NEWSROOM

Dole and Daschle Release New Report on the Role of Agriculture in Cutting US Greenhouse Emissions

Monday, June 2, 2008


Contact:  Paul Bledsoe, Director of Communications  

 

Rules by Which Farmers Can Sequester Carbon and Gain Valuable Emissions Permits; A Key Constituency to Passage of Mandatory Climate Legislation

 

(Washington, D.C.) -- On the eve of Senate debate on legislation to cap U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, former Senate Majority Leaders Bob Dole and Tom Daschle today released recommendations for creating a robust U.S. market for agricultural carbon credits to cut emissions and provide a valuable new asset for famers. 

 

“Political leaders, members of the business community, and the general public increasingly expect that restrictions on emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) will be needed to address the problem of global warming,” Dole and Daschle write in the report.   “As Congress moves forward in the near future to draft and debate climate change legislation, American agriculture can play an important role in  shaping the eventual policy outcome—and specifically, in ensuring that any future U.S. cap-and-trade program fairly credits farmers and ranchers for GHG reductions and allows them to participate in a new national market for carbon credits.  The stakes are extremely high for America’s agricultural producers.  Done well, a national GHG emissions control policy can provide a new multi-billion dollar per year market opportunity for farmers.”

 

In a report last year, Dole and Daschle came out in favor of mandatory measures to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.  The new report released today focuses solely on the emerging agricultural carbon market. Dole and Daschle recommend that Congress adopt rules for new agricultural carbon markets that appropriately reward carbon sequestration and other agriculture projects that reduce greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.  Specific recommendations include:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The new agricultural carbon markets report was released by the senators as part of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s 21st Century Agriculture Policy Project.  One year ago, Senators Dole and Daschle released their first report of the project, entitled Competing and Succeeding in the 21st Century; New Markets for American Agriculture, which set forth a number of recommendations to Congress on a range of issues, including preserving the agricultural safety net, reducing the cost of the federal Farm Bill, promoting renewable energy development on agricultural lands, and creating a robust market for agricultural carbon credits.  Both reports can be found at: http://www.21stcenturyag.org/ and http://www.bipartisanpolicy.org/.

On the need for mandatory action on climate change, Dole and Daschle stated last year:

 

“Federal action to establish a mandatory program to limit greenhouse gas emissions is sensible and will provide agricultural producers with significant new market opportunities. The agriculture sector is in a unique position to lead in—and benefit from—efforts to address climate change.”