plan that includes numerous ways to apply fertilizer. This offers some risk management in years like this one when fertilizer prices are high.
Kristjan is working in collaboration with his brother who raises livestock, to produce silage for the cattle, then grow a cover crop that's available for grazing, in turn adding manure fertilizer to the land. From an environmental viewpoint, he thinks it's important to get farmers and livestock producers working together.

Pelekikena a mea Ê»ona o ka Ê»oihana Agrofood nāna e hana, nā kaÊ»ina hana, packs and exports vegetables – 100 limahana a 500 limahana kau. MahiÊ»ai 3,000 hectare. Ê»Elima hale hoÊ»opaÊ»a hale no nā mea kanu nā aÊ»a, nā mea kanu hou a me ka citrus

Luna Hoʻokele o 2 farms – one with 350,000 hectares o ka hana holoholona, ka mea ʻē aʻe, 20,000 hectares o nā soya GM, kānana hybrid, palaoa, canola a me ka eucalyptus. Ua hoʻomaka koke ʻia 200 hectare family farm – 50% hoʻoulu, ʻaʻole a hiki, a 50% ululaau.

ʻO David Hill kahi kolu o ka hanauna i hui pū ʻia me ka mahiʻai holoholona, e ulu ana ka palaoa, barley, canola, na anoano a me na mea kanu e ae ma Norfolk, UK. Ua komo ʻo ia i loko o nā hoʻāʻo o ka beet kō GM a pīhoihoi loa ʻo ia ua hoʻoholo ʻo ia e hoʻomaka e ulu i kahi hua GM hou aʻe ma kāna mahiʻai ma lalo o kahi laikini aupuni..

Agricultural Engineer – Farms 794 hectares – also rents 12,000 hectares e ulu ka palaoa, Ê»oka,
rai, barley, palaoa, peas, soy, ʻalalā, a me ka sunflower. Nā hoʻolimalima: 28,000 hectares no ka hana pipi

Ke kanu nei ʻo David Hughes a me kāna mau hoa i ka palaoa, soybeans, ʻO ka palaoa a me ka palaoa ma ka moku ʻo Buenos Aires a ke hoʻomohala nei i kahi pā holoholona ma ka moku ʻo Sla Rioja, Alekina.

Kornelis 'Kees' Huizinga has farmed in central Ukraine for 20 makahiki, growing onions, kāloti, palaoa, barley, canola, beet kō, palaoa, sunflowers and navy beans. They also have a modern dairy farm. Kees is a member of the Global Farmer Network. i 2022, Kees received the GFN Kleckner Global Farm Leader Award.

Mahiʻai 14,000 hectares me ke kaikaina a me ka makuakāne, ulu lāʻau soya, palaoa, palaoa, barley a me nā ʻoka; ke kanu nei mākou 90% o ka palaoa GM, a ʻo ka soybean kekahi 100% ʻEnehana GM. 32 limahana

Developing and running his farm in a holistic manner, has a breeding herd for Angus, rearing sheep, chickens and pigs using rotational grazing and bale grazing. Selling directly to consumers through the farm shop and farmer markets.

Deceased (1943-2015) I loko o kāna alakaʻi ʻana ka Lower Brule Sioux Tribe hoʻonui i kā lākou mahiʻai mahiʻai ma o popcorn, ʻo ka buffalo pāʻoihana a me ka pipi a me ke kūʻai aku ʻana i nā huahana ma lalo o ka inoa ʻo Lakota Foods.

Ê»O ka mahiÊ»ai Ê»eono, me kana kane a 2 sons – grow corn and soybeans on 2,700 eka. HoÊ»ololi genetically Ê»ia nā Ê»ano hua āpau me nā Ê»ano e hoÊ»omaikaÊ»i ai i ke olakino mea kanu. HoÊ»opili nā hana lohi: Ê»aihue, palena iki i a holehole i.

Started a farming business buying and selling crops; Teaches farmers on money, ka huliau, conservation agriculture; Leader in Makandi Muungano Womens Group and is Chairlady of Ag in Mbeu Ward.

85 acre dairy farm – 37 Holsteins, 12 hipa, 120 puaÊ»a. Ulu 40 Ê»eka o ka maize no ka silage. E ulu i nā mea kanu Ê»okanika na mākou iho a me kahi mākeke kÅ«loko. Ehiku limahana

Kim farms 25 acres Papaya farm and wholesaling business – farm uses PRSV resistant transgenic cultivars. He has a papaya variety named after him.

Kākoʻo Passionate no ka mahiʻai a me ka ʻenehana, kaikamahine a kahi mahiʻai papaya.

ʻEhiku ʻeka ʻāina mahi ʻai o ka maize, pulupulu, hua palaoa, hua kukui, ʻuala a me ke kō. Hana ʻehā mau lālā o ka ʻohana ma ka mahiʻai, a i 5 ʻoi aku ka nui o ka poʻe e hana ma ka mahiʻai no ka wā huki lima ʻana a me ka puliki ʻana i nā manawa.

Ua mahiʻai no 30 makahiki, loio kūkaʻi ʻole no ka biotechnology, ulu ka pulupulu Bt, mea kanu hybrid, palaoa, ʻumiʻumi, pī piʻa. Hānai puaʻa, nā kao a me nā moa o hope.

Mahiʻai 48 hectares palaoa, rice, nā mea kanu, pulse, mea ʻala, ʻumiʻumi, a fennel me kahi hui o 15 nā limahana. ʻO ka hawai wai ma o nā luawai luʻu, wai canal a me nā laina paipu lalo.

ʻO Nancy Kavazanjian kahi mahiʻai Wisconsin nāna i kōkua i ka mālama ʻana i nā ʻoihana o kēlā me kēia lā no kahi ʻeka 2000 (800 hectare) mahiʻai hua lālani ʻohana a me nā ea kiʻekiʻe o ka ʻāina kahi e koʻikoʻi ai ka mālama ʻana i ka lepo a me ka mālama ʻana i nā kumuwaiwai i kahi ʻano hoʻomau. Ua ulu ʻo Kavazanjian ma New York suburban. I kēia lā, mahiʻai ʻo ia ma Beaver Dam, ʻO Wisconsin me kāna kāne ʻo Charles Hammer. Loaʻa iā lāua he ʻelua mau keiki makua a ʻehā mau moʻopuna a ua pili pū kekahi i nā hoʻolālā wai kūloko a me nā hoʻolālā hoʻolālā ʻāina ma ko lākou wahi.

Kēkelē ʻEpekema holoholona mai ka Mokuʻāina ʻo Iowa, Kēkelē laeoʻo, ʻO ka meaʻai meaʻai puaʻa mai ka mokuʻāina ʻo Kansas. i 2009 ua hoʻomaka ʻo ia e mahiʻai me nā makuahōnōwai kāne. 4,000 ʻeka ʻeka, soybeans; 150-poʻo poʻo pipi / hana keiki bipi. E hoʻohana i ka ʻenehana kūpono, kaha palapala ʻāina, grid sampling, e hoʻopili pono i ka hua, mea hoʻomomona a me nā kemika. Ua hoʻopukapuka kālā i ka ʻenehana ʻenehana lā.

