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DEAR NEW FARM:
I am on a 50-state road trip talking to Americans about environmental
sustainability. We have run into many conflicting opinions about
whether or not growing crops for fuel is a good idea. There are
questions about:
- the viability of growing enough crops for the amount of fuel
that America requires (especially if the CAFE standards do not
decrease);
- the likelihood of farmers switching to fuel crops due to subsidies
and creating a food deficit; and,
- those same farmers caring little about what kind of herbicides/pesticides
they are putting into the soil to get a better yield for fuel.
I think this is a really important issue in this country, especially
as water is running low in many areas and population is always increasing
steadily. I want to be able to address this issue when asked about
it - so that I can at least send people in the right direction for
really honest, true-cost accounted answers.
Thank you!
Julie Evans
Kentucky
DEAR JULIE:
There certainly are a lot of conflicting opinions surrounding
the ethanol issue. We hope that you’ll find the following
articles to be helpful: Turning
crops to ethanol fuel: on the road to energy independence, Green
energy, Exploiting
clean energy for profit, Corn
ethanol takes more energy than it makes, Pursuing
a new vision for agricultural policy, U.S.
corn exports to drop dramatically due to ethanol growth and
Ethanol-fueled
high corn prices create ripple effect that touches organic grain
outlook. There’s also this New Farm Reader Mail from September,
Is
it profitable for me to grow corn for ethanol?
One concern within the sustainable farming community is that farmers
are taking marginal lands out of conservation programs and planting
them in corn to get in on the “gold rush.” And we believe
corn-based ethanol is just that. Where will these farmers be three
to five years down the road when the bottom falls out? At the very
least, they’ll be out a lot of valuable organic matter. This
has global warming implications as well, both because organic matter
stores carbon and because conventional corn requires vast amounts
of synthetic nitrogen (which requires natural gas to produce).
For another word or two on the subject, please read (or reread)
New Farm Managing Editor
Greg Bowman’s Editor's
Note from our September 2007 newsletter.
We hope this helps further your discussion. Thank you for your
good work, and thanks for reading New Farm.
NF
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