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As Prices Rise, Farmers Spurn Conservation
Out on the farm, the ducks and pheasants are losing ground.
Thousands of farmers are taking their fields out of the government's biggest conservation program, which pays them not to cultivate. They are spurning guaranteed annual payments for a chance to cash in on the boom in wheat, soybeans, corn and other crops. Last fall, they took back as many acres as are in Rhode Island and Delaware combined.
Environmental and hunting groups are warning that years of progress could soon be lost, particularly with the native prairie in the Upper Midwest. But a broad coalition of baking, poultry, snack food, ethanol and livestock groups say bigger harvests are a more important priority than habitats for waterfowl and other wildlife. They want the government to ease restrictions on the preserved land, which would encourage many more farmers to think beyond conservation.
Kerry Dockter, a rancher in Denhoff, N.D., has about 450 acres of grassland in the program. "When this program first came about, it was a pretty good thing," he said. "But times have definitely changed."
The government payments, Mr. Dockter said, "aren't even comparable anymore" to what he could make by working the land. He plans to devote some of his conservation acres to growing feed for his cows and some to grazing. He might also lease some land to neighbors.
For years, the problem with cropland was that there was too much of it, which kept food prices low to the benefit of consumers and the detriment of farmers.
Now, because of a growing global middle class as well as federal mandates to turn large amounts of corn into ethanol-based fuel, food prices are beginning to jump. Cropland is suddenly in heavy demand, a situation that is fraying old alliances, inspiring new ones and putting pressure on the Agriculture Department, which is being lobbied directly by all sides without managing to satisfy any of them.
Born nearly 25 years ago in an era of abundance, the Conservation Reserve Program is having a rough transition to the age of scarcity. Its 35 million acres - about 8 percent of the cropland in the country - are the big prize in this brawl.
Groups like Ducks Unlimited and Pheasants Forever want the government to raise rental rates to keep the same amount of land in the program or even increase it. While offering more money to farmers might be a difficult sell in a year of record farm profits, Jim Ringelman of Ducks Unlimited said, "There are overriding environmental issues here."
The bakers and their allies have a different set of overriding issues: high commodity prices. The rising cost of feed is hurting ranchers, the rising cost of corn is hurting ethanol producers and the rising cost of wheat is hurting bread makers.
"We're in a crisis here. Do we want to eat, or do we want to worry about the birds?" asked JR Paterakis, a Baltimore baker who said he was so distressed at a meeting last month with Edward T. Schafer, the agriculture secretary, that he stood up and started speaking "vehemently."
The Paterakis bakery, H&S, produces a million loaves of rye bread a week. The baker said he could not find the rye flour he needed at any price. That gives him two unwelcome options: close half of his operations starting in July, or experiment with a blended flour that will yield a different and possibly less-than-authentic rye bread.
Such problems were never contemplated when the Conservation Reserve was conceived as part of the 1985 Farm Bill. Participants bid to put their land in the program during special sign-ups, with the government selecting the acres most at risk environmentally. Average annual payments are $51 an acre. Contracts run for at least a decade and are nearly impossible to break - not that anyone wanted to until recently.
"Older farmers put their land in the program rather than renting to a younger farmer or selling," said Dale Schuler, who grows wheat in Fort Benton, Mont. That made it difficult for farmers who wanted to expand as well as farm equipment dealers, supply co-ops and other services, which suffered declines in business.
"It's certainly been a polarizing issue," Mr. Schuler said. "Half the people love it and half the people hate it."
While few urban dwellers ever heard of Conservation Reserve, it found support among two important constituents: hunters had more land to roam and more wildlife to seek out, with the Agriculture Department estimating that the duck population alone rose by two million; and environmentalists were pleased, too. No one disputes that there are real environmental benefits from the program, especially on land most prone to erosion.
The program peaked late last summer, with more than 400,000 farmers receiving nearly $1.8 billion for idling 36.8 million acres. Put all that land together and it would be bigger than the state of New York.
The group doing the most to undermine this amiable coexistence is the farmers themselves. Last fall, when five million acres in Conservation Reserve came up for renewal, only half of them were re-entered. While the program has gained some high-priority land in the last few months, in part from an initiative to restore bobwhite quail habitats, the net loss is still more than two million acres.
That is just the beginning, warns Ducks Unlimited, a politically potent organization with more than half a million members in the United States. Ducks Unlimited is concerned about the three-quarters of a million acres of grassland that were removed from the program last year in the so-called duck factory in the Upper Midwest.
