A Collection of Current Outdoor Power Equipment (OPE) Industry Related News Articles From OPEESA's (Outdoor Power Equipment and Engine Service Association) Newsletter "OPE-In-The-Know," the Business of OPE.
Friday, July 13, 2012
U.S. Declares Drought-Stricken States Largest Natural Disaster Area Ever
July 12 -- The United States Department of Agriculture has declared natural disaster areas in more than 1,000 counties and 26 drought-stricken states, making it the largest natural disaster in America ever.
The declaration—which covers roughly half of the country—gives farmers and ranchers devastated by drought access to federal aid, including low-interest emergency loans.
"Agriculture remains a bright spot in our nation's economy," U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Wednesday while announcing the assistance program. "We need to be cognizant of the fact that drought and weather conditions have severely impacted farmers around the country."
According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, more than half the country (56 percent) experienced drought conditions—the largest percentage in the 12-year history of the service. And according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the period from January through June was "the warmest first half of any year on record for the contiguous United States."
The average temperature was 52.9 degrees Fahrenheit, or 4.5 degrees above average, NOAA said on Monday. Twenty-eight states east of the Rockies set temperature records for the six-month period.
A heat wave blistered most of the United States in June, with more than 170 all-time temperature records broken or tied during the month. On June 28 in Norton, Kan., for instance, the temperature reached 118 degrees, an all-time high. On June 26, Red Willow, Neb., set a temperature record of 115 degrees, eclipsing the 114-degree mark set in 1932.
Monday, July 9, 2012
OPEI Announces 2012-2013 Officers and Directors
Alexandria, VA – June 28, 2012 – The Outdoor Power Equipment Institute (OPEI) today announced its 2012-2013 Officers and Board of Directors during its 60th Annual Meeting in Colorado Springs, CO June 20-22, 2012.
Officers
for the 2012-2013 year include:
OPEI
Chairman Daniel Ariens, President, Ariens Company;
OPEI
Vice Chairman Todd Teske, Chairman, President & CEO, Briggs & Stratton
Corp.; and
Secretary/Treasurer
Paul Mullet, President, Excel Industries.
“Our
new officers will lead the organization in an important year for our industry,”
said Kris Kiser, President and CEO of OPEI. “A variety of legislative,
regulatory and market issues will be addressed by the new OPEI Board of
Directors, who bring strategic thinking and expertise to the direction we will
take.”
Added
OPEI Chair Dan Ariens, “The vantage point that OPEI represents is more relevant
than at any other time in the organization’s 60-year history. Our members are
in a unique position to provide firsthand knowledge of how legislative actions
might affect the employees in this industry and the consumers who rely on power
equipment products every day.”
Continuing
their service on the OPEI Board are:
Immediate
Past Chairman, Jean Hlay, President and Chief Operating Officer, MTD Products
Inc.;
Steven
Bly, Executive Vice President, Echo Inc;
Ed
Cohen, Vice President, Government & Industry Relations, Honda North
America;
Michael
Hoffman, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, The Toro Company;
Michael
Jones, President of the Americas, Husqvarna; and
Fred
Whyte, President, Stihl Incorporated.
New
to the board this year are:
Marc
Dufour, President, Club Car;
Peter
Hampton, President, Active Exhaust Corporation; and
Lee
Sowell, President – Outdoor Products, Techtronic Industries, N.A., Inc.
About
the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute
The
Outdoor Power Equipment Institute (OPEI) is an international trade association
representing more than 84 small engine, utility vehicle and outdoor power
equipment manufacturers and suppliers worldwide. OPEI is a recognized Standards
Development Organization for the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
and active internationally through the International Standards Organization
(ISO) in the development of safety and performance standards. For more
information, visit www.OPEI.org.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Midwest Dry Spell Threatens to Intensify
June 24 -- A year after enduring massive floods, much of the Midwest faces a drought expanding in size and intensity, damaging crops and raising concerns about the threat of fire from fireworks as July 4 approaches.
