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May 16, 18 deadlines for USDA grants


May 10, 2007 9:28 AM 

From: Delta Farm Press online 
http://deltafarmpress.com/news/070510-usda-deadline/ 



Farmers, ranchers and rural businesses are being encouraged to apply for
grant and loan funding through two of the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Rural Development programs - the Value-Added Producer Grant Program and
the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Program, according to Kay
Lynn Tettleton, LSU AgCenter community development agent.

The deadlines are May 16 and May 18.

"Even if you don't think you can make the deadline for this year, start
planning for next year," said Judy Meshe, business and cooperative
specialist for the USDA.

Meshe spoke on the Value-Added Producer Grants Program, which can help
farmers and independent producers fund planning activities and provide
working capital for marketing value-added agricultural products. Her
message was one of several at an LSU AgCenter-sponsored workshop at the
Scott Research and Extension Education Center in Winnsboro, La. The
deadline for these grants is May 16.

Examples of projects funded the last four years include a goat farmer
who wanted to sell the meat to ethnic groups and needed a marketing
plan; a soybean farmer who wanted a feasibility study for grinding beans
for energy production; a peach farmer who wanted to market throughout
the country and needed working capital, a Web site, brochures and
labels; and a sugarcane farmer who needed a study on converting his
stalks to an additive for ethanol, Meshe said.

The second USDA program is for renewable energy and energy efficiency.
This can help farmers and small businesses finance renewable energy
systems or make energy improvements, said Kevin Boone, renewable energy
coordinator for the USDA. May 18 is the deadline, he said.

Only one Louisiana project has been funded. "We are not proud of that.
We need to step up to get additional applications," Boone said.

That project was a Sabine Parish poultry farmer who modeled a similar
Mississippi application that reduced energy costs and increased
production.

"Biomass is plentiful in Louisiana," Boone said. "Biomass is any organic
material available on a renewable or recurring basis and includes
agricultural crops, trees grown for energy production, wood waste and
residues, aquatic plants and grasses included in the energy matrix,
fibers and animal wastes. But landfills do not qualify."

Bayou Wood Products in West Monroe recently secured a $4.9 million loan
guarantee for a renewable energy plant, Boone said. Bayou Wood Products
will use the funds to build a facility that will turn wood waste
products into an alternative fuel source. It will take wood scraps and
other waste and turn them into wood pellets to be used as a heat source
for wood-burning stoves. The facility is expected to produce 60,000 tons
of pellets per year.

"The bioenergy arena is so new, but the bottom line is the project must
be of commercial nature, not in the pilot stage," Boone said.

He said potential applications include cattle operators in remote areas
who want to use solar energy to run pumps. The deadline for the loan
guarantee application is July 2.

For more information on the loan and grant programs, visit 
http://www.rurdev.usda.gov <http://www.rurdev.usda.gov>  or contact
Tettleton at (318) 267-6721.

Vicki Morrone

Organic Vegetable and Crop Outreach Specialist

Michigan State University

C.S. Mott Sustainable Food Systems

303 Natural Resources Bldg.

East Lansing, MI 48824

517-353-3542

517-282-3557 (cell)

517-353-3834 (fax)

http://www.MichiganOrganic.msu.edu/

http://www.mottgroup.msu.edu/

 

 


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