S&mp nov dec '13 final

Page 1

Vol. VII No. 6

November / December 2013

Serving Soil, Mulch, Compost, & Biofuel Professionals www.SoilandMulchProducerNews.com

NEWS

Attention Readers !

Are you looking for Products, Equipment or Services for your business? If so, please check out these leading companies advertised in this issue:

Bagging Systems

Amadas Industries – pg 21 Nova Packaging LLC – pg 13 PremierTech Chronos – pg 17

Buildings & Structures ClearSpan – pg 19

Clutch Parts Foley Engines – pg 3

Compost Equipment

Farmer Automatic/Aggero – pg 14 HCL Machine Works – pg 20

Mulch Coloring Equipment/Colorants Colorbiotics – pg 11

Shredders, Grinders, Chippers & Screening Systems Allu Group Inc – pg 16 CW Mill Equipment Co. – pg 5 Doppstadt – pg 7 Komptech USA – pg 24 Morbark Inc. – pg 2 Peterson – pg 23 Premier Tech Chronos – pg 17 Rayco Mfg – pg 8 Rotochopper Inc. – pg 9 Screen USA – pg 19 Universal Refiner Corp – pg 14 West Salem Machinery – pg 12

Transport Trailers Trinity Trailer – pg 15

Trommel Brushes

Duff Brush LLC – pg 8 United Rotary Brush Corp – pg 3

Used Equipment

EarthSaver Equipment – pg 20

Challenges, Successes for Mulch & Soil Council

L

By P.J. Heller

ike pioneers trudging their way across the country in covered wagon trains, the soil and mulch industry made slow and steady progress in 2013 but continually had to circle the wagons to fend off attacks from all sides. Many of the issues faced by the industry in 2013 will continue into the New Year. Among the most pressing will be maintaining access to raw materials, having access to an open and fair marketplace and differentiating the “good from the bad” operators, according to Robert C. LaGasse, executive director of the Mulch & Soil Council. LaGasse outlined the achievements and challenges ahead for the industry at the council’s annual meeting Oct. 16-17 in New Orleans. He later elaborated on those issues in an interview with Soil & Mulch Producer News. Action — or inaction — by the federal government on matters affecting the mulch industry came in for heavy criticism. Specifically targeted were the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for its efforts to increase the cancer hazard rating of inorganic arsenic by as much as 17 times the current level; the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency’s Biomass Crop Assistance Program (BCAP) which provides a subsidy to forest and agriculture land owners for eligible biomass material delivered to a qualified biomass conversion facility; and Congress for its failure to renew the 2008 Farm Bill of which BCAP is a part. On the positive side, the council reported on its success in defeating a proposal to regulate potting soil and mulch as soil amendments and

on the introduction of its Elite Bulk Member program, which was rolled out at the New Orleans conference. One of the most contentious issues facing the industry is BCAP, which is “driving competition for raw materials and [creating] unfair government diversion of raw materials away from our industry into bioenergy,” LaGasse says. While mulch has been established as a “higher-value product” under BCAP, that status could change at any moment, LaGasse warns. “If it’s in the USDA’s best interest or the Department of Energy’s best interest to change that definition, then we would be back in the same boat,” he says. The battle lines are clearly drawn as more bioenergy and pellet plants come online and require more and more raw materials. “We’re in competition with them,” LaGasse says. “There’s ongoing efforts by the bioenergy industry to get as much control over raw materials as they can, so just because we won this round [with the higher-value product designation] that doesn’t mean they’re going to stop. They have no reason to stop. It’s in their best interest to proceed. There are more bioenergy and pellet mills and pellet exports going on now than there were before and they’re consuming large amounts of resources.” He notes that at every annual council meeting, there is at least one session on alternative raw materials. “We’re looking at alternative supplies in the event we get overrun,” LaGasse explains. Under BCAP, the government provides financial subsidies to encourage cultivation of new biomass crops, much to the consternation of other Continued on page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
S&mp nov dec '13 final by Downing and Associates - Issuu