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Tag: starts

  • Local football finally starts  – Sport

    Local football finally starts  – Sport

    Local football finally returns to Namibia with the Debmarine Namibia Premiership and the FNB Women’s Super Leagues kicking off this weekend.

    The Debmarine Premiership was originally supposed to start on 21 September, but was delayed due to a protracted court case between the Namibia Football Association (NFA) and Namibia Correctional Service, who eventually lost their bid to be included in the premiership.

    It was then set for 2 November, but was once again postponed due to negotiations to finalise sponsorship agreements.

    Now, with the third attempt, the league is finally set to kick off with the third and final year of the Debmarine sponsorship, which amounts to N$18 million for the season.

    African Stars, who have won the league for the past two years in a row, should once again start as the favouriters, but the other teams are catching up and they can expect stiff competition this season.

    One of them is FC Ongos, who finished three points behind Stars in second place last season, and with a clear vision and strategy mapped out, they are determined to go a step further this season.

    “The league is won by the team that accumulates the most points and not the team that beats African Stars. It doesn’t help if you beat Stars but lose two or three matches in a row after that, so we will take it one game at a time and focus on each match and try and accumulate the points that we need,” coach Mervin Mbakera said yesterday.

    “FC Ongos has to become a household name, not just in Namibia, but also in Africa. We have to broaden our horizons and strive to take on the best. Our women’s team has participated in the Champions League but they have to improve on that stage and our men’s team must now also reach that level and the only way to do it is by winning the league,” he added.

    Ongos will kick off the new league when they take on Tigers at the Independence Stadium tonight, and Mbakera said they are well prepared and eager to start their campaign.

    “The long delay was a bit of a challenge, but we made the most of the additional time to make sure we are fully prepared. We are extremely grateful to our management who have supported us during the delays by paying the players’ salaries during these difficult times,” he said.

    “The dedication shown by the players and technical team has been exemplary. We’ve had numerous preparation matches, and although there was a bit of a dip with the delay, the players are now rejuvenated and ready. Tigers are a strong opponent, but we have made sure that we are mentally, physically and tactically prepared,” Mbakera added.

    Tigers, meanwhile, will be led by seasoned coach Woody Jacobs, who says it is great to be back in Namibia after a stint in Botswana.

    “It’s going to be a tough encounter against Ongos – they have come on in leaps and bounds and it was no fluke that they came second last season. They have a good team with a good coach and Ricardo Mannetti as director, so they will be a force to be reckoned with,” he says.

    “We, however, have a good, well-balanced squad of youth and experience, we are highly motivated and we want to start our campaign with a win,” Jacobs adds.

    African Stars open their campaign against Young African at the Independence Stadium tomorrow, and their chairman, Salomo Heii, says they hope the league will turn fully professional soon.

    “We are looking forward to the start of the league and hopefully next year we will have a professional league in place that is independent from the NFA, in line with aim of professionalising football in Namibia,” he says.

    “We are happy to see there is also the new MTC Maris Cup – at least there is more to play for this season now,” he adds.

    African Stars will also be in action in the FNB Women’s Super League for the first time after they acquired Ongwediva Queens and rebranded the team, but they have been hit with a transfer ban by Fifa due to outstanding payments to their former Ghanaian midfielder Michael Okolo.

    Heii, however, says it hasn’t really affected them.

    “Our transfers were completed long ago – the ban only came into effect on Tuesday, so it doesn’t really affect us. There are one or two players that we are still interested in but our legal team is working on the matter. It’s a new season, a new challenge and we are looking forward to defending our title,” he says.

    There are several other enticing fixtures this weekend, including the highly-anticipated derby matches between Julinho Sporting and Cuca Tops at Rundu; Blue Waters and Blue Boys at Walvis Bay; and Eeshoke Chula Chula and KK Palaced at Grootfontein.

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  • What to stream: ‘Yellowstone’ starts its end, Eddie Redmayne as a sniper and Aubrey Plaza gets high

    What to stream: ‘Yellowstone’ starts its end, Eddie Redmayne as a sniper and Aubrey Plaza gets high

    Eddie Redmayne starring as a sniper for hire in the new limited series “The Day of the Jackal” and “Yellowstone” riding off into the sunset with the launch of its final episodes are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.

    Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: Aubrey Plaza stars in the coming-of-age comedy “My Old Ass,” two famous Nintendo siblings team up for the video game Mario & Luigi Brothership and Whitney Houston’s epic 1994 concert video in post-apartheid South Africa.

    – Is there a better way to spend election week than with a psychedelic mushroom-induced Aubrey Plaza? Well, yes, there probably is. But, still, Megan Park’s “My Old Ass” (streaming Thursday on Prime Video) is a uniquely charming and oddly moving coming-of-age drama. The film stars Maisy Stella as Elliott, an 18-year-old whose birthday mushroom trip, while camping in Ontario’s Muskoka region, conjures a surreal visitor: her 39-year-old self (played by Plaza). In his review, AP’s Mark Kennedy called the results “uneven but (Park) sticks the landing.”

    – Of the many fans of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s films, none is more passionate than Martin Scorsese. In “Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger” (airing Thursday on TCM), Scorsese narrates his journey through movies that have had a profound effect on the filmmaker. In it, he describes being “so bewitched by them as a child that they make a big part of my films’ subconscious.” The documentary, directed by David Hinton and produced by Thelma Schoonmaker, isn’t just a chronicle of films like “The Red Shoes,” “Black Narcissus” and “I Know Where I’m Going!” but captures how movies can transfix you, change you and live alongside you as you grow older.

    — With many glued to screens for the election results Tuesday, it might be a good week to revisit some of the best films about American politics. Alan Pakula’s chilling assassination thriller “The Parallax View” is streaming on Paramount+. On Hoopla, you can find both John Frankenheimer’s mind control masterpiece “The Manchurian Candidate” and Elia Kazan’s prescient “A Face in the Crowd.” “Election,” Alexander Payne’s biting satire, is streaming on Fubo. Spike Lee’s towering “Malcolm X” is available to rent, as is Steven Spielberg’s epic “Lincoln.” But if you’re feeling more cynical, Mike Judge’s “Idiocracy” can be found on Hulu.

    AP Film Writer Jake Coyle

    — On Friday, Nov. 8, the Whitney Houston estate and Legacy Recording will release “The Concert for a New South Africa (Durban),” the recording of her epic concert in post-apartheid South Africa, staged after President Nelson Mandela’s landmark election. It follows the fully remastered theatrical release of a concert film of the same name. In 1994, Houston took the stage for three concerts in South Africa including in Durban at Kings Park Stadium, Johannesburg and Cape Town. Over 200,000 people attended. The album is also Houston’s first ever live concert album (but not her first ever live album, give credit where credit is due — to 2014’s “Whitney Houston Live: Her Greatest Performances” and “VH1 Divas 1999.”) She’s never sounded better.

    — Another look back at the ’90s: Tsunami, the ferocious indie rock band lead by frontwomen Jenny Toomey and Kristin Thomson, co-owners of the Simple Machines record label, are receiving a long overdue, career-spanning collection from the prolific Numero Group: A five LP, vinyl box set that features demos, singles, 1993’s “Deep End,” 1994’s “The Heart’s Tremolo,” and for the first time ever pressed to wax, 1997’s “A Brilliant Mistake.” If that’s too much physical media, don’t fret — listeners will be able to get an education on streaming platforms as well.

    — AP Music Writer Maria Sherman

    Eddie Redmayne hasn’t starred in a TV series since the 2012 two-part World War I saga, “Birdsong.” He marks his return as a sniper for hire in the new Peacock limited series, “The Day of the Jackal.” It’s an updated version of a Frederick Forsyth novel published in 1971. Lashana Lynch plays an intelligence officer, intent on catching Redmayne’s mysterious killer who goes by the moniker The Jackal. “The Day of the Jackal” debuts Thursday on Peacock.

    — Prime Video’s spy franchise “Citadel” now includes “Citadel: Honey Bunny.” This version is set in India and is a prequel to the 2023 original that starred Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Richard Madden. It takes place in the 1990s and introduces viewers to the parents of Chopra Jonas’ character, Nadia. Samantha Ruth Prabhu plays Nadia’s mother, Honey, with Varun Dhawan portraying her father, Bunny. The series debuts Thursday.

    “Yellowstone,” the contemporary Western about a family whose ownership of the largest cattle ranch in the U.S. goes back generations, returns for the second half of its final season on Sunday, Nov. 10. Fans will want to tune in to learn how Kevin Costner is written off the show and what happens to couple Rip and Beth, played by Cole Hauser and Kelly Reilly. “Yellowstone” season 5B debuts on Paramount Network.