Large
sections of Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Kansas face drought conditions
after a mild winter, little spring rain and recent scorching temperatures. The
National Weather Service predicts drought conditions will persist or even
intensify over the next three months in much of the lower Midwest.
Prices
for crops have surged recently on concerns the dry weather will lead to a lower
harvests. Corn prices for the coming crop hit their highest level since March,
while soybean prices climbed to a nine-month high at the Chicago Board of
Trade.
Rising
commodity prices can translate into higher food costs, especially as producers
of beef, pork and chicken look to pass on higher animal-feed costs.
The
summer months tend to be a dry period for the central U.S., limiting the
chances for rain to replenish parched soil.
"Going
into that dry period already dry is not looking good," said Jim Keeney,
weather program manager for the National Weather Service in Kansas City.
Swaths
of Texas and the western U.S. have faced drought conditions for much of the
year, including parts of Colorado where wildfires continue to burn. But drought
conditions only recently have built in the Midwest—a sharp change from a year
ago when heavy rains and swollen rivers led to historic flooding.
Jeff
Scates, a farmer in Southern Illinois, said about 75% of his family's farm was
underwater last spring, and he didn't finish planting his corn crop until early
June. This year, he got his crop into the ground by late April, but dry
conditions are now causing damage and reducing the number bushels his fields
will produce."I don't remember anytime when it was this dry, this
early," the 42-year-old farmer said.
Meteorologists
say the dry conditions in the Midwest started with a lack of snow, which
usually replenishes soil with moisture.
The
spring brought below-average rainfalls in states such as Illinois and Indiana,
and the warmest average temperatures in the Midwest for the first five months
of the year on record, according to the Midwestern Regional Climate Center.
Data
from the National Drought Mitigation Center shows rainfall in the southern
Illinois city of Carbondale totaled 7.5 inches from the start of March to last
week, down from 30.3 inches last year and 16.8 inches in a normal year. In
northern Ohio, Akron is similarly dry, with rainfall of 8.2 inches compared
with 20 inches a year ago and 12.9 inches in a normal year.
The
dry weather is raising worries about fire as dry conditions fueled recent
grassland blazes in rural Nebraska and other parts of the Midwest. July 4
fireworks displays present an additional threat.In Indiana, fire officials are
cautioning against shooting off fireworks, with some counties banning their use
by residents.
In
LaPorte County, Ind., nestled along Lake Michigan southeast of Chicago, the
emergency management department has been getting a steady stream of calls from
people asking whether fireworks shows will be canceled. While the county is
telling residents not to set off their own fireworks, community displays are
still on, said Fran Tibbot, the county's emergency management director.
"Hopefully
we will get some rain," she said.
Not
all of the Midwest is dry. Duluth, Minn., was inundated last week by a record
7.2 inches of rainfall in about 24 hours. Rising water damaged hundreds of
homes and caused about $100 million in infrastructure damage alone, according
to city officials. Miles of roadways were torn up, bridges and rail lines were
washed away and the city zoo is a mess.
The
city's port operation—based largely on shipments of taconite for the steel
industry—has been severely curtailed. "Railcars can't get to ships,"
said Amy Norris, 59, a public information coordinatorfor the city.
Northern
states including Minnesota, Wisconsin and North Dakota are closer to normal
rainfall levels as a high pressure system over the middle of the country pushed
wet weather northward during the last month. But they are expected to be dry
this week, while southern areas such as Kansas City, Mo. will face intense
heat, said Rick Hluchan, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Duluth.
In
Colorado, meanwhile, wildfires threatened some of the state's most popular
summer tourist destinations over the weekend, demolishing nearly two dozen
homes near Rocky Mountain National Park and emptying hotels and campgrounds,
according to the Associated Press. A wildfire near Colorado Springs prompted
the evacuations of more than 11,000 residents, the AP reported.
Tropical
Storm Debby hunkered down in the central Gulf of Mexico on Sunday, forcing oil
and gas companies to cut production while forecasters debated which way the
system would go next—west toward Texas or east into Florida.
Meanwhile,
Tropical Storm Debby hunkered down in the central Gulf of Mexico on Sunday,
forcing oil and gas companies to cut production while forecasters debated which
way the system would go next—west toward Texas or east into Florida.
