United States: Sorghum brings economic potential to rural America

Published Aug 28, 2024

Tridge summary

Sorghum United CEO, Nate Blum, is pushing for the cereal grain to have a larger economic impact in rural America due to its suitability for most farming operations and potential for value addition in food, fuel, and fiber products. Sorghum is desired by consumers for its non-GMO, gluten-free, and highly nutritious properties. It is also a drought-resistant crop that benefits the environment by using a third of the water corn needs and aiding in carbon sequestration and nitrogen fixation. The global sorghum industry is projected to grow to $34 billion by 2030, with the U.S., particularly Kansas, Texas, and South Dakota, being the largest producer. China currently purchases 93% of the U.S. crop.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The CEO of Sorghum United says there’s tremendous potential for sorghum to have a larger economic impact in rural America. Nate Blum says the cereal grain, which is popular in India and Africa, fits well into most farming operations. “If we can locate regional value additions to food, fuel and fiber products that are using sorghum and millets, then you can, at least in one part of your cropping system, you can get that under direct contract and mitigate the commodity marketing risk in the other parts of your operation,” he says. He tells Brownfield sorghum offers traits desired by consumers, as the grain can be milled into flour and oils or used for things like cattle feed. “There’s a lot of consumers that want non-GMO and gluten free, both of which sorghum and millets are.” He says, “In addition to that, sorghum and millets are very highly nutritive.” He says the drought-resistant crop also enhances the environment. “Sorghum uses about a third of the water corn does.” He says, ...

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