    Alicia Rancilio

    — Mario may be the biggest celebrity in the Nintendo universe, but some of his most satisfying adventures have co-starred his gangly brother, Luigi. The boys are teaming up again for Mario & Luigi: Brothership, in which they explore an ocean dotted by a variety of islands. You’ll need to switch between the two to solve various puzzles, and sometimes they’ll need to team up to fly over or knock down obstacles. When they run into an enemy, the action switches to turn-based combat in which timing is everything. Mamma mia! Set sail Thursday on the Switch.

    Lou Kesten



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  • ‘I don’t see myself in a 9-to-5 job’: Gen Z woman starts coffee joint in her own home, Lifestyle News

    ‘I don’t see myself in a 9-to-5 job’: Gen Z woman starts coffee joint in her own home, Lifestyle News

    Coffee Near Me is not exactly your average cafe.

    Founder Sonia Lim runs it within her family’s landed home in Upper Thomson.

    Opened in February, this home-based business provides a cafe experience for its customers.

    You walk through the entrance (or front gate, in this case), place your order and head to the seats and tables available at the front yard to enjoy your coffee.

    Initially, they served coffee to the surrounding community only.

    “There aren’t any cafes nearby so it’s not very convenient if you don’t have a car,” the 21-year-old said during a chat with AsiaOne.

    At the time, all you had to do was drop her a text, come by and pick up your cup of coffee.

    This had been going on for a few months until Coffee Near Me started going viral on social media.

    Taking TikTok by storm

    Thanks to a few TikTok clips, what was once a coffee business for a neighbourhood became a home-based cafe open to the public.

    “I felt there was potential and I wanted people to know more about this space,” Sonia said before cheekily noting that the decision to open to a wider customer base might make her a few extra bucks too.

    But this transition brought with it more challenges.

    While the number of customers grew, there was no change to the operational processes.

    Sonia recalled: “It became more stressful because I was [still] the only one that’s preparing the drinks.” 

    The first two weeks after Coffee Near Me opened to the public, her cousin came over to offer a helping hand.

    Apart from churning out orders, there was also the issue of crowd control.

    Having neighbours over for a cuppa is one thing but welcoming a bunch of strangers into your home is a whole new ball game.

    “The tricky part is that I have very limited tables and chairs,” Sonia said.

    Coffee Near Me was not fully prepared for the influx of customers so, at times, they would hang around, queuing or waiting for an empty seat.

    People wanted to experience what they saw in those social media videos — a place to chill with friends over drinks and small bites.

    [[nid:706907]]

    But having a thriving business inside of a quiet residential district didn’t sit well with some.

    In late September, Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) and Singapore Food Agency personnel dropped by, Sonia told AsiaOne, as the authorities had received “feedback” about Coffee Near Me.

    She added: “They checked if I had a food licence, third-party bakes or commercial machineries at home.”

    The business was allowed to continue, though Sonia had to make minor adjustments, one of which was to remove the Coffee Near Me signage at the premises.

    URA’s home-based business scheme prohibits such businesses from putting up advertisements, signages or posters at residential premises.

    This entire episode was a bittersweet experience for Sonia.

    While she admitted to feeling annoyed initially, she has since seen the incident in a different light.

    “Oh wow, it’s like ‘I made it’!” she giggled.

    What’s on the menu

    Caffeine lovers have options aplenty, whether it is an Americano ($3.50), Cafe Latte ($4.50) or Spanish Latte ($5).

    According to Sonia, a favourite among her customers is the Matcha Latte ($5).

    Given the scorching weather during my visit, I opted for an Iced Cafe Latte ($5) and was pleased with my pick.

    When asked what makes a good cup of coffee, she excitedly replied: “Well balanced, not too milky but not too acidic either.”

    Fans of Coffee Near Me would also be aware of its secret menu, visible only on its socials, with drinks like Hojicha Einspanner and Cream Top Latte.

    If you’re feeling peckish, there are bakes available too. Prepared in-house, the menu changes weekly and customers can expect menu items from Tomato Focaccia to Earl Grey Madeline.

    Unconventional route 

    Sonia mentioned how tricky and unpredictable customer footfall can be.

    And as if right on cue during our interview, she had to step away to attend to a customer’s order. 