Mark Peters www.wsj.com
Friday, June 22, 2012
OPEI Says EPA Decision Puts Consumers and Equipment at Risk
Alexandria, Va. – June 18 — The Outdoor Power Equipment Institute issues a warning today that the EPA’s ruling providing their approval of the sale of 15 percent ethanol (E15) into the U.S. consumer marketplace for automobiles made since 2001, is dangerous. The government’s test results that show E15 is harmful to outdoor power equipment, boats and marine engines and other non-road engine products. The fuel used for automobiles and other engine products would have to be divided, substantially increasing the risk for misfueling, significant engine damage and consumer hazard.
“For
the first time in American history, fuel used for some automobiles may no
longer safe for any non-road products. It may, in fact, destroy or damage
generators, chain saws, utility vehicles, lawn mowers, boats and marine
engines, snowmobiles, motorcycles, ATVs, and more,” says Kris Kiser, President
and CEO of the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute, one of the industry groups
who have been sending warnings to the federal government about E15.
In
September 2011, members of the Engine Products Group (OPEI, National Marine
Manufacturers Association, Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers and Global
Automakers) filed a formal legal challenge to EPA’s E15 partial waiver
decision. The EPG asked the DC Circuit
Court of Appeals to reverse the E15 waiver decision. The decision on this
matter is expected to be issued at any time by the court.
Said
OPEI’s Kiser, “EPA purports to educate tens of millions of Americans using
hundreds of millions of engine products, asserting it will educate these users
with a 3 inch by 3 inch pump label. It’s frighteningly inadequate.”
Many
times OPEI has pointed out that the EPA’s prior experience with the
introduction of new fuels shows that labeling alone is insufficient to prevent
misfueling. As the EPA led the transition to unleaded fuels, the Agency
reported a misfueling rate of nearly 15 percent almost ten years after the
introduction of unleaded gasoline, and even with a physical barrier at the pumps.
The
Outdoor Power Equipment Institute (OPEI) is an international trade association
representing more than 80 engine and equipment manufacturers worldwide in the
utility, forestry, landscape, and lawn and garden industry. OPEI is a
recognized Standards Development Organization for the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) and active internationally through the International
Standards Organization (ISO) in the development of safety standards. For more
information, visit www.OPEI.org.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Fire Temporarily Halts Work at Husqvarna Orangeburg Plant
ORANGEBURG, SC -- June 20 -- A Tuesday morning fire at Orangeburg’s Husqvarna plant cut operations short for the day, with employees evacuating the building.
The
fire occurred around 11:01 a.m. in the plant’s powder-coating area, where lawn
mowers are painted.
“The
incident was contained to a small area of the plant and employees were safely
evacuated immediately,” Husqvarna Marketing Communications Manager Evin Ellis
said. “No injuries or casualties have been reported.
“The
cause of the fire is still under investigation.”
Husqvarna
is Orangeburg County’s largest manufacturer. It employs an average of 1,500
making riding lawn tractors, tillers and snow throwers. At its height, the
company typically employs upward of 2,300.
After
the fire, some employees were told to leave and report back to work the next
day.
Employees
standing outside during the evacuation asked to remain anonymous, saying they
did not officially know what had transpired.
“All
we heard was ‘boom, boom,’” one employee said. He can’t remember a similar
incident in his seven years at the plant.
Orangeburg
Department of Public Safety Capt. Mike Adams said the fire began in one of the
plant’s three powder-coating machines.
“When
officers got to the rear of the building, they found heavy smoke and fire at
which time they made an interior attack from the east and west side of the
building,” Adams said.
Adams
said the fire was confined to one machine, which is about 12 feet high and 40
feet long.
"There
was extensive damage to the machine and some damage to the roof,” he said. “The
fire is not suspicious.”
The
fire was put out within 40 minutes.
The
fire caused about $50,000 in damage to the machine and $50,000 to the roof,
Adams said.
The
Jamison Fire Department also responded to the fire.
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