REGULATORY REGISTER Volume 23, Issue 2 Spring 2021
Activists File Petition with EPA to Regulate Dairy and Hog Farms Under the Clean Air Act Twenty-five environmental activist organizations from around the country filed a petition with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) requesting that EPA initiate rulemaking to regulate air emissions under the Clean Air Act (CAA). The petitioners specifically call for the regulation of dairy operations with 500 or more cows and hog operations with 1,000 hogs or more.
In this issue Comments to Lab-Grown Seafood Docket Submitted, Page 2 NMPF Supports Labeling Integrity through Dairy Pride Act, Page 3 NMPF Pushes Back on FDA Over Proposed Traceability Rule, Page 4 FARM to Resume On-Farm Evaluations, Adds Animal Care Task Force Members, Page 5
NCIMS Conference Postponed The 2021 National Conference on Interstate Milk Shipments is being postponed until April 7-12, 2022 after 94 percent of its delegates voted to postpone. The conference will take place at the J.W. Marriot in Indianapolis pending the approval of a contract. The planned 2023 edition of the biennial conference will be shifting to 2024. NMPF will convene its NCIMS Committee in approximately a month to discuss the arrangements and issues that may warrant proposals.
The activists argue that air emissions from dairy and hog operations cause and contribute significantly to air and climate pollution that endangers public health and welfare. They further assert that dairy confinement facilities and purchased feed are responsible for a 10.7 percent increase in dairy enteric emissions over the last 30 years. With respect to manure management, they assert methane emissions from manure have increased by 98.8 percent in recent decades. While the activists call for regulating large dairy and hog farming operations under the CAA, the effort seems more geared toward ending large-scale farming. According to the activist groups, larger operations regulated under the CAA would need to use “the best system of emission reduction” to mitigate the emissions, which, the petition states, would be well-managed pasture- based farming. Converting all dairy farms with 500 or more cows to pasture-based systems, however, would be extremely unrealistic given the amount of land necessary. The petition also labels dairy digesters as “the factory farm gas scheme.” It also asserts that biogas is “dirty energy” that allows corporate conglomerates with an ownership interest in the oil and gas industry to safeguard the role of fossil gas instead of transitioning to solar and wind. The activist position, in essence, is that that the biogas that could be generated by digesters is insufficient to meet our nation’s clean energy needs and diverts money and interest away from wind and solar. The petition does not mention any of the past, current and future accomplishments that have been made in environmental sustainability and technologies. The petition also does not appear to be in any way consistent with the Biden administration’s climate change initiatives. NMPF is discussing our response with our dairy industry associates as well as the pork, beef, and poultry associations. The petition is available here.
2019 NCIMS Conference