ʻO ka mahiʻai ʻelima: ulu ʻuala, palaoa, raiki a me ka palaoa ma 500 eka. Ke mahi mahi ʻai a ke keiki, ke ulu nei i nā lau a me nā huaʻai i ke kau kau. Kanaha mau limahana ma ka mahiʻai. E hoʻowai me nā luawai paipu. Iwa kanaā waiu.

Cultivating Kiwi, fish farming, buffalo farming, chilly and vegetable farming, peanut, avocado, other fruits. Regular milk is sold. Indigenous species (such as fapar, rice, palaoa) also produced.

Felix Kili is a second generation cereals farmer and a graduate in agricultural engineering. He grows 600 hectares of maize, barley and wheat and canola using minimum till technology with an eye toward no-till farming. The farm uses a crop rotation and plants sun hemp, sunflower and canola as cover crops. All farm operations are mechanized and include GPS.
The farm has its own silos and maize mill. It’s widely known in the country, standing out for its mechanization and technology advances. These advancements influence many other farmers. The farm offers quarterly field days with local farm input suppliers to educate farmers around them on sustainable farming practices.
As rainfall has become less reliable, the farm implemented minimum tillage to preserve soil moisture. Soil improvements have increased returns for the farm. Yields used to average 7.8 tons of maize/hectare and now it’s more in the range of 9.2 tons/hectare. This happened while the farm has reduced costs for fertilizer, machinery, labor, a me ka wahie.

ʻO Rodney Kili kahi mahiʻai hanauna ʻelua, ulu palaoa, barley malting, palaoa, sunflower a me canola me ka mahi ʻai palena liʻiliʻi a me GPS ma Uasin Gishu County, Kenia. Hoʻohana lākou i ka mahi liʻiliʻi a me GPS. Loaʻa iā lākou 25 nā bipi waiū a ke hana nei e hoʻonui i kēlā ʻoihana.

ʻO ka mahiʻai waiū ka mea ulu o ka silage, ʻoka. Hōʻike ʻenehana waiu, nā hanai hānai hou, a hoʻonohonoho i kahi kula e hoʻomaʻamaʻa i nā mahiʻai ma ka dairying.

Ponoi 400 ʻO ka mahiʻai ʻeka ma ke awāwa ʻo Red River. He lepo ʻeleʻele ka mahiʻai a hana i nā ʻano mea kanu like ʻole, GMO a me ka maʻamau. Ua ulu mākou i ka palaoa, canola, nā lā pua pua a me nā mea kanu lāʻau. Pālahalaha loa ia a hana ke kihi a kahi kihi.

A farmer, industry leader, long-time agriculture champion, former senior government executive and experienced corporate director, Alanna Koch is the Board Chair of the Global Institute for Food Security (GIFS) at the University of Saskatchewan. She works with farmers and the agriculture industry through her consulting company, KoHert Agri Inc. Prior to this, she served as Deputy Minister to Premier Brad Wall and Cabinet Secretary and was the Saskatchewan Deputy Minister of Agriculture for nine years.

Alanna has been involved in the agriculture industry, both professionally and personally, for most of her career and life. Alanna and her husband, Gerry Hertz, farm at Edenwold, SK, and are committed to sustainable crop rotation practising minimum tillage and utilizing advanced crop technology growing grains, oilseeds and pulse crops.

Patience Koku is serving the GFN as Regional Lead: ʻApelika. Aia ka mahiÊ»ai Ê»o Patience ma ka pākaukau Ê»o Jere Azara, Aupuni Aupuni Kagarko, ma Kaduna State Nigeria. The farm produces two crops annually under center pivot irrigation. They grow mostly seed corn and corn grain for major food processing companies in Nigeria, e like me Flour Mills o Nigeria. Ê»O ia ka mea i koi na ka 2019 Ê»O Kleckner Award mai ka Global Farmer Network a 2018 Ê»O Cornell Alliance For Science Farmer o ka makahiki. Mālama pÅ« kekahi Ê»o ia ma ka papa ʻōlelo aÊ»oaÊ»o Ê»o Cornell Alliance For Science. In her time as a member of the GFN, she has advocated on major stages.

PhD Hoʻolālā Waiwai; 50 mahiʻai waiū ʻeka me kekahi mau hoʻokele, 100 ʻeka o ka hana ʻana o ka maʻa hybrid, 7 employees – do contract work for a sugar company.

Ulu ʻo Sudhindra Kulkarni i ka pulupulu GM, nā pulse a me nā palaʻai kokoke i ke kauhale kaiāulu o Malli ma ka mokuʻāina ʻo Karnataka, Inia.

Nā mahiʻai ʻo Rajesh Kumar 120 ʻeka ma nā ʻāpana ʻelua o India, me ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka wai e ulu ai ka brinjal, kulina ono, kulina pēpē, nā ʻōmato a me nā mea kanu ʻē aʻe. Kūʻai pololei aku ʻo ia i nā mea kūʻai mai ma o nā kiʻī ma nā wahi he nui a holo i kahi ʻāpana hana meaʻai no ka ʻohi ʻana i nā mea kanu. Ua hōʻike ʻo Mr.. He lālā ʻo Kumar o ka TATT Global Farmer Network a loaʻa iā ia ka 2012 Kālepa TATT Kleckner & ʻO ka makana holomua ʻenehana.

Ulu ulu, palaoa, litchi, manga, maiʻa a kikaika ma 175 eka; 65 ʻeka o nā māla ma lalo o ka hoʻouwai micro; hoʻonoho ʻia i kahi waiho anuanu me ka mana o ka lā ma kāna mahiʻai. Loaʻa iā ia ka mahiʻai holomua ʻoihana i ka mokuʻāina ʻo Bihar. 'Lelo aʻoaʻo no ka hana' enekinia, mīkini hana, hawai micro.

Mahiai mua, holo i kahi kaʻa i kāohi ʻia, ʻōnaehana hua lū waena 640 eka palaoa, GM kanola, barley, peas, faba beans i ke kaʻapuni; ʻo ia ka mea mua ma ke komohana o Kanada e hoʻomohala i kahi ʻōnaehana mahiai kalepa uila.

Jake and his family farm GMO canola, palaoa, kūlana, peas, Hua soybeans GMO, olonā a me nā palaoa. ʻO kekahi o nā mahiʻai mua i ka wahi e ulu i ka soybeans i 2010. I kēia manawa e noʻonoʻo ana i ka palaoa. Kanu ʻole no 20+ makahiki.

Ke ulu nei ʻo Doyle Lentz i ka bale, palaoa puna, soybeans a me canola ma kahi mahiʻai kokoke i ka palena ʻo Kanada i loko o ko lākou ʻohana ma mua o hoʻokahi kenekulia.

No ka mea 2008, Diana Lenzi is running her family's winery, Fattoria di Petroio, near Siena in Tuscany, Ikalia. She owns and farms 15 hectars of organic vineyards to produce Chianti Classico wines. From 5 hectars of an organic olive grove, the farm produces extra virgin olive oil. She has an international market for the products, but also relies on direct sales at the farm. The farm hosts tourists, wine tours, and wine events that are organized by her family. In addition to a culinary career, Diana has experience in young farmers organizations.

