Both are cool - season crops that
produce oilseeds.
Not exact matches
We've seen how supply management for dairy, poultry and eggs hurts a) consumers through artificially high prices; b) food processors (and the jobs they could be creating in Canada) because of their inability to compete internationally; c) exporters of all kinds looking for more international trade access, but which Canada is denied because of supply management; d) the majority of Canadian farmers (over 90 per cent)-- those who grow and
produce beef, pork, grains,
oilseeds, pulses, and who are not supply managed — who would also benefit from more international trade access; and finally e) most ironically, dairy farmers themselves, also prevented from exploiting international growth opportunities.
Produced from a new variety of
oilseed rape — the familiar yellow - flowered crop that is the third - largest source of the world's vegetable oil needs — the new oil, -LSB-...]
In early June, a farmer in southern England used weed killer to destroy 26 acres of engineered
oilseed rape
produced by a biotech company called AgrEvo, because his farm's trustees were opposed to the trials and were worried that the rape might contaminate nearby organic crops.
Timothy Durrett, assistant professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics, and collaborators at Michigan State University and the University of Nebraska, Lincoln have modified Camelina sativa — a nonfood
oilseed crop — and
produced the highest levels of modified seed lipids to date.
The goal of the research is to alter
oilseeds to
produce large amounts of modified oil that can be used as improved biofuels or even industrial and food - related applications.
According to the CRS report, «For centuries, the plant species Cannabis sativa has been a source of fiber and
oilseed used worldwide to
produce a variety of industrial and consumer products.
Experiments in Quebec found that soybeans, a major legume
oilseed crop in eastern Canada,
produced lower nitrous oxide emissions than corn, the major cereal crop grown in the eastern region.
Back when the bright yellow flowers were still known as Rape or
Oilseed rape, Brassica napus
produced a bitter oil, unsuitable for human consumption and used mainly to lubricate machines.