"We foresee a dramatic reduction," said Mr. Ringelman, a conservation director for the association.
Ardell Magnusson, a farmer in Roseau, Minn., shows the changing mood. He said the program was "a godsend" when he put 300 of his 2,300 acres into it eight years ago. "I needed some guaranteed income or my banker was going to tell me to find another occupation," Mr. Magnusson said. It is not exactly a bonanza: he gets about $12,000 a year.
He calculates he can make more than that by farming sunflowers or wheat or soybeans. When his contract expires in two years, he plans to withdraw about half his land. It would not be a shock if the Agriculture Department cut him loose sooner. "Another nine months of wheat at today's prices and there will be political pressure on this program like you wouldn't believe," Mr. Magnusson said.
That pressure is exactly what the bakers and their allies are aiming for, saying the Conservation Reserve costs taxpayers and hurts consumers.
"This program is taking money out of your pocket twice a day," said Jay Truitt, vice president for government affairs for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association. "Do you think it's right for you to pay so there's more quail in Kansas?"
The cattlemen and bakers argue that farmers should immediately be allowed to take as much as nine million acres out of the Conservation Reserve without paying a penalty, something they say would not harm the environment.
"The pipeline for wheat is empty," said Michael Kalupa, a bakery owner in Tampa, Fla., who is president of the Retail Bakers of America. Mr. Kalupa said the price he paid for flour had doubled since October. He cannot afford to absorb the cost and he cannot afford to pass it on. Sales have been falling 16 percent to 20 percent a month since October. He has laid off three employees.
Among farmers, the notion of early releases from conservation contracts is prompting sharp disagreement and even anger. The American Soybean Association is in favor. "We need more food," said John Hoffman, the association's president.
The National Association of Wheat Growers is against, saying it believes "in the sanctity of contracts." It does not want more crops to be grown, because commodity prices might go down.
That is something many of its members say they cannot afford, even with wheat at a robust $9 a bushel. Their own costs have increased, with diesel fuel and fertilizer up sharply. "It would decrease my profit margin, which is slim," said Jeff Krehbiel of Hydro, Okla. "Let's hurt the farmer in order to shut the bakers up, is that what we're saying?"
Mr. Krehbiel said his break-even last year was $4 a bushel. This summer it will be $6.20; the next crop, $7.75.
In the struggle between those who would shrink the program and those who would bolster it, the Agriculture Department is leaning toward the latter. When Mr. Schafer spoke recently before wildlife and hunting groups in Phoenix, he opened the door to significantly raising rents on new land.
Randy Schuring, a dairy farmer with 200 acres in the program, said there was no possible solution that would make everyone happy.
"If the government lets the land out and then crop prices fall, that's going to hurt a lot of farmers," said Mr. Schuring, whose farm is in Andover, S.D. "If it doesn't let the land out and prices keep going up, that will hurt a lot of consumers. If only we had a crystal ball."
© 2008 The New York Times

33 Comments so far
Show AllThe farmer's version of Fishing Down the Food Chain.
Ducks Unlimited exists solely to have more ducks to kill. That's it.
The name implies a commodity, like tires.
The less ducks they have to slaughter the better, but no sympathy for farmers or ranchers who want to grow food for livestock.
Shame on meat eaters.
The water and grain and cropland wasted on livestock production could feed many more humans. Its simple math. And it kills wildlife(the ones not slaughtered by sadistic cowardly hunters).
I hope and expect this is getting a lot of attention in the Department of Agriculture. In the past, whole fields and farms have been placed in the conservation reserve program. That plan must end. We must now target the areas of fields most prone to erosion, the areas alongside streams and a few other areas deemed most important to wildlife. I'm a farmer and I love the high prices I'm getting now, but world hunger is far more important than us farmers getting windfall profits. Strongly encouraging no-til/minimum til farming is essential also.
This is a more complicated issue than meat bad, land good. People are starving around the world because they can't afford to buy the grain that creates the basic food source for about 50 per cent of the population.
But the grain going to ethanol does nothing for them. So maybe the idea is to tax farmers raising gas-grain out and pay farmers raising food-grain?
It wouldn't be so bad if ethanol wasn't such a giant scam...
"People are starving around the world because they can't afford to buy the grain that creates the basic food source for about 50 per cent of the population."
Welcome to the 'soft-power' world of neo-Liberalism...
{Planting a garden, are you?]
