Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST)

Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST) We're a nonprofit that publishes credible, balanced, & science-based papers.

CAST is a nonprofit 501 (c)(3) organization composed of scientific societies and many individual, student, company, nonprofit, and associate society members. CAST's Board is composed of representatives of the scientific societies, commercial companies, and nonprofit or trade organizations, and a Board of Directors. CAST was established in 1972 as a result of a 1970 meeting sponsored by the Nationa

l Academy of Sciences and National Research Council. The primary work of CAST is the publication of task force reports, commentary papers, special publications, and issue papers written by scientists from many disciplines. The CAST Board is responsible for the policies and procedures followed in developing, processing, and disseminating the documents produced. These publications and their distribution are fundamental activities that accomplish our mission to assemble, interpret, and communicate credible science-based information regionally, nationally, and internationally to legislators, regulators, policymakers, the media, the private sector, and the public. The wide distribution of CAST publications to non-scientists enhances the education and understanding of the general public. CAST addresses issues of animal sciences, food sciences, agricultural technology, plant and soil sciences, and plant protection sciences with inputs from economists, social scientists, toxicologists, plant pathologists, entomologists, w**d scientists, nematologists, and legal experts.

Ever wonder what an economist sees when a "food prices are rising" headline pops up?In this clip from Cast Pulse Podcast...
06/11/2026

Ever wonder what an economist sees when a "food prices are rising" headline pops up?

In this clip from Cast Pulse Podcast, David Ortega explains what he checks first — and why connecting the data to people's everyday experience (farmers, grocery shoppers) matters as much as the numbers themselves.

🎥 Watch here: https://buff.ly/BEOFw2Q
🎙️ Full conversation: https://buff.ly/Ni2Dcq2

Grocery prices are up across the board in 2026 — and it's not just one thing causing it. In this episode of CAST Pulse, ...
06/11/2026

Grocery prices are up across the board in 2026 — and it's not just one thing causing it. In this episode of CAST Pulse, food economist Dr. David Ortega explains what's really driving food prices: tariffs, the conflict in the Middle East, drought, and fuel costs.

It's also a preview of our free live "Meet the Expert" conversation with Dr. Ortega on July 7 — no registration required.

🎧 Listen now: https://buff.ly/E9sy7to

CAST is now accepting nominations for the 2026 CAST Lifetime Achievement Award — CAST's award for career-long impact.The...
06/08/2026

CAST is now accepting nominations for the 2026 CAST Lifetime Achievement Award — CAST's award for career-long impact.

The CLAA recognizes individuals whose career-long contributions have advanced agricultural science, science communication, or evidence-based leadership in food, agriculture, and the environment.

Now in its second year, the award was inaugurated in 2025 with Ambassador Kenneth M. Quinn, President Emeritus of the World Food Prize Foundation.

The 2026 award will be presented December 10, 2026, at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., alongside the Borlaug CAST Communication Award and the CAST Science Communication Scholarship.

Nomination deadline: July 31, 2026. Self-nominations are not accepted.

Nominate: https://buff.ly/vT3Tzuf

What keeps grocery store shelves stocked through pandemics, trade wars, and climate shocks? Decades of public investment...
06/05/2026

What keeps grocery store shelves stocked through pandemics, trade wars, and climate shocks? Decades of public investment in agricultural science — and that investment has been eroding.

In the latest Voices of Agriculture op-ed, Dr. David Ortega (Michigan State University, 2025 Borlaug CAST Communication Award recipient) examines the land-grant university system, the decline in U.S. public agricultural R&D funding, and what it means for food prices and long-term food security.

Key data point: By 2021, U.S. public agricultural R&D spending had declined to levels comparable to the 1970s, while China's was estimated at roughly double U.S. levels by the mid-2010s.

Read the full piece: https://buff.ly/bEAhvo1

The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent the views, positions, or policies of CAST.

CAST is now accepting applications for the 2026 CAST Science Communication Scholarship.$1,000 award for an undergraduate...
06/04/2026

CAST is now accepting applications for the 2026 CAST Science Communication Scholarship.

$1,000 award for an undergraduate or graduate student who excels at communicating agricultural science — through writing, video, podcasting, graphics, or any other medium.

Judged on clarity, accuracy, creativity, and impact. Open to CAST Student Members.

The award will be presented December 10, 2026, at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., alongside the Borlaug CAST Communication Award and the CAST Lifetime Achievement Award.

Deadline: July 31, 2026

Apply: https://buff.ly/Zz4hYHJ

Congratulations to Frances Pierce, our Creative Media Assistant intern, on graduating with her Bachelor of Science in Ag...
06/01/2026

Congratulations to Frances Pierce, our Creative Media Assistant intern, on graduating with her Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Communications from Oklahoma State University! 🎓

Frances walked across the stage surrounded by her closest friends — a moment she described as "accomplishing something huge together." That energy and heart showed up every day she was with our team.

And she's not done yet: Frances is heading back to OSU to pursue her Master's in Agricultural Communications, with goals in marketing and eventually teaching.

We're so grateful to have had you on the team, Frances. Proud of everything you've accomplished — and everything that's ahead. 👏

Episode 6 of CAST Pulse is live.This week, two conversations about what it takes to connect science with the people who ...
05/29/2026

Episode 6 of CAST Pulse is live.

This week, two conversations about what it takes to connect science with the people who need it most.

Jeremy Jack is a farmer from the Mississippi Delta and the newest member of CAST's Strategic Advisory Council. He talks about how precision agriculture transformed his family's operation — and why he thinks a National Academy of Agriculture could change how research reaches farmers on the ground.

Suraksha Baral is a Ph.D. student at The Ohio State University and the 2025 CAST Science Communication Scholarship recipient. She grew up watching food go to waste on her family's farm in Nepal. Now she studies how small, well-designed messages can actually change behavior at scale.

🎙️ Listen now: https://buff.ly/IIfO9Lx

The deadline to nominate for the 2026 Borlaug CAST Communication Award is 3 days away — May 31, midnight CST.This annual...
05/28/2026

The deadline to nominate for the 2026 Borlaug CAST Communication Award is 3 days away — May 31, midnight CST.

This annual award honors professionals in agriculture, food, and environmental science who communicate their work effectively to policymakers, media, and the public. Mid-career candidates actively engaged in the science are given primary consideration.

If you submitted a nomination in 2025, your package is already eligible for 2026 — confirm the rollover through the nomination form, no additional materials needed.

Submit at: https://buff.ly/DUR75l4

Farm succession planning isn't just a financial decision — it's one of the most consequential choices in agriculture tod...
05/22/2026

Farm succession planning isn't just a financial decision — it's one of the most consequential choices in agriculture today.

In the latest Voices of Agriculture piece, Julia Valliant, Farms for a New Generation Director at American Farmland Trust, lays out a stark reality: farmers aged 75 and older outnumber farmers under 35 by two to one — and most farmers who are retirement age have no succession plan at all, according to USDA data released in April 2026.

Much of a farm family's net worth is tied up in the land itself. To transition between generations while holding onto that land, the farm's income needs to grow to employ more people — and in today's agricultural economy, that's tough.

The consequences reach beyond individual families. Increasingly, farms without succession plans are being sold to real estate developers, investors, and larger-scale farm operations — driving land prices up and pricing out America's next farmers and ranchers.

Read More: https://buff.ly/HtNnvSE

// The opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not represent the views or policies of CAST.

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