ʻEwalu ʻeka ʻāina mahi ʻai o ka maize, kāpena, ʻōmato. He pipi hoʻi kā, hoki, nā hipa a me nā moa kauhale

Luna Nui o mua o 76,000 ʻeka o Navajo Nation Enterprise ma o ka hoʻohana ʻana o 210,000 ʻeka ʻeka o ka wai mai San Juan River Basin kahi ʻāpana o ka muliwai ʻo Colorado. I kēia manawa, Luna Managing o Greenstone Agri Con, ʻO LLC e hāʻawi nei i ke kūkākūkā agribusiness i Famers a me Ranchers ma Southwestern United States a me nā ʻōiwi ʻōiwi ʻAmelika

He mea hoʻokumu o Dairy United Ltd.. Me 15 nā mahiʻai ma Hohhot a me Hailer o Inner Mongolia a ʻoi aku 10,000 mau bipi wahine. ʻO ka ʻoihana waiū nui loa ma Kina, kona k modelkohu ua hoʻokō nui ia mai ka 2008 Melamine hōʻino.

Adowarim Lugu-Zuri grows coconuts, ʻōmato, kini, ʻūpala, okra and raises snails and pigs in central and eastern Ghana. Utilizing precision agriculture, including greenhouse and hydroponic technology, she is focused on curbing post-harvest loss in all sectors. Click to watch bio

Pili ka ʻohana i nā māla ʻelua. Hoʻokahi ʻo 15,000 hectare a ʻo kekahi 10,000 hectares – grow corn, palaoa, soybeans, pāheʻe oilseed. Ka hana ʻana i nā hua a pau i nā mahiʻai. E hoʻohana i nā mīkini ʻenehana kiʻekiʻe, ʻŌnaehana GPS, mahiʻai pono.

Ke ulu nei ʻo Rajaram Madhavan i ʻekolu mau mea kanu like ʻole i ka makahiki ma kāna mahiʻai kokoke i ke kauhale ʻo Ulundhai, Tamil Nadu, Inia. He nui nā palapala hoʻoilina a Madhavan no nā pono mahiʻai mahiʻai, alakaʻi i nā hālāwai aʻo e paipai i nā mea kālepa e lawe i ka mahiʻai ma ke ʻano he ʻoihana.

Ulu palaoa, ala basmati a me ka laiki parmal, Pulupulu Bt, desi pulupulu a me guar. Hoʻopili ʻo ia i nā ʻenehana hou me nā hua GM, a kōkua ʻo ia i ke alakaʻi ʻana i kāna hoa a me nā mahiʻai ʻōpio me nā ʻenehana ʻenehana.

Kauhi. Kelly Manton-Pearce, along with her husband Alan, grow canola, palaoa, barley, oaten-hay and sheep in Western Australia. I ka mahi ʻana i ka mahiʻai, Kelly is a Nuffield Scholar and Research Fellow with Murdoch University

ʻO ka mahiʻai ʻehā - 400 hectares –grows sorghum, pua lā, palaoa, barley, peas alfalfa, pīni. Hoʻohui ʻia i nā pivots waena i nā makahiki 1980 e ulu i ka palaoa. i 2000 kanu ʻia 33 Nā mānoanoa o ka hua waina a i loko 2005 kūkulu i kahi hale inu waina.

Ruramiso Mashumba is serving the GFN as Regional Lead: ʻApelika. Ruramiso is a young female farmer from Marondera, Zimbabwe and founder of Mnandi Africa, an organization that helps rural woman combat poverty and malnutrition. She is currently studying for an MBA in sustainable food and agriculture. The trailblazing farmer holds several accolades and achievements to her name that is testimony to the outstanding work she is doing in the Zimbabwean agricultural sector. Ua Ê»ike Ê»ia Ê»o Ruramiso Ê»o ka 2020 LoaÊ»a i ka makana Ê»o GFN Kleckner.

E mahiʻai ana ʻo Derek me kona makuakāne mai ia manawa 1983. Mahiʻai lākou 1,600 heka o nā mea kanu (30 hectares ma lalo o ka hoʻoinu pivot waena) a hāpai aʻe 100 pipi pipi. i 2005, he started South Africa's first corn ethanol plant with his brother.

Hoʻopili ʻia i ka hana ʻana i nā hua no nā hua Hybrid no ka hui ʻo Uganda Seed Company. Ulu ulu 400 Eka, puaʻa 800 a 120 mau bipi wahine. 12 limahana mau a 80 kau-kau

Ulu pulupulu, nā māla a me nā palaoa, mālama pipi, kao a me nā moa. Mahiai semi-mīkini. Kanu kanu, ʻohiʻohi, hana lima a me ka baling hana lima.

Mahiai mua - 1800 eka, ulu palaoa, ka pāleona a me ka pehi wahine ʻaila. ʻO ka mea kuleana ma kahi waiū waiū nui ma US. Luna Hoʻokele o kahi ʻoihana nona a hoʻokele hoʻi 30,000 ʻeka o nā mea kanu ulu ma ʻAtenekia. ʻO ka mea lanakila ʻo Kleckner Award - 2009.

Ua mahiʻai ʻo ia me kāna kāne mai ia wā 1978 - 900 hectares – grows wheat, canola, pipi bipi a me nā keiki hipa mua. Ua hoʻonohonoho i nā hālāwai ʻikepili GM no nā mahiʻai kūloko a me nā wahi.

Recognized as by the GFN as a 2021 Kleckner Award for Global Farm Leadership award recipient, Annechien ten Have Mellema has been farming since 1993. On her farm you'll find 600 sows, 5,000 finishers, palaoa, sugar beets and corn and a biogas plant 1,1 MW. She is a pork industry leader, member of the board of a Local Water Authority, and member of the Council on Animal Affairs. Annechien is founder of Hamletz, scharrelvlees van Annechien her own brand of pork.

Me kāna keiki, hoʻokele a 420 hectare mahiʻai hoʻoheheʻe. Hana i nā kulina momona no ka ʻoihana ʻona a me ka hau, kulina no ka palaoa (o ka mea 100 ha o GM maize) a me nā pīni Palani. Hoʻopili i ka hoʻomohala ʻana i nā ʻano lūlū pololei.

He originates from Argentina and is now farming in African countries, bringing modern technology and training. Previously managed Argentinian wheat, barley, soybean, sunflower, ka palaoa a me ke sorghum.

ʻEnekinia Mahiai; mahiʻai me nā kaikunāne ʻelua. 2,225 acres – wheat, soybeans, corn – double crop production; i loko nō o ke kūlana waiwai paʻakikī, kiʻekiʻe loa ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka biotechnology.

Aaron Moore combined his passions for agriculture and business by becoming an analyst for John Deere. First in Brisbane, then moving to New Zealand he became a field staff manager working with dealers and growers to deliver a technology that allowed them to be more efficient and improve their operations.

His next journey took him to Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam to build an indoor hydroponic farming operation from the ground up. He then set up his own hydroponic consulting business and he now oversees all production related activities taking place in the Bustanica Modular Grow Units.

ʻO ka mea liʻiliʻi e aʻo ana i ka Biotechnology. Kōkua me ka hoʻopau ʻana o ka maʻi i kaʻuala a me ka cassava, a ua koho ʻia e hele i ka Open Forum no ka Biotechnology Mahiai ma ʻApelika. Ua aʻo ʻia ma ka Mokuʻāina ʻo Michigan ma kahi haumana haumana MasterCard.

Mahiai mai 1990 – grows maize, sunflower, hua palaoa, pākana a me nā tōmato. Ua hoʻomaikaʻi kaʻu ʻoihana mahiʻai i ka wā i hoʻolauna ʻia ai ʻo Pioneer i Zambia ma 2007 na ke Kuhina mahiʻai a me nā limahana.

