Barrage of Pop-Ups – January 9, 2020

Digital shoppers face a barrage of pop-ups and promos for unhealthy food

 

Within a few years, the average U.S. household will spend $850 annually on food and beverage purchases over the internet, according to an estimate by Nielsen and the Food Marketing Institute. On Wednesday, a consumer group warned that digital grocers “are generally undermining Americans’ efforts to eat well” by flooding shoppers with pop-up ads and promotions for junk food.

 

With change in party, Van Drew vanishes from House ag panel

 

New Jersey Rep. Jeff Van Drew, who changed parties to become a Republican after voting against the impeachment of President Trump, is the second lawmaker to lose his seat on the House Agriculture Committee in a year. The other was anti-immigrant Republican Steve King of Iowa.

TODAY’S QUICK HITS

Big dairies reign in Midwest (Hoard’s Dairyman): Just 3 percent of the dairy farms in the Central Federal Milk Marketing Order — which covers Kansas, Oklahoma, and sections of many other midwestern states — produced half of the region’s milk this past October.

 

Protein out of ‘thin air’ (BBC): Scientists in Finland are researching new technology that would create a flavorless protein but produce near-zero greenhouse gas emissions in the process.

 

Carbon farming for additional income (Center for American Progress): The average family farm could gain $22,000 a year in income if the government expanded working lands programs and encouraged carbon sequestration in the soil, and if farmers significantly increased their use of cover crops and renewable energy.

 

China drops ethanol goal (Reuters): Chinese officials have suspended their goal of a 10 percent blend of ethanol in the national gasoline supply this year, a blow to domestic producers and to overseas producers who hoped for a large, new market for the biofuel.

 

A hefty price for almonds (Guardian): Almond growers rely on honeybees to pollinate their trees, yet the bees used in the almond groves are dying in record numbers. Said one scientist, “It’s like sending bees to war.”

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