Imperial Valley Press

Agricultur­e secretary nominee Vilsack endorses biofuels push

- By ASHRAF KHALIL

WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) — Tom Vilsack, President Joe Biden’s nominee for secretary of agricultur­e, pledged Tuesday to focus on climate change initiative­s and work to address racial inequities in agricultur­al assistance programs. Vilsack, who testified before the Senate Agricultur­e, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, would bring much on-the-job experience to the position. In addition to serving two terms as the governor of Iowa, he spent eight years as President Barack Obama’s Agricultur­e Secretary.

In his opening remarks, Vilsack, 70, sought to dispel concerns that he would be coming to the job with antiquated ideas.

“I realize that I am back again. But I also realize that this is a fundamenta­lly different time,” he said, referencin­g a need to rebuild parts of the country’s agricultur­al infrastruc­ture in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The reality is we lacked openness, fairness and competitiv­eness and resiliency, as the COVID-19 crisis has shown, in many of our agricultur­al markets,” he said.

In his testimony, Vilsack heavily endorsed boosting climate-friendly agricultur­al industries such as the creation of biofuels.

“Agricultur­e is one of our first and best ways to get some wins in this climate area,” he said.

He proposed “building a rural economy based on biomanufac­turing” and “turning agricultur­al waste into a variety of products.” He pledged to work closely with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to “spur the industry” on biofuels.

Republican Joni Ernst of Iowa questioned whether Vilsack’s commitment to biofuels would clash with the Biden administra­tion’s public commitment to switch the federal vehicle fleet to electric cars and trucks.

“We’re going to need both,” he responded, saying there was room for both climate-friendly industries to thrive and pointing out that the Navy has begun to deploy warships that run partially on biofuel.

With systemic racial inequity now a nationwide talking point, Vilsack said the Agricultur­e Department needed to seriously examine if it was sufficient­ly supporting farmers of color.

He envisioned an “equity taskforce” to identify what he called “intentiona­l or unintentio­nal barriers that make it difficult for people to access the programs.”

Sonny Perdue, agricultur­e secretary in the Trump administra­tion, sought to purge hundreds of thousands of people from the SNAP or Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program — commonly known as food stamps. That effort was defeated in court, and Vilsack said the SNAP program was particular­ly vital to the country’s recovery from the pandemic.

He said he wanted his department to work directly with governors across the country to make sure SNAP benefits were being accessed smoothly and to address the issue of food deserts in low-income communitie­s.

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