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Strong Climate Message Issued by Farm Bureau Delegates

No doubt about opposition to cap and trade and EPA regulating greenhouse gases.
Compiled by staff 
Published: Jan 13, 2010

Farm and ranch delegates at the American Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting unanimously approved a special resolution to strongly oppose cap and trade proposals before Congress and strongly support any legislative action that would suspend the Environmental Protection Agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act.

 

The delegates cited recent developments in the climate change debate as reasons to re-emphasize their opposition. The resolution asserted that proposed cap and trade legislation would result in significantly higher production costs for farmers, and that potential benefits of agricultural offsets are far outweighed by the costs. 

 

According to the resolution, the administration's economic projections show the proposed cap and trade legislation would result in planting trees on 59 million acres of crop and pasture land thereby damaging the capability of U.S. agricultural producers to feed a growing world population and create the conditions for higher consumer food prices. Cap and trade legislation would eliminate jobs, and could result in the loss of 2.3 million jobs in the U.S. over the next 20 years.  



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Tagged: farm, Farm Bureau, Environmental Protection Agency, American Farm Bureau Federation, ranch

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Leading scientists are unequivocally reaffirming the consensus on global warming in the wake of "Climategate."  The American Association for the Advancement of Science released a statement "reaffirm[ing] the position of its Board of Directors and the leaders of 18 respected organizations, who concluded based on multiple lines of scientific evidence that global climate change caused by human activities is now underway, and it is a growing threat to society." The American Meteorological Society and the Union of Concerned Scientists have also reiterated their positions on climate change, which they say are unaffected by the leaked e-mails.  The Farm Bureau is grasping at straws trying to say there are any developments in the climate change debate that refute global warming and that humans are playing a major role in increasing CO2 levels.  Sticking one's collective head in the sand and pretending we are not facing problems will not make things better for the midwest farmer.  Instead they should be focusing their influence on making sure we get the best deal possible in cap and trade legislation.  Like windfarms we may be farming differently in the future than we do now.
Posted by D on January 13 at 3:00 PM
 
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