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ASA Submits Concerns and Issues for Climate Change
Legislation
November 4, 2009…Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today issued a paper outlining its concerns and issues
for climate change legislation. ASA believes that climate change
legislation passed by the House of Representatives and the current draft
Senate climate change bill do not provide sufficient measures to protect
American economic competitiveness, and ASA does not support those
measures in their current form.
ASA is issuing its detailed position paper as the Senate continues
work on climate change legislation in the Environment and Public Works
Committee and considers the potential for future hearings and mark-ups
by the Senate Agriculture and other committees of jurisdiction.
"ASA is concerned with the impacts that could result from enactment
of climate change legislation that unilaterally subjects U.S. farmers,
manufacturers and other businesses to emissions caps and increased
energy costs without appropriate measures to ensure that the U.S.
maintains economic competitiveness," said ASA President Johnny Dodson, a
soybean producer from Halls, Tenn. "ASA recognizes that inaction on
energy and environmental issues may also have consequences and that
absent legislation, potential regulatory action by the Environmental
Protection Agency may be a more onerous and costly method of addressing
the issues."
If Congress moves to enact climate change legislation, ASA believes
it must be structured in a manner that will achieve the desired benefits
while maintaining the viability of the U.S. economy and domestic food
supply, including U.S. farmers and livestock producers, food and feed
processors, and our communities.
"Any cap and trade legislation must provide stability, promote the
global competitiveness of U.S. agriculture, and not diminish our ability
to supply U.S. and foreign consumers with abundant food, feed, fiber and
renewable fuel," Dodson said.
ASA’s priorities for climate change legislation include:
- exempting America’s two million farm and ranch operations from any
emissions cap;
- making implementation of any U.S.
climate change legislation contingent upon meaningful participation by
major emitting countries, including major developing countries and our
foreign competitors, in an international agreement to cap greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions;
- ensuring that the legislation complies with our trade obligations;
- provision of allowances to food and feed processors, including
soybean processing facilities;
- funding for a more energy and cost efficient transportation
system;
- long-term extension of the biodiesel tax incentive;
- corrections to flawed and untested indirect land use calculations
and unnecessary feedstock certification
requirements in the EPA’s rules governing the Renewable Fuel Standard;
- providing funding from emission allowances for research and
development programs at the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
specifically the National Institute for Food and Agriculture, to
support research on all aspects of agricultural productivity,
including food security, bioenergy, environment and natural resources;
- a number of specific recommendations for a workable agricultural
offset program, including provisions that target offsets toward
practices that will allow working lands to remain in production.
"If Congress moves to enact climate change legislation, ASA believes
that safeguards need to be included to ensure that U.S. farmland, which
is the most productive land in the world, is not idled or afforested in
response to carbon sequestration incentives," Dodson said. "Doing so
would reduce U.S. and global food security, increase food prices for the
poor, and increase the United States’ reliance on food imports from
countries that may not be participating in a greenhouse gas emissions
program."
ASA’s detailed position paper outlining concerns and issues for
climate change legislation is available at http://www.soygrowers.com/policy/ClimateChange1109.pdf.
ASA represents all U.S. soybean farmers on domestic and international
issues of importance to the soybean industry. ASA’s advocacy efforts are
made possible through the voluntary membership in ASA by over 22,500
farmers in 31 states where soybeans are grown.
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For more information contact:
Johnny Dodson, ASA President, (731) 286-2268, johnnydodson@bellsouth.net
Cassandra Schlef, ASA Communications Coordinator,
(314) 576-1770, cschlef@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm |