(2/6/09 – NY Times) Earlier this year, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in its Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR), stated that it might tax cows in an effort to curb methane and other greenhouse gases. It has since backed down from any greenhouse gas regulation on the livestock industry.
“Under the proposal, if a state charged the “presumptive minimum rate” from the EPA, the cow tax would be $175 per dairy cow, $87.50 per head for beef cattle and a little more than $20 per pig,” said American Farm Bureau Federation Director of Regulatory Relations Rick Krause.
This could have limited the number of cows which farms have, raised the price on meat and dairy products, or put weaker farms out of business.
Perhaps this wasn’t the perfect proposal, but I would’ve liked to see something, anything done to limit the impact of greenhouse gases from livestock. While it doesn’t make me glad to see farms struggling or put out of business, it’s like seeing a hummer dealership fail. Businesses or farms will need to adapt.
If the government wants people to believe that global warming is as serious of an issue as scientists are telling us, no sector of the economy should be immune to reform and regulation.
Here are some interesting comments from the Times blog post:
Sigh…the ranchers don’t have to do anything?
At least we should make them fund the research into better feed to reduce the methane. I have still yet to hear if grass fed beef emits less methane.
– Mark, Dallas
It is such a joke. The cattle industry is so subsidized, and they complain about a little tax. A low quality slab of steak would cost about $100 if the government didn’t subsidize the industry. But of course, healthier foods like vegetables recieve very little subsidy (yea, corn does, and too much, but most other vegetables do not).
— 0megapart!cleMost serious people that are informed about climate change would acknowledge that cows in our agriculture chain do account for a disproportionate amount of emissions. But before we go for a tax, maybe we should just rein in the vast subsidies that the industry now enjoys in the form of grain subsidies, land usage subsidies, etc. This would also of course greatly benefit public health and the accompanying public health expenditures if people ate more spinach and less subsidized beef.
— akbWell, something must be done. Perhaps a meat tax rather than a cow tax would be better. NYTimes yesterday noted that carbon emissions were down due to decreased consumer spending, in turn due to economic downturn.— Rr Salamander
This tax is insane. No one with any knowlege of farm life could possibly agree to this outragous tax. The beef industry feeds america, this tax could potenialy put hundreds of small time farmers out of buissness in today’s economy and cripple america’s food supply. For someone completely removed and clueless to where there food in there grocery stores comes from, this wouldn’t sound too crazy to them but the reality that all farmers face is that this tax would destroy there way of life. It’s easy for people who aren’t affected by this to agree that the load of protecting our environment should be shared. If this was a tax on all vehicles that emitted harmfull pollutants into the enviroment then it would be a different story. This tax is a joke and a slap in the face to all of the hardworking livestock producers of america.