    “You see what I mean when I say there might be nobody but suddenly I’ll have [customers]!” she said. 

    Sonia was energetic in the kitchen, whether it’s brewing beans, preparing milk, or whisking matcha powder.

    As I observed from the side, it did look like she was (for the lack of a better phrase) right at home.

    Having a desk-bound job wasn’t appealing to her.

    “I don’t see myself in a 9-to-5 job,” she explained. 

    Given Coffee Near Me’s positive start, Sonia may not need to consider office jobs at all.

    She is open to the idea of barista-entrepreneur being her full-time profession.

    Sonia added: “I would want to [eventually] have my own space. But I’m looking more towards [a stall in a] kopitiam.”

    High rental cost and the competitiveness of Singapore’s cafe scene were reasons why she is less keen on running a standalone cafe. 

    Coffee Near Me’s competitive pricing vis-a-vis its cafe counterparts is something she took into consideration too.

    And according to Sonia, moving into a kopitiam would likely allow for prices to be kept low.

    After the chat about the business’s future, she noted that there isn’t a specific timeline for it to move out of her home.

    For now, Coffee Near Me is set to stay put at Casuarina Walk.

    [[nid:702467]]

    amierul@asiaone.com

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  • What’s at stake for USWNT for the rest of 2024? Emma Hayes ‘real work’ starts now

    What’s at stake for USWNT for the rest of 2024? Emma Hayes ‘real work’ starts now

    As far as first impressions go, few have done better than Emma Hayes. The U.S. women’s national team head coach led the team to Olympic gold in Paris just two months on the job, reestablishing the U.S. as one of the dominant forces in women’s soccer.

    That triumph will now serve as the benchmark as the team convenes for their first camp since the Olympics when the real work begins for Hayes. The head coach was not just hired to win a gold medal but to keep the USWNT in the sport’s top ranks as the women’s soccer landscape becomes increasingly competitive. October’s friendlies against Iceland and Argentina will offer a first glimpse at Hayes’ long-term vision for the USWNT’s evolution, as will the year-end friendlies at England and the Netherlands, as the head coach swaps the quick timeline to the 2024 Olympics for a patient buildup to the 2027 Women’s World Cup.

    Here’s what’s at stake for the USWNT as they close out 2024.

    Player pool expansion

    The USWNT’s first post-Olympics games will act as a “victory tour,” as mandated by the collective bargaining agreement, so Hayes will work chiefly with the group that won gold for this month’s camp. A handful of unavailabilities, though, plus Hayes’ request for an expanded roster means some fresh faces made the cut this time around. Six players named to this month’s camp eye their first cap, but more experienced players like Alyssa Thompson, Ashley Sanchez and Hailie Mace are back in the mix after around a year or more away from the team.

    The roster does not include any members of the U-20 team that finished third at last month’s Women’s World Cup, with Hayes electing to let them re-settle with their clubs after the tournament. Talented 17-year-old Lily Yohannes, who made her debut in a friendly against South Korea in June, also did not make the cut this time around. Yohannes has yet to commit to her international future to the U.S. and is currently in the process of acquiring a Dutch passport, though Hayes said she and U.S. Soccer will take a patient strategy as conversations continue with the prospect.

    “We have to be mindful. She’s a really young player, Hayes said. “Understandably, she wants to take the time at her age and her stage before she makes an important decision but there has been communication post-Olympics between Lily and us at the federation so I’m always optimistic but I don’t like to pressure anybody in a situation.”

    This month’s friendlies, though, are just the start of the USWNT’s project to expand the player pool, which began in earnest last year under interim head coach Twila Kilgore. Hayes and her coaching staff have spent the last few weeks traveling to watch prospective talent with their clubs and are casting as wide a net as possible. The results of their scouting will most likely be on display in January, when U.S. Soccer will put on a futures camp that will run simultaneously with a full USWNT camp in Los Angeles. Hayes said the concurrent sessions will not be limited solely to NWSL players or youth internationals but could include more experienced players and even those in the USL Super League.

    Establishing a tactical identity

    Hayes can own the Olympics triumph as her own, in large part because she got the best out of an already-talented player pool. She largely worked with an inherited a player pool and tactical vision for the Olympics rather than crafting either on her own, which means October’s friendlies could offer a true first glimpse at Hayes’ long-term strategy for the USWNT.

