Search Site   
Current News Stories
Reader questions answered on BBSE, nutrition and vaccines
America 250 Grant helps support Ag Museum’s antique tractor, engine show
Dairy margins flat to slightly firmer in second half of March
Time to get sugar water feeders ready as hummingbirds arrive
Protein demand is rising thanks in part to MAHA aligned food system
Tractor rollovers and machinery entanglement most common hazards
EPA approves temporary waiver for nationwide E15 sales
Crash Course Village, Montgomery County FB offer ag rescue training
Panel examines effects of Iran war at the farm gate
Area students represent FFA at National Ag Day in Washington
Remembering Orion Samuelson, the ‘Voice of Agriculture’ for 60 years
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
ISA, ICGA tout Senate’s approval of Growing Climate Solutions Act
 
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Growing Climate Solutions Act received overwhelming approval with a 92-8 vote on June 24 on the floor of the U.S. Senate. Also known as Senate Bill 1251 and sponsored by Sens. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) and Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), the proposal creates a certification program at USDA to help eliminate entry barriers to farmer and landowner participation in carbon credit markets. Braun spoke in June with Indiana Soybean Alliance (ISA) and Indiana Corn Growers Association (ICGA) members about the benefits of his proposal.
“Market demand for carbon credits represents a significant opportunity for Indiana farmers to improve their annual income,” said Mike Beard, a Frankfort, Ind., farmer and ICGA president, who attended that meeting with Sen. Braun. “We are very happy with the Senate’s support of this bill, and we encourage the U.S. House of Representatives to take up the issue quickly and help farmers across the country.”
House Ag Committee members Reps. Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.) and Don Bacon (R-Neb.) have introduced a companion bill that eventually will be combined with the Growing Climate Solutions Act.
According to Braun’s bill, the new USDA program would offer reliable information about carbon markets and access to qualified technical assistance providers for farmers and landowners. This bill establishes a Greenhouse Gas Technical Assistance Provider and Third-Party Verifier Certification Program in the USDA to provide transparency, legitimacy and informal endorsement of third-party verifiers and technical service providers that help farmers and private landowners generate carbon credits through a variety of agriculture and forestry-related practices. The USDA certification program will ensure these assistance providers have agriculture and forestry expertise, which is lacking in the current marketplace.
Stabenow, chair of the Senate Ag Committee, said passage of the Growing Climate Solutions Act will improve the environment by encouraging more farmers and landowners to enter the carbon credit markets.
USDA will administer a new website, which will serve as a “one-stop shop” of information and resources for producers and foresters who are interested in participating in carbon markets. Through the program, USDA will help connect landowners to private sector actors who can assist the landowners in implementing the protocols and monetizing the climate value of their sustainable practices.
“Gaining access to carbon markets is often confusing and difficult,” said Mike Koehne, a Greensburg, Ind., farmer and chair of the ISA’s Membership and Policy Committee. Braun first proposed the Growing Climate Solutions Act more than a year ago. In a series of meetings with Hoosier farmers and agricultural leaders, the proposal has been modified to its present form.
“Sen. Braun has worked with the Indiana Soybean Alliance and Hoosier farmers to make sure that the Growing Climate Solutions Act is agriculture friendly,” said Phil Ramsey, a Shelbyville, Ind., farmer and American Soybean Association member. “This proposed law will help farmers as they start to engage carbon markets and implement more environmentally friendly practices.”
7/2/2021