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Cargill to Pay Growers for Carbon-Friendly Farming Methods
Commodity superpower Cargill Inc. is starting to pay American farmers to adopt growing practices that boost soil health and trap carbon.
The biggest closely held U.S. company says such farming methods, known as regenerative agriculture, will create new revenue streams for farmers and allow customers who buy packaged goods from Cargill to meet sustainability goals.
The sequestration of carbon helps eliminate man-made greenhouse gas emissions, and farmers could play an important role in slowing climate change by using more environmentally friendly growing techniques. Agriculture accounts for 10% of all U.S. emissions.
While other companies including Indigo Ag have started paying farmers for capturing carbon, Cargill says its reach from the field to finished products such as meat and animal feed give it an advantage.
鈥淲e believe ag is how we鈥檒l address climate change, so we鈥檙e excited about the work is doing. Together, we can partner with farmers to improve soil health and pull carbon out of the atmosphere.鈥 鈥揋reg Downing, Cargill 鈥 Cargill (@Cargill)
鈥淲e are acting as a bridge between鈥 farmers and consumer packaged goods companies, Ben Fargher, vice president of sustainability at Cargill, said by phone. 鈥淲e need to produce food and deliver an environmental outcome together.鈥
Cargill鈥檚 program is part of a commitment to advance regenerative-agriculture practices across 10 million acres of North American land by 2030. Techniques include growing cover crops, which are planted after principal crops to help reduce erosion. So far, farmers have enrolled in the program for states including Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Arkansas, Missouri and Tennessee.
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