2017年美国乳品可持续发展奖获奖者已亮相!
这是第六个年度项目,表彰那些改善人类、动物和地球福祉的奶牛场、企业和合作伙伴。请点击了解今年的获奖者。卓越的奶牛场可持续性
赢家:威斯康星州卡斯科的金纳德农场
金纳德一家为7000多头奶牛挤奶,这个规模可以让他们在支持农村社区的同时,最大限度地提高水、土壤和奶牛的舒适度。他们雇用受过大学教育的年轻居民创新农业技术,从而留住了他们。金纳德家族常常走在前沿;他们建立了第一个沙子回收中心——在这个过程中不使用淡水——对沙子进行分离、清洗和干燥,以便重复使用。沙子是这个农场首选的床上用品,因为它为奶牛提供舒适和可靠的地基,并且是无菌的,保持乳房健康。
卓越的奶牛场可持续性
获奖者:俄勒冈州瑞克瑞尔的瑞克瑞尔奶制品公司
Rickreall,俄勒冈州,居民知道Louie Kazemier是一个好邻居。事实上,他的关系是他农场经常改进的力量。例如,当固体在他的粪便泻湖建立羊水湖时,Louie发起了与种子农民的贸易,以提供肥料以交换饲料。他还与当地的食品加工机合作,使用他们的废水进行灌溉。Kazemier取决于整个系统的方法倾向于重要 - 这反过来就是一切。结果很大:对于一个,大多数乳制品的25名员工已经在那里超过20年了。
卓越的奶牛场可持续性
获奖者:密歇根州阿尔托的瑞士农场
这个农场距离密歇根州第二大城市大急流城市中心23英里。这既带来了城市扩张的压力,也带来了几代人离开农场的机会。自2006年以来,瑞士的乳品探索项目已经为36000多名学生、教师和家庭提供了参观农场的机会。在可持续实践方面,他们有很多可以证明的地方。在一次农场能源审计后,他们做出了改进,使每头牛的能源成本降低了17%。他们还采取步骤通过密歇根农业环境保证计划进行验证,这样邻居们就能继续看到结果。
卓越的乳制品加工和制造可持续发展
获奖者:格兰比亚营养公司,伊利诺斯州埃文斯顿
虽然杂货店的消费者在杂货店没有看到甘蓝营养品牌,但它具有大型足迹,是美国式奶酪和乳清的领先制造商之一。为了实施可持续发展计划,他们从爱达荷州的一个植物开始。该团队确定了优先影响领域,测量了社会存在,确定的指标,以证明进度,并确定需要额外资源的领域。到2016年,该公司已经通过三个植物复制了这种方法,并通过了一个全球可持续发展战略,即承诺“培育,增长和维持我们员工,牛奶生产商,客户,消费者和社区的生活”。
资源管理工作成绩突出
赢家:Kellercrest注册Holsteins,Inc。,威斯康星州赫尔斯山
凯勒家族参与了“欢乐谷流域项目”,这是一项由州、地方和国家机构合作的项目,旨在减少当地流域的磷负荷。结果是戏剧性的和积极的。事实上,威斯康辛州自然资源部预计会提议将Pleasant Valley支流从环境保护局的沉积物受损河流名单中移除。其他参与该项目的农场也看到了经济效益,这促使他们组成一个小组,在学习的基础上继续发展。凯勒一家从19世纪40年代末开始就在何烈山(Mount ho烈山)的丘陵上耕种,他们看到了节约成本和环境效益。
资源管理工作成绩突出
尊敬的议员:宾夕法尼亚州梅克斯堡的Mercer Vu Farms
Hissong家族需要一个粪便管理系统,使他们能够在保护Chesapeake湾流域的同时保持其高标准的母牛舒适度。他们看着农业外的行业设计了乳制品农场可以复制的东西。他们开发了一种系统,使它们能够使用牛床上用品和堆肥的粪便,同时使用来自液体粪肥的磷作为作物肥料在靶向应用中。他们的新系统消除了相当于从路上移除740辆汽车的温室气体排放。
社区伙伴关系的突出成就
获奖者:马里兰州,卡洛琳县,奥克兰景观农场和中岸河流保护协会
环保团体和农民的意见并不总是一致——特别是在切萨皮克湾流域,水质是一个重大问题。但这些团体确定了一个共同的目标:通过可复制的具有成本效益的项目来改善社区的水质。他们用一个木屑生物反应器完成了这项工作,这是马里兰州的第一个生物反应器,它可以从农业排水中去除氮。这是一种有效的、几乎无需维护的解决方案,每年可以消除流入切萨皮克湾的48磅硝酸盐-氮。
社区伙伴关系的突出成就
荣誉奖:东密歇根食品银行,密歇根的克罗格公司,密歇根牛奶生产者协会和密歇根州立大学扩展,诺维,密歇根州
长期以来已经建立了牛奶营养密集型材的好处。但密歇根牛奶生产商协会(MMPA)依赖于鲜为人知的品质,以帮助密歇根州弗林根居民,密歇根州在危机中,他们易受受污染的水中中毒的危机。在乳制品中发现的钙和铁,可以帮助减轻铅消费的健康风险。通过全面的伙伴关系,589,824份牛奶捐赠给有需要的人。现在有一个捐赠模型可以在受潜在的铅污染影响的其他社区中表明这一点是可能的。
社区伙伴关系的突出成就
荣誉奖:美国乳品教育和培训联盟延伸,学院站,德克萨斯州
美国西南部熟练的农业专业人士的需求继续发展,特别是随着该地区的大学减少或消除了他们的乳制品。usdetc今天蓬勃发展,感谢农民和其他乳制品专业人士。目标:在现代乳品管理的实际方面训练动物和乳制品科学,农业和兽医前学生。学生在尽可能多的不同乳房,管理风格和发展阶段学习和访问,以增长参与者对乳制品运营所需的理解,所以它们更好地装备领先。
The Kinnard Family milks more than 7,000 cows—a scale that allows them to maximize water, soil and cow comfort while supporting their rural community. They retain the area’s young, college-educated residents by employing them to innovate farm technology. The Kinnards are often on the cutting edge; they made a first-of-its-kind sand recycling center—one that uses no freshwater in the process—to separate, wash and dry sand for repeated use. Sand is this farm’s preferred bedding material because it provides comfort and sure footing for cows and is bacteria-free, keeping udders healthy.