There is plenty of grain to feed the world. As land has competing interests (fuel, housing, parks etc.), grain prices rise. If we want to conserve natural habitat, we can buy that land or rent/lease it from landowners. The Nature Conservancy operates this way and that's why I support them. If the portion of the population wants to make this a priority, they can create new non-profit groups or give to the Nature Conservancy. If not, then in a capitalistic society, the landowners have some rights also. I would love to get some financial help in putting in 3 more wetlands on our farm that I hope to be able to finance personally over the next 20 years. College tuition for my kids may make it take a little longer.
The sooner we remove our foot from the political gas pedal that is pushing ethanol from corn for fuel---even when the whole scheme is neither energy efficient nor water sensible--the sooner food prices will moderate and conservation will become more popular again.
I have to wonder if much of the rush to ethanol is little more than a Karl-Rovian-like plot to bolster the midwest so folks there will find their reasons to keep voting for "conservative" politicians. (Such an odd word, really, since hardly anyone seems to be able to define exactly what "conservatives" are actually conserving.)
If we would end income tax on incomes up to $100,000 and make up the difference with huge tax increases on all energy, this would greatly encourage conservation, decrease the use of ethanol, increase the food supply, decrease the destruction of equatorial forests, decrease urban sprawl, and on and on.
Better idea: Farmers can turn these preserved lands into wildlife managed hunting preserves with many diverse American game species and charge big bucks to rich hunters for the privilege of shooting the big game with tranquilizer darts, getting their picture taken with and releasing the trophy animal to breed.
Meat hunting can be limited to released easily farmed wild birds and small mammals and to young, better tasting big game without losing the genetic superiority as you do when shooting large select breeding stock. Tranquilizer guns, shotguns and even bow and arrows have much shorter ranges than high powered rifles and are much safer to use.
Other large areas turned into wildlife preserves can also become more profitable to farmers who can do wildlife tours and photography tours.
Oh! Yea! Its the american way, lets destroy a few more species for a buck. Think you spare some for the starving on the planet, especially since your government forced the third world to give up their sustainable crops in exchange for some 'ONE' crop that didnt feed them, destroyed their environment, and poisoned their land. What an incredibly evil country this is. All the more because it didnt have to take EVERYTHING from these people. It could have SHARED, but it hasn't evolved past the terrible two's into "plays nicely with others" "shares." What a concept!
With the loss of habitat the birds will start feeding on the farmer's fields.
Here in the Pacific Northwest the burgeoning population of snow geese is wintering further north and not only feeding on the marshes but on the expanses of school playing fields.
Don't you people realize that Big Agri is having fun with you environmentalists and farmers tearing each other apart? Perhaps we all can learn to be frugal and conserving rather than stay the GUZZLING course, now can't we?
And by the way, fertilizers and most diesel fuel are made out of petroleum and with rising oil prices, a switch to algae, switchgrass, or even hemp as North Dakota is fighting for it would go a long ways to mitigating this kind of infighting.
I read that we pay farmers to grow switchgrass (prairie grass) to preserve the soil. If cellulose biofuels become popular, we can have the farmers grow the grass, preserve the soil and have wet lands. Switchgrass only has to be replanted every 10 years and you just go out and mow it to make biofuels.
A baker in Tampa says, "sales have been falling 16 percent to 20 percent a month since October". Doesn't that mean that he now has virtually no sales at all? Hard to believe that no one in Florida is eating bread anymore!
It's hard to choose which side to stand on. They're right in that it will be impossible to make both sides happy. I support wildlife protection, thus my schooling deals with Wildlife Management; but at the same time I support the farmers because I was raised in rural Kansas on a farm. The consumers I don't really care about because it's impossible to please everyone, but I think the farmers should be allowed to do with their land as they please, regardless of whatever "contracts" may be on their land. And livestock have just as much right to this land as wildlife, and in most areas both live together pretty well. I got a good laugh when the first comments to this article were "meat bad, hunters bad." Vegans confuse me...what's the point in eating celery, lettuce, and broccoli when our bodies can't break down the cellulose. Show me a vegan who likes jello, and I'll show you a liar. Oh well, to each his own I suppose. If prices continue as they are, expect farmers to give the gov't the bird and plant those fields or let cattle graze them.
Just a few observations from this 75-yr-old retired farmer.
1. Birds and wildlife require specific habitat to live and reproduce.It's not so simple as "just let 'em go eat grain-fields".
