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Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming

This is a discussion on Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming within the XDTalk Chatter Box forums, part of the XD Talk category; Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming - DailyFinance Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming By Michael Hirtzer Walmart has long used ...

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Old 06-21-2012, 01:27 PM   #1
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Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming

Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming - DailyFinance

Walmart's 'Green Wheat' Drive May Transform American Farming

By Michael Hirtzer

Walmart has long used its commercial might to forge a global supply chain with ruthless efficiency. Now it has a new target: U.S. wheat fields.

As part of efforts to reduce its carbon footprint and burnish its image as an environmentally responsible company, the huge retailer is sending senior employees into the fields for the first time ever, looking for ways to help farmers reduce their use of carbon-intensive fertilizers or improve logistics.

"We don't have a lot of visibility in the supply chain, so we started in the field," says Robert Kaplan, a sustainability manager at the Bentonville, Ark.-based firm. "I hadn't seen a wheat field before and I wanted to find out how we go from a green crop in the fields to flour on our shelves."

This May, Kaplan and a colleague were the first Walmart (WMT) employees ever to attend the annual crop tour across the No. 1 winter wheat state Kansas, a rite of passage for traders, analysts, academics and buyers for the past 55 years.

The aim is simple: use Walmart's commercial muscle to get its Great Value-branded flour and wheat products from field to shelf more efficiently, using less carbon.

In the process, however, Walmart may end up initiating transformative changes in the way U.S. farmers grow wheat, lowering costs and improving yields for a crop that has failed to keep pace with the dramatic improvements in sustainability of other commodities such as corn and cotton.

There are some relatively easy wins: convincing more farmers to abandon the practice of plowing their fields after each harvest, and using satellite imagery to optimize fertilizer use.

But the challenge is substantial. Wheat is already one of the least-intensive crops in terms of nitrogen fertilizer, using half as much as corn to produce and acre of grain.

"Wheat is relatively low input. There are not a lot of corners that can be cut," says Jason Kelley, a wheat and corn extension agronomist at the University of Arkansas.

Lagging Efficiency

In the last three decades, better farming practices, such as reducing tillage, have resulted in a 15% drop in greenhouse gas emissions in each bushel of wheat grown in the United States, according to a soon-to-be-released study by Field to Market, an alliance of national farm groups and more than 40 companies including Cargill and Kellogg's (K) (but not Walmart) that are seeking to enhance sustainability.

But those gains pale in comparison to other major crops. The amount of water needed to irrigate cotton fields has dropped by 30%, according to the study; soil erosion in corn farming has declined by 67% since 1980.

As it continues to buy more and more wheat to support its in-house brand, Walmart believes it can use its muscle to bring changes to the agricultural landscape by getting farmers to adopt more progressive techniques and labeling the flour they sell as a sustainable product.

In 2010, Walmart's store brands had a 4.4% share of the $14.35 billion U.S. packaged and industrial bread market, up from a 3.7% market share in 2006, according to research firm Euromonitor International.

About 40% of U.S. wheat is used for food. Walmart declined to specify how much wheat it buys directly or through its suppliers.

Tim Robinson, the company's senior buyer of baking commodities, joined Kaplan on the trip.

He said that, while it is still in the fact-finding phase of its wheat work, Walmart is likely to promote "precision farming" which uses satellite-guided planting to improve yields and no-till methods which proponents say reduce soil erosion and maintain land quality.

Roughly 75% of wheat farmers in Arkansas plow, or till, their fields, says Kelley. Abandoning that practice could require them to rotate crops regularly and take greater care in planting to avoid stunting plant growth.

"Wheat is one of the later adopters to no-till or zero-till," said Stewart Ramsey, a senior economist at analytics firm IHS who works with Field to Market.

New Inefficiencies

If anyone can drive efficiency into the generations-old practices of U.S. farmers, it's Walmart.

"Having world class logistics and distribution is the core of their business and what they've increasingly been doing is looking to apply those capabilities across the broader supply chain, going further upstream into production and processing," says Stewart Samuel, a senior analyst at global food and research firm IGD.

The company has embarked on an effort to eliminate 20 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions from its global supply chain by the end of 2015, the equivalent of taking nearly 4 million cars off the road for a year. It declined to say how much of the company's total emissions that represented.

