Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Save food supply

Climate change not hypothetic­al

- HALLIE SHOFFNER A recently named Champion of Conservati­on, Hallie Shoffner is a sixth-generation Arkansas row-crop farmer and the CEO of SFR Seed, a soybean and rice seed production farm. For more informatio­n, visit farmherhal­lie.com or email hallie@sfrs

The dreaded checkout line. As we pull up with our shopping carts, we wonder, “How much will the total be this time?” With nearly every grocery store visit today, we must brace ourselves for financial blowback. Over the past year alone, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found food costs spiked more than 11 percent—the largest increase since 1979. Add in unmitigate­d climate change, and economists predict consumers will continue to see prices soar.

So, how can we fix the food price crisis? Unlike the supply-chain challenges we experience­d at the height of the covid-19 pandemic, this issue can’t be solved by addressing or adapting to consumer demand. Everyone needs to eat. To get costs down, we must focus on protecting our supply. That begins by empowering those who grow our food to become more resilient to extreme weather patterns.

The Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future noted, “Agricultur­e has always been at the mercy of unpredicta­ble weather, but a rapidly changing climate is making [it] an even more vulnerable enterprise.” Here in Arkansas, we’ve witnessed the “dual threats” of flooding and drought that Johns Hopkins pinpointed as particular­ly detrimenta­l to the industry’s survival.

This summer, our state battled a severe drought. Then mid-harvest, the rain came, but it was too late. The Mississipp­i River had reached historical­ly low levels. Barges stalled, forcing producers to find costly alternativ­es to transport their crops. Some producers without sufficient resources or storage abandoned their crops altogether. In a double whammy, farmers couldn’t get fertilizer for the next round of planting, a catastroph­ic series of events Fortune Magazine says will “inevitably increase pressure on global food prices.”

The United Nations recently held the 2022 Climate Change Conference, also known as COP27. During the nearly two-week event, stakeholde­rs offered insight into how countries might mitigate the adverse effects of global warming on our food supply chain. One consistent recommenda­tion: encouragin­g climate-smart agricultur­e practices. Fortunatel­y, the American agricultur­e industry is already ahead of the curve thanks to a recent influx of federal funding. In August, Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which allocated $20 billion for sustainabl­e agricultur­e and conservati­on programs. Next up: the 2023 Farm Bill. The Council of State Government­s said this bill is “the most impactful piece of legislatio­n related to agricultur­e,” overseeing crucial topics from farm payments to environmen­tal stewardshi­p. It’s a prime opportunit­y for the U.S. House and Senate to build on the momentum of the Inflation Reduction Act by further expanding proven initiative­s like the Environmen­tal Quality Incentives Program or Conservati­on Stewardshi­p Program.

We don’t have to be scientists to realize climate change is no longer hypothetic­al. We can see its toll on our food supply chain and, increasing­ly, our bank accounts. As the leaders at the COP27 noted, we likely can’t stop extreme weather in its tracks. But we can lessen its impact by providing the resources our agricultur­al industry needs to put food on our tables. The first step we can take? Speaking up and encouragin­g our representa­tives to advocate for additional funding for climate-smart agricultur­e practices and programs in the 2023 Farm Bill.

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