The Real Organic Project is sponsoring a conference at Churchtown Dairy in Hudson, NY, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. It’s on “Saving Real Organic: Anti-Trust and Food.” Tickets and information are here.
Growing crops for fuel: Big Ag wins, the public loses
I know I’ve been posting this graph multiple times, but to me it sums up everything that’s wrong with the U.S. agricultural system. Close to half the biofuels grown in the U.S. is used to make biofuels.
Here’s what happens to corn.
But that’s not all. Roughly 40% of U.S. soybeans are converted to diesel fuel, according to a report from the World Resources Institute: Increased Biofuel Production in the US Midwest May Harm Farmers and the Climate.
As the report explains,
- Corn and soybeans are grown on 178 million acres of farmland.
- They grown mainly in Midwest states — Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
- 30 million acres of corn are used to produce ethanol, but ethanol from corn only supplied 4% of U.S. transportation fuel in 2022.
- More than 40% of U.S. soybean oil supply has been used for biofuels since 2022; biodiesel made from soybeans supplied less than 1% of U.S. transportation fuel.
The rest is mainly used for animal feed.
All this means that the current subsidy system:
- Encourages large agricultural producers to grow corn in places where it should not be grown (areas of low water, for example).
- Takes up farmland that could be used to produce food for people.
- Pollutes the environment with pesticides and herbicides, making local water sources undrinkable.
- Promotes meat in the diet (it reduces the price of feed)
This is a really bad system that does nothing to help Make America Healthy Again.
Is the system likely to change? Not a chance.
And now we have the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
It is applauded by the trade association for ethanol and diesel producers.
The American Prospect, however, calls it “climate-wrecking.”
the Renewable Fuels Standard, created by the Energy Policy Act of 2005….was to cut down on greenhouse gas emissions by requiring the use of various biofuels for transportation and heating (and, not coincidentally, hand out gobs of cash to farm states like Iowa, a place which is kind of critical in presidential elections). Since these are created from plants that pull carbon out of the atmosphere, rather than digging up oil from the ground, it was thought this would cut emissions. [But] mainly it led to an explosion of farming corn and soybeans to be rendered into ethanol, which increased by about 500 percent between 2005 and today.
Take a look at who is made happy by this bill.
- American Soybean Association
- National Association of Wheat Growers (they want in)
- National Cattlemens Beef Association
Big Ag wants to sell crops; it doesn’t care how they are used.
Add this to everything else that’s wrong with this bill.
Fortunately, there is at least one dissenting voice:
Meanwhile, House Agriculture Committee Ranking Member Angie Craig (MN-02) shared her negative sentiment towards the bill saying in a statement that “Today marks a grave turning point for our country, one which leaves rural communities and farmers behind, and places us on the road toward increased hunger, less prosperity and fewer opportunities for working families. This bill takes food away from millions of children, seniors, veterans and people with disabilities. Congressional Republicans have sold out ordinary Americans to pay for tax breaks for the ultra-rich and large corporations. The Republican budget is a disgrace, and every single person who voted for it should be ashamed.”