U.S. senators call for planting on conserved land in response to Ukraine
crisis
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[April 02, 2022]
By Leah Douglas
(Reuters) -Two senators are joining farm
groups and other lawmakers in calling on the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to allow farmers to plant conserved acres this spring in
response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Aid groups have warned that global hunger will rise this year as a
result of disruptions to the planting season in Ukraine, a major grain
exporter.
Republican Senators Marco Rubio from Florida and Cynthia Lummis from
Wyoming sent a letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack on March 31
calling on the USDA to allow farmers to plant acres enrolled in the
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) without penalty.
"Allowing crop production on CRP lands is a critical step for
stabilizing food prices that have skyrocketed in recent months, and to
help American growers fulfill the unmet global demand for grains that
threatens the lives of tens of millions of people," the senators wrote.
Senator John Boozman, a Republican from Arkansas and ranking member of
the Senate Agriculture Committee, also asked the USDA in March to allow
for CRP planting.
The USDA is opposed to the idea, according to a letter sent from Vilsack
to the National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) on March 31.
"Quickly converting (CRP) land to crop production is clearly unfeasible"
and would have negative long-term consequences for the climate and land,
the letter said.
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A farmer drives a tractor through farmland as Franklin County
commissioners vote to end recognition of Governor Jay Inslee?s "Stay
Home, Stay Healthy" mandate and allow businesses to reopen, during
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Franklin County near
Pasco, Washington, U.S. April 22, 2020. REUTERS/David Ryder/File
Photo
Farm groups, including NGFA, called
on Vilsack this month to allow farmers to plant on the more than 4
million acres (1.6 million hectares) of "prime farmland" currently
enrolled in CRP. The program pays farmers to fallow acres under 10-
or 15-year contracts. [L2N2VQ2R1]
Some economists and farmers have expressed skepticism about the
idea, as some CRP land is environmentally sensitive.
High costs and scarce availability of fertilizer and other materials
has also muted farmer interest in planting more acres. In an annual
survey of planting intentions, farmers said they would be planting
just 214,000 acres (86,603 hectares) more than in 2021, a 0.1%
increase.
The European Union has already moved to allow farmers to plant on
fallow land in response to the war in Ukraine and is distributing
aid to help them do so. [L5N2VQ584]
(Reporting by Leah Douglas; additional reporting by Christopher
Walljasper; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Marguerita Choy)
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