ʻO Pierre Kamere Munyura kahi mea kanu kope a me ka mea hana, e ulu ana ke kope ma 25 ʻeka ma ke Komohana Komohana, Ruanada.

Ua hōʻike ʻo Mr.. Ulu ulu nui ʻo Motlatsi Musi, pīni, uala, puaʻa hānai a puaʻa ma 21 hectares i loaʻa iā ia i loko 2004 ma o ka Hoʻolālā ʻĀina no ka Polokalamu Hoʻolālā Mahiai (LRAD) ma ʻApelika Hema. Ua ʻike ʻia ʻo ia Oct. 17 i Des Moines, ʻO Iowa e like me ka 2017 Loaʻa iā Kleckner Award.

Nā hoahānau hānai, ua ʻimi ʻo ia i kā mākou kauka nāna i alakaʻi iā ia e hoʻokolohua me ka soybeans ma ke ʻano he kumu protein kumu kūʻai haʻahaʻa. I kēia manawa ua hoʻomaʻamaʻa 10,000 nā wahine i ka mahi mahi ʻai. ʻO ka mea hoʻokumu o Bashan Farm, VP o Zimbabwe National Soybean Association.

Biotech cotton farmer – 10 hectares – have seen an increase in the use of biotech by smallholder farmers as they battle bollworms. I kÄ“ia manawa Ê»oi aku ma mua o 90% o nā mahiÊ»ai kÅ«loko e hoÊ»ohana ia.

Has grown Bt cotton since it arrived in India and successfully uses micro irrigation. Uses a combination of modern and traditional, with the help of advanced technology.

Along with raising livestock, different crops are planted including: canola, palaoa, barley, palaoa, soybean. The farm uses irrigation and is involved with seed production.

Mālama i nā hoʻopukapuka pilikino i ka hana ʻana i ka palaoa, ʻūpala, nā mea kanu waiwai nui, a me nā huaʻai. Komo i loko o nā hui kākoʻo; Hui Pūkū ʻAilana Pilipino, ʻAhahui ʻoihana Poultry ʻo Northern Mindanao.

3.5 ʻeka o ka maiʻa, 9.2 ʻeka hana laiki, 6 ʻeka ma ka mānoanoa o ka mānoanoa. 12 dairy cattle Some horticultural crops – tomatoes, Nā pīni Palani, ka pepa ʻōmaʻomaʻo, ʻakaʻakai, a me ka ʻāne - he wili laiki hou.

Uses sustainable, effective agricultural practices; Full-time farmer, teacher at a local college; Promotes world food security and improving farmer livelihoods.

ʻO ka mahiʻai ʻekolu - hana i ka māla, rice, soybeans, uwea, ʻO ka cassava a me nā mea kanu a aia nā māla a me nā māmela me nā pipi, hipa, kao a me nā puaʻa ma 50 hectare.

ʻO Tia ka luna ʻāina o ka Pūnaewele ʻAla Hoʻokele ʻo Savannah, kahi hui hoʻomohala mahiʻai alakaʻi i ʻApelika e hāʻawi i ka poʻe mahiʻai i kahi leo i ka hoʻopaʻapaʻa honua e pili ana i ka palekana o ka meaʻai a me ka meaʻai.

A third-generation farmer from South Dakota – farms with father and uncle, 3,300 eka kulina, soybeans a me ka mauʻu. 430 waiū pipi, a hāpai i nā bipi wahine hou. ʻEleu i ka haʻi ʻana i ka moʻolelo o ka mahiʻai.

Ê»O ka mea kanu banana Ê»o Pioneer TC ma ka ʻāina. Ê»Eleu i nā hui mahiÊ»ai. Has represented Kenya in Farmers’ meetings in Uganda, Tanzania a me Ê»Apelika Hema.

Pacifique has a bachelor's degree in biotechnology. He is a farmer and an entrepreneur. In December 2015 he started Real Green Gold Ltd, using half a hectare of land from his family. He developed a banana farming demonstration farm with more than 15 varieties of bananas and trained small producers while contracting to buy their 1st grade quality bananas. He sells them to high-end hotels and restaurants in Kigali. Today he has expanded to 3 hectare, adding avocados and other fruits and vegetables like tomatoes, ʻakaʻakai, and eggplants. As the number of crops increased, he started working with more farmers. He's currently working with 144 small producers from across Rwanda. The group has been challenged with Panama disease, a devastating disease in bananas. He is a founding member of Rwandan Youth in Agribusiness Forum (RYAF) a countrywide network of youth who are doing primary production, food processing and extension service. Click to watch bio.

Eve "ʻO Tepsy" He mahiʻai mahiʻai ʻo Ntseoane, e hānai pipi ana a me nā pipi bipi i Kaalfontein, Kaona ʻo Emfuleni ma ka moku ʻo Gauteng, Apelika Hema.

ʻO Isidro Antonio Matamoros Ochoa kahi Kumu Polopeka i ka hana pipi ʻana, mahiʻai 1,059 hectares – owned by 4 nā mea hoʻopukapuka kālā mai 2007 – developing 720 cow dairy – 16 limahana, 37 limahana aelike, mahiko kope.

Hana ʻo Tomas i ka mahiʻai pono, kālele ʻia i ka hana ʻana me ka liʻiliʻi, no ka hana mau. Nānā ʻo ia no ka pono kūpono o kēlā me kēia kaiapuni a hoʻokō i ka hoʻokele kūpono loa i kēlā me kēia hihia me ka maka i ka pono, hana a me ka loaʻa kālā. No ka mea 2007 ʻO ia ka luna a me ka mea hoʻomalu o ka hui ʻo Las Cortaderas, kahi hui e kōkua i ka hoʻopili ʻana i nā hopena ʻenehana ma nā mahiʻai.

Grows bananas, green beans, nati, avocados and peas. Deals with fresh produce crops, largely horticultural crops from seed to produce marketing, including certification to global standards that lead to market access.

ʻO ka mahiʻai iʻa nui (26 nā hīnaʻi / 300 MTS o Tilapia / makahiki) a me ka mahiʻai moa liʻiliʻi. Hoʻomohala ʻia AquaRech App - ʻae i nā mahiʻai e kiʻi i nā hānai kiʻekiʻe, hoʻokele i nā mahiʻai, loaʻa ka mākeke no kā lākou huahana. Has developed a digital thermometer that relays water temperature to farmer's phones.

Nā mahiʻai a hana no ka hale mahiʻai nui ma Uruguay ma ke ʻano he ʻenekini agronomic. ʻO ka loea laha i kēia coop o ~ 3000 mau hoa hana. Hana pū me USDA, ke hāʻawi nei i nā helu helu ag, wānana ʻohi, nā holoholona a me nā ʻike waiū no Uruguay.

Deceased ( -2020) Ua mahiʻai ʻo Benjamin Olumuyiwa Adewumi ma Nigeria no kahi mau aku 25 makahiki, ulu palaoa, plantain, maiʻa, cassava a me kekahi holoholona. ʻO Adewumi kahi USAID-MARKETS II i hoʻomaʻamaʻa i ka mahiʻai cassava a he lālā hoʻi no ka Global Farmer Network.