">Winner: Rickreall Dairy, Rickreall, Oregon
Rickreall, Oregon, residents know Louie Kazemier as a good neighbor. In fact, his relationships are the force behind his farm’s frequent improvements. For example, when solids were building up in his manure lagoon, Louie initiated trade with a seed farmer to provide fertilizer in exchange for feed. He also collaborated with a local food processor to use their waste water for irrigation. Kazemier depends on a whole-system approach to tend to what matters—and that turns out to be everything. The results are big: for one, most of the dairy’s 25 employees have been there for more than 20 years.
">Winner: SwissLane Farms, Alto, Michigan
This farm is 23 miles from downtown Grand Rapids, the second-largest city in Michigan. That poses both pressures from urban sprawl and opportunities to reach people several generations removed from the farm. Since 2006, SwissLane’s Dairy Discovery program has offered farm tours, reaching more than 36,000 students, teachers and families. They have plenty to demonstrate when it comes to sustainable practices. After a farm energy audit, they made improvements that reduced energy costs by 17% per cow. They also took steps to become verified through the Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program so neighbors continue to see results.
">Winner: Glanbia Nutritionals, Evanston, Illinois
While the Glanbia Nutritionals brand is not seen by consumers in a grocery store, it has a big footprint as one of the leading manufacturers of American-style cheese and whey. To implement a sustainability plan, they started with a single plant in Idaho. The team determined priority impact areas, measured social presence, determined metrics to demonstrate progress, and identified areas where additional resourcing was needed. By 2016, the company had replicated this approach with three more plants and adopted a global sustainability strategy that promises to “nurture, grow and sustain the lives of our employees, milk producers, customers, consumers and communities.”
">Winner: Kellercrest Registered Holsteins, Inc., Mount Horeb, Wisconsin
The Keller family participated in the Pleasant Valley Watershed Project, a collaboration among state, local and national agencies to reduce the local watershed’s phosphorous load. Results were dramatic and positive. In fact, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources is expected to propose removing the Pleasant Valley Branch from the EPA’s list of sediment-impaired streams. Other farms that participated in the project saw economic benefits too, and this spurred them to form a group to build on the learnings. The Kellers, whose family has farmed the hills of Mount Horeb since the late 1840s, saw cost savings as well as environmental benefits.
">Honorable Mention: Mercer Vu Farms, Mercersburg, Pennsylvania
The Hissong family needed a manure management system that allowed them to maintain their high standard of cow comfort while protecting the Chesapeake Bay Watershed. They looked at industries outside agriculture to devise something dairy farms can replicate. They developed a system that allows them to use manure solids for cow bedding and for compost while using phosphorus from the liquid manure as crop fertilizer in a targeted application. Their new system eliminated greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to removing 740 cars from the road.
">Winner: Oakland View Farms & Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy, Caroline County, Maryland
Environmental communities and farmers haven’t always seen eye to eye – especially in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, where water quality is a significant issue. But these groups identified a common goal: improve the community’s water quality through cost-effective projects that could be replicated. They did that with a woodchip bioreactor – the first of its kind in Maryland – that eliminated nitrogen from agricultural drainage water. An effective, virtually maintenance-free solution, it eliminates 48 pounds of nitrate-nitrogen from flowing into the Chesapeake Bay each year.
">Honorable Mention: Food Bank of Eastern Michigan, The Kroger Co. of Michigan, Michigan Milk Producers Association and Michigan State University Extension, Novi, Michigan
The benefits of milk’s nutrient-dense profile have long been established. But the Michigan Milk Producers Association (MMPA) relied on lesser-known qualities to help the residents of Flint, Michigan, during a crisis in which they were susceptible to lead poisoning from contaminated water. Calcium and iron, found in dairy, can help mitigate health risks of lead consumption. Through a comprehensive partnership, 589,824 servings of milk were donated to those in need. Now there’s a donation model to show this is possible in other communities affected by potential lead contamination.
">Honorable Mention: U.S. Dairy Education & Training Consortium Extension, College Station, Texas
The need for skilled agricultural professionals in the Southwestern United States continues to grow, especially as universities across the region have reduced or eliminated their dairy programs.USDETC thrives today thanks to farmers and other dairy industry professionals. The goal: train animal and dairy science, agribusiness and pre-veterinary students on practical aspects of modern dairy management. Students study and visit as many different dairies, management styles and developmental stages as possible to grow participants’ understanding of what a dairy operation entails so they’re better equipped to lead.
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