Prairies vanish in the US push for green energy

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
Prairies vanish in the US push for green energy


ROSCOE, S.D. (AP) — Robert Malsam nearly went broke in the 1980s when corn was cheap. So now that prices are high and he can finally make a profit, he's not about to apologize for ripping up prairieland to plant corn.

Across the Dakotas and Nebraska, more than 1 million acres of the Great Plains are giving way to corn fields as farmers transform the wild expanse that once served as the backdrop for American pioneers.

This expansion of the Corn Belt is fueled in part by America's green energy policy, which requires oil companies to blend billions of gallons of corn ethanol into their gasoline. In 2010, fuel became the No. 1 use for corn in America, a title it held in 2011 and 2012 and narrowly lost this year. That helps keep prices high.

"It's not hard to do the math there as to what's profitable to have," Malsam said. "I think an ethanol plant is a farmer's friend."

What the green-energy program has made profitable, however, is far from green. A policy intended to reduce global warming is encouraging a farming practice that actually could worsen it.

That's because plowing into untouched grassland releases carbon dioxide that has been naturally locked in the soil. It also increases erosion and requires farmers to use fertilizers and other industrial chemicals. In turn, that destroys native plants and wipes out wildlife habitats.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
Hard to react to this for one glaringly obvious reason -

Most of the farmland we ALREADY have now, were once wide open prairies.

It's hard to react to the "loss" of prairie land when we once had states that were prairies from one to the other.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
It's hard to react to the "loss" of prairie land when we once had states that were prairies from one to the other.



the FED has been paying farmers NOT to grow the past 30 some yrs ....

... to keep prices up, to 'conserve' or prevent soil erosion by letting grass grow ...
 

Railroad

Routinely Derailed
On balance, I see this whole thing as a non-issue. There are those who would protest either way - whether loss of prairies or not enough crops being grown. Some folks just have to have something to complain about. I choose not to listen too closely while considering the source.
 

Gilligan

#*! boat!
PREMO Member
The fact that the high corn prices and increased crop acreage are being driven by ethanol production is what I have a major problem with. Raising corn is a very environmentally destructive process (speaking as a former corn grower) and making ethanol from corn is also a negative....without even factoring in the extensive economic damage to certain types of engines and/or storage containers or fuel tanks.

The whole scam is nothing but a massive farm subsidy thinly disguised as good environmental policy.
 

nhboy

Ubi bene ibi patria
It’s Time to Rethink America’s Corn System

Link to original article.

"Nothing dominates the American landscape like corn.

Sprawling across the Midwest and Great Plains, the American Corn Belt is a massive thing. You can drive from central Pennsylvania all the way to western Nebraska, a trip of nearly 1,500 miles, and witness it in all its glory. No other American crop can match the sheer size of corn.

So why do we, as a nation, grow so much corn? "
 

BOP

Well-Known Member
On balance, I see this whole thing as a non-issue. There are those who would protest either way - whether loss of prairies or not enough crops being grown. Some folks just have to have something to complain about. I choose not to listen too closely while considering the source.

US farmers fear the return of the Dust Bowl - Telegraph

The article is a couple of years old, but there are plenty of articles out there.

There is not much to be happy about these days in Happy, Texas. Main Street is shuttered but for the Happy National Bank, slowly but inexorably disappearing into a High Plains wind that turns all to dust. The old Picture House, the cinema, has closed. Tumbleweed rolls into the still corners behind the grain elevators, soaring prairie cathedrals that spoke of prosperity before they were abandoned for lack of business.

Happy's problem is that it has run out of water for its farms. Its population, dropping 10 per cent a year, is down to 595. The name, which brings a smile for miles around and plays in faded paint on the fronts of every shuttered business – Happy Grain Inc, Happy Game Room – has become irony tinged with bitterness. It goes back to the cowboy days of the 19th century. A cattle drive north through the Texas Panhandle to the rail heads beyond had been running out of water, steers dying on the hoof, when its cowboys stumbled on a watering hole. They named the spot Happy Draw, for the water. Now Happy is the harbinger of a potential Dust Bowl unseen in America since the Great Depression.
 
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