Is Carbon Farming a Viable Fit for Your Operation?

With an incoming president and administration that will have a more regulatory bent and environmental focus, what will that mean for agriculture? Tom Vilsack has been tapped to do a reprise of his role as Secretary of Agriculture, so we know there will be more of an environmental lean in the years ahead. Vilsack has vowed to put climate change at the top of the agenda.

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How much of agricultural and environmental policy will come with a carrot or a stick remains to be seen. But one potential carrot might be incentives for growers to farm carbon.

The idea of using fields, pastures, and forestry to capture and retain carbon from the atmosphere is not new, but it has been garnering more attention in recent years.

President Biden has promised the new administration would pursue direct federal payments from USDA to growers who use their fields to capture carbon. In addition, some of the largest agricultural companies are working to set up agricultural carbon-exchange markets.

Even the Wall Street Journal is taking notice. In late December, it ran an extensive piece, “Agriculture Industry Bets on Carbon as a New Cash Crop.” The story covered the landscape of this emerging sector. It also told how one Iowa farmer, Kelly Garrett, planted cover crops for all the normal benefits of fighting erosion, building organic matter, and improved fertility. In addition to those benefits, Garrett earned $75,000 for 5,000 carbon credits his farm generated through a program developed by ag startups Nori and Locus Agricultural Solutions. You may have seen Locus on the trade show floor of our Florida GrowerSM Citrus Show in recent years.

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Shopify, Inc. bought Garrett’s carbon credits. While the e-commerce company has nothing to do with agriculture, it does need credits to offset carbon emissions it produces while transporting goods sold through its platform during the Black Friday/Cyber Monday weekend. That’s a lot of shipping and a lot of emissions. The company is marketing its commitment to offset omissions, and Garrett’s wallet is $75,000 fatter for it.

Bayer, Nutrien, Indigo Ag, Cargill, Corteva, and ADM all are dipping their toes into the carbon game in one way or another. Data collection and farm management software will play a critical role in helping growers demonstrate just how much carbon they are capturing. I am sure some of you will be leery of that amount of data being shared, which I totally get. But it is worth noting that beyond dollars for carbon, having that level of understanding of how your farm is performing can provide benefits in productivity, efficiency, and profitability.

Whether incentives from government or credits from private companies, carbon capture could provide opportunities for your farm or grove in the future. It’s worth watching and perhaps trying if it makes economic sense for your operation.

Would you consider farming for carbon credits on your operation’s acreage?

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Avatar for Sonny Scott Sonny Scott says:

Liberal green new deal BS. Absolute insanity. This country is going backwards

Avatar for Bacon Bacon says:

Sounds like the same argument that the whale oil industry, blacksmiths and coal miners had. Whos going backwards?

Avatar for Russ Russ says:

Check out iceagefarmer.com to find out what is really going on. This will make your stomach turn and your hair stand up on the back of your neck. You will have hungry people coming to your farm and helping themselves and the government will tell you that it is theirs to take. You won’t be able to stop them.

Avatar for croploss croploss says:

Expecting to get paid for what farmers have always done – incorporate crop residues back into the soil, or practicing minimum til is just another dishonest money grab. Please do not complain when your utility bills, costs for necessary fuels, and general taxes go up because you are part of the public that will have to pay for this green scam. Meanwhile you will be turning over control of your farm to government and green morons. Good luck and enjoy screwing the rest of the public by using just one more government subsidy.

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