Nebraska Farmers, Ranchers Push for Green New Deal Policies
Eric Galatas, Public News Service – NE
LINCOLN, Neb. – Agriculture is the fourth largest producer of climate
pollution, and farmers and ranchers from across the U.S. have launched a
campaign urging Congress to pass the Green New Deal, which supports
regenerative family farm and ranching practices over industrial scale
agribusiness.
Graham Christensen, who runs an independent farm in northeastern
Nebraska, says farmers across the political spectrum are seeing the
proposal as an opportunity to level the playing field.
“Farmers have a chance to be able to lead in reduction of greenhouse
gases, as well as clean up the water, and at the same time develop a
more nutritional food system that probably benefits their bottom line as
well,” he states.
Christensen says 85% of the nation’s $25 billion farm subsidies go to
the biggest 15% of businesses, which rely on factory farming, synthetic
fertilizers, chemical pesticides and other practices linked to increased
air and water pollution.
Christensen says supporting cleaner practices will produce healthier food and enrich soil by capturing more carbon.
Critics of the Green New Deal say it’s too expensive and argue that a
better way to address climate change would be to encourage innovation in
the private sector.
Katherine Paul, communications director for the group Regeneration International, says the Green New Deal is an opportunity to reinvest money already being spent in innovative private family scale farms.
But she admits change won’t come easily, noting that agribusiness
currently spends more than the defense industry lobbying Congress.
“And what they want is rarely good for small, independent farmers and
ranchers who are interested in farming in a way that benefits everyone,”
she stresses.
So far, more than 10,000 farmers and ranchers have joined the campaign.
The coalition’s next steps include creating alliances with conservation
and business groups, and inviting lawmakers to come out and see the
benefits of clean land use, along with the economic challenges facing a
growing number of the nation’s family farms.