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Delaware Risk Management Conference set March 4

February 26, 2024

Continuing to run a business is not without risk, but the Delaware Farm Bureau and the University of Delaware’s Cooperative Extension are hoping to make that a little easier to deal with for farmers in the First State. Now in its second year, the Risk Management Conference focuses on information farmers need to minimize the risks in their industry. This free event is scheduled for 8 a.m. to 4 p..m., Monday, March 4, at the Harrington Fire Hall.

Topics include: 2024 Commodity Crop Enterprise Budgets, USDA Farm Services Agency Update, USDA Risk Management Agency Update, Fertilizer Market Update, Grain Market Update, Dryland Yield Modeling for Crop Insurance and Delaware Solar Farm Development Update.

“This event highlights the power of an industry-based organization. The farm bureau not only works to educate the public, but our farmers as well. It’s important to get together and remember the risks of our work and how to navigate that in our everyday practices. This conference is a great opportunity to do just that,” said Don Clifton, DEFB executive director.

Nathaniel Bruce, a farm business management specialist at the University of Delaware Cooperative Extension’s Georgetown office, said this conference makes a difference in how farmers move forward in Delaware’s agriculture industry.

“It’s an event that the Delaware Farm Bureau and Cooperative Extension came together last year for because there were a lot of questions in agriculture with the way input costs and grain prices were. There was just a lot of uncertainty. What’s going on in the farming economy is different from year to year,” Bruce said. Organizers hope that the conference gives producers more information on production risks such as markets, returns, money and crop insurance, to name a few, and where each of those topics is headed for the year.

“We want to give them the tools before they get into planning so they know what they’re getting into for the year,” he said. “I hope when they leave, they go home and wonder, ‘Am I doing that on my operation currently,’ or, ‘How do I improve on my operation?’ I think in farming, in general, a lot of those skills are handed down from generation to generation. So a lot of producers don’t have that experience where they’re getting new information or going to a class on business management,” said Bruce.

Both groups hope producers come out of the event with a new perspective and feel better equipped for the year ahead.

To register for this free event, go to defb.org or call the DEFB state office at 302-697-3183. To ask questions, contact Nathaniel Bruce at nsbruce@udel.edu or 302-362-7619.

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