Hoʻolālā ʻo Andrew i ka hua hery ley a me ka palaoa malting. He ʻoi aku kona mahiʻai ma mua o 700 hectares o ka mauʻu no ka hua a me kahi nui o ka barley malting spring barley loea. ʻO kāna mahiʻai kahi hui o ka mea nona, hoʻolimalima a ʻaelike i ka hoʻoponopono mahiʻai, kipaku ʻia e ka lawelawe mākeke koi.

Hoʻonui i nā hua GM a me nā hybrid, canola, palaoa, ʻoka a me ka palaoa, soybeans, ka palaoa a me ke sorghum, me kekahi mau mea kanu ma lalo o ka wai. Hāpai i ka pipi hānau a hoʻolimalima i nā mīkini mahiʻai. ʻEleu me ka No Till Agriculture Foundation

A farmer and forestry researcher, has implemented an integrated crop, livestock and forestry system to produce soybeans, palaoa, millet, eucalyptus trees, grass, and beef cattle.

ʻO ka mea hana cereal a me ka mea ʻaila, uala --- nā mea hou a hana ʻia hoʻi, pipi, paʻakai, a me kahi mea kūʻai waiwai pono. He waha ʻōlelo waiwai nui ʻo ia no nā hana kūpilikiʻi kūikawā i kū i mua e nā mahiʻai Argentina.

Marco Pasti produces maize, soybeans, palaoa, barley, sugar beets, some wine grapes and walnuts in North-East Italy along the Adriatic coast. They also feed some beef cattle and have a biogas plant to produce electricity. He's past-president of the Italian corn grower association. ʻO ka loea i ka māla mālama. Marco recently participated in the Argentina-based summit: Mobilizing the GFN in Support of a Resilient Agri-Food System.

Charles' family farm business was started in 1985 by his parents. They produce 3,500 hectares in a sustainable intensified agriculture operation with soybeans, corn as a second crop and cattle in an integrated crop-livestock management system. The farm is in the middle of Brazil.
Charles' father was a pioneer in the adoption of no-till technology, and in the production of corn as a second crop. He has passed away and now Charles and his sister lead the family company.
The farm participates in a farmers group that conducts its own research program looking for better technologies and crop management systems for the sustainability and efficiency of their farm business.
In addition to using no-till for the past 31 makahiki, the farms soil is permanently covered using cover crops. Nutrient management is balanced with crop yields using precision agriculture tools. The farm produces about 15 tons of grains/hectare/year and conserves at least 10 tons of dry matter over the soil, protecting soil biological activity and biodiversity and mitigating water erosion.

Agronomist, Nā mahiʻai 500 hectares me kona makuakāne; ua hoʻomaka "ʻO Petrosu Serv" e kūʻai aku i nā hua kanu a me nā hua palaoa i hana ʻia ma ka mahiʻai. Ke hoʻonui nei i kā lākou hana hoʻomehana hale hoʻouluulu.

Holo Unifarm, kahi honua GAP i hōʻoia ʻia 400 me ka mahiʻai huaʻai a me nā mea hectare ma ka moku ʻo Binh Duong. Ulu muskmelon, maiʻa, huaʻai jack a me nā mea kanu ʻē aʻe. He inoa i mahalo nui ʻia ma waena o nā mahiʻai ʻenehana kiʻekiʻe ma Vietnam.

Hana ʻo Ian Pigott i kahi ʻoihana mahiʻai like ʻole ma Harpenden, UK. Located just 20 miles from the centre of London, he grows wheat, oilseed, rape and oats in rotation. The farm is a LEAF (linking environment and farming) demonstration farm. Ian is a Global Farmer Network member.

He mau mahiʻai / hānai ʻo Hope Pjesky a me kona ʻohana ma ka ʻākau o Oklahoma kahi e hānai ai lākou i nā bipi hānai a me ka palaoa hoʻoilo ʻulaʻula paʻakikī. Nui ka hoihoi o Hope i ke kālepa honua i kākoʻo ʻia e kāna koho ʻana ma ke ʻano he Eisenhower Agriculture Fellow a ma hope ma o kahi ʻo McCloy Agriculture Fellowship.

He lālā ʻo Hope ma ka Farm Foundation, hoʻolauna i nā hoa mahiʻai kūwaho mai nā ʻāina ʻē aʻe ma Oklahoma a me Wakinekona, DC. a hāʻawi i ke alakaʻi i ka Polokalamu Alakaʻi Hoʻokele o Oklahoma. Ua manawaleʻa pū ʻo ia no kekahi mau makahiki ma ke ʻano he lālā no ka Global Farmer Network.

Ê»O ka mahiÊ»ai Ê»ohana Ê»ekolu - 4,500 hectares – alfalfa, palaoa, palaoa, barley, ʻōmato, pālua, broccoli – also raise cattle and sheep - ulu Bt kulina

Hana ʻo Mel a me kāna kāne ʻo Mike 2500 ʻeka pipi a me ka ʻoihana hipa. ʻO kā lākou holoholona 100% hanai ʻia ka mauʻu. Ma luna 95% o kā lākou huahana mahiʻai (keiki hipa, pipi a me ka hulu hipa) hoʻolilo ʻia. Loaʻa i ka ʻoihana kahi kahu hipa, hānai hānau Perendale hipa kāne hipa.

Prakash Puppalwar has been recognized as a progressive farmer by Maharashtra India. He was among the first farmers to adopt Bt cotton when it was introduced in India in 2002. He did experiments on his farm with Bt cotton, including the use of micro-irrigation, micro-fertigation, plastic mulching and pheromone traps. He works to drive adoption of these techniques among other farmers as well.
Prakash farms 11 hectares with 7 hectares under full irrigation and the rest partially irrigated. In addition to using hybrid seed and the techniques outlined above, his farm also uses solar power. His multi-crop system includes Bt cotton, soybeans, pigeon peas, maiʻa, turmeric and watermelon. He produces a crop for green manure, to add organic matter to the soil to increase organic Corban. Some of his production is organic.
He provides timely guidelines to area farmers in order to advance the use of modern farming techniques. Prakash has been recognized with the Progressive Farmer Award by the Indian Cotton Association and by CII Mumbai. Manavseva Foundation recognized him with the Dr. Panjabrao Deshmukh Krushiratn Puraskar award for appreciation of his work in agriculture. He was appointed a resource person by the Government of Maharashtra to guide farmers. He was also appointed to the Atma committee by the Government of Maharashtra.

Jose Luis Quintana farms with three generations of his family on an enterprise based in Rosales, Chihuahua in the North of Mexico. His agriculture company has reached 250 acres of arable land growing alfalfa, peanut, palaoa, nuts corn, oats and cotton. On an additional 4,000 eka, cattle are raised using regenerative livestock practices.

Mahiʻai ʻohana, agronomist a me ka aʻoaʻo aʻoaʻo e ulu ana i ka soya, palaoa, palaoa ma 275 hectare. Alakaʻi ʻo ia i kahi papahana honua e hoʻolilo i ka ʻenehana i ʻApelika, e hoʻomaka ana ma Ghana a me Guinea, ke ulu ʻana i ka palaoa a me ka soya.

