US bets on climate friendly farming; experts doubt it is climate
friendly enough
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[April 11, 2024]
By Leah Douglas
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden's administration is offering
farmers money for adopting practices that store carbon in the soil to
fight climate change, but Reuters interviews with soil science experts
and a review of U.S. Department of Agriculture research indicate doubt
that the approach will be effective.
Farm practices like planting cover crops and reducing farmland tilling
are key to the USDA's plan for slashing agriculture's 10% contribution
to U.S. greenhouse gas emissions as the U.S. pursues net-zero by 2050.
Ethanol producers also hope those practices will help them secure
lucrative tax credits for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) passed in the
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
But the farming techniques, which will receive an extra funding boost
from Biden's signature climate law, may not permanently sequester much
atmospheric carbon in the soil, according to five soil scientists and
researchers who spoke to Reuters about the current science.
Four other soil scientists, and the USDA, said the practices can store
various amounts of soil carbon, but circumstances will dictate how much
and for how long.
The White House referred Reuters to the USDA for comment.
A USDA spokesperson said "the adoption and persistent use of no-till and
cover crops are key for the sequestration of carbon on working
croplands."
All the experts interviewed by Reuters agreed that no-till and cover
crops can have significant environmental benefits such as preventing
soil erosion and increasing biodiversity. Yet five of them expressed
skepticism about tying climate policy and public money to the practices.
"Will it help with climate adaptation? Absolutely. Should it serve as an
offset for more permanent and long-lived pollutants? Absolutely not,"
said Daniel Rath, an agricultural soil carbon scientist at the Natural
Resources Defense Council.
The USDA has spent $1.3 billion in financial assistance to farmers for
planting and managing cover crops and $224 million for implementing
no-or reduced-till since 2014, according to agency data. That figure is
miniscule compared to total USDA spending, but does amount to about 8%
of its farm conservation spending in that period.
"If we really want to offset or mitigate climate change, we need to
think about different systems," said Humberto Blanco, an agronomy
professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. "We need to think about
more aggressive strategies."
IT ALL DEPENDS
Adoption of cover crops and no-till has risen in the past decade; now,
11% of farms plant cover crops and about 40% use minimal or no tilling,
according to the most recent USDA agricultural census.
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AltEn LLC ethanol plant is seen in Mead, Nebraska, U.S., March 21,
2019. Picture taken on March 21, 2019. REUTERS/Humeyra Pamuk/File
Photo
Under the right conditions, planting cover crops and reducing
tilling can be positive for the climate, scientists told Reuters.
"If a farmer is using cover crops and getting good growth in the
fall and spring, and they’re doing minimal tillage, on most soils,
they’re going to add soil carbon over time," said Robert Myers, a
professor at the University of Missouri and regional director of
extension programs at a USDA research site.
A USDA spokesperson said the benefits largely depend on factors like
growing climate, soil type, crop rotation, and other factors.
Five other experts told Reuters that no-till farming commonly
results in a higher concentration of carbon in the soil surface but
a decrease deeper in the soil profile, resulting in a net zero gain.
Seven experts said the climate benefits of no-till and cover crop
techniques can be lessened or reversed if farmers plow their fields
again.
"Even if you do build up some extra carbon under reduced tillage, if
you then do a traditional plowing, the evidence seems to be that you
quite quickly lose the carbon that you’ve been building up," said
David Powlson, senior fellow at Rothamsted Research, an agricultural
research institution.
Only 21% of farmers report using no-till continuously, according to
the 2022 farm census, and about a third alternate reduced tilling
with conventional tilling, showed a 2018 USDA report.
A USDA standards document for no-till says loss of carbon in the
soil is directly tied to the amount and intensity of the tilling,
and other factors like soil moisture and temperature.
As for the SAF tax credit, the Treasury Department is expected to
finalize details in coming weeks. The $1.25 per gallon credit is
aimed at producers who prove their fuel can cut emissions 50% from
those of straight jet fuel.
The program will likely require ethanol producers to source corn
from farmers using cover crops, reduced tilling, or efficient
fertilizer application, sources told Reuters.
The USDA declined to comment on what the fertilizer application
would entail.
The ethanol industry hopes to account for a significant portion of
the 35 billion gallons of SAF the Biden administration has pledged
to produce by 2050.
The IRA includes some $19.5 billion for farm climate programs over
10 years, and in 2023, about $52.5 million of that money went to
cover crops and no-till.
(Reporting by Leah Douglas; Editing by David Gregorio)
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