CropLife
America Celebrates 80 Years
CropLife
America (CLA) celebrated its 80th anniversary as the national association
representing the crop protection industry during its Annual Meeting in West
Virginia. The theme of this year’s meeting was “The Great Progression of
Agriculture” and included presentations on modern agriculture’s past, present
and future.
In
a panel discussion moderated by Jay
Vroom, CLA’s president and CEO, former U.S. Secretaries of Agriculture John Block, Michael Espy, John Knebel
and Ed Schafer shared memories from
their respective terms in office and reflected on U.S. farm policy, including a
five-year farm bill that is currently under deliberation in the House and
Senate.
“We
were delighted that four former Secretaries of Agriculture were able to
participate in an open dialogue at this year’s Annual Meeting,” said Vroom. “It
was a truly unique opportunity for attendees to learn more about U.S. farm
policy from the leaders who have seen it evolve so much in recent decades. The
panel discussion embodied our Annual Meeting theme of looking back on
agriculture’s past while still concentrating on the future.”
Pollinator
health, the focus of the next panel presentation, included panelist Gabriele Ludwig, associate director of
environmental affairs for the Almond Board of California. Panelists stressed a
need for increased collaboration among the crop protection industry,
beekeepers, crop farmers and regulatory agencies including the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Keynote
presenter Dr. Cary Fowler, special
advisor and former executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, was
instrumental in the development of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, which
provides security for seed samples of more than 750,000 unique crop varieties. Fowler
focused on the continual preservation and security of seed diversity in order
to sustain global food demands.
Brennan
Costello,
central region vice president of the National FFA Organization, and Caroline Weihl of Agriculture Future of
America (AFA), challenged attendees to imagine what agriculture and the crop
protection industry might look like in the next 30 years.
“Throughout
this year’s Annual Meeting, we celebrated the work of those ‘agricultural
giants’ that came before us and worked so steadily on advancing modern
agriculture from the time of CLA’s founding until today,” Vroom noted. “At all
times, however, we must continue looking forward. Our industry is dependent on
students like Brennan and Caroline, who represent the future of agriculture.”
Labels: Cary Fowler, CLA 80th anniversary, CropLife America Annual Meeting, CropLife America Celebrates 80 Years, Ed Schafer, Garbriele, Jay Vroom, John Block, John Knebel, Ludwig, Michael Espy