ʻEnekinia Mahiai, ʻeleu i ka hui no-till, mahiʻai mai 1970 400 ʻeka o ka palaʻai biotech a me ka sorghum - hoʻohua 60 nā hana

Became engaged in his father’s farm in 2005 - 400 hectares e ulu ana i ka maize a me ka rai. Uhi Ê»ia ke koena e nā mea kanu ikehu ʻē aÊ»e. Ke hānai wale nei ka mea kanu i kahi mea kanu biogas ma ka mahiÊ»ai e hoÊ»opuka nei i kahi mana mana o 500kw / h.

No ka mea 1986, Luna Nui o kahi Hui Pukiki o nā ʻoihana Mahiai. 3,700 eka, 90% i hoʻohainu ʻia - lāʻau ʻoliva, plum, peach, kumulāʻau kalaka, kaukini; palaoa, palaoa, sunflower, ʻoka - 400 hectare ma lalo o ka pivot waena, 250 pipi pipi

Ma kahi mahiʻai kanaono eka, Ulu ʻo Ravi i ka Rice, Kōpaʻa, Pulupulu a me nā puʻupuʻu. E hoʻohana pono i ka wai i nā mahina kau wela, hoʻohana ʻo ia i nā ʻōpala a me nā ʻōkuhi drip. Ua hoʻohui i ka mīkini ʻana i ka pilikia o ka hana; 12 limahana. The Kleckner Global Farm Leader Award winner in 2013, Ravi volunteers as a board member for the Global Farmer Network. Click to watch bio

27-acre farm – grows Bt cotton, nā Ê»iliÊ»ili, ka maize a me ka paddy. Aia i loko o ka holoholona nā bipi Ê»ehā a me Ê»elima mau bipi wahine. Mai loko mai o ka huina o 27 eka, 11 aia nā Ê»eka ma lalo o ka wai wai kulu, a 16 Ê»eka ma lalo o ka wai wai. Hana nā kānaka Ê»ehā i ka mahiÊ»ai.

He mahi mahi ʻai ʻo Megz ma SW Saskatchewan. ʻO lāua a me kāna kāne he mau mahiʻai mahi ʻole. Ulu lākou e pili ana 2,800 ʻeka o ka bale, palaoa durum, nā lentila ʻōmaʻomaʻo nui a me ke olonā. She’s an advocate for agriculture and good policy and is passionate about developing consumer trust in farmers. He ikaika ʻo ia ma Twitter, Instagram a me Facebook.

Haumana Passionate, pili i ka mahiʻai ʻohana.

Semeh Roberts is CEO of the Universal Farmers Association (UFA) in Liberia. The organization is building the capacity of its more than 15,000 farmers through workshops on sustainable land use, biodiversity conservation, climate change mitigation and adaptation and dividing them into farming groups to engage in mechanized farming with an eye toward making Liberia food secure by 2030.
Despite strong natural resources, Liberia has no record of feeding itself. The country imports $200M US worth of rice annually, but it’s not enough to feed the population. In support of UFA’s development goal, UNDP and the Global Environment Facility (GEF) are providing support, comprising farming tools, training, cash grants, etc. and they’ve cleared 1500 acres in separate locations. This year they are growing cassava, oil palm, plantain, pepper, garden eggs, watermelon and working on honey bee domestication with support from the Associated Women of the World (ACWW), based in the UK.

Efrén Robles was born and raised in Manatí, Puerto Rico. He is the co-founder of Frutos del Guacabo, a Culinary Agro-Hub Farm and co-founder of Horizon Solutions a water treatment consulting firm. He’s a passionate businessman, committed to the growth of local food ecosystems. During the past 13 years Efren has been able to work with over one-hundred farmers and commercialize over 200 local products. He has been very active on the local gastronomic scene and with the help of his family they have developed gastronomic experiences designed to showcase the impact of local production/consumption on the near communities.

Ua loaʻa ka ʻāina mahiʻai i hoʻohaʻahaʻa ʻia no ka hana kō ʻana. I kēia manawa ulu ka soy, palaoa, palaoa a me kope - hāʻawi ʻia no ka maikaʻi kope maikaʻi loa ma Parana State a me Brazil.

700 Ê»O ka mahiÊ»ai Ê»eka ma ke awāwa Ê»o Jamastran ma ke komohana o Tegucigalpa ke kapikala o Honduras. Kolo (300 eka) Dairy – 280 poÊ»o, 90 mau bipi waiÅ«; most farming is done by machine – including the milking

Holo ʻo Jose a 1200 mahiʻai pipi ʻeka eka ʻo ia ka ʻoihana ʻohana nui a ʻoi 40 makahiki. Hoʻopuka ka mahiʻai i kēia manawa i ka ʻoka, palaoa, pipi pipi a me ka waiū no ka mākeke kūloko. Hana pū ʻo Rosales me kahi mea hoʻomohala hydropower kūloko e kūkulu i kahi mea kanu hydropower liʻiliʻi ma ka mahiʻai.

Kaahwa Jean is a fish farmer, entrepreneur and consultant. He is the Managing Director of Shalom Fish Farms Ltd. and Africa Agribusiness Services Ltd. He started as a fish farmer producing table fish, fish fingerlings and offering aquaculture services. He's engaged in horticulture, dairy and poultry.

A mixed cropping/livestock farm using holistic grazing, minimal tillage, cover cropping, mineral nutrition to produce winter vegetables, cereal, oilseed. Raises ewes for wool and lamb production, first cross Angus Friesian heifers, pasture-raised laying hens.

Fourth generation farmer – bought his first farm in 1972. ʻO nā mahiʻai i kēia manawa 400 ʻeka o ka palaoa a me ka soybeans, ka hapanui ma lalo o no-till. Hoʻohana nā mea kanu a pau i nā ʻenehana GMO i mea e hiki ai i kāna papahana mālama. 2018 ʻo kāna ʻohiʻohi 45 ia. Kākoʻo ʻo Larry no ka mahiʻai, ke hāʻawi nei i nā haʻiʻōlelo he nui a ke kūkulu ʻana i kona alo ma ka pāpili kaiaulu.

Ua hoʻolaʻa aku ʻo Lydia Sasu i kona ola e hoʻomaikaʻi i ke ola o nā mahiʻai wahine kuaʻāina. Ma ke ʻano he mahiʻai ʻohana a me ka Luna Hoʻokele o ka Development Action Association (DAA) i Ghana, Lydia.

Grows conventionally wheat, sugar beets, rapeseed and corn for regional mills, sugar producers, biogas plant and crush facilities. Uses cover crops and flowering strips.

ʻO Jennie kahi mahiʻai ʻekolu. Hoʻoulu ka mahiʻai a ka ʻohana i nā hua, nā huaʻai a me nā hua waina i ka Hikina Hikina o Maryland. ʻO ka mikiona o ka mahiʻai e hoʻomaʻamaʻa "mahiʻai synergistic" me ka hoʻohana ʻana i nā ʻoi loa o nā hana mahiʻai a pau e hana i nā lepo olakino a hoʻomau i ka hana olakino maikaʻi.

Took over a farm in the Federal State of Mecklenburg – Western Pomerania in the eastern part of Germany after reunification in 1990. Ê»O ka mahiÊ»ai Ê»o 650 hectare - canola, palaoa, nā mānoanoa kulina a me kō.