    Over the summer, the head coach stressed that she did not want to overwhelm the players with excessive tactical information ahead of the Olympics, though the summer tournament offered some hints. She was able to solve the U.S.’ attacking problems, which plagued their disappointing 2023 Women’s World Cup campaign, with relative ease as Mallory Swanson, Trinity Rodman and Sophia Smith scored a combined 10 goals in Paris. Some of the team’s other issues, though, will require more time to solve.

    The U.S.’ midfield, for example, looked unresolved at times during their gold medal run, though that issue has plagued the team long before Hayes’ hire. The new head coach found mixed results with a midfield three that included some combination of Sam Coffey, Lindsey Horan, Rose Lavelle and Korbin Albert, at times appearing disjointed with the in-form attack. Hayes’ work in midfield from this point on will be worth keeping an eye on, and will perhaps be a focal point as she builds a team that represents her tactical vision.

    Build a wide-ranging vision

    National team coaches are not necessarily required to have a comprehensive plan to develop the program as a whole, but U.S. Soccer clearly hired Hayes with a program reboot in mind. Hayes is the first head coach to take the job after the world caught up to the USWNT, and so she has the unique challenge of keeping the team competitive in a new-look women’s soccer landscape. For her, that smartly requires a look not only at the current players but the wider player development strategy.

    At the January camp in Los Angeles, Hayes will introduce the strategy for the 2027 Women’s World Cup and 2028 Olympics at a first-of-its-kind conference for the senior national team and youth equivalents, and was collaborated closely with U-20 USWNT head coach Tracey Kevins on the project.

    “I’m very much a believer of making everything we do interdisciplinary and from WNT [down] to YNT, there’s a very, very clear pathway for our players,” Hayes said. “All youth coaches, national team coaches and the staff in and around the teams [will] come together so we can deliver a unified strategy. Most importantly, when the WNT are training, the futures camp will be going side by side so if I’m coaching on one side and that session finishes, I’m able to then be involved in the session on the other side.”

    The details of Hayes’ vision are not reserved solely for U.S. Soccer players and staff. She will share details with other figures in the USWNT’s sphere to ensure there’s little conflict between clubs, leagues and the national team. It is true to Hayes’ player-first reputation and echoes her roots as a coach at the club level, but also reflects the modern realities for the USWNT. The national team was once players’ sole priority, but the increased investment in the women’s game means clubs and countries can now hold equal importance.

    “The important part is the collaboration, particularly with the NWSL,” Haye said. “I’ve been communicating across the board — at the board level, the general management level, the head coaching level — the plans, not just for this camp but for the November camp and the futures [camp] to make sure we’re aligned and most importantly, that we build trust because the January camp is during a preseason. I think it’s important for us, when we bring players into our care. I know what it’s like as a club coach to do that so I want to take care of our players in the preparation for the beginning of their seasons.”



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  • On Lake Erie, getting rid of problem algae starts with giving it less food

    On Lake Erie, getting rid of problem algae starts with giving it less food

    OREGON, Ohio — On a warm late-summer evening, a small speedboat motored across a pea-green stretch of Lake Erie past a beach where a child sat splashing and a pair of newlyweds waded for a portrait photographer. On the sand, unseen or ignored, bright red signs warned people to stay out of the water due to dangerous algae toxins.

    Some 70 miles away, farmer Bill Kellogg is trying to do something about the chronic algae blooms in America’s southernmost Great Lake. Instead of scattering fertilizer atop his fields, Kellogg now uses a strip till machine that knifes fertilizer pellets 8 inches into the soil — deep enough that heavy rains won’t wash it away.

    He plants cover crops that strengthen the soil so it can absorb more nutrients. In other fields, he’s replaced some crops with buffer strips of grasses and other plants that can absorb nutrient runoff before it shoots into streams bound for Erie, where the runoff would be potent fuel for the algae.

    “We accept that we have a target on our back in the agriculture community,” Kellogg said.

    Bacteria commonly called blue-green algae are often present in bodies of water throughout the world, but if fed too much of the phosphorus and nitrogen in farm fertilizers, they can turn into harmful algae blooms that can affect drinking water, create oxygen-starved dead zones that kill marine life, spoil swimming, boating and tourism and endanger human health.

    Western Lake Erie is an ideal environment for the bacteria to thrive: It’s about 30 feet deep, the shallowest part of the shallowest Great Lake, and it heats up faster when temperatures are warm. And it’s where nutrients from farm fields along streams and creeks throughout the basin eventually drain into the Maumee River, which dumps into Erie at Toledo.

