American Malting Barley Association, Inc.

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1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 2014 American Malting Barley Association, Inc. 740 North Plankinton Avenue, Suite 830 / Milwaukee, WI 53203 / (414) 272-4640 / Fax: (414) 272-4631 / http://www.ambainc.org REGULAR MEMBERS ASSOCIATE MEMBERS AB-InBev Abita Brewing Lost Coast Brewery Allagash Brewing Alaskan Brewing Madtree Brewing Bell s Brewery Anchor Brewing Malterie Frontenac Boston Beer Ballast Point Brewing & Spirits Market Garden Craft Brewery Briess Malt & Ingredients Bear Republic Brewing Matt Brewing Brooklyn Brewery Bently Heritage Estate Distillery Mecca Grade Estate Malt Brown-Forman Big Sky Malts Montana Craft Malt CANarchy Blacklands Malt Nebraska Malt Cargill Malt Blue Ox Malthouse New Holland Brewing Craft Brew Alliance Boulevard Brewing Ninkasi Brewing Deschutes Brewery Brewery Vivant Oran Station Brewing Supplies Diageo C N C Malting Rahr & Sons Brewing Dogfish Head Craft Brewery Cold Spring/Third Street Brewhouse Real Ale Brewing Full Sail Brewing Colorado Malting Riverbend Malt House Gambrinus Company Deer Creek Malthouse Rogue Ales Great Western Malting Epiphany Craft Malt Russian River Brewing Heineken Mexico Firestone Walker Brewing Saint Arnold Brewing Malteurop North America Flying Dog Brewery Schlafly Beer Molson Coors Founders Brewing Sprecher Brewing New Belgium Brewing Georgetown Brewing Straub Brewery New Glarus Brewing Great Lakes Brewing Sun King Brewing Odell Brewing Half Acre Beer Troegs Brewing Rahr Malting Harpoon Brewery Uinta Brewing Schell Brewing Lagunitas Brewing Urban Chestnut Brewing Sierra Nevada Brewing Lakefront Brewery Utah Brewers Cooperative Skagit Valley Malting Left Hand Brewing Valley Malt Stone Brewing Leopold Bros Distillery Victory Brewing Summit Brewing MISSION: To encourage and support an adequate supply of high quality malting barley for the malting, brewing, distilling, and food industries and increase our understanding of malting barley. VISION: To be the leader in improvement, development, and understanding of malting barley. PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: Enhance barley competitiveness with other crops. 0 Foster and support research that helps develop higher yielding public sector malting barley varieties with characteristics that mitigate production risk factors to increase acceptance rates. 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 US Barley Acreage Millions of Acres

Page 2 Foster and support research that helps develop traits for public and private sector malting barley varieties that mitigate production risk factors to increase acceptance rates. Favorable federal farm programs, including crop insurance, that mitigate production risks to growers and that do not favor other crops over barley. Barley is primarily a public sector non-gm crop, with most barley research and development at state universities and USDA-ARS facilities. Little interest by biotechnology seed companies in barley research & variety development. Low acreage = limited seed sale potential Barley is facing stiff competition from corn, soybeans, canola, wheat, and other crops that are receiving substantial private sector investment, including GM variety development, and that have more favorable federal farm program provisions. MEETING AMBA S MISSION, OBJECTIVES & CHALLENGES RESEARCH To keep barley competitive with other crops requires an adequate national barley research infrastructure of personnel, facilities, and operating funds to conduct appropriate research. AMBA works to meet that goal and serves as a national coordinator of US malting barley research. AMBA research funding of state university and USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS) researchers totals about $530,000/year to programs in seventeen states (CA, CO, ID, MI, MN, MT, NC, NE, ND, OH, OK, OR, TX, VA, VT, WA, WI). AMBA Strategic Goals for National Barley Research Program Malting Barley Variety Development Spring 2-Row > 6-Row Priority AMBA goals & research areas Improved technologies to accelerate variety development Increased yields Winter Varieties Higher yield, less water use and earlier harvest than spring types. Resistance to abiotic stress (drought, heat, cold, preharvest sprouting) Lodging resistance National and regional screening nurseries Breeding Program Priorities o Idaho Spring 2-row; Winter 2-row (Gongshe Hu, USDA-ARS, Aberdeen) o Minnesota Spring 2 & 6-row; Winter 2-row (Kevin Smith, University of Minnesota) o Montana Spring 2-row (Jamie Sherman, Montana State University) o Nebraska Winter 2-row (Stephen Baenziger, University of Nebraska) o North Dakota Spring 2 & 6-row (Richard Horsley, North Dakota State University) o North Carolina Winter 2-row (David Marshall, USDA-ARS, Raleigh)