He mahiʻai ʻAmelika ʻo Scott e noho ana ma Brazil. He kekelē ʻo ia ma Ag Economics mai Cornell. Ua hele ʻo ia i Brazil i 2004 ma hope o ke koleke a ma hope o ka mahiʻai ʻana ma laila ma mua me kona makuakāne. Ua hana mua ʻo ia me nā hui ʻelua ma Brazil, mālama ʻana i ka ʻāina mahiʻai a lawelawe i nā mea hoʻopukapuka ʻāina ʻē aʻe. Ua mahiʻai ʻo ia ma kāna iho 4 makahiki.

Ulu nā legume no ka mea ʻoi aku ka pale o ka maloʻo. ʻO ka mea hana hua hua i hōʻoia ʻia. I ka ulu ʻana o kāna ʻoihana, ua kūʻai ʻo ia i nā pono hana a me nā ukana a hoʻomaka i kahi papahana kūʻai aku e kūʻai aku i kāna hua ma nā mākeke.

He mea kālai ʻo Amadou e ke kālepa, nāna i hoʻopukapuka i ka hana ʻana i kahi hale hoʻoulu ʻenehana kiʻekiʻe e lawe i nā kumukūʻai paʻa i nā mea kanu wā ʻole ma Mali. Hoʻohana nā greenhouse i ka hana soilless, kaohi aniau, misting, pale aluminium a me ka hana hou ʻana i ka wai.

Balwinder Singh Kang has been farming since 1984. He grows GM cotton, mea kanu hybrid, palaoa, mustard and chick peas at Hanumangarh, in the state of Rajasthan, Inia. Kang educates farmers about the benefits of using the latest technologies in agriculture and is a member of the Global Farmer Network.

ʻO ka mahiʻai mahiʻai kolu, palaoa, uala, nā hua pi a me nā meaʻai o ka ʻai, mauʻu mauʻu a me ka sinapi ma kā lākou mahiʻai ʻohana 25-ʻeka ma ka mokuʻāina ʻo Punjab. Kākoʻo ikaika ʻo ia i nā mea kanu GM a me nā hybrid. Ua hala 30 nā makahiki o ka ʻike e hana pū ana me nā mahiʻai i ka hoʻoili o nā ʻenehana mahiʻai e hoʻonui i ka hana.

Ua hōʻike Ê»o Mr.. Ulu Ê»o PPS Pangli i ka palaoa, rice, basmati Ê»aÊ»ala Ê»ole, palaoa, pulse, kālika, Ê»akaÊ»akai, Ê»o ka mākeke a me nā hua kanu no ka Ê»ai a me nā lau kanu kau ma kahi mahiÊ»ai ma kona wahi kÅ«puna Ê»o Panglian, Ê»O Ludhiana Apana ma ka mokuʻāina Ê»o Punjab aia ma India ʻĀkau. Ua hōʻike Ê»o Mr.. Pangli chairs India’s United Farmer Empowerment Initiative, He alakaÊ»i mahiÊ»ai Ê»o ia o ka Borlaug Farmers Association no South Asia a he lālā o ka Global Farmer Network.

Māla ʻo Sarah Singla i ka palaoa, triticale no ka hua, pue wale, alfalfa, ʻO nā pī hoʻoilo a he nui nā mea i uhi i nā mahiʻai ma ka mahiʻai ʻohana ma ka Hema o Palani. ʻO Sarah kahi Nuffield Scholar a he lālā o ka Global Farmer Network.

ʻO ka mahiʻai palaoa like ʻole me nā lālā o ka ʻohana - ulu i ka palaoa, soybeans, ka palaoa i ka hoʻololi - palena iki a ʻaʻohe hoʻi; Lunahoomalu o nā Growers no Biotechnology, pelekikena o ka North Dakota Grain Growers Association

ʻO ka mahiʻai palaoa like ʻole me nā lālā o ka ʻohana - ulu i ka palaoa, soybeans, ka palaoa i ka hoʻololi - palena iki a ʻaʻohe hoʻi; Lunahoomalu o nā Growers no Biotechnology, pelekikena o ka North Dakota Grain Growers Association

Breeding operation in the sheep and beef industries – export genetics to Australia and Bangladesh. E hoʻoulu i nā mea kanu mahi ʻai. ʻO ka lālā o ka Council Veterinary Council o New Zealand a ʻo The Red Meat Partnership.

Her farming operation uses no-till, variable input application and others. Produces poultry, confectioning and specialty crops, yerba mate, coriander, sunflower and rice processing.

Ulu laiki, palaoa, nā mea kanu a me ka pulupulu a ke hana ikaika nei i ka hoʻomohala waiu ma kāna wahi. He played a crucial role in drafting the vision statement of agriculture for Prime Minister Modi’s election.

Jacob Farms grows corn, pīni, grain sorghum, palaoa, pulupulu, and cover crops ensuring there is a living root in all acres 365 days a year to prevent soil erosion. Using multispecies winter cover crops, custom grazing is offered to cow/calf operations in the area. The farm has been under no-till for about 21 years and has been using intensive planting rotations, variable rate applications, and cover crops for 14 makahiki.

Deceased (1975-2021) Aia ka mahiʻai a Julio Speroni ma ka moku ʻo Entre Rios o ʻAtenitina. ma 4,500 ʻeka ʻāina, Holo ʻo ia iā Hereford a me Angus bipi ma kahi ākea, e hana ana 800-850 hoʻokele mai 1,000 mau bipi wahine. He manaʻoʻiʻo ʻo ia a me kāna koʻokoʻo i nā hana pono o nā holoholona maikaʻi. Kanu ʻo ia i ke kulina, soybeans, sorghum a me ka lau nahele e hoʻohana ana i nā hana no-till.

Loaʻa iā Sujatha 30 ʻeka o nā ʻāina mahiʻai ma Tamilnadu. Ulu ʻo ia i nā mea kanu ʻokanika, kō, a me ka pulupulu Bt. Hoʻohana ʻo ia i kekahi o nā loina mahiʻai kūlohelohe i ka pulupulu Bt e hoʻonui i ka loaʻa. Hānai pū kekahi ʻo Sujatha i nā bipi a me nā kao.

3,000 eka palaoa, barley, hoʻohuli canola. ʻO Canola ulu kahi hui o nā mea maʻamau, Hoʻomākaukau Roundup, ʻO nā ʻano ʻo Clearfield a me IT. ʻAi-ʻole, ʻōnaehana kalaiwa kalaiwa ʻōnaehana me ka paʻa ʻana o ka mauʻu piha. 600 hipa merino.

Hana i kahi mahiʻai ʻohana liʻiliʻi (240 eka) komohana ʻākau o Des Moines - Non wai i kēia manawa akā ke noʻonoʻo nei i ka hiki; hoʻoulu kulina, soybeans, kulina ono no ka mākeke mahiʻai a me kekahi mea kanu kūikawā no kahi ʻoihana kūloko

Founded a women’s farming group in her village in order to transfer her knowledge of modern farming techniques to others. Ma kāna mahiÊ»ai, ulu Ê»o ia i ka palaoa, nā mea kanu, nā mea kanu chili a me nā mea kanu.

GM o ka waiū a me ka hānai ʻana, ʻO Craigmore Sustainables. Hana ka 22 nā waiwai waiū ma Canterbury, ʻĀpana ʻo Otago ʻĀkau. Me 16,000 mau bipi wahine, Hoʻohana ka hui i kahi ʻōnaehana hānai hānai rotational i hoʻonui ʻia me Fodder Beet a me Kale. Hoʻopulu ʻia nā mahiʻai a pau. ʻO ka hānai hānai ka nui o ka huehue a me ka kāwili, kekahi mau wahi hānai fescue.

