Golden LEAF tours Plant Sciences Building, dedication to be held April 12, 2022 | Eastern NC Now

Agriculture remains North Carolina’s top industry. Researchers have pointed to a rapidly growing population, loss of farmland, climate shifts, and emerging crop diseases as some of the complex agricultural challenges that do not fit into particular academic or research silos.

ENCNow
Press Release:

    Agriculture remains North Carolina's top industry. Researchers have pointed to a rapidly growing population, loss of farmland, climate shifts, and emerging crop diseases as some of the complex agricultural challenges that do not fit into particular academic or research silos. The Plant Sciences Initiative aims to break down barriers to solving these and other major challenges.

    On April 12, 2022, N.C. State will host a dedication for the Plant Sciences Building, which will be home to the Plant Sciences Initiative. The dedication is open to the public with registration available by clicking here.

    Golden LEAF provided $48 million to support the initiative which will create opportunities to grow the state's thriving agricultural industry into a global leader - by developing new products, conducting research, and educating our next generations of agriculture industry employees for the jobs of the future.

    Golden LEAF's longest serving Board member and North Carolina farmer Lawrence Davenport and Golden LEAF President, Chief Executive Officer Scott T. Hamilton recently toured the near-complete building. The five story, 185,000-square-foot building was designed for maximum potential for collaboration, interdisciplinary activities, and innovation. The entire fifth floor is a greenhouse.

    "The Plant Sciences Initiative is setting a standard for the world's agriculture research," said Davenport. "This is the first time I've seen a collaboration ever come together like this for agriculture. The Plant Sciences Initiative is the future of agriculture."

    In fact, this public-private initiative had a total of 44 statewide commodity groups raise $6 million for the Plant Sciences Initiative. Other partners include the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. The Plant Sciences Initiative already has more than 100 industry sponsored research projects.

    "This public-private partnership will bring together the brightest minds in academia, government, and industry to drive vital research and innovation that will increase crop yields, extend growing seasons, enhance agricultural and environmental sustainability, and produce new and improved technology," said Hamilton. "Golden LEAF remains dedicated to supporting our farmers and the agribusiness industry. Our farmers recognize the importance of innovation to the future of agriculture. Investing in the NCSU initiative is investing in rural North Carolina's future."

    While the opening of the building is one major milestone for the Plant Sciences Initiative, it is only the beginning of the agricultural innovation that will give North Carolina farmers and rural communities the edge needed in a competitive global market.
Go Back

HbAD0

Latest Neighboring Counties

A North Carolina State Senate race is heading for a recount after the two pro-Trump Republicans come down to a two vote margin.
This is simply a failure of will, and we are here to help impose that will today, so that to me is the simple punchline," said State Treasurer Brad Briner. "I appreciate the leaders of Rocky Mount being here, but we need to get to a place where there is the will to fix a very, very serious problem.”
A federal judge will not issue an injunction blocking local Watauga County election districts created by the Republican-led North Carolina General Assembly.
The FBI has captured Alejandro “Alex” Rosales Castillo, who is on the 10 Most Wanted Fugitive list and wanted in connection with a 2016 murder in Charlotte.
A major redevelopment project planned in Morehead City has been scrapped following strong public opposition over the use of eminent domain.
In the coming months, the North Carolina Supreme Court will decide whether a class-action lawsuit can move forward against Raleigh over water and sewer impact fees.
Former congressman Wiley Nickel made his candidacy for the office of Wake County district attorney official this week, with his Tuesday announcement.
Groups representing North Carolina's travel and tourism industry support a lawsuit against Currituck County at the North Carolina Supreme Court.
Plaintiffs in a $16 million class-action lawsuit against Raleigh challenged the city's legal tactics in a new state Supreme Court filing.

HbAD1

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools is asking the North Carolina Supreme Court to overturn a lower court order that would force the school system to pay into a retirement fund for campus police.
Members of the North Carolina Rural Health Association (NCRHA) visited Washington, D.C., on Feb. 14, 2024, to meet with elected officials and advocate for policies to improve access to care in rural areas.
The US Supreme Court will not take the case of Virginia-based owners of a Dare County beach home who challenged the county's COVID-related shutdown in 2020.
The North Carolina State Fair is set for the Raleigh state fairgrounds from October 12-22, 2023
A $2.5-billion-dollar bond referendum is slated to be placed on the November ballot this year, as Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) looks for support to fund 30 different projects in the school district.
Five Asheville-area residents are suing the city in federal court for refusing to appoint them to the local Human Relations Commission. The residents claim they were rejected because they are white.
Federal grant expands midwifery care for North Carolina
Pirates achieve historic sponsored activities funding

HbAD2

 
 
Back to Top