2.Petrolium is a finite resource which presently serves to provide enery,fertilizers,plastics,fabrics etc,etc.India,China and other developing countries demand a "place at the table".This seems undeniable proof that we need to develope new sources of energy.Difficult?Undenianly!Impossible?I can't believe humankind can't rise to the challenge if we get serious.
3.At our extreme peril do we abandon concern for the rest of Gods creatures and nature!Ignoring the "canary in the mineshaft" represents arrogance supreme!
4.My parents and their peers survived the Great Depression and eventually suceeded against that awful adversity.I pray that THIS GENERATION will rise to the challenges facing us so that our grandkids may inhabit a better,more sane future.
Thanks for your time,keep up the dialogue and constructive concern!! Bob
"I can't believe humankind can't rise to the challenge if we get serious."
You are right, but as long as those in power have friends that make a lot of money off the way things are, then it is likely to stay the same.
US agriculture is economically unsustainable.
The high input costs needed for it to survive require that it be highly subsidised and if the subsidies are withdrawn it would collapse.
Unfortunately dumping highly subsidised US crops on the world market for years has pushed many previously profitable small scale farmers in the third world off the land, further exacerbating the current food crises.
If farming were sustainable, there would be plenty of room for conservation.
I formerly opined negatively about ethanol until I found
www.alcoholcanbeagas.com Now I wonder.
Let us get the crystal ball out. The standard way of doing this is to take the long term trends. World population is still going up. Climate change is still accelerating. The base input costs of mass produced agriculture are increasing as cheap oil becomes scarce. The oceans food stocks have plummeted. The world larder is empty, we are feeding on current production now. Of course the price of agricultural produce will rise, and pressure to resume farming unused land will increase as long as the production costs can be added to the sale price.
Mr Obvious
(Again, do you have a first name, as 'obvious' is definately NOT what you are?)
Your denial that organic food is not healthier is twaddle. Was the earth flat until the majority of scientists agreed it was round?
Sustainable organic agrciulture is much more suitable for difficult soil and cliamatic conditions, and it uses less fossil fuel.
Research shows that modern organic agriculture produces yields similar to chemical industrial agriculture. Regularly the input costs for organic agriculture are lower than high-tech industrial agriculture, and due to high consumer demand organic food can be sold for more. A win-win situation.
In the developing world, changing to sustainable modern day organic methods compared to age old traditional methods regularly improves yields between 100% and 300%. Want to see the research?
With demand for organics growing at 30% per year globally, I predict organics is the food of the future.
That is why agri-business have to spend so much effort and propaganda to maintain their profits.
Ha, ha, ha...
Guess what?
Another new report shows GM crops do not yield more, sometimes less. See
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8985
But then the earth was flat until someone produced a peer reviewed study to show it was round. Or Mr O does not approve of web sites ending in .org, they must be .edu sites. Sounds like aliens in area 57 type stuff to me.
Perhaps we should look more at the local food movement. The more of us that produce our own food, via 'victory gardens' or community gardens, the less pressure there is on farmers to have to plow under acres in conservation. It's all tied to gas, isn't it? Fertilizer for crops, transportation for crops, energy to make the crops. Grow local, and cut down on the fuel required. You can grow salad in a a box on a windowsill, fer cryin out loud. We may (hopefully) see more people ripping out their lawns and putting in food. They did it in the forties, we can do it now. What we need is biodynamic and bio-diverse agriculture, not petrol driven monoculture.
PUtting corn into ethanol is one of the craziest things I ever heard. It's just the easiest way to make ethanol, not necessarily the best. You can make fuel from bio trash, fer crissakes. What idiot decided to use food for fuel? Grass clippings, compost, tree branches, all these can be used. The rotting food behind markets can be used. Isn't there a community in the midwest that makes fuel from trash? We have the technology. Perhaps the good thing to come out of this food crisis is that we may be driven to use said technology.
alwyn - The biggest slice of US agriculture is grain production for animal feed. I don't think that victory gardens will help much with that (although fresh vegetables produced on land that would otherwise be in sod is a good idea). The ethanol subsidies are just a response to other country's underhanded subsidies designed to get around WTO agreements (like the EU ban on GM crops that have been approved by the scientific regulatory agencies in these same countries).