Page 3 o Oregon Winter 2-row (Pat Hayes, Oregon State University) o Virginia Winter 2-row & 6-row (Carl Griffey, Virginia Tech) o Washington Spring 2-row (Kevin Murphy, Washington State University) Management Practices Quality Quality evaluation of lines and varieties (USDA-ARS Cereal Crops Research Unit, Madison, WI & AMBA member testing) Flavor screening of barley Fermentability prediction Glucanase assays Pest Resistance Insects Russian wheat aphid and Bird cherry-oat aphid = crop damage, virus transmission Fusarium Head Blight (Scab) Ug99 African & Other Stem Rust Net Blotch Spot & Net forms Cereal Yellow Dwarf Virus Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus Septoria Speckled Leaf Blotch Diseases Bacterial Leaf Streak Powdery Mildew Stripe Rust Root diseases Spot Blotch Increased secondary uses Additional markets for barley not used or accepted for malting and straw to bolster grower returns. Animal Feed Biofuels Food AMBA leads the National Barley Improvement Committee (NBIC) - Barley growers, researchers, malting, brewing, and cereal food end-users NBIC has successfully lobbied Congress & USDA for barley research funding $20 million in one-time funding for new ARS research facilities $10.2 million increase in annual base barley research funding last 15 years at various ARS research locations Major research initiatives to address disease challenges & enhance genomic research New ARS Cereal Crops Research Unit, Madison, WI Addition to ARS National Small Grains Germplasm Research Facility, Aberdeen, ID Addition to ARS Cereal Disease Laboratory, St. Paul, MN

Page 4 $5.0 million/year Fusarium Head Blight (Scab) $3.0 million/year Ug99 African Stem Rust $2.5 million/year Small Grains Genotyping Labs (KS, ND, NC, WA) $9.4 million cumulative funding Congressional earmark for USDA National Institute of Food & Agriculture (NIFA) US Barley Genome Project (USBGP; 1990-2010) USBGP led to award of NIFA competitive grant of $5 million for the Barley Agricultural Coordinated Agricultural Project (Barley CAP; 30 scientists from 19 institutions, genomic research; 2006-2010) Barley CAP led to award of NIFA competitive grant of $25 million for the Triticeae (barley & wheat) Coordinated Agricultural Project (T-CAP; 56 scientists from 28 institutions, genomic research; 2011-2015 In addition to securing federal funding, AMBA also has substantial input into how funding is utilized with its connections to state and federal research programs and service on oversight committees. With the current federal budget situation, with cutbacks in federal spending, AMBA s primary goal now is to preserve the funding previously obtained. AMBA Quality Evaluation Program Early generation malting quality screening at ARS Cereal Crops Res. Unit, Madison, WI (5,000 + lines a year from public sector breeding programs) Most promising lines submitted to AMBA collaborative member pilot scale evaluation program (35 lines per year; 2 years per line) Satisfactory pilot lines may be advanced to AMBA plant scale malting and brewing evaluations by member companies (6-12 lines/year; 1-2 crop year evaluation) Satisfactory results from plant scale evaluation by at least one member moves a variety to the AMBA list of recommended malting barley varieties at that member s request. The annually updated list informs growers of which varieties AMBA members prefer, encouraging their planting.

