
23 January 2026
USDA Launches $100M Screwworm Challenge, Boosts Farmer Profits, Transparency
Department of Agriculture (USDA) News
About
Welcome back, listeners, to your weekly USDA update. This week’s top headline: Secretary Brooke L. Rollins launched the New World Screwworm Grand Challenge, unleashing up to $100 million for innovative projects to boost sterile fly production and stop this devastating pest from spreading north from Mexico and Central America.
USDA’s USDA press release quotes Rollins saying, “This is a strategic investment in America’s farmers and ranchers... to protect our food supply and our economy, rebuilding our cattle herd to lower grocery prices.” It’s a direct hit against a threat that could ravage livestock, echoing fights against spotted lanternfly and citrus greening.
Other big moves include appointing Philip Cowee as Nevada’s Farm Service Agency State Executive Director on January 5, part of Rollins’ push to put farmers first in rural America. USDA also rolled out a new online portal for reporting foreign-owned ag land deals, boosting transparency. And Rollins signed off on 2026 research priorities—think boosting farmer profits through automation, cracking trade barriers for record yields, soil health for lasting lands, and precision nutrition for healthier eats.
These shake things up: Farmers get tools for profitability and pest defense, shielding jobs and cutting food costs for everyday Americans. Businesses tap new markets and bioenergy uses, while states like Nevada see streamlined local leadership. Internationally, it strengthens ties in pest battles across borders.
Data point: Senators warn USDA’s crop insurance tweak hits 67 million acres, urging a reversal for 2027 planting deadlines. WIC families now get more fluid milk through a fresh policy boost.
Watch the next WASDE report February 10 for crop outlooks. Dive deeper at usda.gov. If you’re a farmer, apply for Grand Challenge funds soon.
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USDA’s USDA press release quotes Rollins saying, “This is a strategic investment in America’s farmers and ranchers... to protect our food supply and our economy, rebuilding our cattle herd to lower grocery prices.” It’s a direct hit against a threat that could ravage livestock, echoing fights against spotted lanternfly and citrus greening.
Other big moves include appointing Philip Cowee as Nevada’s Farm Service Agency State Executive Director on January 5, part of Rollins’ push to put farmers first in rural America. USDA also rolled out a new online portal for reporting foreign-owned ag land deals, boosting transparency. And Rollins signed off on 2026 research priorities—think boosting farmer profits through automation, cracking trade barriers for record yields, soil health for lasting lands, and precision nutrition for healthier eats.
These shake things up: Farmers get tools for profitability and pest defense, shielding jobs and cutting food costs for everyday Americans. Businesses tap new markets and bioenergy uses, while states like Nevada see streamlined local leadership. Internationally, it strengthens ties in pest battles across borders.
Data point: Senators warn USDA’s crop insurance tweak hits 67 million acres, urging a reversal for 2027 planting deadlines. WIC families now get more fluid milk through a fresh policy boost.
Watch the next WASDE report February 10 for crop outlooks. Dive deeper at usda.gov. If you’re a farmer, apply for Grand Challenge funds soon.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI