Farm groups say protecting tropical forests could add $200 billion to U.S. farm income
By Jon H. Harsch
© Copyright Agri-Pulse Communications, Inc.
Washington, May 26 – A coalition of farm, forest product and labor organizations released a report Wednesday forecasting over $200 billion in benefits to U.S. agriculture from reducing tropical deforestation.
The report – “Farms Here, Forests There: Tropical Deforestation and U.S. Competitiveness in Agriculture and Timber – concludes that:
National Farmers Union (NFU) President Roger Johnson commented in releasing the report that “American farmers and ranchers know the importance of being good stewards of the land. With family farmers fighting to hold onto their land, we’ve got to make sure we’re not being undercut by irresponsible practices like deforestation.”
Recently back from visiting Brazil, Fred Yoder of the Ohio Corn Growers Association, immediate past president of the National Corn Growers Association, explained that “If we could just stop the deforestation and what’s happening in places like Brazil, U.S. agriculture revenue would go up by as much as $270 billion between 2012 and 2030. That’s direct benefits from increased production of soybeans, beef, timber, palm oil. Overall, if you look at just individual states, states like Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, Indiana and Nebraska, each state would stand to gain between $2.6 and $6.8 billion in increased revenue.”
The report commissioned by NFU and Avoided Deforestation Partners (ADP) calls for including substantial incentives in U.S. climate legislation to encourage countries like Brazil to preserve their tropical forests rather than allow continuing deforestation.
In a teleconference to announce the report, Johnson, Yoder, American Forest and Paper Association President Donna Harman, and United Steelworkers Strategic Issues Representative Keith Romig (representing forest products workers) joined in explaining that the U.S. stands to benefit directly from tropical forest protection. ADP Founder Jeff Horowitz says “Protecting rainforests is a win-win-win for the climate, for American consumers, and for farmers and ranchers.”
Among the report’s key findings:
To read the 56-page report, “Farms Here, Forests There: Tropical Deforestation and U.S. Competitiveness in Agriculture and Timber,” along with state-by-state and industry-by-industry factsheets, go to: www.adpartners.org/agriculture
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