Agricultural commodities definition

Agricultural commodities means wheat, cotton, flax, corn, dry beans, oats, barley, rye, tobacco, rice, peanuts, soybeans, sugar beets, sugar cane, tomatoes, grain sorghum, sunflowers, raisins, oranges, sweet corn, dry peas, freezing and canning peas, forage, apples, grapes, potatoes, industrial hemp, timber and forests, nursery crops, citrus, and other fruits and vegetables, nuts, tame hay, native grass, aquacultural species including, but not limited to, any species of finfish, mollusk, crustacean, or other aquatic invertebrate, amphibian, reptile, or aquatic plant propagated or reared in a controlled or selected environment, excluding stored grain;
Agricultural commodities means agricultural products and livestock.
Agricultural commodities or "commodities," means: (a) Grains for which inspection standards have been established under the United States grain standards act; (b) pulses and similar commodities for which inspection stan- dards have been established under the agricultural marketing act of 1946; and (c) other similar agricultural products for which inspection standards have been established or which have been otherwise designated by the department by rule for inspection services or the warehousing requirements of this chapter.

Examples of Agricultural commodities in a sentence

  • Agricultural commodities may be provided to meet emergency food needs through foreign governments and private or public organizations, including intergovernmental organizations.

  • Agricultural commodities also may be provided for non-emergency assistance through private voluntary organizations or cooperatives which are, to the extent practicable, registered with USAID, and through intergovernmental organizations.

  • Agricultural commodities pro- duced and marketed under an organic system plan, as described in 7 CFR 205.201, but not sold, labeled, or rep- resented as organic, shall not dis- qualify a producer from exemption under this section, except that pro- ducers who produce both organic and non-organic agricultural commodities as a result of split operations shall not qualify for exemption.

  • Agricultural commodities agreement, with memorandum of understanding.

  • Agricultural commodities produced and marketed under an organic system plan, as described in 7 CFR 205.201, but not sold, labeled, or represented as organic, shall not disqualify a producer from exemption under this section, except that producers who produce both organic and non-organic agricultural commodities as a result of split operations shall not qualify for exemption.


More Definitions of Agricultural commodities

Agricultural commodities means any agricultural
Agricultural commodities or “commodities” means cotton, all agricultural products commonly classed as grain, including rice, rough rice, corn, wheat, oats, rye, soybeans, barley, and grain sorghum, and any other agricultural commodity or other farm product which the commission may, by regulation, declare to be a commodity subject to this Chapter.
Agricultural commodities means any agricultural commodity, non-processed food, feed, fiber, or livestock, including insects. (Section 18b-101 of the Law)
Agricultural commodities means the commodities in the agriculture value chain that are sold for a commercial value;
Agricultural commodities means any agricultural commodity, non-processed food, feed, fiber, or livestock, including insects.
Agricultural commodities means any and all aquacultural, agricultural, apicultural, horticultural (including floricultural), viticultural, and vegetable prod- ucts produced in this state or any class, variety, or utilization thereof, either in their natural state or as processed by a producer for the purpose of marketing such prod- uct, or by a processor as herein defined, and shall include, but not be limited to, any one, any combination thereof, or all of the agricultural products, livestock and live- stock products, poultry and poultry products, timber and timber products, fish and seafood, and the products of the farms, waters, and forests of this state. “Agricul- tural commodities” includes citrus regulated pursuant to chapter 601 only for the purpose of funding production research and associated activities related to chemical residue; the term does not include citrus with respect to any other citrus-related ac- tivity, whether or not that activity is regulated by or described in chapter 601.
Agricultural commodities means wheat, cotton, flax, corn, dry beans, oats, barley, rye, tobacco, rice, peanuts, soybeans,