Stella Thomas is a farmer who has also established the first female owned seed company in Nigeria called Tecni Seed. She is the CEO of Tecni Seed, one of the foremost seed companies in Nigeria where she grows maize, rice, sorghum and vegetable seeds. Stella grows seed on her farm and also outsources the growing of seed on other farms. She works with over 3,000 farmers cultivating over 6,000 hectares annually.

Shuichi Tokumoto produces rice, beans and corn on 1,000 hectare. Having been introduced to GM crop systems and new seed coating technology, he plans to use sustainable practices to grow GM crops with an emphasis on environmentally friendly agriculture. He serves as representative director, Agricultural Corporation Tree & Norf Company.

Ke kanu nei ʻo Le Thi Trang Nha i nā mea kanu, melon, maiʻa a me nā hua citrus ma Unifarm ma Binh Duong Panalāʻau, Wiekanama. Nui ka makemake o Nha i ka neʻe ʻana i ka mahiʻai Vietnamese a me ka hopena maikaʻi i ka hoʻokele waiwai kaiāulu ma ke ʻano he lālā o ka Global Farmer Network.

Ulu i nā pulupulu a me nā cereala ma mua o 100 ha a ala aʻe i luna 100 poʻo o nā holoholona, ʻeleu i nā hui mahiʻai e pili ana i nā pilikia e pili ana i ke kālepa honua

Agronomist Engineer – active with the National Seed Institute and other agricultural organizations.

Deceased (unknown - 2022) Luna Hoʻokele Nui o NIBULON Ltd., kahi hui e alakaʻi ana i ka loli mahiʻai ma Ukraine. Hoʻokomo ʻia i kahi ʻōnaehana hoʻoholo no ka lawe ʻana, ka mālama ʻana a me ka hana ʻana i nā huahana ag. Hoʻokomo ʻia ka hana kulina i Ukraine.

Ad van Velde is a dairy farmer in the northern part of the Netherlands. On his family farm, he milks 200 cows with some external labor. The farm breeds all of its own cattle. Ad has been farming since 1979. He’s an innovator who has been using milking robots since 1998. The dairy is moving toward being antibiotic-free and climate neutral, also quick to adopt new technology to improve milk production. His milk is delivered to NoorderlandMilk, a cooperative that Ad founded in 2006.
Ad grows grass, alfalfa, sugar beets and maize on loamy clay soil which requires drainage tile. The farm is intensively cooperative with crop farmers in the region, exchanging land and providing manure to other farmers. Ad is working on several projects with Wageningen University. He also owns DairyNext, a business development consultancy. He is also a partner in a dairy project in India.
He is a farmer with an international view and a very large network. Ad has been president of Global Dairy Farmers since 2017.

Nā mahiʻai 3,400 hectares o ke kulina, palaoa hoʻoilo, barley, palaoa durum, sunflower, pue wale, nā beets kō a me nā mea kanu liʻiliʻi ʻē aʻe.

Kanaha-ʻelima waiū bipi me nā waiū robotic. Pelekikena i hala o ka New Brunswick Young Farmers Forum. He ʻelele ʻelele pono; Mālama ka mahiʻai i nā malihini kipa me nā hui kula.

ʻO Pedro Vigneau kahi mahiʻai ʻelima hanauna, hānai pipi a me nā mea ulu e ulu ana no ka hānai a me ka palaoa, me GM soya, ma Central Argentina. ʻO Passionate e pili ana i nā pono o ka mahiʻai ʻana a me ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka ʻenehana e pale aku i ke kaiapuni.

Ulu palaoa, barley malting, hua lōkō, ka beet kō a me nā pī ʻōmaʻomaʻo ma 3000 eka. Lālā o Kuekene Parliament, 2007- Lālā o nā kōmike no ka mahiʻai a me ke kaiapuni, a me Kanawai Kivila.

ʻO Terry Wanzek kahi mahiʻai ʻehā o North Dakota. Hāpai kēia pilina ʻohana i ka palaoa puna, palaoa, soybeans, barley, nā pi maloʻo maloʻo a me nā sunflowers. Ua koho ʻia ʻo Terry e lawelawe ma ke ʻano he Senator ʻo North Dakota State, ke hāʻawi nei i ke alakaʻi i ke kōmike mahiʻai a ke lawelawe nei ma ke ʻano he Pelekikena Senate Pro Tempore. Terry continues to provide leadership to the National Association of Wheat Growers and the NoDak Mutual Insurance. He kekelē ʻo ia i ka Administration Business a me ka Heluhelu mai ke Kulanui ʻo Jamestown a hoʻopau i ka Texas A. & Polokalamu M Hoʻokele no nā mea Mahiai.

Mea kanu mea kanu PhD a me ka mea kākau o 4 nā hybrids i hoʻopaʻa inoa ʻia. Hoʻopili ʻia i ka mahiʻai ʻohana a ka wahine kahi e mahi ai i ka maize no ka hua, ka ʻono momona no ka mākeke hou, rape i ka hua aila a loaʻa kahi māla cherry.

ʻO Andrew Weidemann mahiʻai me kāna wahine ʻo Julie, ke kaikaina ʻo Rodney a me kāna wahine ʻo Andrea ma ka moku ʻo Wimmera ma Victoria, ʻO Australia kahi e kanu ai lākou i ka palaoa, barley, canola, piʻa ākea, chic a me nā pā piʻo, ʻāpala, oaten a vetch hay me nā keiki hipa ʻo White Suffolk.

Mea kākau moʻolelo ma mua. ʻO kāna māla ka mahiʻai raiki ʻoihana nui ʻelua ma Nigeria e ka nui o ka ʻāina; 45,000 hectare; ulu laiki no nā mea wili. Ua ʻaʻa ʻia ʻo ia me ka hoʻoulu ʻana i ka noho maluhia ma waena o kāna mau limahana a me kahi kaiāulu ʻo Fulani paʻa loa. Ua alakaʻi kēia i ka hoʻokumu ʻana o kahi hoʻomaka ʻenehana i hoʻolālā ʻia e uwapo i ka hakahaka ma waena o nā kaiāulu mahiʻai kūwaho i kaiāulu ʻo Nigeria a me nā keʻena palekana.

Growing cereals, legumes and potatoes, the hilly topography is what initially drove Jim into precision ag, aiming to improve productivity and reduce costs.

Ua hoʻi ʻo ia i ka mahiʻai a kona ʻohana ma 2007 ma hope o ka hana ʻana i ke kālā ma ke ʻano he kālepa kālepa. Hoʻoulu i ka lihi, palaoa, canola a me nā mea kanu ʻē aʻe. Hoʻohana ka ʻohana i ka pīpī lewa a me nā ʻoihana hoʻokomo hua.

ʻO nā mahiʻai i ka hui pū ʻana me kona kaikaina, kahi ʻo ia kahi mea kūʻai aku i ka palaoa i laikini ʻia. Mālama ʻia ma ka Papa Hoʻolaha ʻĀina a ka mokuʻāina a alakaʻi ʻia me ke alakaʻi me ka National Trade Gross Association a me ka Polokalamu Hoʻolālā Biotech.