Last year, the company installed more efficient lighting in its stores in the United States and Mexico and also delivered more goods even as its truck fleet drove fewer miles.

Ideas Sprout

May's crop tour has already yielded new ideas.

As one farmer told Robinson and Kaplan about how he used manure from nearby cattle feedlots to fertilize his fields, they wondered about the feasibility of hauling manure from U.S. poultry producers -- predominately in the mid-South -- to farmers elsewhere in that region or to the Corn Belt.

"We're an expert in transportation. What if we could find empty trucks going from one place to another that will help farmers get something they need?" Robinson said.

Tanner Ehmke, who grows wheat in western Kansas and met with Walmart during the tour, said: "From the farmer's perspective that is a great idea. Manure is a fantastic fertilizer."

"The question is whether it would pencil out, costwise," Tanner said.

He's not the only one asking that question.

"Hopefully, sustainable flour becomes an everyday business practice," said Robinson as the tour paused in Wichita, Kan. "We can't do this if it costs more."
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Old 06-21-2012, 01:32 PM   #2
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At least it's not more products from China.
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Old 06-21-2012, 01:41 PM   #3
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With Walmart driving it, I doubt the drive to be "green" will be environmentally appropriate at all. The only green they are after is money. Until they start buying ONLY organic, responsibly farmed, carbon neutral, etc., etc., it will never amount to much. So they are sending out COMPLETE NOOBS to the fields to try and solve the farmers problems? How egotistical of them.

At least hire some seasoned consultants in the various areas or farming, transportation, logistics, etc.
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Old 06-21-2012, 01:46 PM   #4
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So they are sending out COMPLETE NOOBS to the fields to try and solve the farmers problems? How egotistical of them.

At least hire some seasoned consultants in the various areas or farming, transportation, logistics, etc.
The seasoned consultants haven't gotten much changes so far... Just remember Microsoft was started in a garage by NOOBS.
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Old 06-21-2012, 01:49 PM   #5
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I like the effort here, but I have my doubts that this will have much positive impact on the environment or emissions. Likely will result in trading one bad practice for a different one.
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Old 06-21-2012, 02:41 PM   #6
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The seasoned consultants haven't gotten much changes so far... Just remember Microsoft was started in a garage by NOOBS.
NOOBS that knew what they were doing though. They were all techies and programmers.
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Old 06-21-2012, 02:52 PM   #7
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Great..a bunch of bean counting weenies are going to teach farmers how to grow wheat more efficiently

Kinda like where I work, buncha college graduate "business geeks" get in and set policy and "look at the numbers" and haven't a CLUE how it is supposed to work, and all they do is generate MORE problems and confusion and frustration than letting those that know how to do it actually do it.
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Old 06-21-2012, 03:26 PM   #8
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The seasoned consultants haven't gotten much changes so far... Just remember Microsoft was started in a garage by NOOBS.

I thought microsoft got started by stealing what was started in a garage by noobs.

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Old 06-21-2012, 04:44 PM   #9
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I thought microsoft got started by stealing what was started in a garage by noobs.

XCOPY

sssh
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Old 06-21-2012, 05:33 PM   #10
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F*ck walmart. I worked for them years ago while in college when old Sam was still alive. He was barely cold and buried when it all changed. Some of you older guys may remember when every wally world had a big sign up front that featured some little company they had saved, like some little 50 person flyswatter factory in backwater nowhere. They used to have special signs to indicate items that were made in America, and they would have your head if you put anything foreign on that shelf or rack. Loyal employees were given preferred shifts and regular raises. Now they're pushing all employees into rotating shifts, knowing that the adult working moms, retired ladies, etc can't or won't work rotating shifts. They can then fire these long-term, higher-paid full timers and replace them with a few low-paid part timers. Part timers because they wally doesn't have to pay for benefits. They are the single largest importer of crap from China -- you know, that corrupt communist government that runs on our dollars, whether we spend them willingly on their crap products or by buying our debts. They're the epitome of what's wrong with American business and I refuse to buy ANYTHING from them. Even if my only alternative is to buy the exact same chinese crap item from another store and spend more, that's what I'll do.
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