    Nutrient runoff from agricultural fields, mostly fertilizer, accounts for about 80% of the nutrients that flow into Lake Erie, and half of the nutrients reaching the lake arrive via the Maumee.

    Reducing the amount of nutrients — specifically phosphorus — was one focus of a 2015 agreement between the United States and Canada to cut the phosphorus going into Erie by 40% by 2025. Researchers say progress has been made — the latest figure is that phosphorus is down about 32% — but the target likely won’t be met.

    This year’s algae bloom in western Lake Erie was moderate compared to previous years. It appeared June 24, its earliest since monitoring began, and its late-summer peak covered about 660 square miles — larger than some previous years, but not nearly as thick as some other blooms.

    Warming temperatures are expected to make algae blooms start earlier, last longer and potentially become more toxic as more intense rainstorms drive nutrients through waterways and higher temperatures warm the lake.

    “If all things stay the same and the climate changes in the way we sort of expect it to over the coming decades, then things will get worse,” said Nate Manning, the interim director of the National Center for Water Quality Research.

    For Kellogg, who farms 7,400 acres of corn and soybeans in Forest, Ohio, conservation efforts on his farm have long been a personal priority; he regularly visits Lake Erie with his family to fish and swim. But he became even more committed after a 2014 bloom that led to a temporary shutoff of drinking water for more than 400,000 people in Toledo and southern Michigan.

    “Once that happened, it got us into high gear,” Kellogg said.

    Kellogg spent more than $1 million for the strip-till machine and the tractor to pull it that lets him tuck the solid fertilizer several inches below ground. It was a big outlay, but he said he’s now spending about $300,000 less on fertilizer as less of it runs off. The liquid fertilizer he sometimes uses is stored in tanks that sit in a concrete basin to contain any leaks.

    “Our yields have increased. Our fertilizer cost has dropped. Once you get hooked on something and you’ve proven it to yourself that it works, nobody has to pay us anything now to do it,” Kellogg said.

    Near Sandusky Bay on the southwestern part of Lake Erie, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is working with other conservation groups to restore wetlands that filter nutrient runoff before it gets into the bay. At one site, engineers reconnected water channels through areas of former farmland to return the area to a wetland state. At another, island barriers are being built near the shoreline in addition to wetland restoration to aid filtration.

    As part of the H2Ohio program begun in 2019, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and its conservation partners have completed 23 wetland restoration projects in the western Lake Erie Basin, with another 49 ongoing. These help, but they’re only one part of the solution, said Mary Mertz, the director of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

    “You can’t just do wetlands and that’s going to clean up Lake Erie,” she said. “Other things have to happen.”

    Researchers at the National Center for Water Quality Research in Tiffin constantly monitor phosphorus in the water. Their data show that the phosphorus load into western Lake Erie is trending downward, but the 40% reduction target hasn’t been met consistently.

    “There’s a lot to be positive about,” Manning said.

    But more funding is needed and more farmers must adopt conservation and nutrient management practices, said Emily Kelly, the agriculture and water coordinator for the Ohio Environmental Council. A 2023 report from that group and the Alliance for the Great Lakes found that Ohio needs to increase spending between $170 million and $250 million to meet these reduction goals. Michigan needs to spend between $40 million and $65 million.

    Farmers in Ohio have enrolled about 1.5 million acres in the western Lake Erie basin in a nutrient management plan with the state, according to data from 2023. That’s about 43% of the basin’s cropland, with a goal of enrolling at least half, said Carissa Cochrane, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Agriculture.

    Farmers develop their own plan and are eligible for incentive payments up to $40 per acre, though they aren’t required to meet any nutrient load reduction targets. They work with local soil and water conservations districts to choose which practices, such as cover cropping and targeted fertilizer placement, might work best on their fields.

    To get results, some farmers might need multiple practices, like buffer strips and expensive machines like Kellogg’s. All that can discourage some, said Jordan Hoewischer, director of water quality and research at the Ohio Farm Bureau.

    Kellogg thinks if more farmers voluntarily adopt these conservation practices, there’s less chance that government would step in with regulations. He’d rather farmers do it on their own.

    “We were probably part of the problem to begin with,” Kellogg said. “It’s upon us to be part of the solution.”

    _____

    The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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