Innovating Ag Innovation
Wednesday, 27 Sep 2023 at 5:30 pm – Dolezal Auditorium, 127 Curtiss Hall
This lecture will be recorded, and the recording link will be added here within 36-48 hours after the lecture has finished.William K. Deal Endowed Leadership LectureInnovation in agriculture is omnipresent. Yet, the agricultural sector in the U.S. - and the rest of the world - is facing unprecedented challenges and risks to meet the global demand for food, fiber and energy. How can we innovate the innovation required to address these challenges in our supply chain infrastructure, meaningfully mitigate climate change, enhance productivity, improve water quality, water use and water availability, increase biodiversity and mitigate labor shortages while ensuring food security?Al Tank, ag and food entrepreneur, investor and consultant based in Bethesda, Maryland, earned his bachelor’s degree in animal science from Iowa State in 1981. He has held several positions within the agricultural field over the years, serving in Iowa and Washington, D.C. This includes serving as a previous CEO of the National Pork Producers Council.He also founded and was chief executive officer of two companies – AgCert International Plc and Revolution Energy Solutions LLC. AgCert has become a leader in producing and selling agriculturally derived greenhouse gas emission reductions used to meet Kyoto Protocol and European Union Emission Trading Scheme requirements. Revolution Energy Solutions LLC developed, owned and operated renewable energy projects on agricultural platforms in the United States.According to Tank, innovation in agriculture is omnipresent. Yet the agricultural sector in the United States and the rest of the world faces unprecedented challenges and risks to meet the global demand for food, fiber and energy. During his presentation, Tank will address how we can:innovate the innovation required to address these challenges in our supply chain infrastructure;meaningfully mitigate climate change;enhance productivity;improve water quality, water use and water availability;increase biodiversity; andmitigate labor shortages while ensuring food security. This lecture will be recorded and made available a few days after the event at https://www.lectures.iastate.edu/recordi...ings. This lecture will be recorded, and the recording link will be added here within 36-48 hours after the lecture has finished.William K. Deal Endowed Leadership LectureInnovation in agriculture is omnipresent. Yet, the agricultural sector in the U.S. - and the rest of the world - is facing unprecedented challenges and risks to meet the global demand for food, fiber and energy. How can we innovate the innovation required to address these challenges in our supply chain infrastructure, meaningfully mitigate climate change, enhance productivity, improve water quality, water use and water availability, increase biodiversity and mitigate labor shortages while ensuring food security?Al Tank, ag and food entrepreneur, investor and consultant based in Bethesda, Maryland, earned his bachelor’s degree in animal science from Iowa State in 1981. He has held several positions within the agricultural field over the years, serving in Iowa and Washington, D.C. This includes serving as a previous CEO of the National Pork Producers Council.He also founded and was chief executive officer of two companies – AgCert International Plc and Revolution Energy Solutions LLC. AgCert has become a leader in producing and selling agriculturally derived greenhouse gas emission reductions used to meet Kyoto Protocol and European Union Emission Trading Scheme requirements. Revolution Energy Solutions LLC developed, owned and operated renewable energy projects on agricultural platforms in the United States.According to Tank, innovation in agriculture is omnipresent. Yet the agricultural sector in the United States and the rest of the world faces unprecedented challenges and risks to meet the global demand for food, fiber and energy. During his presentation, Tank will address how we can:innovate the innovation required to address these challenges in our supply chain infrastructure;meaningfully mitigate climate change;enhance productivity;improve water quality, water use and water availability;increase biodiversity; andmitigate labor shortages while ensuring food security. This lecture will be recorded and made available a few days after the event at https://www.lectures.iastate.edu/recordi...ings.
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