COURT ORDERS FARM AIR EMISSIONS RULE TO BE SENT BACK TO EPA
A federal District Court judge on Monday remanded to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for revision regulations that exempt livestock farmers from reporting to state and local authorities routine emissions from their farms. Environmental and animal-rights groups in 2018 brought a lawsuit against the Fair Agricultural Reporting Method (FARM) Act, which Congress approved with overwhelming bipartisan support after a federal appeals court rejected a 2008 EPA rule that exempted farmers from reporting routine farm emissions under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA). Known as the “Superfund Law,” CERCLA is used primarily to clean hazardous waste sites but also includes a mandatory federal reporting component. The appeals court ruling would have forced tens of thousands of livestock farmers to “guesstimate” and report emissions from manure on their farms to the U.S. Coast Guard’s National Response Center and subjected them to citizen lawsuits from activist groups. In implementing the law, EPA also clarified that farmers did not need to report routine emissions to state and local first responders under the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) – an adjunct to CERCLA. First responders have been clear they consider such reports unnecessary and burdensome. Activist groups sued to have the FARM Act regulations vacated and to force farms to immediately begin reporting emissions. In August 2021, in a secret backroom deal days after the court granted NPPC’s and other livestock groups’ request to intervene in the activists’ lawsuit, EPA met and agreed to settle the lawsuit with the activist groups. EPA provided no notice to affected livestock farmers about the settlement until it asked the court in November to order the rule returned to the agency to be redrafted. Under the court’s order, farmers will not be required to take any action until EPA completes a new rulemaking.
USTR CRITICAL OF CHINA'S WTO COMPLIANCE
The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative this week issued its annual report to Congress on China's compliance with World Trade Organization (WTO) commitments. Largely critical of China's approach to trade, USTR said the Asian nation has failed to embrace the market-oriented principles on which WTO rules are based. Specifically on agricultural trade, the trade office noted that China is “a difficult and unpredictable market for U.S. agricultural exporters, largely because of inconsistent enforcement of regulations and selective intervention in the market by China’s regulatory authorities.” In the report, USTR does point out the advances made through the U.S.-China Phase One Economic and Trade Agreement, noting that the agreement addressed many non-tariff barriers to agricultural trade and made “significant reforms in some agricultural sub-sectors, including meat and poultry products and facility registration.” But China has failed to take meaningful action on other Phase One commitments, including a required risk assessment for the use of the feed additive ractopamine in pork and beef production, said USTR. China also still has a 25% retaliatory tariff on a host of U.S. goods, including pork, a response to U.S. duties on Chinese steel and aluminum. NPPC is continuing to press USTR and the Biden administration to urge China to remove that tariff, which in large part caused a nearly 26% drop in U.S. pork exports to China in 2021. (Click here to read the report.)
OMB GETS NEW USDA ‘POULTRY RULE,’ STAGE SET FOR NEW GIPSA REGULATION
USDA this week sent a new regulation related to the poultry contract grower tournament system – the so-called Poultry Rule – to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review, the final step before a regulation or proposed rule is finalized. In December 2016, USDA – at the end of Tom Vilsack’s first tenure as Agriculture Secretary – proposed a similar regulation as part of a package of Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) rules. Those regulations, which USDA withdrew in November last year, would have set criteria the Secretary could consider when determining whether a live poultry dealer’s use of a ranking system for payments to poultry growers was unfair, unjustly discriminatory or deceptive or gave an undue or unreasonable preference, advantage, prejudice or disadvantage to one grower over another. It also would have made such practices, absent a legitimate business justification, per se violations of the Packers and Stockyards Act (PSA) even if they did not harm competition or cause competitive injury, a longstanding prerequisite for winning a PSA case, according to eight U.S. appellate court rulings. (During debate on the 2008 Farm Bill, which called for clarifications to the PSA, Congress considered and rejected eliminating the competitive harm requirement.) NPPC supports rules that recognize the right of farmers to freely enter into contracts to sell and buy livestock and poultry.
PANEL DISCUSSES NEED FOR COLLABORATION IN FIGHT AGAINST ASF
NPPC Chief Veterinarian Dr. Liz Wagstrom this week participated on a panel about African swine fever (ASF) and the need for federal, state and pork industry collaboration to prevent, prepare for and control the pig-only disease. Also on the panel, which was held at the winter policy meeting of the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture, were USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Administrator Kevin Shea; Dr. Michael Neult, state veterinarian for South Carolina and director of Clemson University Livestock-Poultry Health; and Dr. Patrick Webb, assistant chief veterinarian at the National Pork Board. While the United States remains free of ASF, the disease was detected last summer in the Dominican Republic and Haiti, the first time in 40 years it’s been in the Western Hemisphere.
GROUPS ISSUE OPEN LETTER ON CONCERNS OVER HEMP IN ANIMAL FEED
NPPC recently joined 16 other livestock organizations, feed associations, veterinary groups and organizations of public health officials on an open letter, urging state agriculture departments to support more education and scientific research on the safety of hemp as an animal-feed ingredient before it is approved by state or federal governments. The Association of American Feed Control Officials has noted that interest in using hemp in commercial animal feed accelerated after passage of the 2018 Farm Bill, which expanded the legal production of hemp in the United States. The use of hemp in animal feed falls under the jurisdiction of FDA and state regulatory programs. There is a push in Congress to allow the use of hemp in feed even though scientific research about its safety and FDA review have not been completed.
WHAT’S AHEAD
NPPC’S ZIEBA TO MODERATE FEB. 23 PANEL ON IMPACT OF TARIFFS
Farmers for Free Trade, of which NPPC is a member, Feb. 23 will host a virtual event on the impact of tariffs on U.S. agriculture and the American economy with Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) and a round table of farmers and economic experts. NPPC Assistant Vice President of International Affairs Maria Zieba will moderate the panel. Several recent reports, including ones from USDA and the U.S. Commerce Department, have shown the ineffectiveness of tariffs. (For more information and to register for the event, which begins at 10 a.m. Eastern via Zoom, click here.)
NPPC, NATIONAL PORK BOARD TO HOLD JOINT ANNUAL MEETING MARCH 9-11
NPPC and the National Pork Board will hold their joint annual business meeting – the National Pork Industry Forum – March 9-11 in Louisville, KY. During the in-person event – last year’s was virtual – NPPC will elect new officers and members to its board of directors. (For more information on the meeting, click here.)
NATIONAL AG DAY SET FOR NEXT MONTH
National Ag Day will be celebrated March 22. Hosted by the Agriculture Council of America and sponsored by dozens of other agricultural groups, including NPPC, Ag Day this year will focus on “Growing a Climate for Tomorrow,” highlighting farmers’ efforts to protect the environment. Because of COVID restrictions, most of the Ag Day events in Washington, DC, will be virtual. The Celebration of Modern Agriculture on the National Mall, which runs March 21-22, will be live.
Source : NPPC