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Farm Business
Agricultural Matters
Guy Smith's response to FW article on AIC rules.
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<blockquote data-quote="Grass And Grain" data-source="post: 7748733" data-attributes="member: 23184"><p>In the world of importing shippers, they can choose which tests they do. There isn't any set list (which they have to test for).</p><p></p><p>For example, they might choose to test mycotoxins in wheat if it's a known high risk mycotoxin year. Another season, they might not test wheat for mycotoxins. It's still their call, good or bad mycotoxins season.</p><p></p><p>If all your grain comes from the UK (with all our pesticide regulation, and only UK approved pesticides available to the farmer), you might decide it unecessary to do any pesticide tests, but maybe just test for moisture, bushel, protein.</p><p></p><p>That's the system for imports, and how they can then be deemed assured to send to a UK mill.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Grass And Grain, post: 7748733, member: 23184"] In the world of importing shippers, they can choose which tests they do. There isn't any set list (which they have to test for). For example, they might choose to test mycotoxins in wheat if it's a known high risk mycotoxin year. Another season, they might not test wheat for mycotoxins. It's still their call, good or bad mycotoxins season. If all your grain comes from the UK (with all our pesticide regulation, and only UK approved pesticides available to the farmer), you might decide it unecessary to do any pesticide tests, but maybe just test for moisture, bushel, protein. That's the system for imports, and how they can then be deemed assured to send to a UK mill. [/QUOTE]
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Guy Smith's response to FW article on AIC rules.
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