Company to Expand Pre-Blended E15 Availability to 17 More Terminals
Posted by Todd Neeley , DTN Staff ReporterGROWMARK Energy has started offering pre-blended E15 at 17 additional terminals across the country.
GROWMARK Energy has started offering pre-blended E15 at 17 additional terminals across the country.
A restart to the central Brazil rainy season benefits second-crop (safrinha) corn.
John Harrington weighs in on which president deserves to be honored by ag more on Presidents Day: an inspiring cheerleader long on theory, or a visionary policymaker who actually shaped the infrastructure and enduring productivity of U.S. agriculture?
While soybean charts show a potential bearish breach of trendline support in this week's activity, the continuous active canola chart has seen the May contract fail to test trendline support drawn from the November low.
5, 10 and 15-year averages for the percent that corn and soybean yields deviated from the 1970-2018 trend.
Agricultural water availability in most of the Ogallala Aquifer continues to show a sharp net decline.
DTN's weekly technical analysis on Chicago, Kansas City and Minneapolis wheat.
In yet another sign of the deteriorating farm economy, a Wells Fargo economist said here last week that banks will not make loans to all financially troubled farmers who have crop insurance this year, even though they will require them to buy it.
Despite a new federal initiative to improve rural high-speed internet access, ultra-high-speed 5G internet will come way sooner to the cities.
The DTN domestic distillers dried grains average price was unchanged at $141 per ton for the week ended Feb. 14.
Journalists don't write for awards. But it's a great honor to be recognized by the groups you cover.
Case-IH says its AFS Connect Magnum is its biggest technology introduction in 10 years, boasting the full integration of iron and technology.
While commercial banks and Farm Credit system lenders hold nearly equal shares of farm debt, banks hold more non-real estate debt, exposing them to greater risks if the farm economy continues to flounder.
The 2019 production year is starting to look a lot like the last three with a few more twists and turns.