I would like to propose a solution to the issue of High Fuel costs High food cost and the damamge to the enviroment all in a few words. I know that this is going to sound insane but the proof is in newton county Indiana.... The plant is a nitrogen fixer in the soil it also does not need any pesticides, Sorry Monsanto no profits here for you so go away. So as I see it the plant while it is not a direct food plant it does have some food uses its oil is king for the human body. The Plant is Hemp as in 0 THC it is not the pot plant but its cousin. The first deisel engine ran on it and it ran clean too compared to todays Diesels. Boeing, Virgin Atlantic and GE are doing experianments to see if a 757 can fly on it. It makes a super rope and its great for clothing, To start with there is a huge crop of it in Newton County Indiana, Just for the picking and Pressing Its time to pull our heads out of our butts and see the plant who's time has arrived. This May be the Plant that saves America from its own demise. time to stop playing lip service to the issues of food enviroment and fuel and take a step into the ring and to do so with brass balls and meet the need with a multi use plant This really does warrent a hard look and kick the Cotton lobby and the Petrol lobby out of the room while its being looked at along with all of the other lobbys that will try to use scare tacticts to stop its being made legal here in the States
murdockmcgyver - Is this stuff illegal all over the world? If not, why not prove the concept where it is already legal?
I for one would rather buy E-85 to run in my car. I can buy it from a gas station that is owned by a farmers co-operative. So only 15% of my purchase is going to the oil companies. My frustration is that you can't buy an E-85 four cylinder engine. I'd love to be able to buy an E-85 hybrid, but no one makes one.
As far as the controversy over using corn to distill alchohol, right now we have the know-how and technology to utilize this food grain. Hopefully the next president, let us hope it be a Democrat, will have the good sense to pump some significant research money into using other crops such as switch grass and ........ whatever else may be out there. Following the first Arab oil embargo we were lulled into complacency with artificially low gas prices during the late 80's & 90's. Now the other shoe has dropped and we are more vulnerable than ever to imported oil. WE need a concerted research effort in this country into new sources of energy. Then we can tell OPEC to "pound sand".
Mr O
Scientific regulatory agencies can be pressurised to approve GM crops. I can write about that too.
European consumers are the the most informed in the world, hence their healthy scepticism for "sceintific" regulatory authotities.
Do you see the French government has recently banned Monsanto's MON810 genetically modified maize pending further investigation.
In Europe civil society have taken things into their own hands and created hundreds of GM free towns, provinces and regions.
In the same way that rBST hormone in milk is slowly being pushed off the shelves in the USA, so too will GM food be pushed off the shelves. For more information on rBST hormone milk and cancer risks see:
http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8956
The more consumers find out about GM food the more they reject it.
Andy - The French situation (part of the EU bans that I referenced agove) is an excellent example of a product used in this country for a decade and in France for the last couple years with no harmful effects. It was approved by the scientific regulatory bodies and they still have no safety concerns. The ban was put in place by a politician with no scientific background and purely for political gain. These protectionist moves are why the EU lost a WTO dispute on this subject. The US has not yet posed sanctions but they will since they can now legally do this based on the WTO descision. This descision concluded that the EU has no workable process to approve GM crops when they are found safe by their own scientists and regulatory process. You might want to look at the rate of cigarette smoking among these highly informed EU consumers. It is outragious! Look it up yourself. For more info on rBST look up something on an education site not an activist site. You can find activist sites that say anything your heart desires.
Info on rBST from Cornell University:
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~ear/CORBST.html
HEY MR OBVIOUS
Your Universty information on Percy Schmeiser was three years out of date. You quoted a Federal court case in 2001, ignored the appeal and omitted the Supreme Court verdict in 2004.
How out of date is this Cornell University information on rBST?
(DIS)APPROVAL OF rBST BY FDA:
"Early casualties were scientists at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) during the drug's evaluation. Chemist Joseph Settepani, in charge of quality control for the approval process of veterinary drugs at the Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM), testified at a public hearing about threats to human safety. Soon after, he was reprimanded, threatened, stripped of responsibilities, and relocated a trailer at an experimental farm. In later testimony before a congressional subcommittee, Settepani said, "Dissent [at CVM] is not tolerated if it could seriously threaten industry profits." [3]
READ MORE:
http://www.seedsofdeception.com/Public/Newsletter/Dec04GotHormones/index.cfm
Monsanto won the 2004 Supreme Court case. Are you too dumb to look it up? Commercial site (.com) are for profit. Look at eduacation or government sites. If people are too stupid to determine who won the Supreme Court decision, do you really think that they will have any influence on anything. Who do you think you are fooling?
If you care to verify my last statement, please visit the US Emassy site below. Its a .gov site rather than a .com site.
http://canada.usembassy.gov/content/embconsul/pdfs/fas_twica17_2004.pdf