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Author Archive for: Lisa Newby

July 24, 2015
24 Jul 2015

Nitrate management in tile water is a big reason why this water control structure has slowly gained a foothold in the Corn Belt

Control water levels and nitrogen with tile systems

The practice that really has Charlie Schafer, manufacturer of the water control structure at Agri Drain in Adair, Iowa, revved up is drainage water management. An inline water control structure installed at the edge of a field intercepts a tile line, raising and lowering water levels in the soil as the crop needs it. Ahead of planting, all stop-logs are removed, completely draining the field. After planting, stop logs are reinserted to raise soil water levels as rainfall infiltrates the tile. The water and nitrates are then available to the crop during the growing season. If rains are exceptionally heavy, the stop logs can be removed to prevent ponding. Before harvest, the stop logs are removed again to dry out the soil. After harvest, they can be reinserted to capture winter moisture.

Adjustable riser boards or stop logs of a water control structure back water into tile lines to raise the water table and saturate the soil upstream. When the stop logs are removed, water flows out.

Illustration: NRCS
July 8, 2015
08 Jul 2015

Ecosystem Services Exchange Hires Paul Sweeney as Director of Conservation Planning

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Ecosystem Services Exchange Hires Paul Sweeney as Director of Conservation Planning

paul pic

Adair, IA (July 5, 2015) – Ecosystem Services Exchange (ESE) is a market leading water management company with sole values set on protecting and improving our natural resources. ESE continues to build on their highly skilled and reputable staff with the addition of Paul Sweeney, the former Senior Project Leader for the Regional Conservationists Office with the USDA – Natural Resources Conservation Service. Sweeney brings to ESE years of experience with numerous federal conservation programs at the local, state and national levels.
Sweeney’s key focus at ESE will be to serve as Director of Conservation Planning. Sweeney will open a new office from Minneapolis and coordinate planning activities from that location. Current planning members Nathan Utt, Andy Mackrill, Forrest Brooks and Jace Klein are looking forward to the opportunity of learning from a man with this experience in conservation planning and implementation.
Sweeney will be joining forces with ESE on July 4th of 2015. His career with the NRCS as a Senior Project Leader included serving as the team lead for the NRCS national Ag Water Management Team and assisting in numerous conservation programs aimed at water quality including drainage water management. He looks forward to bringing this knowledge to ESE to conduct business with both the public and private sectors.
ESE is one of the world leaders in working to reduce nutrient loss from agriculture working lands. They are the best investment for water quality both from a conservation and fiscal aspect. Their work has continued to show significant, reliable, and quantifiable results. Water quality and sustainable agriculture have never been as important as they are today. With the rapidly growing concern, there has never been a better time to partner with ESE.

For more information regarding ESE or any of its services, please visit our website at www.EcoExch.com or contact our Director of Field Operations, Kolby Jones, at kolby@ecoexch.com.

April 20, 2015
20 Apr 2015

HardPoint Capital Partners and Ecosystem Services Exchange Join Forces

Conversion of Conservation Capitalism:

HardPoint Capital Partners and Ecosystem Services Exchange Join Forces HardPoint Capital Partners, LLC is pleased to announce an Affiliated Partnership with Ecosystem Services Exchange, a leader in market-based environmental solutions on agricultural land. Under the partnership, HardPoint and ESE will work cooperatively and symbiotically to maximize revenue and deal flow for both businesses.

Final ESE Release PDF

February 25, 2015
25 Feb 2015

Ecosystem Services Exchange Expands Staff

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

Ecosystem Services Exchange Expands Staff

Jace Photo

 Adair, IA. (February 24, 2015) – Ecosystem Services Exchange (ESE), a professional water management company with values on protecting and improving our natural resources, continues to build on their highly skilled staff with the addition of Jace Klein as an Intern. Klein brings to ESE a dedicated work ethic with an open mind on learning new strategies in conservation practices.

Klein’s key focus is to provide assistance to current team members Nathan Utt and Andy Mackrill as well as gain knowledge and experience in the field of water management practices that will help better our environment.

Currently in his 3rd year of college, Klein is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in Agricultural and Bio-Systems Engineering, Land and Water Resources option, from Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. He is looking forward to applying practices learned in the classroom to a real world setting.

ESE is one of the world’s leaders in reducing nutrient loss from agricultural lands. They are the best investment for water quality by delivering significant, reliable, and quantifiable results. This allows farmers to meet all their regulatory requirements at a lower cost, ultimately reducing downstream impacts on water quality. Water quality and sustainable farming practices have never been as important as they are today. With all this rapidly growing concern, there has never been a better time to partner ESE.

For more information regarding ESE or any of its services, please visit our website at www.EcoExch.com or contact our Director of Field Operations, Kolby Jones, at kolby@ecoexch.com.

February 10, 2015
10 Feb 2015

Article-NACD Honors Conservation Leaders / Elects New Officer Team

NACD Honors Conservation Leaders, Elects New Officer Team

New Orleans, LA—February 4, 2015—The National Association of Conservation Districts (NACD) honored conservation leaders at an awards banquet last night during the 2015 NACD Annual Meeting in New Orleans. Also at the banquet, the 2015-2016 NACD officer team and members of the Executive Board were sworn into office.

The NACD/NRCS Olin Sims Conservation Leadership Award was presented to Mike Thralls of Billings, Oklahoma. Thralls is a lifetime farmer who has served as Executive Director of the Oklahoma Conservation Commission for the past 17 years.

“Mike is a pioneer of voluntary conservation in Oklahoma, both in his service to the Oklahoma Conservation Commission and on his farm,” said Jason Weller, Chief of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. “I am grateful for his leadership in protecting our nation’s natural resources and encouraging fellow farmers to use conservation practices that boost soil health, promote clean water and air, and enhance wildlife habitat. Mike has cultivated a strong relationship between the conservation districts and NRCS, which has broadened the footprint of sustainable agriculture across Oklahoma.”

http://www.nacdnet.org/news/newsroom/2015/nacd-honors-conservation-leaders-elects-new-officer-team

February 10, 2015
10 Feb 2015

Video-NACD 69th Annual Meeting – Friend of Conservation Award given to CEO of Ecosystem Services Exchange Charlie Schafer

NACD 69th Annual Meeting – New Orleans, LA

January 14, 2015
14 Jan 2015

USDA announces funding for Saginaw Bay RCPP Proposal

The Nature Conservancy and Michigan Agri-Business Association Move Forward with Innovative Water Quality Partnership in Michigan’s Saginaw Bay Watershed USDA announces funding for Saginaw Bay RCPP Proposal

RCPP Funding Announcement_Final

September 17, 2014
17 Sep 2014

Water Control Structure hard at work in Ohio

Agri Drain Corporation’s President Charlie Schafer and Ecosystem Services Exchange’s Lead Engineer Nathan Utt visit a water Control Structure in Ohio

 

July 17, 2014
17 Jul 2014

Charlie Schafer from Agri Drain discusses new technology in drainage water management.

July 17, 2014
17 Jul 2014

Alex Echols of Ecosystem Services Exchange talk about how to protect, improve and value ecosystem services and natural resources.