Page 5 Federal Farm Programs Planting decisions of growers are influenced by US farm policies. Policies range from federal support when prices fall to crop insurance when adverse weather conditions impact yields or quality. AMBA works with the National Barley Growers Association (NBGA) and state organizations lobbying Congress and USDA to put barley on an equal basis with other crops so that barley growers respond to market signals and not government programs. The Farm Bill Helped increase reference prices for barley relative to other crops providing a cushion against a decline in prices or revenue. Crop Insurance Established a new Specialty Barley insurance program that covers yield loses for malting and specialty food barleys with affordable premiums. Convinced the USDA Risk Management Agency (RMA) to change the way they calculate the coverage rate for barley insurance reducing the risk of growing malting barley. Established accurate testing methods for quality specifications used in insuring malting barley against quality losses. Legislation, Regulation and Liaison AMBA works with the American Society of Brewing Chemists (ASBC), the Brewers Association (BA), the Beer Institute (BI), NBGA and other organizations on issues of common interest. AMBA serves as a liaison between growers and the industry. Ran collaborative testing programs through the ASBC and the USDA Federal Grain Inspection Service (FGIS) that established accurate measurements of deoxynivalenol (DON) in barley and malt, and preharvest sprouting in barley. Worked with a broad coalition during debates on the new Food Safety Bill to ensure realistic traceability requirements for comingled commodities such as malting barley. Comments on proposed rules on grain grading, food safety, US energy policy and others. Provides an annual recommended malting barley variety list to growers. Provides periodic releases on industry concerns with specific crop protectants or crop year specific issues (eg. proper storage conditions). Distributes information on barley acreage, production, stocks, and varieties.

AMERICAN MALTING BARLEY ASSOCIATION American Malting Barley Association, Inc. (AMBA) is a 501c(6) nonprofit trade association. MEMBERSHIP Any entity actively engaged in business as a maltster, brewer, distiller, or food manufacturer using malt is eligible for membership. AMBA has two ongoing membership categories, Regular and Associate. Regular members have a voting representative on the AMBA Board of Directors and Technical Committee, with input into malting barley variety development and all other programs. 2018 Regular Member Dues Maltsters pay dues of $4.77 per 1,000 bushels of barley steeped, and distillers and food companies pay $5.58 per 1,000 bushels of malt consumed the previous calendar year or minimum dues of $5,250. Brewers pay dues per the following tier system based on barrels of beer shipped the previous calendar year. 80,000,000-100,000,000 $294,000 4,000,000-6,000,000 $16,300 70,000,000-80,000,000 $245,000 2,000,000-4,000,000 $12,000 60,000,000-70,000,000 $212,000 1,000,000-2,000,000 $11,000 50,000,000-60,000,000 $180,000 800,000-1,000,000 $10,000 40,000,000-50,000,000 $147,000 600,000-800,000 $9,000 35,000,000-40,000,000 $122,500 400,000-600,000 $8,000 30,000,000-35,000,000 $106,000 300,000-400,000 $7,500 25,000,000-30,000,000 $90,000 250,000-300,000 $7,000 20,000,000-25,000,000 $73,500 200,000-250,000 $6,500 15,000,000-20,000,000 $57,200 150,000-200,000 $6,000 10,000,000-15,000,000 $41,000 100,000-150,000 $5,500 6,000,000-10,000,000 $26,200 < 100,000 $5,250 Associate membership is for companies that do not want voting representation but want to help AMBA meet its mission, vision, and objectives, with some membership benefits. Associate member company personnel receive member only email communications on AMBA and barley, including barley planting, production, variety, and stock reports. They also have access to the member only section of the AMBA web site, which has information on malting barley varieties, research, production, and other items. Associate members are welcome to attend AMBA Board and Technical Committee meetings as nonvoting members. 2018 Associate Member Dues Malting, distilling, and food companies pay the same dues rate as Regular members in their category, with minimum dues of $525. Brewing companies pay dues of $3.33 per thousand barrels of beer shipped the previous calendar year, or minimum dues of $525. Michael P. Davis, Ph.D. President American Malting Barley Association, Inc. www.ambainc.org (414) 272-4640 mike@ambainc.org