Perdue: Not an Obvious Champion for Sustainable Agriculture

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund

President-elect Donald Trump has tapped Sonny Perdue, a long-time agribusiness leader, Democrat-turned-Republican state legislator, two-time governor of Georgia to lead the US Department of Agriculture. Faced with a warming planet, increasing water scarcity, collapsing bee populations and other environmental challenges, USDA needs a leader who will promote planet-friendly farming practices more than ever. Sonny Perdue is not an obvious champion for sustainable farming, and he has made some troubling statements about climate change, but we look forward to learning more about his values and commitment.

With his hands at the controls of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Mr. Perdue would influence how food is grown, inspected, labeled and sold. The agency’s 100,000 plus employees also manage a network of programs aimed at preventing hunger in the US; buy much of the food served up to millions of public school children; manage food aid to nations abroad; try to anticipate, prevent and eradicate the arrival of invasive species and crop pests; promote rural development and renewable energy; and manage our national forests. USDA also regulates food labels and claims, like USDA Organic, which have played a powerful role in growing the good food movement.

For those of us focused on the environment, the billions spent each year by USDA to promote more environmentally friendly farming practices is a particular priority. USDA has significant discretion in how these funds are spent and can choose to promote farming practices that work in harmony with the natural environment (e.g. using beneficial insects to control crop pests) or practices that effectively subsidize conventional industrial agriculture. Mr. Perdue would also likely be influential in establishing the next 5-year US farm policy or Farm Bill, which helps shapes the nation’s agriculture.

An internet search finds little track record by Mr. Perdue on these issues. However, he recently penned a disturbing opinion piece in which he lambasts “liberals” for exaggerating the climate relevance of extreme weather events. He writes “It’s become a running joke among the public, and liberals have lost all credibility when it comes to climate science because their arguments have become so ridiculous and so obviously disconnected from reality.”

Looking further back, however, we do find a few instances where Mr. Perdue has expressed interest in environmental stewardship:  

  • As the Governor of Georgia, he announced a conservation easement tax credit on earth day in 2006 aimed at conserving open space and farmland from sprawl.
  •  In 2007 he encouraged water conservation, saying  “Our state is blessed with a wealth of natural resources, but the drought has shown us that they are not unlimited. The stewardship of energy, land and water resources is vital to the lives of our state’s citizens. Most importantly, conservation is the right thing to do, in times of scarcity or abundance.”
  •  He convened a “Governor’s Energy Policy Council” in 2005 that issued a report recognizing the importance of climate change and recommending state action to address it.

His current agribusiness venture, Perdue Partners, sells a long list of conventional agricultural products, but there are a few organic products included; non-GMO conventional soybeans are also available “grown on contract.”

To be clear, these are quite thin as environmental credentials. But compared to other cabinet nominees, and to President-elect Trump himself, perhaps Mr. Perdue seems less hostile to the environment.

Under the Obama Administration, USDA pledged to reduce agricultural global warming pollution in the US by 120 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions per year by 2025—providing the same benefit as taking 25 million cars off the road annually. The agency’s plans for doing this mostly entail implementing its existing programs. Here at NRDC, we’d hoped the next Administration would be able to do significantly better. Before Sony Perdue is confirmed as Secretary of Agriculture, Americans need to know a lot more about his commitment to protecting natural resources and the environment.

About the Authors

Director, Food & Agriculture program

Read the full article at: https://www.nrdc.org/experts/jonathan-kaplan/perdue-not-obvious-champion-sustainable-agriculture

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